Lead Opinion
James Jackson seeks a certificate of ap-pealability (“COA”) from the denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Because he cannot make a substantial showing of the denial of a federal constitutional right, we deny a COA.
I.
The evidence presented at trial established that Jackson murdered his wife and her two daughters because his wife intended to divorce him. Jackson confessed to strangling eaсh victim. The jury found him guilty of capital murder for murdering more than one person during the same criminal transaction. He was sentenced to death.
During the sentencing phase, Jackson filed a “Motion To Introduce the Testimony of Defendant’s Family and Friends Regarding Their Feelings on the Prospect of a Death Sentence and the Impact an Execution Would Have on Them.” The motion asked the court to allow Jackson to question his friends and family on (1) whether they wanted him to die and (2) what the impact on them would be if he were executed. The trial court denied the motion.
The conviction was affirmed on direct appeal. Jackson v. State,
Jackson filed a federal habeas petition alleging, inter alia, that the refusal to allow the “execution impact” testimony violated his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment right to present any evidence that might lead a juror to conclude that a sentence less than death was warranted. The district court granted summary judgment for the state on that claim, holding that the refusal to allow execution impact testimony was not an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent. The district court rejected Jackson’s other constitutional claims and declined tо issue a COA.
On appeal, Jackson abandons all claims except for his challenge to the exclusion of
II.
Our review on a request for a COA is constrained by statute. Absent a COA, we have no jurisdiction to entertain the merits of Jackson’s claims on appeal. Miller-El v. Cockrell,
“A petitioner satisfies this standard by demonstrating that jurists of reason could disagree with the district court’s resolution of his constitutional claim or that jurists could conclude the issues presented are adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further.” Miller-El,
III.
A.
In Lockett v. Ohio,
To obtain habeas relief, Jackson must satisfy the standards of AEDPA. We have most recently described the means by which a petitioner in Jackson’s circumstance may proceed:
The Supreme Court has determined that section 2254(d)(1) affords a petitioner two avenues, “contrary to” and “unreasonable application,” to attack a state court application of law. Under the first clause:
a state court decision is “contrary to ... clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court” if (1) “the state court applies a rule that contradicts the governing law set forth in [the Supreme Court’s] cases,” or (2) “the state court confronts a set of facts that are materially indistinguishable from a decision of [the Supreme] Court and nevertheless arrives at a result different from [Supreme Court] precedent.”
Under the second clause, “a state court decision is ‘an unreasonable application of clearly established’ Supreme Court precedent if the state court ‘correctly identifies the governing legal rule but applies it unreasonably to the facts of a particular prisoner’s case.’ ” The Supreme Court provided further guidance:
First, the Court indicated that the inquiry into unreasonableness is an objective one. Second, the Court emphasized that “unreasonable” does not mean merely “incorrect”: an application of clearly established Supreme Court precedent must be incorrect and unreasonable to warrant federal habeas relief.
Only if a state court’s application of federal constitutional law fits within this paradigm may this court grant relief.
Summers v. Dretke,
B.
We now examine whether Jackson has made an adequate showing for a COA under either of the “two avenues” this court has described. We conclude that he has not.
1.
The state court’s decision does not plainly contradict Supreme Court governing law. As the federal district court in this case carefully explained,
[Various Supreme Court] cases have consistently held ... that the scope of constitutionally protected mitigating evidence is evidence reflecting on the defendant’s background or character, or on the circumstances surrounding the crime*618 .... Jackson cites no case holding that evidence unrelated to his character or background or the circumstances of the crimе falls within the scope of Lockett [v. Ohio,438 U.S. 586 ,98 S.Ct. 2954 ,57 L.Ed.2d 973 (1978),] and its progeny....
Because the Supreme Court has never included friend/family impact testimony among the categories of mitigating evidence that must be admitted, the district court was correct in deciding that Jackson failed via the first avenue.
2.
The state court decision is not unreasonable under the second possible avenue for a habeas petitioner under AEDPA. If we consider that Lockett and its progeny announce the governing Supreme Court rule, so that the question of the admissibility of the friends/family impact evidence requires application of this existing rule to the facts, we agree that the state court’s determination is not unreasonable — that is, the determination that Jackson’s evidence has no mitigating value and therefore does not meet even the low relevance threshold.
Evidence of impact on friends and family does not reflеct on Jackson’s background or character or the circumstances of his crime, so Jackson’s proffer of that evidence does not satisfy the second avenue available to him to obtain habeas relief. As the district court put it,
The testimony Jackson wished to present ... is not relevant either to the degree of harm Jackson’s crime caused or to Jackson’s moral culpability for the crime. Accordingly, this evidеnce does not fall within the scope of Payne [v. Tennessee,501 U.S. 808 ,111 S.Ct. 2597 ,115 L.Ed.2d 720 (1991),] or Lockett. At a minimum, the Texas courts’ conclusion that Jackson was not entitled to present this evidence is not an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent
This reasoning also is consistent with our rejection, in Summers,
IV.
In sum, it was not objectively unreasonable for the state court to decide that extant Supreme Court holdings should not be extrapolated to include testimony as to the impact of a death sentence on family and friends. It follows that the district court’s determination that the state court ruling was not unreasonable is not debatable by jurists of reason, and jurists could not conclude that the issues presented are adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further, because there is no indication that a more plenary inquiry reasоnably could yield a contrary result.
The application for COA, accordingly, is DENIED.
Notes
. See also Yarborough v. Gentry,
. See Thacker v. Dretke,
The Court of Criminal Appeals held that it was not an abuse of discretion for the trial court to deny Jackson's request to introduce testimony about the emotional impact his execution would have on his family аnd friends. See Jackson v. State,
. See Eddings v. Oklahoma,
. Roper v. Simmons,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Because I disagree with the majority’s application of Miller-El to the standard of review in this case, and because I disagree with the district court’s conclusion that the state court did not violate clearly established federal law in excluding execution impact evidence and believe the issues presented are adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further, I respectfully dissent.
Initially, I note that the majority, while correctly stating the standard of review from Miller-El v. Cockrell, has partially ignored the mandate of the Supreme Court in applying this standard.
As to the substance of this request for a COA, I believe that the issues presented аre adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further. At the time of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals decision in this case, Jackson v. State,
The most important Supreme Court decision to this case is Payne v. Tennessee, a case that dealt with the admissibility of victim impact evidence, or evidence of the effect of the crime on the victim.
The reasоn the Texas CCA gave for affirming the exclusion of execution-impact evidence in this case was very similar to the first reason the Supreme Court held in Booth that the Eighth Amendment excluded victim-impact evidence. See Jackson v. State,
“The contention here focuses on whether a witness felt that appellant should live or die. Since that specific desire does not pertain to appellant’s background, character, or record, or the circumstances of the offense, the trial court did not err in prohibiting it.”827 S.W.2d 919 , 935-36 (Tex.Crim.App.1992).
Like Booth, both the Texas CCA and the majority here rely upon the idea that there are only a limited set of aggravating or mitigating factors to which evidence in capital sentencing proceedings may be relevant. Payne expanded the scope of these factors to include the amount of harm caused by the crime, an element that the Court impliedly conceded has no relevance to those traditional factors. The Supreme Court has required the liberal admission of mitigating evidence in death cases that may be relevant to the deathworthiness or “culpability” of defendants, and these holdings conflict with the idea that there are limited categories of admissible evidence in death cases to which evidence can be neаtly fitted. Penry v. Lynaugh,
The idea that evidence relevant to individualized capital sentencing must be constrained to these limited categories is belied by past Supreme Court jurisprudence. For example, in one of the cases we have frequently struggled with, Jurek v. Texas,
The Payne Court has noted that “States cannot limit the sentencer’s consideration of any relevant circumstance that could cause it to decline to impose the [death] penalty.” Payne,
There is also a further difficulty in this particular case in that victim impact testimony was introduced. In Jackson’s case,
In a case in which the prosecution introduces no victim impact evidence it might be reasonable and fair for the trial court to exclude execution-impact evidence because of Federal Rule of Evidence 403 concerns. If the value of the victim’s life is permitted to be brought before the jury, however, then I see no option under Supreme Court jurisprudence but to permit the defendant to counter this evidence with evidence of the value of his own life. The principles of relevance underlying F.R.E. 403 as well as the fundamental guarantees of due process and fairness require the admission of the defendant’s countervailing evidence of a similar nature in order to prevent unfair prejudice to the defendant’s case. The discussion in Payne demonstrates that this due process analysis is fundamental to the admissibility of execution impact evidence. Justice O’Connor stated in her concurring opinion that:
We do not hold today that victim impact evidence must be admitted, or even that it should be admitted. We hold merely that if a State decides to permit consideration of this evidence, “the Eighth Amendment erects no per se bar.” Ante, at 2609. If, in a particular case, a witness’ testimony or a prosecutor’s remark so infects the sentencing proceeding as to render it fundamentally unfair, the defendant may seek appropriate relief under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Payne,
Furthermore, Justice O’Connor’s concurrence demonstrated the due process analysis by which she, Justice White and Justice Kennedy, determined that there was no due process violation in that particular case. Under their rationale two factors served to alleviate the effect of the victim impact evidence in Payne and to prevent if from being unfairly prejudicial: its brevity, in that the grandmother of the three year old son оf one victim testified that he cried for his mother and baby sister and could not understand why they did not come home; and its redundance, because the jury was fully informed in the guilt phase that the three year old was also stabbed but survived in the same criminal transaction that took the lives of his mother and sister. The fact that the victim impact testimony was redundant and cumulative decreased its prejudicial effect in the sentencing hearing. Payne,
Because the petitioner has made a substantial showing of the denial of his constitutional rights by the state court’s exclusion of his execution impact evidence, and because the majority short-circuited its inquiry into whether the issues are adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further in direct conflict with the Supreme Court’s admonitions in Miller-El, I respectfully dissent.
