James Beverly appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Scullin, J.) dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus based in part on a state court’s jury instructions concerning reasonable doubt. Finding no constitutional error in the instructions, we affirm.
On October 22, 1985, following a jury trial in Onondaga County Court, Beverly was convicted on six counts of selling a controlled substance. He was sentenced as a predicate felon to six concurrent terms of incarceration of 12 1/2 to 25 years. The Appellate Division, Fourth Department, affirmed the conviction and sentence.
In 1992, Beverly filed pro se the instant petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Although he raised 55 separate issues, we are concerned here only with his challenge to the trial court’s charge on reasonable doubt, which included the following language:
Reasonable doubt must be based entirely and absolutely upon some good sound substantial reason without appeal to prejudice, or sympathy, or to the imagination. A juror who has a reasonable doubt and asserts it ought to first be able to give that reasonable doubt a reason for it to himself, and he should be able to communicate that to his fellow jurors that reasonable doubt in the event they ask him to do so.
.... It is not the duty of the People or the prosecution in a criminal case to establish the guilt of a defendant beyond all possible or imaginary doubt or to a mathamatical [sic] certainty. This degree of proof cannot be had in human affairs.... It is possible, however, to establish the guilt of defendant to a reasonable degree of certainty. In that degree of proof the People must be held and are held under the law.
Jury Charge at 380-81.
The habeas petition was referred to Magistrate Judge DiBianco for a report and recommendation. He concluded that “[t]he trial court ... provided adequate reasonable doubt instructions by repeatedly explaining that the prosecution had to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt,” and recommended dismissal of the petition. Although Beverly did not file objections to the report and recommendation, Judge Scullin nonetheless addressed petitioner’s asserted grounds for relief. In a decision reported at
DISCUSSION
Before, addressing the merits of Beverly’s appeal, we discuss the State’s argument that Beverly failed to preserve his right of review (1)by not objecting to the instructions at trial and (2) by not filing objections to the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation.
Beverly’s failure to make contemporaneous objections to the challenged instructions does not act as a procedural bar because the Appellate Division ruled on the merits of his challenge without commenting on the apparent default.
See Rosenfeld v. Dunham,
A
pro se
litigant’s failure to object to a magistrate judge’s report and recommendation precludes appellate review where the report explicitly warns of the consequences of such a failure.
See Roldan v. Racette,
It is well settled that due process requires the government to prove each element of a criminal offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
In re Winship,
However, whether in the exercise of our supervisory authority we should suggest a rule requiring a bare-bones charge is a question not presently before us, since our review on habeas is limited to determining whether the instant charge was constitutionally infirm.
See Vargas,
We examine first Beverly’s contention that the trial court unconstitutionally shifted the burden of proof to him by charging that “[a] juror who has a reasonable doubt and asserts it ought to first be able to give that reasonable doubt a reason for it to himself, and he should be able to communicate that to his fellow jurors that reasonable doubt in the event they ask him to do so.” We recently have noted that charges which state or imply that a juror ought to be able to “articulate” or “give” a reason for acquittals present dangers of shifting burdens of proof because the jury may look to the defendant to supply that reason. In
Vargas,
Beverly also challenges the court’s instruction that “[rjeasonable doubt must be based entirely and absolutely upon some good sound substantial reason.” He argues that this impermissibly raised the quantum of doubt necessary to acquit and thereby lowered the State’s constitutionally imposed burden of proof. As noted above, we upheld in
Chalmers
a charge that defined reasonable doubt as “a doubt for which some good reason can be given,” because the word “good,” when read in context, “was intended to mean doubt based on the existence or non-existence of evidence, as opposed to based on conjecture or imagination.”
We note that the trial court’s instruction appears to be a variation of New York’s pattern jury instructions, which define reasonable doubt in part as “a doubt for which some reason can be given.” 1
Criminal Jury Instructions New York
§ 6.20 (1983);
see Vargas,
Nevertheless, although the “good sound substantial” language should not be used, and we applaud the Appellate Division for condemning it in the exercise of its supervisory authority, we cannot conclude that the entire charge was constitutionally deficient. It is not reasonably likely that the jury understood these words to describe the quantity of doubt necessary for acquittal, rather than as a contrast to doubt based on impermissible criteria such as conjecture or speculation. This is made clear by reading the entire sentence in which the offending clause appears: “Reasonable doubt must be based entirely and absolutely upon some good sound substantial reason without appeal to prejudice, or sympathy, or to the imagination.” The court developed this distinction further when it explained that:
Reasonable doubt is not a mere speculative or imaginary doubt. You must stay within the confines of the evidence that was presented to you during the course of the trial. You do not pick a reasonable doubt out of thin air. It is also not a subterfuge to which a juror may resort in order to avoid doing a disagreeable thing.
Jury Charge at 381.
See Victor,
Finally, Beverly contends that the court lowered the burden of proof when it instructed the jury that the prosecution’s burden was to establish the defendant’s guilt “to a reasonable degree of certainty.” The phrase “reasonable certainty” has been denounced by New York intermediate appellate courts,
see, e.g., People v. Morris,
The judgment of the district court is hereby AFFIRMED.
