Petitioner James Devin was convicted of murdering a fellow inmate while incarcerated in the DuPage County Jail. During his trial, the jury was permitted to view the area of the prison where the crime occurred. Devin alleges that the trial court’s failure to inform him that he had a constitutional right to be present while the jury viewed the . crime scene violated his rights to due process of law and confrontation. Petitioner also argues that the manner in which the jury view was conducted denied him due process. Specifically, he claims that the trial court erred in not requiring a court reporter to be present and in allowing the view to be conducted by a deputy sheriff of the DuPage County Jail who later testified for the state at petitioner’s trial.
On direct appeal, the Illinois Supreme Court held that Devin did not have a constitutional right to be present during the jury view and that no error resulted from the manner in which the jury view was conducted.
People v. Devin,
I.
We first address Devin’s argument that the trial court erred in not informing him that he had a constitutional right to be present while the jury viewed the crime scene. On direct appeal, the Illinois Supreme Court, relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Snyder v. Massachusetts,
With this in mind, we begin and end our analysis of petitioner’s claim with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Snyder v. Massachusetts,
Because it is the law as determined by the Supreme Court which prevails on habeas review, Snyder is controlling in this case absent Supreme Court precedent to the contrary. The only Supreme Court decisions relied upon by the petitioner are cases holding that an accused has a right to be present at all stages of trial.
See Faretta v. California,
The Court explicitly rejected this argument in
Snyder.
While recognizing the rule that a “defendant in a criminal case must be present at trial when evidence is offered,” the Court warned that the scope of the right to due process cannot “be found in dictionary definitions of evidence or trials.”
Snyder,
A fertilé source of perversion in constitutional theory is the tyranny of labels. Out of vague precepts of the Fourteenth Amendment a court frames a rule which is general in form, though it has been wrought under the pressure of particular situations. Forthwith another situation is placed under the rule because it is fitted to the words, though related faintly, if at all, to the reasons that brought the rule into existence.
Id. Petitioner’s argument that the jury view is an important part of trial is nothing more than an attempt to come within a general rule by assigning the labels of evidence and trial to a jury view. The relevant inquiry remains whether the defendant’s absence from the jury view can be said to have denied him a fair trial.
We also disagree with petitioner that the Supreme Court cases holding that an accused has a right to be present at all stages of trial could fairly be read as modifying
Snyder’s
clear holding. Neither
Faretta v. California
nor
Illinois v. Allen
holds that the right to be present at trial is an absolute right. In
Faretta,
the Court actually cited
Snyder
for the proposition “that an accused
*1209
has a right to be present at all stages of the trial
where his absence might frustrate the fairness of the proceedings.”
Finally, petitioner urges this court to disregard
Snyder
on the ground that the concept
of
due process has evolved since that case was decided in 1934. Petitioner, however, offers no Supreme Court cases
2
to support his contention that modem notions of due process are offended whenever a court excludes an accused from a jury view without regard to whether the accused was prejudiced by his absence. We find little merit in petitioner’s suggestion that
Snyder
is inconsistent with evolving principles of constitutional law. To the contrary, we believe that the holding of
Snyder
is equally valid today. The Court’s holding that “the defendant has the privilege under the Fourteenth Amendment to be present in his own person whenever his presence has a relation, reasonably substantial to his opportunity to defend against the charge” is a recognition that the right guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment is the right to a fair trial and that “fairness is a relative, not an absolute, concept.”
Snyder,
What we are subjecting to revision is not the action of the Legislature excluding a defendant from a view at all times or in all conditions. What is here for revision is the action of the judicial department of a state excluding a defendant in a particular set of circumstances, and the justice or injustice of that exclusion must be determined in the light of the whole record. Discretion has not been abdicated.
Id.
at 115,
II.
We turn next to the petitioner’s argument that it was error for the trial court to conduct the jury view without a court reporter present and to permit the view to be led by a deputy sheriff of the DuPage County Jail who later testified on behalf of the state at petitioner’s trial. . Petitioner claims that these alleged errors denied him due process. We examine petitioner’s allegation of constitutional error in light of the record as a whole to determine whether the circumstances under which the jury view was conducted can be said to have denied petitioner a fair trial.
Cf. Snyder,
Petitioner contends that he was prejudiced by the absence of a court reporter as there, is no record of what was said during the view. As the Supreme Court recognized in
Snyder,
the relevant question is whether the accused had an “[opportunity ... to learn whatever there was a need to know.”
Id.
at 109,
Petitioner also argues that it was error to permit the view to be led by a deputy sheriff of the DuPage County Jail who would later testify on behalf of the state. The record indicates that the trial judge gave detailed instructions during the conference held in chambers as to what objects would be pointed out to the jury. Upon returning to the courtroom, the judge also instructed the jury that they were only to observe and not to talk to each other or to ask any questions during the view. Petitioner has pointed to nothing in the record to indicate that the judge’s instructions were not followed. Despite petitioner’s suggestion to the contrary, we conclude that defense counsel’s presence afforded petitioner an adequate opportunity to determine whether the deputy sheriff said anything improper to the jury. Petitioner’s bare assertion that he was prejudiced because this particular deputy sheriff led the view is insufficient to demonstrate that he has been denied a fair trial.
We do not mean to suggest that the procedures employed by the trial court in the instant case were ideal; the oversight of the trial judge and the presence of a court reporter at the view are generally considered desirable. See
Clemente v. Carnicon-Puerto Rico Mgt. Assoc.,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court denying Devin’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Because it is the law "as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States” which prevails on habeas review, the lower court decisions cited by petitioner cannot carry the day. In addition, we note that the two decisions cited by petitioner hardly support petitioner's claim of evolving consensus in support of an accused’s absolute constitutional right to be present at a jury view. In
United States v. Walls,
