OVERVIEW
California state prisoner James Edward Hegler appeals the district court’s decision to dismiss his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for writ of habeas corpus challenging his conviction and sentence for murder. Hegler contends the district court erred by treating the violation of his derivative Sixth Amendment constitutional right to be present at the reading of trial testimony to the jury during deliberations as a harmless “trial error,” rather than a “structural error.” We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253, and we affirm.
BACKGROUND
1. The Law
The United States Supreme Court in
Arizona v. Fulminante,
Until recently, federal courts applied the
Chapman
harmless error standard to all criminal convictions tainted by trial error.
See Chapman v. California,
2. Facts and Prior Proceedings
Hegler was charged with first degree murder in the shooting death of Kerry James during an illegal drug transaction. At trial, Jeanеtta Thomas provided key testimony linking Hegler to the murder. After the jury began its deliberation, the jurors asked to hear Thomas’s testimony again. Because Hegler’s attorney had explicitly declined the opportunity, neither Hegler nor his attorney were present when the court reporter read the testimony to the jury. The jury returned a guilty verdict.
The Califоrnia Court of Appeal affirmed Hegler’s conviction for first degree murder, and the California Supreme Court denied Hegler’s petition for review. Having exhausted his state law remedies, Hegler then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal district court. The district court dismissed the petition, and Hegler appealed.
In
Hegler v. Borg (“Hegler I”),
3. The District Court Decision
On remand, the district court held an evi-dentiary hearing 1 to assess whеther the constitutional error affected the jury’s verdict. The district court examined the court reporter who at trial was responsible for reading back the testimony to the jury. The court reporter explained she was trained to read back testimony without using inappropriate voice inflection, word emphasis, facial exprеssion, or body language; however, she stated she had no independent recollection of reading back testimony during Hegler’s trial. She demonstrated her technique to the district court by reading, from her stenographic *1475 notes, a portion of the trial testimony. The district court noted that the court reporter conducted the readback in а professional style, and found her to be a credible witness. Although the court reporter made two errors during the readback demonstration, the district court observed that at the time the testimony was read to the Hegler jury, a trial transcript was not available and Hegler therefore would have been unable to detect such errors.
The distriсt court also examined four of the jurors. Each juror recalled that the court reporter’s readback was professional and that the substance of the readback was not materially different from the actual testimony of the witness during trial.
The district court held that the evidence did not warrant the grant of habeas relief. The district court dеclined Hegler’s invitation to construe the constitutional error as structural error. The district court concluded that the law of the case doctrine precluded a determination inconsistent with Hegler Fs implicit characterization of the constitutional error as trial error.
Applying the standard announced by the Supreme Court in Brecht, the district court found that the record did not demonstrate that the trial еrror had a substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict. While acknowledging that Hegler I instructed the district court to determine whether the trial error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, the district court nevertheless concluded that Brecht was the proper standard to employ because it represented an intervening change in the law which excused the application of the law of the case doctrine. Accordingly, the district court entered judgment dismissing Hegler’s petition with prejudice.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The decision whether to grant or deny a petition for habeas corpus is reviewed de novo.
Sanders v. Ratelle,
DISCUSSION
Hegler argues the district court erred by failing to classify the violation of his “presence right” as structural error. The government claims the district court correctly concluded it was foreclosed from considering the nature of the constitutional error because a panel of this court in Hegler I implicitly categorized Hegler’s absence as trial error. Similarly, the government contends the law of the case doctrine precludes our reconsideration of the panel’s decision.
1. The Law of the Case
“Under the law of the case doctrine, one panel of an appellate court will not as a general rule reconsider questions which another panel has decided on a prior appeal in the same case.”
Merritt v. Mackey,
Applying these principles, we think it would be inappropriate to accord binding effect to the panel’s decision in Hegler I. The panel grounded its conclusion on an analysis that neither acknowledged nor discussed the trial errоr, structural error dichotomy. There is no assurance the panel considered the nature of the error in question before directing the district court to apply the harmless error standard. In light of this uncertainty, consideration of Hegler’s argument is warranted.
*1476 2. Structural Error Analysis
The Supreme Court “has recognized that most constitutional errors can be harmless.”
Fulminante,
Hegler argues that the constitutional deprivation he suffered fits within that class of cases which can never be analyzed for harmless error. This characterization, however, is contrary to the Supreme Court’s discussion in
Fulminante.
Indeed, the Court cited with approval to
Rushen v. Spain,
In
Rushen,
the Supreme Court held to be harmless a trial judge’s
ex parte
communication with a juror.
Rushen,
Thus, Fulminante and Rushen require us to consider the nature of a “presence error” in the context of the specific proceeding from which the defendant was excluded. In the usual case, such an error will be susceptible to harmless error analysis, but a defendant’s absence from certain stages of a criminal proceeding may so undermine the integrity of the trial process that the error will necessarily fall within that category of cases requiring automatic reversal.
In this circuit we have identified two critical phases of a criminal proceeding where the defendant’s absence constitutes structural error. In
Hays v. Arave,
Our decision in
Hays
rested on the ability of the defendant to “affect[ ] еach and every aspect of that crucial phase of his criminal adjudication.”
Hays,
We relied on our reasoning in
Hays
to determine the nature of the error presented in
Rice.
Again, the determinative factor was the defendant’s ability to affect the proceed
*1477
ing that occurred in his absence: “[I]t was critically important that the return of the death verdict and the polling of the jurors take рlace in Rice’s presence, where each juror would have to look Rice in the eye and reaffirm his or her jury room vote by declaring in open court that Rice did not deserve to live.”
Rice,
In contrast to the constitutional error that infected the criminal proceedings in
Hays
and
Rice,
Hegler’s absence from the reading of trial testimony did not render the trial process defective. Because the purpose of the proceeding from which Hegler was excluded was to allow jurors to hear again testimony given at trial, the ability of Hegler to influence the process was negligible. The only role Hegler could have played, had he been present, was as an observer.
See id.
at 1405 (Wallace, C.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (suggesting that where defendant has no role to play his absence does not constitute structural error). The witness whose testimony was being read was also absent, and thus the right of confrontation from which the right of presence is derived in this context,
see Bustamante v. Eyman,
Nor was Hegler’s right to be present at the readback “fundamental.” The immediate purpose of the proceeding was to let the jury hear for a second time the testimony of a witness; the reading was in all material aspects a sterile event. The jury’s attention was directed not at the defendant, but at the absent witness’s sworn testimony. In short, the defendant’s presence at such a proceeding is unlikely to reap the “gains both symbolic and practical” that inure to the defendant and society from a “public pronouncement ... which is tailоred to the defendant and delivered in his presence.”
Hays,
In sum, we think that before a court can classify a “presence error,” the character of the proceeding from which the defendant was excluded must be evaluated to ascertain the impact of the constitutional violation on the overall structure of the criminal proceeding. In so doing, we conclude that where, as here, the deprivation occurred during a proceeding in which the defendant had little ability to influence its outcome, and the harm that resulted from the defendant’s absence can be quantified, the constitutional error is a trial error, amenable to harmless error analysis.
3. Harmless Error Analysis
After the Supreme Court’s decision in
Brecht,
a habеas petitioner who challenges a conviction on the basis of a trial error is entitled to relief only if the error had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”
Brecht,
- U.S. at -,
The
Hegler I
decision was handed down before
Brecht
was filed. We must apply intervening Supreme Court authority to a subsequent appeal,
United States v. Lancellotti,
Our task then is to determine “what effect the error had or reasonably may be taken to have had upon the jury’s decision.”
Id.
at —,
Our review of the record convinces us that Hegler was not prejudiced by his absence from the readback of trial testimony to the jurors. The evidentiary hearing conducted by the district court established that the court reporter read the testimony without inappropriate inflection or comment, and that the substance of the readback was not materially different from the witness’s testimony at trial. Indeed, there is
no
evidence indicating there was
any
improper conduct during the reading of the testimony to the jury. Under these circumstances, a habeas petitioner is not entitled to relief.
See Lee,
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s decision to deny the petition for writ of habe-as corpus and to dismiss the action with prejudice.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The evidentiary hearing was conducted by the Honorable Carolyn Turchin, Magistrate Judge. Because the district court adopted the magistrate judge's findings, conclusions, and recommendations, we refer to the court as the district court.
. Hegler’s ability to perform even this limited function is doubtful given the fact that at the time of the readback no trial transcript yet existed.
