Petitioner James McNeill Bailey is a Texas state prisoner currently serving a life sentence based upon his conviction for the murder of Imogene McNeill Apple. His conviction was affirmed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.
Bailey v. State,
FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The facts in this case are reported in detail in the opinion rendered by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.
Bailey v. State,
Seiber then went back outside and called out for Bailey, Apple’s cousin, whose car Seiber had seen parked “out by the fence in the back” when she arrived. Seiber returned to the den and began to call for an ambulance. As Seiber completed the call, Bailey walked out of the utility room where Apple lay, with blood on his hands and collar. Seiber later testified that while she was in the den no one could have entered the house either through the sliding glass doors in the den or through the outside utility room door, without her seeing them.
Freddie Wilson, Apple’s plumber, arrived at the residence while Seiber was telephoning for an ambulance. Seiber admitted Wilson into the house and informed him that Apple lay injured on the utility room floor. Wilson did not see Bailey when he first entered the house, but later observed Bailey kneeling over Apple’s body. Wilson later testified that as he gathered his tools from his truck and walked up to Apple’s house he saw no one leave or approach the house.
Officers of the Lewisville, Texas, Police Department arrived at the scene. After brief questioning, Bailey was permitted to leave. As the investigation continued, the officers uncovered a metal pipe with blood and flesh adhering to it, Apple’s will, and a bloody coat with a pair of rubber gloves in one pocket. Bailey later returned to the scene and stated that he wished to speak to Captain Edge, who was in charge of the investigation. Bailey then admitted that he had not told the officers “the whole or exact truth about everything” and that he “hid the murder weapon, a jacket, and the gloves.” Bailey was thereafter placed in custody and charged with his cousin’s murder.
At trial, the State theorized that Bailey, a thirty-four year old airline pilot, murdered his cousin in order to further his scheme to build a health spa and country club on the property he would inherit from her. A jury convicted Bailey of murder and assessed his punishment at life imprisonment.
THE MURDER MOTIVE
Bailey contends that the trial court erred in admitting evidence that Apple planned to execute a new will unfavorable to him without first requiring a showing that Bailey was aware of her intentions. He implies that the State used this information to convince the jury that he had a motive for killing his cousin that afternoon before she had a chance to meet with her lawyer and sign a new will.
On direct appeal, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals found that where a case is dependent upon circumstantial evidence for its proof, “the rules of evidence will not be so stringently applied so as to exclude evidence which sheds light on the occurrence.”
Bailey v. State,
The deceased’s plan to alter her will was a link in the chain of proof that [Bailey] murdered her to inherit her property. Although standing alone it might not support a verdict, when viewed in light of the surrounding circumstances, the evidence complained of is relevant and, therefore, admissible.
Id. at 319-20 (citation omitted).
In reviewing state evidentiary rulings, this Court is ever mindful that “[w]e do not sit as a super state supreme court to review error under state law.”
Skillern v. Estelle,
Our canvass of the record in the instant case reveals but two passing references to Apple’s intention to alter her will: her attorney’s statement that one purpose of Apple’s scheduled appointment on the date of her murder was to “sign a new Will” and the prosecutor’s summary of the attorney’s testimony at closing argument. State Record Vol. VI at 104-05; State Record Vol. VII at 704-05. Neither Apple’s attorney nor any other witness testified that Apple planned to disinherit Bailey. The State’s theory, as is exemplified in the prosecutor’s opening and closing arguments, was that Bailey killed Apple in order to hasten his inheritance under the existing will, not that he wanted to prevent her from executing a new will disadvantageous to him.
See
State Record Vol. VI at 55-59; State Record Vol. VII at 701-05. Thus, the references to Apple’s intention to change her will appear to have been merely tangential to the State’s central theory of the case. Clearly, the passing references to Apple’s intention to sign a new will were not “material in the sense of a crucial, critical, highly significant factor,”
Skillern,
We are also unpersuaded by Bailey’s assertion that the district court erroneously relied upon
Nelson v. Estelle,
BRADY
At Bailey’s state habeas corpus proceeding, Joseph Stockard, the son and law partner of Apple’s deceased attorney, testified that he had found in his father’s files a proposed new will for Apple. The primary change in the redrawn document was to devise to Bailey a life estate in Apple’s twenty-one acre property, rather than the unfettered fee interest he would have inherited under the original will. Bailey maintains that this evidence was exculpatory, that the prosecution was aware of it before trial, and that the State violated the strictures of
Brady v. Maryland,
Brady
dictates that an accused’s right to due process is violated when the prosecution withholds material evidence that is favorable to the defense.
Moreover, the contents of the new will are far from exculpatory. In light of the State’s theory that Bailey planned to develop the land into a country club and health *1170 spa, Apple’s intention to devise him a mere life estate in the property would have severely hindered his real estate development scheme. Thus, it appears that an earlier discovery of the proposed will stood to benefit the prosecution far more than the defense. Accordingly, Bailey’s Brady argument is without merit.
JURY CHARGE
At the close of evidence, the trial court, over defense counsel’s objection, charged the jury in part:
Unless you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the death of Imogene McNeill Apple was not caused by the independent act of a third party, if there was such a death, or if you have a reasonable doubt thereof, then you will acquit the Defendant.
State Record Vol. V at 869. Bailey contends that the instruction confused the jury and impermissibly shifted the burden of proof to the accused.
A federal court may grant habeas corpus relief only when the state court’s instruction “by itself so infected the entire trial that the resulting conviction violates due process,”
Cupp v. Naughten,
The burden of proof in all criminal cases rests upon the state throughout the trial; it never shifts to the defendant. The defendant is presumed innocent, unless his guilt is established by legal and competent evidence beyond a reasonable doubt; and, in case you have a reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s guilt, after considering all the evidence before you and these instructions, you will acquit him.
State Record Vol. V at 872 (emphasis added). In light of the trial court’s unequivocal admonition that the burden of proof rests with the prosecution, the imprecise language of the challenged instruction did not “infect the entire trial” in a manner which violated Bailey’s right to due process.
See Cupp v. Naughten,
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court dismissing Bailey’s application for a writ of habeas corpus is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In Nelson, we noted:
This Court has distinguished between two types of "prejudice"; that which might (i) affect the jury verdict, and (ii) which renders the trial as a whole “fundamentally unfair." The erroneous admission of evidence which might affect a jury's verdict is prejudicial enough to constitute reversible error, however, within the constitutional framework which restricts this Court’s review, such an error must be of the magnitude which will render the trial as a whole “fundamentally unfair."
