Petitioner James Perruquet stabbed Christopher Hudson to death during a struggle in 1995, and an Illinois jury later found Perruquet guilty of first-degree murder. Perruquet now seeks a writ of habeas corpus, asserting in relevant part that the state trial court deprived him of due process when it refused to admit evidence and instruct the jury on self-defense. The district court concluded that Perruquet had not adequately made out a due process claim and that, even if he had, the claim was without merit. We conclude that Perruquet procedurally defaulted the due process claim by not fairly presenting it to the Illinois courts.
I.
Perruquet and Hudson both lived in a trailer park near Goodfield, Illinois, a small town in the central part of the state. Hudson had become friends with Perru-quet’s wife, Tammy Perruquet (“Tammy”), and this was the source of some tension between the Perruquets. On the evening of April 14, 1995, after Tammy returned home from a walk, she and Perruquet began to argue. Perruquet, thinking that Tammy had been out with Hudson, ac *509 cused her of having an affair with him. The argument continued on and off over the course of the evening, escalating in volume. Hudson, evidently aware of the fighting and concerned that Perruquet might be hurting Tammy, called their trailer repeatedly, leaving voice messages when they did not pick up the phone. When he called for the third time, Perru-quet answered and argued with him. Subsequently, Perruquet left the trailer and went to sit in his car. While he was gone, Hudson called again and Tammy spoke with him. During their conversation, Tammy heard something “bang” against the trailer. She hung up the phone and went to investigate the noise. She opened the trailer door to find Perruquet standing there. He had heard Tammy speaking to Hudson and was enraged; Perruquet said that he had heard Tammy tell Hudson she loved him. The two began to argue again, violently. Perruquet grabbed Tammy and pushed her down on a couch. Tammy was screaming, and Perruquet was attempting to stifle her screams by placing his hand over her mouth.
Hudson’s apparent effort to intervene at this point cost him his life. While Tammy and Perruquet were arguing, Hudson knocked on the door of their trailer. Per-ruquet opened the door slightly and told Hudson that the matter was none of his business. Perruquet attempted to close the door, but Hudson persisted in attempting to gain entry. Ultimately, Perruquet lunged out the door at Hudson and the two men fell to the ground. Witnesses saw Perruquet, who landed on top of Hudson, making motions with his arm; in fact, Perruquet was stabbing Hudson. Hudson died as a result of internal bleeding from several wounds to his chest area. Perru-quet subsequently returned to his trailer and, according to a number of witnesses, said to Tammy, “Look what you made me do” or words to that effect.
Before police arrived, Perruquet left the scene and spent the night in a motel. He was apprehended the following day. A medical examination of Perruquet conducted on the evening of his apprehension revealed two small puncture wounds on Perruquet’s abdomen which required no treatment other than cleansing.
At trial, Perruquet sought to show that he had killed Hudson in self-defense. He testified that Hudson had yelled at him earlier that day that he would “tear [Per-ruquet’s] head off,” “kick [his] ass,” and (ultimately) “kill [him]”. Perruquet also wanted to elicit testimony from two other witnesses who had heard Hudson say that he would kill Perruquet and also to establish that Hudson had a criminal record that included a conviction for domestic battery. The trial court sustained the State’s objection and barred this line of testimony; it also declined to instruct the jury on self-defense. The court reasoned that in order for Perruquet to assert self-defense, he would have to admit that he had stabbed Hudson; but Perruquet had not done this. Although Perruquet had acknowledged the physical altercation with Hudson in his trial testimony, he had not admitted that he stabbed Hudson. Perruquet had testified that when he attempted to shut the trailer door on Hudson, a tug of war had ensued. Perruquet said that he felt a “sting” in his side. Thinking that Hudson had stabbed him, he went “flying” out the door at Hudson. They landed hard on the concrete outside the trailer, and Perruquet feared that he might have broken Hudson’s neck. Perruquet denied having picked up a knife before fighting with Hudson. He could offer no explanation for how Hudson received the fatal stab wounds. Indeed, he testified that he did not even realize that Hudson had been stabbed until the owner of the trailer park so informed him later.
*510 The jury convicted Perruquet of first-degree murder, and the trial court ordered him imprisoned for his natural life. Perru-quet appealed to the Illinois Appellate Court, which affirmed his conviction. That court sustained the trial court’s refusal to admit evidence and instruct Perruquet’s jury on self-defense:
Defendant denied having a knife and stated he did not know how Hudson got stabbed. The only injury he believed Hudson may have suffered was a broken neck. He testified that he first learned of the stabbing during a telephone call he made after he left the scene. Since defendant did not admit stabbing Hudson, he was not entitled to claim that his use of force was justified by Hudson’s own acts. Thus, the trial court did not err in refusing to admit evidence of pri- or threats from Hudson or evidence of Hudson’s criminal history, nor did it err in refusing to instruct the jury on self-defense.
People v. Perruquet,
No. 4-96-0255,
Perruquet subsequently filed his pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Central District of Illinois. Among other claims, Perruquet asserted that the state trial court had deprived him of his Fourteen Amendment due process right to a fair trial when the court excluded the evidence through which he sought to establish that he had killed Hudson in self-defense and refused to instruct the jury on self-defense. R. 7 at 6a-6d.
The district court concluded that Perru-quet’s due process claim was either non-cognizable on habeas review or without merit. As the court recognized, a state trial court’s decision not to admit evidence and its refusal to give a particular jury instruction generally do not implicate federal constitutional rights. R. 16 at 8 (citing Dr
essler v. McCaughtry,
II.
Our review begins with the principal ground on which the district court disposed of Perruquet’s due process claim. As the district court recognized, errors of state law in and of themselves are not cognizable on habeas review.
E.g., Estelle v. McGuire, supra,
However, we believe that Perruquet’s petition draws enough of a connection between his right to due process and the trial court’s (alleged) evidentiary and instructional errors to render his claim cognizable on habeas review. The petition, along with the supporting memorandum that Perruquet filed, does more than merely cite his constitutional right to a fair trial. Perruquet has articulated the theory of self-defense that he wished to pursue; he has described the evidence (both excluded and admitted) that supported that theory; and he has argued that preventing him from pursuing the theory of self-defense likely resulted in the conviction of an innocent person. R. 6a-6d; R. 15 at 8-9. Whatever gaps there may be in his petition and supporting memorandum, the basic rationale of Perruquet’s due process argument is readily discernible. As Perruquet was without counsel in the district court, his habeas petition is entitled to a liberal construction,
e.g., Jackson v. Duckworth,
By saying that Perruquet’s claim is cognizable, we are not saying that it is necessarily meritorious. In that regard, one must draw a distinction between
claims
that are cognizable in habeas proceedings and errors that are cognizable. Perru-quet’s claim is that his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process has been violated. That claim, if borne out by the facts, would be one as to which a federal court could grant him relief. Whether the errors that the trial court allegedly committed (if they were errors at all) indeed were of constitutional magnitude or were merely state-law errors could only be assessed based on a closer inspection of the underlying facts. Neither the State’s answer nor the district court’s opinion undertook such an examination. Ultimately, on closer inspection, the facts might reveal that even if the trial court did err as Perruquet alleges, the errors were not so grave as to have deprived him of due process- — -that they were, ultimately, errors of state law, and so beyond the power of a federal habeas court to address. But here the parties and the court proceeded no further than the face of Perruquet’s petition, and that petition, as we have explained, adequately sketches out a claim that Perru-quet was deprived of due process. As such, it presents a cognizable claim.
See, e.g., Buggs v. United States,
As an alternate basis for disposing of the claim, the district court indicated that Perruquet had not shown that the state-court rulings on this claim were either contrary to, or reflected an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law as determined by the United States Supreme Court. R. 16 at 9; see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). But the state courts never passed judgment on Perruquet’s due process claim; their rulings on the subject of the self-defense theory were based solely on state law and contain no hint of constitutional analysis. Thus, Perruquet cannot be faulted for the failure to articulate why the state courts’ adjudication of his claim was irreconcilable with federal law — there was no state-court ruling for him to critique.
The conspicuous absence of any state-court decision on Perruquet’s due process claim does beg an explanation, however, and that explanation in turn will dictate how we shall proceed to address the claim. The State contends that the lack of a state-court ruling is explained by Perruquet’s failure to invoke the United States constitution while he was pursuing his state-court remedies. That failure, as the State sees it, bars us from reaching the merits of Perruquet’s claim. Perruquet, on the other hand, contends that he did present the due process claim to the state courts and that they simply failed to address that claim. As a result, Perruquet reasons, this court may not only reach the merits of that claim, but should do so without the usual degree of deference that we would accord to the state court’s rationale pursuant to section 2254(d)(1).
See Newell v. Hanks,
Before seeking a writ of habeas corpus in federal court, a petitioner must first exhaust the remedies available to him in state court. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A). Exhaustion serves an interest in federal-state comity by giving state courts the first opportunity to address and correct potential violations of a prisoner’s federal rights.
Picard v. Connor,
If the exhaustion doctrine is to prevent unnecessary conflict between courts equally bound to guard and protect rights secured by the Constitution, it is not sufficient merely that the federal habeas applicant has been through the state courts. The rule would serve no purpose if it could be satisfied by raising one claim in the state courts and another in the federal courts. Only if the state courts have had the first opportunity to hear the claim sought to be vindicated in a federal habeas proceeding does it make sense to speak of the exhaustion of state remedies. Accordingly, we have required a state prisoner to present the state courts with the same claim he urges upon the federal courts.
Picard,
Where state remedies remain available to a habeas petitioner who has not fairly presented his constitutional claim to the state courts, the exhaustion doctrine precludes a federal court from granting him relief on that claim: although a federal court now has the option of denying the claim on its merits, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2), it must otherwise dismiss his habeas petition without prejudice so that the petitioner may return to state court in order to litigate the claim.
Castille v. Peoples,
The procedural default doctrine does not impose an absolute bar to federal relief, however. “[I]t provides only a strong prudential reason, grounded in ‘considerations of comity and concerns for the orderly administration of justice,’ not to pass upon a defaulted constitutional claim presented for federal habeas review.”
Haley,
The State, as we have noted, contends that Perruquet did not fairly present his due process claim to the Illinois courts and, consequently, committed a procedural default that bars federal review of that claim. Perruquet has two responses. He asserts first that the State waived this purported default because it never argued below that he had failed to fairly present his due process claim to the state courts, see R. 12 at 5-7; by contrast, the State did contend that federal review was foreclosed as to two of his other claims due to procedural defaults, see R. 12 at 8-10. Alternatively, Perruquet contends that he did alert the state courts that he was relying on the federal constitution and thus he did fairly present the due process claim to the state courts.
A petitioner’s procedural default does not deprive the federal court of jurisdiction over his habeas petition; rather, it is an affirmative defense that the State is obligated to raise and preserve, and consequently one that it can waive.
Trest v. Cain,
The State implicitly waives a defense when its response to the petitioner’s claim is inconsistent with an intent to preserve that defense.
Cf. United States v. Johnson,
In the district court, the State asserted a procedural default defense as to some of Perruquet’s claims but not as to his due process claim.
See
R. 12 at 7-10. Its failure to invoke procedural default as to the latter claim thus lends some support to Perruquet’s argument that the State has waived the defense.
See Henderson,
What we have, then, is a simple failure of the State to assert a procedural default when it answered Perruquet’s habeas petition. The State’s silence on the subject of procedural default is normally not enough, standing alone, to demonstrate the intent to relinquish the defense that is the essence of true waiver.
See, e.g., Kurzawa,
Granted, there are any number of decisions from this court indicating that the State waives the procedural default defense by not asserting it in the district court.
E.g., Cossel v. Miller,
At the same time, there are precedents from this circuit and others that recognize a federal appellate court’s discretion to address a procedural default even when the State has raised it for the first time on appeal.
See Brewer v. Aiken,
Under the circumstances presented in this case, we believe it is appropriate to reach the State’s procedural default defense notwithstanding its failure to assert that defense in the district court. First, as our ensuing discussion will reveal, the procedural default in this case is clear: Perruquet failed to raise his due process claim at any level of state-court review. Second, because no Illinois court was ever given the opportunity to pass on the merits of Perruquet’s constitutional claim, comity and federalism principles weigh strongly against permitting Perruquet to assert the claim in federal court. Third, if we were to reach the merits of Perruquet’s constitutional claim, we necessarily would have to do so
de novo,
as there is no state-court decision we can look to for an evaluation of this claim.
See Newell v. Hanks, supra,
We wish to emphasize that we are electing to address the State’s procedural default defense, notwithstanding its failure to assert the defense below, as a matter of discretion, and that we are by no means suggesting that this court or the district courts should routinely overlook the forfeiture of a procedural default defense.
See Trest v. Cain, supra,
A petitioner fairly presents his federal claim to the state courts when he articulates both the operative facts and the controlling legal principles on which his claim is based.
E.g., Sweeney v. Carter,
A review of Perruquet’s brief on direct appeal, the Illinois Appellate Court’s order, and Perruquet’s petition for leave to appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court convinces us that he did not fairly present his due process claim to the state courts. Neither his appellate brief nor his petition for leave to appeal on the subject of self-defense contains any mention of due process, the Fourteenth Amendment, or even the United States constitution generally.
See
R. 13 Ex. A at 31-36;
id.
Ex. C at 15-19. Perruquet cited only state cases to the Illinois courts. None of those cases look to the federal constitution or employ a due process analysis; all instead apply Illinois standards for the admission of evidence and for instructing the jury on self-defense.
3
The facts as Perruquet presented them presented ordinary questions of state law; these facts certainly were not within the mainstream of constitutional litigation.
See Sullivan v. Fairman,
We reject Perruquet’s suggestion that the subsequent history of one of the state cases that he cited in support of his claim was alone sufficient to alert the Illinois courts that he was presenting them with a federal due process claim.
People v. Everette,
Perruquet has not supplied us with any compelling reason to reach the merits of his due process claim notwithstanding his failure to fairly present that claim to the Illinois courts. He has not identified any circumstance that might amount to good cause for the procedural default,
see Carrier,
III.
Because Perruquet did not fairly present his due process claim to the Illinois courts and thereby procedurally defaulted that claim, and because Perruquet has not established grounds for overlooking the default, the federal courts may not reach the merits of this claim. We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s decision to deny Perruquet relief on this claim. We thank Perruquet’s appointed appellate attorneys for their vigorous advocacy on his behalf.
Notes
. Perruquet's petition also asserted that these rulings deprived him of a constitutional right to have the jury instructed on a defense (of self-defense) that was supported by the evidence, citing the Fifth and Sixth Amendments in addition to the Fourteenth. R. 7 at 6d. At one time, our cases did recognize a defendant’s right, grounded in the Fifth and Sixth Amendments, to a jury instruction "on any defense which provides a legal defense to the charge against him and which has some foundation in the evidence, even though the evidence may be weak, insufficient, inconsistent, or of doubtful credibility.”
Whipple v. Duckworth,
. The State suggests that it was deprived of the opportunity to raise the question of fair presentment in the district court, because in his habeas petition Perruquet failed to articulate why the state-court rulings on the subject of self-defense amounted to a deprivation of his federal constitutional rights. Thus, as we have previously discussed, the State argued to the district court, and that court agreed, that Perruquet had not set forth a cognizable constitutional claim. R. 12 at 5-7; R. 16 at 8-9. Even assuming that Perruquet did not sufficiently substantiate his due process claim, however, the face of Perruquet's habeas petition nonetheless malees clear that he was invoking the federal constitution’s guarantee of due process. R. 7 at 6d. Consequently, the State was on notice that Perruquet was at least attempting to make out a federal claim with respect to the self-defense theory. Indeed, the State’s answer acknowledges as much. R. 12 at 6. Under those circumstances, the State was not deprived of the opportunity to raise the issue of fair presentment.
. Two of the state cases that Perruquet cited do mention a defendant's right to a "fair trial,”
see People v. Crane,
People v. Everette,
. We note that Perruquet's post-conviction petition did assert that the trial court deprived him of due process by refusing to admit evidence and instruct the jury on self-defense. R. 13 Ex. E at 2 ¶ 7(c). However, assuming that Perruquet remained free to assert the constitutional ramifications of the trial court’s ruling in post-conviction proceedings after having failed to do so on direct review, he did not pursue this claim on appeal from the post-conviction court's ruling.
See
R. 13 Exs. F, H. Consequently, he cannot be said to have fairly presented the constitutional claim on post-conviction review.
See Spreitzer v. Schomig,
