Jerome Pelmer a/k/a Jerry Jones shot and killed Billy Ray Norwood during a struggle. Although Pelmer was charged with intentional murder only, the trial judge — without objection — instructed the jury on reckless murder also. On direct appeal the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction holding that the evidence was sufficient to convict, that the trial court did not err by failing to charge on a lesser included offense, and that Pelmer’s sentence did not violate the Eighth Amendment.
Jones v. State,
Following the direct appeal, Pelmer filed in state court a petition for writ of error coram nobis alleging ineffective assistance of trial counsel, prosecutorial misconduct, insufficient evidence, improper sentencing, and improper jury instructions — including for the first time an attack on the reckless murder charge. The state court denied Pelmer’s ineffectiveness claim and struck the other claims as beyond the scope of a petition for writ of error coram nobis. On appeal, the Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama affirmed holding that all claims either were raised or could have been raised on direct appeal.
Jones v. State,
Pelmer filed his pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal district court stating three grounds for relief: (1) the evidence was constitutionally insufficient to support his conviction; (2) the trial court failed to charge on a lesser included offense; and (3) Pelmer was denied the effective assistance of counsel. Pelmer amended his petition to allege further facts in support of his ineffectiveness claim. The district court rejected on the merits Pel-mer’s claims of insufficient evidence and ineffective assistance of trial counsel and applied a procedural bar to Pelmer’s claim that a lesser included offense charge should have been given.
Pelmer then filed a pleading entitled “Petitioners[sic]-Objections to Court Judgment” in which he made three arguments: (1) the decision was mistakenly based on an earlier petition which Pelmer had voluntarily dismissed; (2) the trial court’s jury instruction on reckless murder was plain constitutional error; and (3) Pelmer’s counsel was constitutionally ineffective. Two days later Pelmer filed a notice of appeal from the district court’s judgment. We dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction, treating Pelmer’s objections as a Rule 59 motion. See Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(4).
Pelmer filed a motion for out-of-time appeal. The district court denied the motion as moot. Pelmer filed a notice of appeal from that judgment and a request for a certificate of probable cause. We granted Pelmer’s application for a certificate of probable cause and motion to appeal in forma pauperis and remanded for the district court to rule on Pelmer’s Rule 59 motion. Pelmer then filed a motion to amend his petition to add an equal protection argument. The district court denied both the Rule 59 motion and the motion to amend.
Appeals from two district court orders are now before us: (1) the district court’s order denying Pelmer’s motion for out-of-time appeal; and (2) the order denying both Pelmer’s motion to amend and his Rule 59 motion. Because we treat Pelmer’s appeal from the district court’s order
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denying his Rule 59 motion as an appeal from the district court's original judgment denying the writ,
see Foman v. Davis,
DISCUSSION
A. Ineffective Assistance as a Basis for Habeas Relief
Pelmer raised his ineffective trial counsel claim for the first time in his state petition for writ of error coram nobis. On Pelmer’s appeal of the denial of the state writ, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals held that because this issue was not raised on direct appeal, it could not “be raised in a subsequent petition for writ of error coram nobis.”
“A state court is entitled to express its views on federal constitutional issues without waiving its procedural default rules.”
Hall v. Wainwright,
B. Fourteenth Amendment Claims
Pelmer contends that the trial court’s reckless murder instruction when Pelmer had been charged only with intentional murder deprived him of due process and that Alabama’s application of
Ex parte Washington,
“Attempts to raise new claims are governed by the rules of amendment, without regard to the characterization given the claims by the petitioner.”
Robinson v. Wade,
1. Due Process
In general, the refusal to consider an issue raised for the first time after the entry of judgment is no abuse of discretion.
See Hashwani v. Barbar,
a. Procedural Default
“Under Alabama law, a failure to raise an issue either at trial or on direct appeal ... constitutes a procedural bar to the assertion of the claim in a subsequent collateral proceeding.”
Ladd v. Jones,
b. Cause
Pelmer now claims that he can demonstrate cause for his default by showing trial counsel’s ineffectiveness or by showing that it was impossible to anticipate that the Alabama courts would shift their position on the propriety of this reckless murder instruction. Although the district court rejected Pelmer’s substantive claim of ineffective assistance, the court addressed neither the reckless murder/due process issue nor Pelmer’s cause for failing to object to the reckless murder instruction at trial.
(1) Ineffective Assistance as Cause for Procedural Default 3
“Ineffective assistance of counsel ... is cause for a procedural default.”
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Murray v. Carrier,
Pelmer claims that his trial counsel’s performance was deficient in several respects, but Pelmer most strongly asserts as error his trial counsel’s failure to object to the trial court’s reckless murder instruction.
4
Just months before Pelmer’s trial, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals had held that an alternative instruction on reckless murder in a prosecution for intentional murder was not a fatal variance.
See Marsh v. State,
We hold that trial counsel’s failure to object to the jury instruction which had been recently approved by the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals — the court to which an appeal would be taken — was not unreasonably ineffective assistance. “Every trial presents a myriad of possible claims.”
Engle v. Isaac,
(2) Novelty of the Issue
“[W]here a constitutional claim is so novel that its legal basis is not reasonably available to counsel, a defendant has cause for his failure to raise the claim in accordance with applicable state procedures.”
Reed v. Ross,
We note ... that the futility of presenting an objection to the state courts cannot alone constitute cause for a failure to object at trial.... Even a state court that has previously rejected a constitutional argument may decide, upon reflection, that the contention is valid. Allowing criminal defendants to deprive the state courts of this opportunity would contradict the principles supporting Sykes.
Engle,
Pelmer does not claim futility as such. Rather, citing Washington and Marsh, he contends that at the time of his trial he could not know that the use of Alabama’s reckless murder instruction raised a constitutional question. We reject this argument and hold that the legal basis for framing Pelmer’s reckless murder/due process claim was available at the time of his trial.
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The only case which Pelmer cites as a shift in the law is
Washington.
Although
Washington
did signal a shift in the position of Alabama’s courts on the jury instruction at issue, it establishes no new principle of federal constitutional law. The federal constitutional principle forming the legal basis for Pelmer’s claim — that is, that conviction of a crime not charged violates due process — has been long established by the nation’s highest court.
See, e.g., Stirone v. United States,
That
Washington
did not overrule
Marsh
until after Pelmer’s trial and during the pendency of Pelmer’s direct appeal might explain why Pelmer’s counsel, believing objection futile, did not object to the jury instruction at trial; but Marsh’s existence fails to establish that the legal basis for the claim was unavailable. That the law is unsettled on a point does not mean the legal basis for arguing the point is unavailable. Novelty, that is, the unavailability of a legal basis for a claim, can be cause for a procedural default, and so can ineffectiveness of counsel; but there can be a gap between these separate grounds for cause. Because law is not an exact science, an ordinary, reasonable lawyer may fail to recognize or to raise an issue, even when the issue is available, yet still provide constitutionally effective assistance.
See Engle,
Before Pelmer’s trial, Marsh and Washington both raised the reckless murder/due process issue at their trials. This shows that the claim was available and had been recognized by other lawyers at the time of Pelmer’s trial. “Where the basis of a constitutional claim is available, and other defense counsel have perceived and litigated that claim, the demands of comity and finality counsel against labeling alleged unawareness of the objection as cause for a procedural default.”
Engle,
2. Equal Protection
The district court denied Pelmer’s post-judgment motion to amend his habeas petition to add an equal protection argument. The district court had permitted Pelmer to amend his petition prior to the entry of judgment. Unlike his Rule 59 motion, Pelmer filed his second Rule 15 motion extremely late: the district court had denied Pelmer’s amended petition on the merits almost a year before this attempted amendment, and Pelmer had already appealed to this court which had agreed to hear the appeal. When this second amendment was proposed, the case was before the district court for the purpose of ruling on the Rule 59 motion. We cannot say that the district court abused its discretion. The merits of this equal protection claim are therefore not before us.
CONCLUSION
The judgments and orders of the district court are therefore AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Pelmer's appellate briefs raise seven issues: (1) denial of the effective assistance of counsel; (2) violation of equal protection by the selective application of
Ex parte Washington,
. Had the reckless murder/due process issue been preserved by a contemporaneous objection at trial, the issue could have been raised on direct appeal. Under Alabama law, "in a non-capital case, where no objection is made to the erroneous portion of the trial court’s oral charge, that issue is not properly preserved for appellate review."
Biddie v. State,
. The state does not claim that the procedural default barring consideration of ineffective assistance of counsel as an independent basis for habeas relief also bars consideration of ineffective assistance as a basis for cause for a separate procedural default.
Cf. Murray
v.
Carrier,
. We will consider on appeal only those grounds for ineffectiveness presented below.
See Francois v. Wainwright,
. "[I]n an extraordinary case, where a constitutional violation has probably resulted in the conviction of one who is actually innocent, a federal habeas court may grant the writ even in the absence of a showing of cause for the procedural default.”
Carrier,
