Lead Opinion
This death penalty ease involves the fifth time this court has considered a challenge by John Harvey Adamson to the State of Arizona’s efforts to sentence him to death, and the third time this court has sat en banc to review Adamson’s sentence. A thorough history of the background of this case is set forth in our prior en banc decision. Adamson v. Ricketts,
In our en banc decision, we held the sentence of death to be unconstitutional on six grounds. The State petitioned for certiorari to the United States Supreme Court.
Prior to issuance of the mandate by our Clerk’s office, the State filed a motion with our court to stay the issuance of the mandate and a motion for a rehearing and a rehearing en banc before the full court. The ground for the motions is that the cases of Walton, Lewis, and a third prior case, Alabama v. Smith,
A subsequent issue arose when the State and Adamson entered into a Stipulatiоn and Cooperation Agreement that could result in reinstating the original 1977 plea agreement. The State contends that the case is moot and therefore the appeal should be dismissed and the judgment vacated. We hold that the case is not moot and that the mandate should not be withheld, but should be issued forthwith.
I.
Background
Adamson first appealed to this court in 1980 after the district court rejected Adam-son’s petition for habeas corpus review of the state court's order vacating his sentence of imprisonment, his judgment of conviction, and his guilty plea to second degree murder, and after the State had proceeded to prosecute Adamson for first degree murder. In an unpublished disposition, a three-judge panel of this court affirmed the district court’s denial of Adam-son’s petition. Adamson v. Hill,
Following Adamson’s conviction and death sentence, and after Adamson had exhausted all of his state remedies, a three-judge panel of this court then affirmed the district court’s denial of Adamson’s second petition for habeas corpus review. Adamson v. Ricketts,
The issues before us now arise from actions taken by the State following the Supreme Court’s denial of the petition for сertiorari. The relevant facts and prior proceedings surrounding the present case are set forth below.
II.
The 1988 En Banc Decision
In the opinion filed December 22, 1988, this en banc court addressed the following claims of constitutional violations: (1) seeking and imposing the death penalty after Adamson asserted his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination constituted prosecutorial and judicial vindictiveness; (2) the judge’s imposition of the death penalty, when he had originally determined that a sentence of 48-49 years wаs the appropriate penalty for Adamson, was judi
The State timely petitioned for rehearing on January 9, 1989. The petition was not accompanied by a suggestion for rehearing by the full en banc court. On February 1, 1989, a majority of this panel denied the State’s petition for rehearing. We granted the State’s motion to stay issuance of the mandate pending the Supreme Court’s final disposition of the State’s petition for certio-rari review. On March 20, 1989, the State filed its petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court denied the State’s petition on June 28, 1990, and the denial was filed with this court on July 2, 1990.
After the Supreme Court’s denial of cer-tiorari, but prior to issuance of this court’s mandate, the State filed a motion to stay issuance of the mandate on July 10, 1990. Also on July 10, 1990, the State submitted a “Motion For Rehearing and Suggestion for Rehearing Before Full En Banc Court,” which was followed by a “Motion to Circulate Petition For Rehearing Before the Full Court” submitted on July 16, 1990. This was the State’s first request for rehearing before the full en banc court.
III.
Mootness Contention
While these issues were pending, the State and Adamson entered into a “Stipulation and Cooperation Agreement,” which essentially reinstated the January 15, 1977 plea agreement. The Stipulation and Cooperation Agreement was approved by the Superior Court of Arizona, Maricopa County, on February 1, 1991. Under the terms of that agreеment, “Adamson agrees to cooperate fully with the State in the investigation and prosecution of the June 1976 murder of Donald Bolles, and in the investigation and prosecution of any crimes or cases arising out of or connected with the murder.” This principally involves the murder trials of Robinson and Dunlap, who allegedly hired Adamson to commit the murder of Bolles, for which Adamson was convicted and sentenced to death in 1980. After completion of the murder trials of Robinson and Dunlap, Adamson will tender to the State trial court a guilty plea to second degree murder and will request “that the court reactivate the January 15, 1977 plea agreement.” The State agrees that “the State will, if Adamson has at all times provided complete and truthful testimony and otherwise complied with the terms of this agreement, join in that request and in Adamson’s motion.” The agreement further provides that if Adam-son violates the terms of the agreement,
On the basis of this Stipulation and Cooperation Agreement, the State has filed a motion to vacate the judgment of our court and to dismiss the appeal as moot. We conclude, however, that the case is not moot because all of the conditions precedent to the vacation of Adamson’s dеath sentence have not been fulfilled.
A habeas corpus petition is not moot “until it can be said with certainty” that the state court judgment in question will not affect the petitioner’s liberty. Mancusi v. Stubbs,
In the situation before us, the death sentence has not been vacated. It may be vacated only if the conditions of the Stipulation and Cooperation Agreement are fulfilled. Otherwise, a death sentence that we have held to have been unconstitutionally imposed will be carried out. The case, therefore, is not moot at this time. The case would become moot only if Adamson fulfills the terms of the Stipulation and Cooperation Agreement, approved February 1, 1991, to the satisfaction of the State, and the Superior Court enters an order, on the joint application of the parties, setting aside the death sentence and reinstating the January 15, 1977 plea agreement.
IV.
Procedural Posture
The procedural posture of this matter deserves clarification. The State submitted for filing a Motion for Rehearing and Suggestion for Rehearing Before the Full En Banc Court and also submitted a motion to circulate that petition to the full court. The rules of appellate procedure also require that a petition for rehearing “be filed within 14 days after entry of judgment,” and that a suggestion for a rehearing en banc be made on the same day. Fed.R.App.P. 40(a); 35(c). A party’s suggestion for a rehearing before the full court must also be filed within 14 days of the filing of an en banc opinion. 9th Cir. Gen’l Order 5.8(a). Thus, considered as a petition for rehearing, the petition is untimely.
The limited en banc court determined to treat the motion as a motion to stay the issuance оf the mandate, and called for additional briefing and oral argument on that question. Until the limited en banc court rules on the issue of whether to stay the issuance of the mandate, a petition for rehearing before the full court is premature.
V.
Stay of Mandate
Fed.R.App.P. 41(b) permits a stay of the issuance of a mandate granted to a party who has filed a petition for writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court to “continue until final disposition by the Supreme Court.” Rule 41(b) also requires that, “[ujpon the filing of a copy of an order of the Supreme Court denying the petition for writ of certiorari, the mandate shall issue immediately.’’ (Emphasis added).
In this case, due to a clerical error, the mandate was not issued on July 2, 1990, the day the Supreme Court’s denial of the State’s petition for certiorari was filed in this court, and the mandate had not yet issued on July 10, 1990, when the State submitted its petition for rehearing and suggestion for rehearing before the full en banc court. As a result, the State urged us to stay issuаnce of the mandate and retain jurisdiction to reconsider our prior decision in light of the Supreme Court’s recent decisions in Walton v. Arizona, — U.S. —,
The State relies on the three-judge panel decision in Bryant v. Ford,
In Bryant, the exceptional circumstance held to warrant a stay of the mandate was Congress’s enactment of an amendment to the removal jurisdiction statute, while the casе was pending on certiorari, providing that the inclusion of “doe defendants” in a civil complaint did not defeat diversity jurisdiction. See Bryant,
In Bryant, as in Zipfel, the application of the change in the law required a significant change in the result for the parties. In the Adamson case before us, the application of the subsequent Supreme Court authority does not require a change in the result of our en banc decision. The Supreme Court’s decisions in Walton and Jef-fers overrule in some respects our en banc rulings in Adamson on the issues regarding the overall constitutionality of Arizona’s statute for sentencing in capital cases. However, there are two bases for our decision that were not affected by Walton and Jeffers, those being (1) judicial arbitrariness in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, and (2) prosecu-torial vindictiveness. The judicial arbitrariness determination overrides the determination of prosecutorial vindictiveness because the former triggers complete relief, whereas the latter only requires a remand for an evidentiary hearing. Adamson,
In Part II, we affirm the district court on the issue of judicial vindictiveness. We reverse the district court with regard to the issue of prosecutorial vindictiveness and remand with instructions to conduct an evidentiary hearing on that issue,
In Part III, we reverse the district court and hold that the death penalty was imposed arbitrarily, in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.*620 We remand to the district court with instructions tо grant the writ of habeas corpus unless the State, within a reasonable time, resentences Adamson to a sentence other than death.
Id.
The State contends that the Supreme Court’s decision in Alabama v. Smith,
In this en banc decision, we need not determine whether the standard used in Zipfel and Bryant to recall or stay the mandate is sufficiently stringent to determine its applicability to criminal cases. Even under the threshold specified in those cases, the stay of the mandate for reconsideration by the limited en banc court is not justified. The subsequent Supreme Court authority does not dictate a сhange in result. The judgment would remain the same. It is apparent that the Supreme Court authority on the Arizona statutory issues, to the extent it is inconsistent with our holdings, must govern future cases. Panels of this court are not bound by decisions of prior panels or en banc decisions that are clearly inconsistent with subsequent Supreme Court decisions. See Sheehan v. United States,
District courts and appellate panels are fully capable of applying the Supreme Court precedent and distinguishing it from circuit court precedent that is inconsistent. This is a common occurrence in the federal judicial system when the Supreme Court overrules circuit court precedent. Several panels of our court have already done so in applying our en banc decision in this case. See, e.g., Nichols v. McCormick,
VI.
Teague Contention
The State urges us for the first time in its brief on this motion that exceptional circumstances exist to allow staying the mandate and reconsideration of our en banc decision because of the nonretroactivity principles announced in Teague v. Lane,
VII.
Conclusion
We conclude that, because of the requirements of Fed.R.App.P. 41(b), the mandate should issue immediately. Any stay of mandate would have to be justified upon
THE MANDATE SHALL ISSUE IMMEDIATELY.
Notes
. In denying the State’s petition, four justices voted to deny certiorari, three justices voted to grant certiorari, and the remaining two justices took no part in deciding whether to grant review.
Dissenting Opinion
with whom Judges ALARCON and BEEZER join, dissenting:
The unique prоcedural history of this case deprived the state from fully challenging the correctness of our prior en banc decision. Adamson v. Ricketts,
I.
Case History
I agree with the majority that an understanding of the procedural posture of this matter is necessary to consider the question before us. This is the third time our en banc court has heard an issue stemming from John Adamson’s conviction for the 1976 murder of Donald Bolles, an investigative reporter. The first en banc decision reversed a three-judge panel and would have vacated Adamson’s murder conviction on double jeopardy grounds. Adamson v. Ricketts,
When the en banc court resumed control of the case on remand it again reversed Adamson’s death sentence and remanded for resentencing. Adamson v. Ricketts,
After our en banc decision, Arizona was faced with a choice: challenge our decision (in particular, our ruling on the constitutionality of the Arizona statutory scheme) through a request for a rehearing before the full court of the Ninth Circuit or petition the Supreme Court for a writ of certio-rari. Arizona made the reasonable determination that our cases might be contrary to Supreme Court precedent and that the Court would grant certiorari to consider these important issues. This is exactly what happened in Lewis and Walton.
But something unexpected happened in Adamson. Two Justices, O’Connor and Kennedy, did not take part in the consideration of the petition for writ of certiorari. Lewis v. Adamson, — U.S. —,
II.
Exceptional Circumstances
This unusual circumstance justifies recalling our mandate and reconsidering our decision. The judicial power is vested in the Supreme Court first and we are an inferior court bound to follow its dictates. U.S. Const., art. III, § 1. The actions of the Court following our Adamson en banc decisions should сause us to question whether we correctly applied the law. We have an opportunity to do so, and at least three of the Justices believe it is necessary. The rare posture of this case is exceptional enough for us to take the severe step of recalling our mandate.
In conclusion, I will also note that our holding relating to judicial arbitrariness, while currently the law of our circuit, must be read in light of the Supreme Court’s subsequent cases.
I would order a recall of our mandate to reconsider our second en banc decision.
