Julius CORPUS, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
W. J. ESTELLE, Jr., Director, Texas Department of
Corrections, Respondent-Appellee.
Thomas Ray VESSELS, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
W. J. ESTELLE, Jr., Director, Texas Department of
Corrections, Respondent-Appellee.
Nos. 77-1624 and 77-1727.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
April 28, 1978.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied June 14, 1978.
Julius Corpus, pro se.
Sylviа Demarest, Dallas, Tex. (Court-appointed), for petitioners-appellants in both cases.
John L. Hill, Atty. Gen., Joe B. Dibrell, Dunklin Sullivan, David M. Kendall, Jr., Gilbert J. Pena, Asst. Attys. Gen., Austin, Tex., for respondent-appellee in both cаses.
Thomas Ray Vessels, pro se.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas.
Before CLARK and GEE, Circuit Judges, and LYNNE*, District Judge.
GEE, Circuit Judge:
These appeals were consolidated bеcause petitioners Corpus and Vessels both claim that they are entitled to credit for "good time" served in Texas prisons pending the appeal of their criminal convictions. Vessels raises the additional issue of whether his state trial was rendered fundamentally unfair by the admission of other-crimes evidence. We deal with these issues in turn.
I. GOOD-TIME CREDIT.
Approximately two years after the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed petitioners' convictions,1 we handed down Pruett v. Texas,
The holding of Kane v. Texas was that the Pruett rule should be retroactively applied to persons detained in county jails where prison officials kept conduct records adequate to enable a сomputation of good-time credit. The district judge based this holding on the Pruett court's conclusion that any retroactive awards of good-time credit were administratively impossible because Texas prison officials had, in good faith, failed to maintain conduct records on inmates awaiting appellate review. Since in Kane the state stipulated the adequacy of the conduct records maintained at Harris County's correctional facilities where Kane had been incarcerated pending the outcome of his appeal the district court reasoned that therе was nothing to bar the retroactive application of Pruett in that particular case.
Petitioners Corpus and Vessels borrow from the reasoning of Kane. Having presented evidence that some conduct records were kept in county jails before Pruett, they contend for a rule requiring a case-by-case determination of whether the state can recompute time served for each prisoner denied good-time credit because of his choice to appeal. We reject such a rule, disapprove the holding in Kane, and affirm the rulings of the courts below.
The en banc court in Pruett started with the legal conclusion that it was not required to make its ruling retroactive because the constitutional violation found in the case had nothing to do with the reliability of the guilt-determining process.
In so holding, we rеject Corpus' claim that the district court erred in restricting his discovery of conduct records and in refusing to hold an evidentiary hearing, since we find Pruett binding regardless of the existence and adequacy оf conduct records.2 Further, the extensive discovery that Corpus requested simply underscores the complexity of determining the sufficiency of conduct records.
II. OTHER-CRIMES EVIDENCE.
Vessels was convicted of rape in a state court proceeding. His victim testified at trial that Vessels had come to her home posing as a gas company employee and had asked permission to check her household appliances for gas leaks. She allowed him to enter the house, and after he had carried on the charade for a few minutes, he threatened her with a knife, raped her twicе, and then stabbed her several times.
The evidence to which Vessels objects was the testimony of two other women, both of whom resided in Amarillo, sixty miles from the victim's home in Pampa. The first of these witnesses, а Mrs. Wulfman, stated that, three days before the rape, Vessels came to her home posing as a gas company employee making a routine check for gas leaks. She did not let him enter hеr house, however, because he lacked identification. Mrs. Wulfman also testified that her picture had appeared in a local newspaper on the morning before Vessels came to her house, just as the victim's picture had appeared in a local newspaper a few days before her rape. The second witness, a Mrs. Hill, testified that about two weeks after the rаpe, Vessels broke into her home carrying a knife. During a struggle, Vessels inflicted a minor cut on her hand.
In order for us to grant habeas relief on Vessels' evidentiary objection, the admission of the other-сrimes evidence must have rendered Vessels' trial fundamentally unfair. Hills v. Henderson,
We likewise reject Vessels' claim that the admission of the two women's testimony "forced" him to take the stand, which resulted in his impeachment by ten prior convictions. Whether or not a defendant should take the stand is wholly a matter of trial strategy. Vessels chose to do so and must take the consequences.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Senior District Judge of the Northern District of Alabama, sitting by designation
The Court of Criminal Appeаls affirmed both convictions in 1971. For Vessels it was the second time up the appellate ladder, since three years earlier his original conviction had been reversed and his case remandеd for new trial
For the same reason, we view as insignificant Corpus' additional claims that county sheriffs on occasion have recommended retroactive good-time awards to inmates in county jails pending appeal and that the Texas Department of Corrections has retroactively awarded good-time credit to those held in county jails pursuant to bench warrants issued to permit temporary release from the Department for the purpose of attending judicial proceedings. Both of these practices merely suggest the existence of conduct records and thus tend to show that the administrative burdens in making retroactive awards may be less than the state contended before the en banc court in Pruett
Corpus also argues, in a cursory fashion and without citation of authority, that the above practices violate the due process and equal protection clauses. We disagree. That one sheriff has recommended a retroactive award which is all Corpus has shown is of no significance in itself. As to the Department's retroactive awards, there are several reasons for giving good-time credit to those in county jails on bench wаrrants and not to those awaiting appeal, including the presumably smaller number of prisoners affected and the existence of computer-filed conduct records for those already in the Department's custody, which allows the instantaneous recomputation of time served without the necessity of contacting county officials to determine how long each prisoner was held in county jail.
The rape occurred in mid-afternoon. The victim testified that Vessels was in her home for approximately thirty minutes and that she got a good look at his face
