Kevin Taylor admitted that he stabbed his ex-wife’s live-in lover to death, but maintained that his crime was manslaughter. An Illinois jury disagreed — maybe— and declared him a murderer. In this petition for a writ of habeas corpus, Taylor argues that his conviction was invalid because the instructions given the jury were defective, precluding it from returning a voluntary manslaughter verdict when one may have been appropriate.
Taylor’s appraisal of the jury instructions in his case is well taken. The Illinois Supreme Court held in
People v. Reddick,
I.
A.
Prior to the killing a tense relationship had developed between Taylor and Scott Siniscalchi, the new romantic interest and housemate of his ex-wife Joyce. Katie Taylor, the young daughter of Joyce and Kevin, lived with Joyce and Siniscalchi, and the two men argued on occasion when Sin-isealchi would bring Katie to Taylor’s trailer home for parental visits. Taylor also claimed that Siniscalchi ridiculed and antagonized him when both men were working at a fair.
The bad blood reached a boiling point on September 14, 1985. At approximately 1 a.m., Taylor called Joyce — not an uncommon occurrence, as she often worked late hours — to arrange for visitation plans with Katie the following morning. The two spoke for a few moments, agreed that Taylor would pick Katie up at Joyce’s home, and hung up. Taylor then realized that he had other plans that morning, and called Joyce back to make alternate arrangements. Siniscalchi answered the phone and refused to let Taylor speak with Joyce; he claimed that she was tired and needed sleep. Taylor then asked Siniscalchi if he would bring Katie to meet Taylor at the municipal pool that morning. Siniscalchi refused, and (according to Taylor) said that he wasn’t going to bring Katie anywhere to see Taylor. Finally, Taylor offered to pick Katie up at that moment, to which Siniscal-chi replied (again, according to Taylor), “Well, suit yourself, but you’re not going to get her.” XIII Tr. at 70.
Agitated that Siniscalchi was trying to keep him from his daughter, Taylor quickly drove to Joyce’s apartment building. Before leaving his ear, Taylor grabbed a sheathed hunting knife and stuck it in the side of his sweatpants. Taylor testified that he heard Katie crying when he approached the door of Joyce’s apartment. He beat on the door, and when nobody answered he kicked it open. Taylor then searched for Katie and found her sitting on the floor in the master bedroom, where Joyce and Siniscalchi were sitting up in bed. Taylor testified that, when he reached to pick up Katie, Siniscalchi “started to roll out of bed and looked like he was reaching for something.” Id. at 76. A fracas ensued between the three adults, and Taylor was thrown into a wall. While Siniscalchi was pulling his hair and shirt, Taylor grabbed the knife and stabbed Sinis-calchi, who screamed, “[t]he knife is in me Joyce, the knife is in me.” XII Tr. at 42. Siniscalchi died from his wounds, and Taylor was subsequently arrested.
B.
At the time of Taylor’s trial, Illinois homicide law provided that murder had two elements. First, the defendant must have performed the acts that caused the death of the victim; second, in performing those acts, the defendant must have intended to kill or do great bodily harm to the victim, must have known that the acts would cause great bodily harm or death, must have known that the acts created a strong probability of death or great bodily harm, or must have been committing a forcible felony (in Taylor’s case, home invasion). Ill. Rev.Stat., ch. 38, 119-1 (1985). Voluntary manslaughter had three elements. The first two were, for all relevant purposes, the same as both elements of murder. The third was a mitigating mental state; the defendant must have acted either under a sudden and intense passion arising from a serious provocation, or under an unreason *444 able (but honest) belief that deadly force was justified to prevent his imminent death or great bodily harm. Id. ¶! 9-2. In essence, the third element worked as a partial affirmative defense to a charge of murder — partial in that a successful defense effected a murder acquittal but a manslaughter conviction. 1
At trial Taylor did not deny that he committed the homicide (although he was less forthright with the police following his arrest). He instead maintained that he acted under a sudden and intense passion provoked by Siniscalchi and hence was guilty only of voluntary manslaughter. At the close of the evidence, the judge tendered to the jury the Illinois pattern murder instructions followed by the pattern voluntary manslaughter instructions. The manslaughter instructions placed upon Taylor the burden of proving that he possessed a mitigating mental state. In addition, the instructions did not direct the jury to consider Taylor’s manslaughter defenses in the event it found both elements of murder. The jury returned a murder verdict, and the judge sentenced him to 35 years of imprisonment. (Taylor’s conviction and concurrent 6-year sentence for home invasion is not at issue here.)
On direct appeal, Taylor challenged his conviction on the ground, among others, that the jury instructions improperly assigned him the burden of proof on the mitigation issue. The trial judge, he argued, should have required the prosecution to
disprove
beyond a reasonable doubt his “sudden and intense passion” defense. The Illinois appellate court did not reach the merits of this claim, holding that Taylor had waived it by not raising it at trial.
People v. Taylor,
Taylor then sought post-conviction relief in the Illinois courts. The trial court dismissed his petition. Subsequently, the Illinois Supreme Court in
Reddick,
His state remedies exhausted, Taylor filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Eleven days later, we held in
Falconer v. Lane, supra,
that the jury instructions invalidated on state law grounds in
Reddick
also transgressed the federal due process clause. The district court in this case agreed that Taylor’s jury instructions were invalid under both
Reddick
and
Fal
*445
coner.
II.
The district court rested its decision upon an interpretation of law, not a determination of fact. Our review is therefore de novo. Because the process of distinguishing new rules from old under Teague is complicated and of somewhat novel application in this circuit, 3 we survey the terrain to structure our inquiry into whether Red-dick and Falconer indeed announced new rules, or whether both simply applied established rules in a different factual context.
In
Teague,
the Supreme Court defined a “new rule” as one that “breaks new ground,” “imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government,” or “was not
dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.”
Teague,
With these basic guidelines in mind, we can easily classify as a new rule any decision that explicitly overrules a pri- or case,
see Butler,
But, as the Court has recognized on occasion, the “new rule” rule is easier to recite than apply in most cases.
See id.
at 301,
We discern from
Teague
and its progeny two criteria that offer guidance in distinguishing “old” from “new” rules in murky cases. The first criterion, explicitly employed in
Butler,
is whether any lower federal court or state court reached a different conclusion as to the precise legal issue subsequently resolved by a given decision. In
Butler,
the habeas petitioner argued that
Arizona v. Roberson,
The fact that a given case departs from prior lower court or state court decisions on the same issue is good evidence that the ease was "susceptible to debate among reasonable minds.” But it is not dispositive. If a prior lower court or state court decision is not only incorrect, but obviously so, it could hardly be said that the existence of that decision renders a subsequent corrective a new rule. Moreover, the absence of prior contrary decisions does not necessarily indicate that a later case was beyond dispute, and hence not a new rule.
The second criterion, amenable to less precise application than the first, concerns the generality of the precedent underlying the decision at issue. The more general a given set of precedent, the more latent ambiguity inherent in that precedent, and the less likely a subsequent decision is dictated by that precedent — and therefore the more likely it announces a new rule. Conversely, the more specific the given set of precedent, the less likely a decision announces a new rule — assuming, of course, that the precedent is specific in a manner that lends easy application to the decision at issue. As will become clear shortly, applying this criterion requires that one examine precedent, however specific, in light of the factual context in which it arose.
Sawyer
presents a rather simple illustration of how levels of generality play into
Teague
new rule analysis. Petitioner there maintained that
Caldwell v. Mississippi,
Use of the generality criterion is implicit in other post-Teague cases. As noted above, Butler held that Roberson followed, but was not dictated by, Edwards, and consequently was a new rule. Edwards provides that the fifth amendment bars police from reinitiating interrogation of a suspect in custody once the suspect has requested counsel, and excludes from evidence any confessions elicited during the second (post-request) interrogation. The second interrogation in Edwards focused upon the same crime as the first. Roberson, decided seven years later, held that the Edwards rule applies when the second interrogation focuses upon a different crime than the first. The Court’s opinion in Butler suggests that Roberson was a new rule because (among other reasons) the dictate of Edwards — “police shall refrain from all further interrogation after a defendant asks for counsel” — was too general. Owing to the particular factual situation underlying Edwards, it was unclear whether a custodial defendant’s request for counsel precludes subsequent questioning only on the subject of the original interrogation or on all subjects. To have “compelled” Roberson within the meaning of Teague, Edwards would have had to be more specific (e.g., “police shall refrain from all further interrogation after a defendant asks for counsel, whether or not the second interrogation involves the same crime than the first”). Or the separate interrogations in Edwards would have had to have focused upon different crimes. (Either possibility would have rendered Roberson superfluous.) In short, Butler deemed Roberson “new” because the general rule in Edwards had a latent ambiguity; it did not specifically forbid subsequent interrogation on matters unrelated to the first interrogation, and thus possibly was limited to resumption of the original line of questioning.
By way of contrast, consider the following hypothetical. Instead of Edwards and Roberson the Supreme Court decided two similar cases, Jones and Smith. Jones announced the same rule as Edwards, but arose in a case where the first interrogation involved a murder and the second, conducted after the defendant requested counsel, a vehicular homicide. Smith reaffirmed the Jones rule in a situation where the first interrogation focused on a murder and the second on mail fraud. A habeas petitioner, whose conviction became final after Jones but prior to Smith, seeks the benefit of the two cases where his two crimes, also subject to sequential rounds of questioning interrupted with a request for counsel, were identical to those in Smith. The question arises whether Smith announced a new rule. If it did, the petitioner is denied relief; if it did not, he gets the benefit of Smith (and, it follows, Jones, for if Smith is not new, Jones applies with equal force).
The state, were it to make the case that Smith announced a new rule, would argue as follows. The rule in Jones — “police shall refrain from all further interrogation after a defendant asks for counsel” — is too general in light of the factual context in which it arose. Jones, in other words, contains a latent ambiguity because it is unclear whether its provisions apply only to cases where both interrogations involved homicides, or perhaps crimes of a similar type (e.g., two different burglaries). Jones, then, did not compel Smith because the second interrogation there involved a mail fraud scheme, a different type of crime than murder, the subject of the first interrogation.
This argument, however, cuts too finely. The purpose of Jones is to prevent reinter-rogation once a defendant requests counsel, and the facts of the case clearly indicate that the rule applies regardless of whether the separate interrogations involve separate crimes. That the separate crimes were both homicides, or of the same general type, is of almost no relevance to the gist of Jones. (In contrast, one could plausibly — though, ultimately, incorrectly — maintain that the purpose of Edwards, in light of its facts, was to prevent renewal of interrogation on the same crime; when the defendant asserted his Miranda rights *448 with respect to crime # 1, he may have been unaware that he was under investigation for crime # 2, or perhaps more willing to talk about his involvement in crime # 2.) The supposed latent ambiguity in Jones is a fiction, because no reasonable jurist would distinguish Smith from Jones on the specious grounds advanced (hypothetically) by the state. It follows that the Jones rule, even in light of its particular facts, is specific enough to compel Smith, and hence that Smith is not a new rule.
To sum up, we adopt the following analysis when deciding whether a case announces a new rule under Teague. First, we determine whether the case clearly falls in one category or another — if it overrules or significantly departs from precedent, or decides a question previously reserved, it is a new rule, while if it applies a prior decision almost directly on point to a closely analogous set of facts, it is not. Second, when the question is a close one, we will look to (1) whether the case at issue departs from previous rulings by lower courts or state courts, and (2) the level of generality of prior precedent in light of the factual context in which that precedent arose.
III.
The Illinois Supreme Court in
Red-dick
invalidated jury instructions identical in all relevant respects to those tendered at Taylor’s trial. The central issue in
Red-dick
was whether, in a homicide case, the defendant or the prosecution bears the burden of proving whether the defendant had a mitigating mental state when the killing occurred. The Court found that this issue was controlled by § 3-2 of the Illinois Criminal Code of 1961 (Ill.Rev.Stat., ch. 38, ¶ 3-2 (1985)).
Reddick,
if a defendant in a murder trial presents sufficient evidence to raise issues which would reduce the charge of murder to voluntary manslaughter, then to sustain the murder conviction, the People must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that those defenses are meritless....
Id.
at
Both parties here agree that the instructions given at Taylor’s trial contravene
Reddick
and that
Reddick
was handed down after Taylor’s conviction became final. They disagree as to whether we should accord Taylor the retroactive benefit of
Reddick.
Both parties assume that
Teague
governs here; Taylor maintains that
Reddick
did not announce a new rule, while the state maintains that it did. Their assumption, however, is incorrect. It is irrelevant whether the rule in
Reddick
is new or old, for it was grounded solely on Illinois criminal law, and we are foreclosed from granting habeas relief because a state court committed an error of state law.
See Estelle v. McGuire,
— U.S.-,
By stating our holding in such categorical terms we do not mean to imply that the precise nature of
Reddick
(that it is based solely on state law) was always free from doubt, or even that we had no hand in creating this doubt. In
Rose v. Lane,
We take this opportunity to dispel any such impressions.
Reddick,
according to its own terms, was controlled by § 3-2 of the Illinois Criminal Code. The question here is whether the case was
also
controlled by the federal constitution;
Reddick
left this question unaddressed because of its grounding in state law. We find that it was not. First, any links with the due process principles in
Falconer
are illusory.
Falconer,
as we shall see, did not rest on burden of proof questions, but rather upon the fact that the instructions were confusing and could permit a jury to completely ignore whether the defendant had a mitigating mental state — regardless of who bore the burden of proof.
Falconer,
Nor was
Reddick
based upon due process rule underlying
Mullaney v. Wilbur,
The question, then, is whether malice was an element of murder in Illinois at the time of Taylor’s conviction. It was at one point, but Illinois deleted the phrase “malice aforethought” from its murder statute when it revised the Criminal Code in 1961. Taylor, pointing to several Illinois appellate court decisions, makes a spirited argument that, the amendment notwithstanding, malice remains an element of murder. His argument, however, is doomed by the Illinois Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in
People v. Wright,
Reddick,
therefore, does not rest upon federal due process principles, but rather is controlled solely by the Illinois Criminal Code (which, as it certainly may, gives criminal defendants tried in Illinois courts more breaks than it is required to by the federal due process clause). Any indications to the contrary in our prior decisions are disavowed. Taylor consequently cannot reap the benefit of
Reddick
on collateral review, for we may not grant habeas relief to remedy an error of state law.
See McGuire,
In fact, this case is markedly similar to
Engle v. Issac,
For the foregoing reasons, the question of whether
Reddick
constitutes a “new rule” under
Teague
is irrelevant, for we can give the case neither retroactive nor prospective application on collateral review. One problem remains — the state arguably waived this argument by not pushing it either in the district court or on appeal. While we generally disregard waived issues, there are a narrow class of exceptions, primarily those involving “delicate issues of comity.”
Thomas v. Indiana,
IV.
Falconer
was a habeas case in which we considered the same Illinois murder and manslaughter pattern jury instructions invalidated in
Reddick.
The two sets of instructions, we observed, were fine when read separately.
Falconer,
The parties agree that the instructions given at Taylor’s trial were invalid under Falconer. We therefore consider only whether Falconer announced a new rule, and, if not, whether the defective instructions were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. 5
A.
The state contends that
Falconer
departed from our “previously expressed views of the Illinois murder and voluntary manslaughter statutes.” Resp.Br. at 10. If this is true,
Falconer
is definitely a new rule.
See
p. 445
ante; Teague,
*451
The state’s strongest argument in this regard is that
Falconer
broke from
Peery v. Sielaff,
Falconer is not the type of case that departed from precedent and hence obviously announced a new rule. Further, since there was no precedent directly on point at the time Falconer was decided, nor was it clearly an application of an old rule. We therefore apply the two-part analysis laid out above for difficult “new rule” cases.
B.
1.
Our first inquiry is whether lower courts or state courts had previously disagreed with the ruling we subsequently handed down in
Falconer.
The state points to
Fleming v. Gramley,
Fleming I
never reached, even tangentially, the central issue decided in
Falconer
— what due process requires in the event a defendant presents credible evidence that
could have
supported a manslaughter verdict. (The petitioner in
Falconer
had cleared this threshold.) Seen in this light,
Fleming I
is distinguishable from
Falconer
on factual, not legal, grounds.
See id.
at 307-08. It therefore does not represent the type of frontal assault on
Falconer
which suggests prior disagreement with the precise legal issue decided therein.
See Thomas,
The state also calls our attention to
People v. McGee,
We therefore find no indication that lower courts or state courts had previously split on the issue ultimately decided in Falconer.
2.
Our second inquiry concerns the generality of the case law underlying
Falconer. Falconer
considered itself an application of
Cupp v. Naughten,
But this does not end our inquiry. In determining whether a given decision is compelled by precedent, we examine not only the precedent the decision actually cites, but also the precedent it could have cited. Self-characterization has never been considered dispositive in
Teague
new rule analysis. The simple fact that a decision, for whatever reason, fails to cite the authorities that compel it does not render it a new rule, any more than the fact that a decision describes itself as “controlled” by the authorities it cites renders it an application of an old rule.
See Butler,
Falconer, recall, reversed petitioner’s murder conviction because the jury could have interpreted the jury instructions as permitting it to return a murder verdict without first considering the defendant’s manslaughter defenses. Our holding actually rested upon two premises: first, that the instructions were inherently ambiguous and susceptible to more than one interpretation; and, second, that a murder verdict reached (in accordance with one of these interpretations) without considering a defendant’s manslaughter defenses violates due process. An examination of all relevant case law, particularly Cupp’s progeny, convinces us that there was precedent specific enough to have compelled each of these premises at the time Falconer was decided.
We first consider Falconer’s ruling that the challenged jury instructions were ambiguous and susceptible to an erroneous (we assume for the moment it was erroneous) interpretation. Prevailing law at the time
Falconer
was decided provided that, in cases challenging the sufficiency of ambiguous jury instructions, a court must view the instructions “as a whole,”
Cupp,
■ Second, we consider
Falconer’s
holding that instructions permitting a jury to reach a murder verdict without considering evidence that would warrant mitigation to voluntary manslaughter (in accordance with a reasonable interpretation of those instructions) violates due process.
Connecticut v. Johnson,
Granted, one could conceivably argue that Johnson does not address the specific issue under consideration in Falconer, and hence does not dictate its result. Johnson involved instructions that lead the jury to ignore exculpatory evidence as to intent, an element of the crime (attempted murder) of which petitioner there was convicted. Falconer, in contrast, involved instructions that lead the jury to ignore evidence regarding a mitigating mental state, the absence of which (in Illinois) is not an element of murder, but rather the presence of which is an affirmative defense. This argument, however, carves an insignificant distinction. What ultimately mattered in Johnson was that the jury could not weigh evidence that may have led to an acquittal on the charge of conviction — regardless of whether the evidence related to an element of the crime or an affirmative defense. In a state that defines manslaughter and murder as separate crimes, and at a trial where a defendant is constitutionally entitled to voluntary manslaughter instructions, a homicide committed under a sudden and intense passion is no more a murder than á homicide committed without the intent to kill. In this light, the principle laid out in Johnson is indistinguishable from that applied in Falconer.
In accordance with the two-pronged analysis established herein, we find that Falconer is not a new rule, and hence that Taylor is entitled to its retroactive application.
*454 C.
We now consider whether the erroneous jury instructions at Taylor’s trial were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Rose v. Clark,
The state contends that the jury, had it been constitutionally instructed, would have still (beyond a reasonable doubt) returned a murder verdict, and therefore that the error was harmless under
Chapman.
We have rejected similar contentions in the past, finding that the constitutional errors in the Illinois murder/manslaughter pattern instructions were “inherently prejudicial.”
Fleming,
* * * * * *
We grant Taylor’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The writ shall issue unless the State of Illinois elects to retry him within 120 days.
Reversed.
Notes
. Pursuant to amendments to the Illinois Criminal Code effective July 1, 1987, the crime of “murder” is now "first degree murder,” and "voluntary manslaughter” is now "second degree murder.”
See
Ill.Ann.Stat. ch. 38, ¶¶ 9-1, 9-2 (Smith-Hurd 1991);
Fleming v. Huch,
. Or, perhaps, 90 days later.
Penry v. Lynaugh,
. To our knowledge, the only case deciding whether a given decision announced a new rule is
Thomas v. Indiana,
. In a similar vein,
Sawyer v. Smith,
supra—which held that
Caldwell v. Mississippi,
. At the outset, we note that Taylor’s attorney failed to challenge the jury instructions at trial. Consequently, Taylor arguably waived the issue under
Wainwright v. Sykes,
. While the state cites these cases to demonstrate that Reddick was a new rule, it is possible that they are also relevant to the novelty of Falconer.
.
Johnson
was a plurality opinion, but the dissent did not take issue with this particular portion of the opinion. Rather, the dissent disputed the plurality’s suggestion that instructions violating
Sandstrom
warrant nearly automatic reversal, and argued instead that such errors should be subject to
Chapman
harmless error analysis.
Id.
