Kеnt Eric LEBERE, Petitioner-Appellant, v. James ABBOTT, Warden; John W. Suthers, the Attorney General of the State of Colorado, Respondents-Appellees.
No. 11-1090
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit
Oct. 18, 2013
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM.2
James L. Volling, Faegre & Benson LLP, Minneapolis, MN (Jesseca R.F. Cockson, Martin S. Chester, Christina C. Semmer, and Daniel G. Prokott, Faegre & Benson LLP, Minneapolis, MN; Laurence W. DeMuth, III, Faegre & Benson LLP, Boulder, CO; and Jennifer K. Harrison, Faegre & Benson LLP, Denver, CO, with him on the briefs), for Petitioner-Appellant.
John D. Seidel, Senior Assistant Attorney General (John W. Suthers, Attorney General, with him on the brief), State of Colorado, Denver, CO, for Respondents-Appellees.
Before KELLY, O‘BRIEN, and MATHESON, Circuit Judges.
O‘BRIEN, Circuit Judge.
Kent LeBere is serving a 60-year term of imprisonment imposed by a Colorado court as a result of his conviction for second-degree murder and second-degree arson. In his
The procedural history of this case is somewhat convoluted (as we will detail)
LeBere contends Colorado‘s successive bar has no effect on the availability of habeas review of his particular claims. He is correct. We reverse.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On October 16, 1998, Linda Richards‘s van was set ablaze from the inside and abandoned at a car wash on the west side of Colorado Springs, Colorado. Her partially clothed remains were found wedged between the two front seats of the van. An autopsy confirmed she had died from strangulation before the fire was set.
The State of Colorado charged LeBere with Richards‘s murder. He pled not guilty and the case went to trial.
The prosecution‘s case was primarily circumstantial. LeBere was observed leaving a bar on the east side of town with Richards hours before her death. Later, he was viewed on the store‘s security camera as he caught a cab ride home from a convenience store located several blocks from the car wash. The cab driver identified him as the man he picked up at thе convenience store at 2:45 a.m., less than an hour after witnesses spotted the burning van. Although LeBere admitted to leaving the bar with Richards, he initially provided conflicting stories about what happened next. He told the police two stories (he walked home from the bar and Richards drove him home) and told his aunt a third (Richards had driven him across town to go to another bar, he became sick, left her car, walked around until he found the convenience store, got something to eat and called a cab).
There was no physical evidence linking LeBere to the murder. In addition, Yvonne Castro, the only witness who actually saw the vаn prior to the fire, testified to observing a man standing next to it. She described the man as wearing light clothing and a fishing hat. LeBere, however, was wearing dark clothing and no hat. Tellingly, Castro viewed the convenience store‘s surveillance footage of LeBere on the night of the murder and did not identify LeBere as the man she saw at the car wash.
The State‘s only direct evidence was the testimony of Ronnie Archuleta, an inmate who had been housed with LeBere shortly after his arrest. Archuleta‘s testimony included a story LeBere had related to him. In that story, LeBere admitted to raping Richards, strangling her to death, and burning her van to concеal the evidence. According to Archuleta, LeBere said he killed Richards so she would not be able to identify him from a distinctive tattoo on his arm.
As part of his defense, LeBere presented evidence about another person—Richards‘s fiancé, Russell Herring. In his testimony, Herring admitted the couple‘s relationship had been tumultuous, poisoned by infidelity and punctuated by bouts of violence, and he confessed to having physically assaulted Richards in the past. He also testified as follows: The couple argued the evening of Richards‘s death resulting in Herring telling Richards he was considering ending their relationship. When Richards left the house Hеrring figured, correctly, she was headed for a bar. He stayed home that night.
Herring‘s testimony about staying home was challenged. The defense presented evidence of his car having been driven the night of the murder. Specifically, a neighbor heard a noise which sounded like a truck leaving the house. Moreover, Richards‘s father saw the vehicle the following morning and noticed an accumulation of water on the windshield. He described it as dew, but a meteorologist testified the weather conditions made it scientifically impossible for dew to have formed. According to the meteorologist, there could be only two explanations for the water: either someone had placed it on the windshield or someone had been breathing inside the car.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In February 2000, while LeBere‘s case was pending on direct appeal, Archuleta contacted LeBere‘s attorney and recanted his trial testimony. He said the whole story was fabricated; LeBere had never confessed. Worse, he said his false testimony had been induced by the lead detective on the case, J.D. Walker, who visited him in jail and promised to push for favorable treatment in his pending criminal case if he would implicate LeBere in the Richards murder. According to Archuleta, Walker knew the testimony Archuleta gave at trial was false—LeBere had never confessed. Moreover, Walker furnished Archuleta with a copy of the police reports, presumably so he could come up with a plausible confession story.
Relying on the recantation, LeBere moved for a new trial based on newly
LeBere initiated pro se federal habeas proceedings in July 2003. He raised, inter alia, error in the state courts’ denial of his motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. The State responded, claiming dismissal was appropriate for failure to allege a violation of federal law, see Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U.S. 62, 67-68, 112 S.Ct. 475, 116 L.Ed.2d 385 (1991), and even assuming such a federal claim could be divined from his petition, it was unexhausted.5 Counsel for LeBere entered their appearance and moved to stay the federal proceedings to allow LeBere to return to state court and exhaust his claims. The district judge granted the motion.6
With the assistance of new counsel, LeBere filed a motion for post-conviction relief in state court pursuant to
LeBere then returned to federal court with an amended
DISCUSSION
We review a state court‘s decision under appropriate habeas standards. If the state court, in fact, reached the merits our review is deferential; otherwise it is de novo. See Mitchell v. Gibson, 262 F.3d 1036, 1045 (10th Cir. 2001). However, “[w]hen a state court declines to review the merits of a petitioner‘s claim on the ground that it has done so already, it creates no bar to federal habeas review.” Cone v. Bell, 556 U.S. 449, 466, 129 S.Ct. 1769, 173 L.Ed.2d 701 (2009).
In his Rule 35(c) post-conviction proceedings, LeBere presented his Brady claim to the state courts. But the post-conviction court did not resolve the Brady claim оn the merits. Instead, it declined review under a Colorado rule barring post-conviction review of a claim raised and resolved in a previous proceeding. See
In Cone, the Supreme Court decided a state court‘s refusal to consider the merits of a claim because the claim was previously determined is not a proper basis for denying federal habeas review. Cone, 556 U.S. at 466. This is not a novel proposition. We are among several circuits to have previously reached the same conclusion, Page v. Frank, 343 F.3d 901, 907 (7th Cir. 2003); Brecheen v. Reynolds, 41 F.3d 1343, 1358 (10th Cir. 1994); Bennett v. Whitley, 41 F.3d 1581, 1582-83 (5th Cir. 1994); Silverstein v. Henderson, 706 F.2d 361, 368 (2d Cir. 1983), and the Supreme Court had implied as much nearly two decades earlier in Ylst v. Nunnemaker, 501 U.S. 797, 804 n. 3, 111 S.Ct. 2590, 115 L.Ed.2d 706 (1991). Cone‘s contribution was to confirm that the principle applies with equal force where a state court refuses to consider a federal claim on the erroneous premise that it had already been adjudicated. Cone, 556 U.S. at 466-67.
The facts in Cone are on all fours with this case. After he was convicted and sentenced to death, Gary Conе appealed his conviction, arguing prosecutors had violated state law by failing to disclose evidence strengthening his defense—he committed the murders while in the throes of a drug-induced psychosis. Id. at 454, 457. His appeal was unsuccessful, and the Tennessee courts denied post-conviction relief. Id. at 457.
The post-conviction court denied review because, it concludеd, the Brady claim had been previously determined on direct appeal; the appellate court affirmed and the state supreme court and United States Supreme Court denied review. Id. at 460-61. Cone then raised his Brady claim in a
The Supreme Court vacated the Sixth Circuit‘s decision and remanded to the district court. Id. at 452. While thеre was some confusion as to whether the state appellate court had refused to reach the merits of the Brady claim because it had been previously determined or because it had been waived, the Supreme Court concluded the basis for the decision was the former—it had been previously determined. Id. at 467-68. The state court‘s decision rested on a “false premise,” the Supreme Court explained, because the claim Cone raised on direct appeal arose under state law, not Brady. Id. at 466. In any event, the application of Tennessee‘s successive bar did not preclude federal review: “When a state court refuses to adjudicate a claim on the ground that it has been previously determined, the court‘s decision does not indicate that the claim has been procedurally defaulted. To the contrary, it provides strong evidence that the claim has already been given full consideration by the state courts and thus is ripe for federal adjudication.” Id. at 467.
The Court‘s decision in Cone controls the outcome of this case. As in Cone, LeBere raised a state-law nondisclosure claim on direct appeal and, based on the same facts, a Brady claim on post-conviction review. And, as in Cone, the post-conviction court applied the state bar on successive claims in declining to reach the merits. If the apрlication of the successive bar in Cone did not affect the availability of federal review, the same should be true for a nearly identical rule here.
We can discern only one potentially material distinction between the two cases, and it relates to the scope of the applicable successive bars. In Cone, hearings on petitions for post-conviction relief could not be based on claims “previously determined,” meaning a court had “ruled on the merits of the claim after a full and fair hearing.” Id. at 458 n. 8 (quotations omitted). The Colorado successive bar appears to sweep more broadly, if only slightly. The rulе limits review to claims not “raised and resolved” in a prior proceeding. See
The apparent distinction disappears upon closer examination of the two rules. Like Colorado‘s Rule 35, Tennessee‘s successive bar rule was designed in the mold of its federal counterpart concerning successive
More than that, they are cut from the same cloth. Both rules represent legislative tweaks on the common law doctrine of res judicata, both are modeled on the Supreme Court‘s decision in Sanders v. United States, and both were created to serve the same principle—finality. Rodriguez, 914 P.2d at 249; Sherman, 172 P.3d at 916; Bledsoe v. State, No. W2000-02701-CCA-R3-PC, 2001 WL 1078269, at *3-4 (Tenn. Crim. App. Sep. 14, 2001) (unpublished); Johnson, 1994 WL 90483, at *13; Bates, 1993 WL 144618, at *5; Anderson, supra, 48 Tenn. L. Rev. at 607 n. 3, 611, 626, 659. Much like the doctrine of res judicata, their application goes to a previous determination of the merits of a case, which is what the Court was driving at in Cone when it said a procedural bar covers claims that have not been fairly presented, not claims that have been presented more than once. See Cone, 556 U.S. at 467.
The State‘s attempt to limit Cone to its facts is misguided. In several places it simply misreads the decision. Elsewhere it conjures up distinctions either not there or otherwise having no bearing on the application of Cone to this case. For instance, it stakes its argument on the incorrect premise that Cone “assumed the very fact in dispute here,” namely, “the claims presented each of two times to state courts were federal in nature and identical.” (Respondent‘s Supp. Br. at 7, 9.) This could not be further from the truth. Far from assuming the two claims were identical, the Supreme Court concluded Cone did not present a Brady claim on direct appeal, and even faulted the State for “conflating” Brady with the state-law non
The State tries to distinguish Cone by pointing to uncertainty as to which procedural bar—the waiver rule or the bar on successive claims—had been invoked by the Tennessee courts. While initially there may have been some uncertainty in this regard, in reaching its decision the Supreme Court concluded the Tennessee appellate court had applied the successive bar, not the waiver rule, in declining to reach the merits of the Brady claim. Id. at 467-69. It was by way of this conclusion that the Court arrived at its broader holding—a state court‘s determination that a claim has already been adjudicated does not preclude federal habeas review.
The State makes much of the fact that Colorado‘s successive bar mirrors the one applied by federal courts under former Rule 9(b) of the Rules Governing
There is, admittedly, a shallow logic at work here: if federal law precluded review of federal claims arising from facts determined in earlier federal habeas proceedings, should nоt an identical state bar operate to a similar effect? The wisps of logic dissolve when one considers the contours of the procedural default doctrine; the federal habeas rules do not inform a debate animated by an entirely different set of principles. When a district court invoked the successive bar in Rule 9(b) and declined to entertain a federal prisoner‘s request for habeas relief, it did so knowing the prisoner had a fair opportunity to present his claim in federal court. But no such assurance attends a decision declining review of a state prisoner‘s request for habeas relief on thе ground that a state court decided it was previously determined. Whether the federal claim was previously decided, as opposed to being waived, must ultimately be determined by a federal court. The federal court must determine whether the state court‘s refusal to revisit the claim excuses its obligation under
Given the posture of this case there is no procedural bar to habeas review. The irony has not escaped us.12 Had the Colorado courts decided LeBere‘s Brady claim was waived or forfeited because it could have been but was not raised on direct appeal (as is clearly the case—he was aware of the pertinent facts but neither made mention of Brady nor fairly alluded to it), see
Instead, the Colorado Court of Appeals concluded the Brady claim had been decided because it was necessarily included in the new trial motion. However, while the new trial motion was based on the same
REVERSED and REMANDED.
