The facts and prior procedural history of this case are set forth in the Court’s opinion of December 20, 1983.
This Court had vacated the judgment of the district court sua sponte because it appeared to us on the record before us that petitioner had failed to exhaust available remedies in the Kentucky courts. We found that petitioner had not presented the Kentucky Supreme Court with the claim that his procedural default should be excused to prevent injustice or because his counsel was inadequate. We held that Ky. R.Cr. 11.42 afforded petitioner an adequate post-conviction opportunity to raise these claims and that it had not been utilized.
After certiorari was granted, counsel for petitioner first learned that petitioner had filed two pro se state post-conviction actions under Ky.R.Cr. 11.42 prior to the filing of his habeas corpus action, and these facts were acknowledged by the respondent. In view of these events, unknown to counsel and unasserted before us in our previous consideration, the case is remanded to us to reconsider the petitioner’s appeal from the dismissal by the district court on its merits.
I
NECESSITY OF A “CAUSE AND PREJUDICE” HEARING.
The standard of “cause” for a procedural default was left open for case-by-case determination in the seminal case of
Wainwright v. Sykes,
This Court has held that a hearing is necessary to determine cause and prejudice under
Sykes. See Hockenbury v. Sowders,
One of the early cases that establishes that evidentiary hearings should be held to determine whether incompetence of counsel constituted “cause” under
Sykes
was
Jiminez v. Estelle,
Because the
Sykes
court left open the standard of “cause” for a case-by-case determination, the Ninth Circuit has held that the degree of attorney inadvertence necessary to constitute cause must be resolved by examination of the particular facts at hand. Thus, the court held that an eviden-tiary hearing should be required in many cases.
Farrow v. United States,
Under the circumstances in the present case, the district court must grant the petitioner a hearing to determine whether there was cause and prejudice to justify his procedural default. The district court gave the petitioner no opportunity to demonstrate why his counsel failed to preserve the error or to hear from trial counsel whether there was a legitimate reason for the default. Because there are factual issues in dispute and an insufficient record upon which to resolve the legitimate claims advanced by the petitioner, the district court erred in denying petitioner’s request for a cause and prejudice hearing.
See Hines v. Enomoto,
This case must therefore be remanded to the district court for a hearing on cause and prejudice. In reviewing this ease, the Court must consider the various claims which the petitioner has raised. To ensure that the district court has- adequate guidance to resolve the issues, and to clarify the standard of cause and prejudice for future cases, we will proceed to discuss the considerations necessary for informed resolution of this case.
II
INEFFECTIVENESS OF COUNSEL
Counsel for the state assert that ineffectiveness of counsel can never constitute cause for a procedural default. They rely primarily on two cases:
Washington v. Estelle,
Subsequent to the decision in
Lumpkin,
the Fifth Circuit held that proof of ineffectiveness of counsel was a sufficient showing of cause under
Sykes
to justify review of defaulted claims.
Sincox v. United States,
The Ninth Circuit has held that the inadvertence or ignorance of counsel will constitute cause even if the attorney’s handling of the case does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.
Garrison v. McCarthy,
The district court in the present case did not recognize the petitioner’s claim that ineffective assistance of counsel may constitute cause for a procedural default. This claim, however, has consistently been upheld in this circuit. In
Canary v. Bland,
The district court should therefore afford the petitioner an opportunity to establish that his trial attorney’s conduct satisfied the cause and prejudice standard of
Sykes.
It is conceivable that the petitioner may be able to establish that his counsel was ineffective. This circuit defines effective counsel as one who performs “at least as well as a lawyer with ordinary training and skill in the criminal law.”
Beasley v. United States,
Ill
OTHER FACTORS
There are factors in this case other than the effectiveness of counsel, and the district court should not limit its consideration of cause and prejudice to the issue of whether counsel was sufficiently effective. The right at issue in this ease is a fundamental one — the right not to be convicted unless guilt is proved by sufficient evidence. The district court must therefore determine, after a full and fair hearing, whether such a basic right is entitled to a more moderate calculation of cause and prejudice and whether the state presents sufficient interests in finality to justify its strong limitations on a review of that right.
The petitioner asserts that
Sykes
should not apply to claims of insufficient evidence to support a conviction. It is a denial of due process to convict and punish a person without evidence of that person’s guilt.
Thompson v. City of Louisville,
In
Jackson v. Virginia,
Nevertheless, the Supreme Court has indicated that the cause and prejudice standard applies to sufficiency of the evidence claims. In
Jackson,
the Court implicitly recognized this requirement: “Thus, assuming ... that no independent and adequate state ground stands as a bar, [citing
Francis (v. Henderson,
The importance of this right, however, affects the calculation of cause and prejudice. The state interests served by Sykes and Isaac are not present to the same degree in a ease such as this, and may well be insufficient to justify the State’s procedural barriers. There is clearly no tactical justification to be gained by failing to assert a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, nor any reason to “sandbag” the claim for later determination. Nor is there, a compelling need for a challenge to be made at trial as there is in the case of an objection to jury instructions or a motion to suppress evidence. In those cases there is a need to proceed with the trial and submit the factual issues to the jury. Moreover, a successful challenge to those violations would require a retrial of the ease on remand. Here, however, where the sufficiency of evidence may be resolved from the record, there may be no need to bring the case back again before a jury. Therefore, the interest in finality and in making the trial the “main event” are not as compelling.
Unlike the contemporaneous objection rule in
Sykes,
the procedural requirement in this case is not as common and well-established a rule. Prior to 1977, the Kentucky courts had allowed sufficiency of the evidence claims to be preserved for appellate review by a motion for a directed verdict or on a motion for a new trial.
See Carpenter v. Liebson,
Because of the importance of the right at issue, it is vital that criminal defendants be allowed an adequate opportunity to present these claims. An inadequate state forum for presenting sufficiency of the evidence claims will constitute “cause” for the procedural default.
See Canary v. Bland,
Because there was no evidence presented of Alcorn’s guilt under the persistent felon statute, the prejudice prong is clearly satisfied. Where is strong evidence of a petitioner’s guilt and a lack of evidence for his claim, the actual prejudice requirement is not satisfied.
United States v. Frady,
Because the petitioner may not have had sufficiently effective counsel or an adequate opportunity to raise his claims, and because his claims related to the fundamental right to proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, this cause is reversed and remanded to the district court for a hearing on cause for the procedural default.
