In this case we examine a habeas petitioner’s claim that he received ineffective assistance of counsel in the state court appeal of his conviction. Leslie Jameson appeals from the July 13, 1993, judgment of the District Court for the Eastern District of New York (I. Leo Glasser, Judge) dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. On appeal, Jameson argues that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his prior counsel decided not to raise in the Appellate Division an argument subsequently upheld by the Court of Appeals on an appeal by Jameson’s co-defendant. We conclude that appellant’s counsel made a reasonable, strategic decision based on New York law at the time of the state court appeal, and that he therefore acted within the range of professionally competent assistance.
Background
On September 23, 1980, Jameson and his co-defendant Terrance Cargill brutally assaulted and robbed Angela Grimes and her retarded son, William, in the Grimes’ Brooklyn apartment. Angela Grimes died in a hospital several weeks later, apparently as a result of the injuries she sustained during the assault. At a state court trial in 1982, Jameson and Cargill were convicted of second-degree murder, N.Y. Penal Law § 125.25 (McKinney 1987 & Supp.1993) and other offenses. Both defendants were sentenced to indeterminate prison terms of twenty years to life on the murder count and lesser concurrent terms for the other offenses.
The ineffective assistance claim concerns the trial judge’s action in granting the request of one of the jurors to be excused. After the trial had begun, the juror was discharged at her own request after she informed the Court that her mother was moving into an apartment budding in the complex where the crime occurred and where the families of the defendants resided. Though she told the Court that she could remain fair and impartial, she also stated that she feared the possible consequences for her mother and herself when they would be seen by the defendants’ relatives. Jameson’s counsel opposed the juror’s removal since she had stated that she could remain fair and impartial.
Jameson’s Appeals.
Jameson’s state court counsel did not raise the issue of the discharged juror on appeal to the New York State Appellate Division, Second Department. Instead he argued three different points: (1) defendant’s confession should not have been admitted into evidence, (2) defendant’s arrest in his home was invalid and without probable cause, and (3) defendant was not proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The Second Department affirmed Jameson’s conviction without opinion.
People v. Jamison,
1
Cargill’s Appeals.
Jameson’s co-defendant Cargill subsequently appealed his conviction to the Second Department on the sole ground that the trial court erred in dismissing the seated juror. Though the Appellate Division affirmed Cargill's conviction, the Court of Appeals reversed and ordered a new trial based on its conclusion that the juror had been unjustifiably excused.
People v. Cargill,
Discussion
Jameson now contends that he received ineffective assistance of counsel because his state court counsel failed to argue to the Second Department that Jameson was prejudiced’ by the unwarranted discharge of the juror. Appellant also asserts that the brief his counsel submitted to the Second Department made untenable arguments.
To prevail on his ineffective assistance claim, appellant must show both that his counsel acted “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance,” and that the deficiencies in his counsel’s performance were prejudicial to his defense.
Strickland v. Washington,
In
People v. Meyer,
Thus, at the time counsel appealed Jame-son’s conviction to the Appellate Division, he was entitled to believe that it would have been futile to argue that the trial judge had erred in granting a juror’s request to be excused after expressing fear related to the circumstances of the case. Hence, we cannot conclude that counsel’s decision not to include excusing the juror as a ground of appeal to the Second Department rendered his performance “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.”
Strickland,
Appellant further asserts that the three arguments that his state court counsel did present to the Appellate Division were untenable. The point now urged by his new counsel is that these arguments were so lacking in merit that, by comparison, the omitted issue regarding the excused juror was the more promising and should have been included. We doubt that constitutional ineffectiveness of appellate counsel can be predicated on a finely calibrated measurement of the relative lack of merit of several issues, all of which appeared unlikely to result in a new trial based on the case law “as of the time of counsel’s conduct.”
See Strickland,
The decision of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. Jameson’s last name was misspelled in most of the prior proceedings.
. We note that even judges of our Court have not always been successful in predicting that the Appellate Division's view of state law would be changed by the Court of Appeals. In
Claudio v. Scully,
