Petitioner-appellant Luis Jimenez (“petitioner”) appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Jack B. Weinstein, Judge), entered on November 4, 2003, denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Jimenez presses two claims on appeal: (1) the state court’s exclusion of evidence that the murder victim was carrying five ounces of heroin in his pocket denied Jimenez his right to present a meaningful defense and (2) the cumulative effect of trial-court errors denied Jimenez his right to a fundamentally fair trial. Respondent-appellee Hans Walker, Superintendent of Auburn Correctional Facility (“respondent” or “state”), contends that the heroin evidence was constitutionally excluded and that the cumulative-error claim is procedurally defaulted and merit-less.
We hold as follows: (1) the conclusive presumption laid out by the Supreme Court in
Harris v. Reed
and
Coleman v. Thompson
applies to the determination under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) of whether an adjudication is “on the merits”; (2) “AED-PA deference” under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) is due to a state court’s rejection of a federal claim as “either unpreserved for appellate review or without merit” because this court has interpreted
Harris
and
Coleman
to deem such “either/or” adjudications as resting on the merits of the petitioner’s federal claim,
see Fama v. Comm’r of Corr. Servs.,
BACKGROUND
On October 4, 1993, Elkin Cardona was shot and killed while standing on a street in Queens, New York. Luis Jimenez was tried and convicted for his murder. The criminal proceedings surrounding his conviction are relevant to this appeal.
I. Trial
At Jimenez’s murder trial, Margie Car-dona, who is the victim’s widow, and Juan Barrera, who is Margie Cardona’s brother and who lived with Margie and the victim, testified for the prosecution as follows. On the day of the shooting, the victim and Margie Cardona gave Jimenez a ride from Queens to Manhattan. During the ride, the victim became upset with Jimenez and argued with him, although the mood did lighten later that day. Around 9:00 that evening, back in his home in Queens, the victim received a page on his beeper and left with Barrera in the victim’s van to meet Jimenez. The victim picked up Jimenez and drove to a street in Flushing, Queens, where all three got out. At a payphone on the corner, Jimenez dialed a phone number two or three times and told the group that he had a wrong phone number. Jimenez announced that he was going to his apartment, which was a few blocks away, to get the right number and walked away.
*134 According to Barrera, about ten minutes later, while the victim and Barrera were waiting on the street for Jimenez to return, Barrera saw Jimenez driving his old, white van slowly toward them. Barrera testified that the van passed them and made a U-turn at the next intersection and that upon returning, a concealed person in the passenger’s seat extended a gun out the passenger window and opened fire at the victim and Barrera. Ballistics reports indicate that at least eleven 0.9 mm bullets and one 0.380 mm bullet were fired. The victim and Barrera ducked behind some cars, and Barrera then ran away down the street. The victim died at the scene, apparently killed by the single 0.380 mm slug.
Barrera returned to the crime scene after removing his sweatshirt and spoke to an officer without revealing his knowledge of the shooting. Although Barrera had told Margie Cardona what happened, she likewise did not immediately tell the police what she knew. Both eventually did volunteer information about the shooting to the police.
Other evidence was introduced at trial. The jury heard that the police located Jimenez’s van in its parking lot near the crime scene but did not recover any inculpatory evidence upon searching it. The van was apparently owned, though not registered, by Jimenez’s father-in-law, who had been convicted of drug and weapons crimes and who testified that Jimenez did not drive the van on the day of the shooting. A lobby attendant in a building near the van’s designated parking spot testified that he thought the van was present in the parking lot at the time of the shooting.
Further evidence contradicted Barrera’s testimony for the prosecution. A teenager who resided in an apartment overlooking the crime scene testified that three people — not two — were standing on the street when a van pulled up and began shooting at them. The teenager also testified that the van had no side windows, whereas Jimenez’s father-in-law testified that his van had side windows. Another child who lived nearby testified that two people — not just Barrera — fled down the street after the shooting, one briefly displaying an object that appeared to be a gun. And ballistics evidence suggested that shots were fired from the sidewalk as well as the street.
At the crime scene, the police found a plastic bag containing five ounces 1 of heroin — evidently worth thousands of dollars — in the pants pocket of the victim. At Jimenez’s trial, the prosecutor moved in limine to prohibit any mention of this heroin evidence before the jury. In response, Jimenez argued that the evidence was relevant because it would tend to prove the defense theory that the victim was killed by someone involved in or related to a drug deal that was to occur that night, not because of an argument with Jimenez earlier in the day, and that Barrera falsely implicated Jimenez in the shooting out of fear that Barrera himself would be charged with drug crimes or with murder. The trial court ruled that the heroin evidence lacked any probative value and granted the prosecutor’s motion in limine to exclude the evidence. Jimenez was then tried and convicted of crimes including murder in the second degree. The trial court sentenced him to imprisonment for 20 years to life for the murder.
II. Post-trial Proceedings
Jimenez appealed his conviction to the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Divi
*135
sion, pressing his claim that the trial court’s exclusion of the heroin evidence deprived him of his constitutional right to present a meaningful defense. The Appellate Division affirmed Jimenez’s conviction, summarily dismissing his challenge to the heroin-evidence exclusion as one of several contentions that were “either unpreserved for appellate review or without merit.”
People v. Jimenez,
III. Federal Habeas Proceedings
Jimenez timely applied for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York. In his application, Jimenez argued that he was denied his right to present a defense by the trial court’s exclusion of the heroin evidence. The district court found that the state trial court did not err in ruling the heroin evidence irrelevant because “it was reasonable for the trial court to hold that the narcotics evidence was too remote to the question of petitioner’s guilt or innocence to be probative.”
Jimenez v. Walker,
No. 00-cv-3599,
DISCUSSION
Jimenez presses two claims on appeal. First, he claims that the trial court violated his due process right to present a meaningful defense by excluding evidence that the police found five ounces of heroin in the victim’s pants pocket. Second, he claims that cumulative trial-court error violated his right to due process.
In evaluating Jimenez’s claims, we review de novo the district court’s denial of the writ.
Jones v. Stinson,
I. The Due Process Right to Present a Defense
A. AEDPA Deference
Because Jimenez filed his habeas application after the effective date of the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (“AEDPA”), we must first decide whether we owe “AEDPA deference” to the state courts’ resolution of Jimenez’s present-a-defense claim because the claim “was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
2
The Appellate Division rejected this claim by stating that it was among claims that were “either unpreserved for appellate review or without merit.”
Jimenez,
*136
Our case law on whether AEDPA deference applies when confronted by such language has confused some observers. Indeed, this court has labeled our decisions in this area a “mare’s nest.”
Shih Wei Su v. Filion,
The confusion in our opinions centers around the fundamental question of how to interpret what state courts have done when their decisions remain somewhat opaque. Our review of answers to this question begins before the 1996 enactment of AEDPA, when federal habeas courts were already determining whether state courts had disposed of a federal claim on its merits or, alternatively, on a state procedural ground. The inquiry then arose in the context of the adequate-and-independent-state-ground doctrine, under which federal courts may not review the judgment of a state court that “rests on a state-law ground that is both ‘independent’ of the merits of the federal claim and an ‘adequate’ basis for the court’s decision.”
Harris v. Reed,
Recognizing that it can sometimes be difficult to decide whether a state court rested its judgment on the merits of the federal claim or on an independent procedural rule, the Supreme Court created a conclusive presumption to guide the inquiry. The presumption was created for administrative convenience, predicting easily and accurately the actual basis of a state court’s decision in most cases at the expense of error in a “small number of cases.”
Coleman v. Thompson,
If the presumption does apply under AEDPA, we would be confronted with the “binary” situation noted by
Ryan v. Miller,
A thorough review of our cases, with careful attention paid to distinguishing holdings from dicta, reveals that they do not chart such divergent courses. As explained below, although we have never explicitly stated that the Harris presumption applies to the AEDPA-deference determination, our holdings are consistent with that result and do not create the tension noted in Shih Wei Su and relied upon by Jimenez. But before reviewing our case law, we describe the Harris presumption in more detail.
1. The Harris conclusive presumption
This presumption finds its roots in
Michigan v. Long,
when ... a state court decision fairly appears to rest primarily on federal law, or to be interwoven with the federal law, and when the adequacy and independence of any possible state law ground is not clear from the face of the opinion, we will accept as the most reasonable explanation that the state court decided the case the way it did because it believed that federal law required it to do so.
Long,
The Supreme Court reaffirmed the
Harris
presumption two years later in
Coleman,
emphasizing the presumption’s requirement that the state court’s decision “must fairly appear to rest primarily on federal law or to be interwoven with federal law.”
Coleman,
To decide whether this requirement was met, the
Coleman
Court looked to the relevant state-court opinion, which granted the prosecution’s motion to dismiss a petition for appeal, as well as to the prosecution’s moving papers, which argued for dismissal on the sole basis of a procedural bar.
5
The Supreme Court held that the state court’s decision “ ‘fairly appears’ to rest primarily on
state
law,”
id.
at 740,
In sum, under Harris and Coleman, federal habeas courts should distinguish between two mutually exclusive categories of state-court decisions disposing of a federal claim:
(1) state-court decisions that fairly appear either to rest primarily on federal law or to be interwoven with federal law and
(2) state-court decisions that fairly appear to rest primarily on state procedural law.
See id.
at 739^40,
2. Second Circuit procedural-bar case law
After the Supreme Court decided
Harris
and
Coleman,
we began to speak on their application. The first relevant opinion to do so was
Quirama v. Michele,
This holding was a slight extension of
Coleman.
The
Coleman
Court found that the state court’s decision fairly appeared to rest primarily on state procedural grounds because the state court had granted a motion to dismiss that was based solely on procedural law.
Coleman,
Some time after
Quirama,
we decided
Fama v. Commissioner of Correctional Services,
We today decline to extend Quirama to those cases in which an opinion of the state court speaks, however cursorily, to the question of whether the state or federal ground was the basis for decision. And we explicitly hold that when a state court uses language such as “[t]he defendant’s remaining contentions are either unpreserved or without merit,” the validity of the claim is preserved and is subject to federal review. When it uses such language, the ■ state court has not adequately indicated that its judgment rests on a state procedural bar, see Hams,489 U.S. at 263 ,109 S.Ct. 1038 ,103 L.Ed.2d 308 , and its reliance on local law is not clear from the face of the court’s opinion. See Coleman, 501 U.S. at 735,111 S.Ct. 2546 ,115 L.Ed.2d 640 .
Fama,
Yet
Fama
appears to have implicitly decided that the
Coleman
requirement is
*140
met when the state court issues a terse “either/or” rejection of a federal claim.
Farm's
statement that it was declining to “extend”
Quirama
implies that even if circumstances behind the opinion indicate that it rests on a procedural bar (as in
Quirama),
the “either/or” language introduces uncertainty sufficient to render the decision “interwoven with federal law” and therefore to satisfy the
Coleman
requirement. To be sure,
Fama
admits of multiple readings. For example, because
Fama
does not describe any of the behind-the-opinion circumstances that
Coleman
and
Quirama
instruct us to examine,
Fama,
3. Second Circuit AEDPA-deference case law
The balance of the relevant case law concerns the test for whether AEDPA deference under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) is due to a state court’s adjudication of a claim because the adjudication is “on the merits.” As discussed below, we have directed courts to examine the same three clues to make this determination that courts examine to establish whether the
Coleman
requirement in the procedural-bar context is met. And we have also strongly suggested that the
Harris
presumption applies to the § 2254(d) “on the merits” test. Finally, we have never held that AEDPA deference is not due to an “either/or” decision, which
Fama
says is on the merits for procedural-bar purposes,
7
alleviating any concern of doctrinal tension such as that expressed in
Shih Wei Su,
a. Sellan v. Kuhlman
In
Sellan v. Kuhlman,
This ruling left us with a second question: how to determine whether a disposition is “on the merits.” The respondent in Sellan had not argued that a procedural bar existed, 8 so we did not *141 consider the possibility that the Hams presumption might apply to this determination. But, even without looking to that body of law, we adopted a test requiring examination of the same three clues that Quirama would have us consider when determining whether the Coleman requirement is met: (1) the state court’s opinion, (2) whether the state court was aware of a procedural bar, and (3) the practice of state courts in similar circumstances. Id. at 314. 9
In
Sellan,
we applied this test to a state court’s order that disposed of the petitioner’s motion for a writ of coram nobis with the statement, “Upon the papers filed in support of the motion and the papers filed in opposition thereto, it is ORDERED that the motion is denied.”
People v. Sellan,
No. 9152 (N.Y.App.Div. Jan. 25, 1990),
quoted in Sellan,
Our holding in Sellan is consistent with an understanding that the Supreme Court’s Harris presumption applies under AEDPA. Sellan’s three-part test simply lists the clues to which we look under Quirama in deciding whether the Coleman requirement (that the state court’s decision fairly appears to rest primarily on federal law or to be interwoven with federal law) is met. In circumstances such as Sellan’s, the state-court decision “fairly appears” to rest primarily upon federal law, establishing the Coleman requirement, and because there is no plain statement otherwise, the Harris presumption conclusively deems the decision to rest on the merits of the federal claim. Thus, no adequate and independent procedural bar supports the state court’s decision, and we afford AED-PA deference to the state court’s adjudication.
After we announced the
Sellan
test, three cases followed that discussed AED-PA deference in the context of a state court’s disposition of claims as “either unpreserved or without merit,” leading us to subsequently comment that “apparent tension” had resulted.
Messiah,
b. Ryan v. Miller
The first of the three cases is
Ryan v. Miller,
There is no reason ... to doubt that AEDPA applies in this situation because the only alternative to finding the claim adjudicated on the merits would be finding the claim procedurally barred, in which case we would not have entertained the claim in the first instance (absent a showing of cause and prejudice).
Id. Thus, for the first time, we linked the AEDPA-deference determination with the procedural-bar determination, reasoning that the classification of a state-court decision presents a binary circumstance — with AEDPA deference down one path and a procedural bar down the other. And Ryan’s result is consistent with Fama, which, while admittedly ignoring the background circumstances, also concluded that an “either/or” state-court decision rested on the merits of the petitioner’s federal claim.
c. Miranda v. Bennett
In the second of the three cases,
Miranda v. Bennett,
We do not suggest that we may ignore the AEDPA-deference pronouncements in this case because they are dicta. Dicta deserve close consideration; emphatic dicta, all the more.
See United States v. Garcia,
We ultimately cannot find
Miranda’s
AEDPA dicta persuasive because there is a fine but firm line between situations like
Miranda’s
and situations like those in the case that
Miranda
relied upon for support,
Boyette v. Lefevre,
But
Boyette
did not hold that a silent opinion is not entitled to AEDPA deference under § 2254(d). Indeed, to so extend
Boyette’s
rule would undermine
Sellan’s
holding that an unexplained state-court disposition of a claim can be entitled to AEDPA deference.
Sellan,
*144 d. DeBerry v. Portuondo
The third of the three AEDPA-deference cases is
DeBerry v. Portuondo,
This brings us to the state of the relevant law today: In the adequate-and-independent-state-ground line of cases, Quirama tells us to look to three clues to decide if the Coleman requirement of the Harris presumption is met, and Fama held that a state court’s “either/or” rejection of a federal claim meets the Coleman requirement when the behind-the-opinion clues show a merits disposition, when the clues are indeterminate, and even when they show a procedural disposition — those clues simply do not matter in the Fama analysis because the “either/or” language rules the day. In the AEDPA-deference line of cases, Sellan instructs us to examine the three Quirama clues to decide whether a disposition rests on the merits. Ryan established that AEDPA deference applies to an “either/or” state-court adjudication where nothing on the face of the state court’s opinion indicates that the claim was decided on procedural grounds and no state procedural bar exists, reasoning that the only alternative to finding that AED-PA deference applies is treating the claim as proeedurally barred. Contrary dicta in two further cases, Miranda and DeBerry, proves unpersuasive. In sum, although no ease has explicitly held that the Harris presumption applies to the “on the merits” inquiry under AEDPA, Ryan strongly implies that it does, and none of our holdings are inconsistent with that conclusion. 15
*145 4. Our holding: Harris guides the AEDPA inquiry
Today, we explicitly hold what Ryan strongly implies: The conclusive presumption set forth by the Supreme Court in Hams and Coleman applies to the determination under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) of whether a state-court adjudication is “on the merits.” The Supreme Court designed the Harris presumption to predict efficiently and accurately the basis of a state court’s adjudication, and federal courts undertake this same inquiry under AEDPA facing the same circumstances that motivated the Supreme Court to create and apply the presumption in the first place. We see in the Supreme Court’s cases no reason why the Harris presumption would not apply to the AEDPA-deference determination, nor do we see any reason to apply a different test that could create logically incongruous results. Moreover, in enacting AEDPA, Congress was presumably aware of the customary judicial usage of “on the merits” in the procedural-bar context and intended that term to have the same meaning under the AEDPA, bringing along the Harris presumption. See supra note 4.
Thus, when examining the basis of a state court’s adjudication of a federal claim, a federal habeas court in this circuit should examine the three clues laid out in Coleman, Qitirama, and Sellan 16 to classify the decision as either:
(1) fairly appearing to rest primarily on federal law or to be interwoven with federal law or
(2) fairly appearing to rest primarily on state procedural law.
See Coleman,
The effect of these rules is to present federal habeas courts with a binary circumstance: we either apply AEDPA deference to review a state court’s disposition of a federal claim or refuse to review the claim because of a procedural bar properly raised.
18
See Messiah,
5. AEDPA deference in this case
AEDPA deference under § 2254(d) is due to the Appellate Division’s rejection of Jimenez’s present-a-defense claim if that judgment was an “adjudicat[ion] on the merits.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). Under
Sellan,
we hold that the Appellate Division “adjudicated” Jimenez’s present-a-defense claim: Although the state court failed to provide reasoning for its decision, it disposed of the claim and reduced its disposition to judgment.
Sellan,
Were we unbound by precedent, we would now examine the three clues to the basis of the state court’s decision and classify the decision as one that either meets or fails the
Coleman
requisite. But
Fama
has already made that classification, binding us today.
Fama
held that a state court’s rejection of a federal claim as “either unpreserved for appellate review or without merit” meets the
Coleman
requisite regardless of background circumstances — clues unimportant under
Fama. Fama,
B. Applying AEDPA Deference to Jimenez’s Claim
Under § 2254(d), we decide whether the Appellate Division’s rejection of Jimenez’s present-a-defense claim “resulted in a decision that was contrary to” or “involved an unreasonable application of’ clearly established Supreme Court precedent. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
19
In making this determination, we may look only to the holdings of the Supreme Court, as opposed to its dicta, and only to the Supreme Court’s holdings as of the time of the relevant state-court decision — December 1, 1997. Williams
v. Taylor,
1. Clearly established federal law
The constitutional right to present a complete defense at a criminal trial was clearly established at the time of the Appellate Division’s decision.
See Taylor v. Illinois,
As with many rights, the right to present a defense is not unlimited. The criminal defendant “must comply with established rules of procedure and evidence designed to assure both fairness and reliability in the ascertainment of guilt and innocence.”
Chambers,
Finally, in habeas actions, trial errors are subject to harmless-error review.
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
2. “Contrary to”
We hold that the Appellate Division’s decision of Jimenez’s present-a-defense claim was not contrary to clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court. The Appellate Division did not arrive at a conclusion of law opposite to one reached by the Supreme Court,
Williams,
3. “Unreasonable application”
When applying § 2254(d)’s “unreasonable application” clause to silent state-court opinions, we review outcomes, not reasoning.
Sellan,
In applying these standards, Jimenez’s possible use of the excluded heroin evidence is relevant. Jimenez informs us that he was to defend his case with the following theory: The victim was involved in a drug deal that went bad on the night of his murder, a drug deal about which Barrera and Margie Cardona knew and that Barrera may have facilitated. Barrera and Cardona falsely implicated Jimenez for either or both of two reasons: (1) Barrera and Cardona were afraid of being charged with drug crimes or (2) Barrera *148 himself arranged for the victim’s murder for drug-related reasons and wanted to shift the blame.
On direct review, we might be inclined to find that the heroin evidence was material to Jimenez’s defense. The heroin evidence is certainly “probative” in the evidentiary sense of the word because it makes the truth of Jimenez’s theory more likely than without the evidence. And the heroin evidence might be foundational to Jimenez’s defense, as opposed to merely collateral, because Jimenez had no other direct evidence that drugs were involved in the events on the night of the murder. Evidence of commercial amounts of heroin could support an inference that Barrera and the victim were at a drug sale, which could support an inference that Barrera was afraid of being prosecuted with drug crimes, which might support an inference that Barrera chose to falsely implicate Jimenez in the shooting, possibly because drug dealings had in fact motivated Barrera to orchestrate the shooting. And the inference of a drug sale could help unite other pieces of evidence — namely, testimony placing a third person with a gun at the shooting and evidence suggesting that two guns were brandished and fired that night.
But we cannot hold that the heroin evidence would have so plainly created reasonable doubt that a conclusion to the contrary would be objectively unreasonable. The Appellate Division could have reasonably concluded that the foregoing chain of inferences in Jimenez’s materiality argument is simply too tenuous and that even with the heroin evidence admitted, the jury would still have discounted the testimony supporting Jimenez’s theory. We do not find that conclusion objectively unreasonable.
Because the state court’s decision was silent and because we hold that it was not objectively unreasonable to deem the heroin evidence constitutionally immaterial, we need not apply § 2254(d)(1) to the second element of Jimenez’s claim, which asks whether the trial court’s exclusion of the evidence was arbitrary.
See Sellan,
II. Jimenez’s Cumulative-Error Claim
Jimenez claims that cumulative trial-court error produced a trial setting that was fundamentally unfair, thereby depriving him of his constitutional right to due process.
See Taylor v. Kentucky,
Before a state prisoner may obtain a writ of habeas corpus from a federal court, the prisoner must exhaust his remedies in state court. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1);
O’Sullivan,
The state contends that Jimenez did not fairly present his cumulative-error claim to the state courts. We agree. Jimenez did not present the cumulative-error claim to the Appellate Division in any of the four modes contemplated by this court in
Daye,
21
nor did he alert the Appellate Division of that claim in another manner.
See Solis v. Garcia,
Jimenez contends that he fairly presented the claim by using in his brief to the Appellate Division the transition phrase “was exacerbated by” to shift between argument of his Brady claim and argument of his evidence-exclusion claim, as well as by using the plural noun “rulings” in the briefs summary section to describe the two trial-court decisions that he contended violated his due process rights. These two isolated phrases do not give the state court fair notice of a distinct cumulative-error claim and simply serve as a transition and a summarization. We hold that Jimenez did not fairly present his cumulative-error claim to the state courts.
Jimenez’s claim is now exhausted because state remedies are no longer available. Jimenez has already taken his one direct appeal, and this claim is procedurally barred from consideration in a collateral attack on his conviction.
See
N.Y.Crim. Proc. Law § 440.10(2)(e). Accordingly, because Jimenez has not
“properly
exhausted” his state remedies by fairly presenting his claim to the state courts,
O’Sullivan,
*150 CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm the district court’s judgment denying Jimenez’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. The parties do not agree whether the heroin weighed four or five ounces. The amount is immaterial to our analysis.
. As we have noted, § 2254(d) may more accurately be called a "limitation on relief” than a deferential "standard of review.”
See Cotto
v.
Herbert,
. Assuming, of course, that the independent state procedural bar is adequate to support the judgment, not excused by a showing of either cause and prejudice or a fundamental miscarriage of justice, and raised by the respondent. Trest
v. Cain,
. Perhaps such a result would make sense if the Supreme Court meant the Harris presumption to maximize prisoner relief from federal habeas courts. But the Court has announced its reasons for creating the presumption, and its predictive and administrative foundations do not disclose such a purpose.
We also note a textual basis for concluding that the procedural-bar doctrine’s Harris presumption applies under AEDPA: ”[F]ederal court caselaw applying the procedural [bar] doctrine customarily distinguishes between 'rulings on the merits' and dismissals on procedural grounds ... [and] Congress is presumed to be aware of such customary judicial usage of a term” when it enacts a statute such as AEDPA. Randy Hertz & James S. Liebman, 2 Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Procedure § 32.2, at 1422 (4th ed.2001). Presumably, then, the term "on the merits” in AEDPA takes the same meaning as it does in the procedural-bar context, bringing along the Harris presumption.
. Thus, Coleman instructs us that a court may look behind the face of the opinion to decide whether the Coleman requirement is met, i.e., whether a state-court decision fairly appears to rest on or to be interwoven with federal law.
.
Quirama
did not mention the presumption of
Ylst v. Nunnemaker,
. Fama did not decide whether AEDPA deference applied.
. Because the existence of an adequate and independent procedural bar is not jurisdictional in the habeas context, a federal court is not required to raise it
sua sponte;
rather, it is "a defense that the State is obligated to raise and preserve if it is not to lose the right to assert the defense thereafter.'1
Trest,
522
*141
U.S. at 89,
. Our exact phrasing of the test gave the factors in the reverse order: "(1) what the state courts have done in similar cases; (2) whether the history of the case suggests that the state court was aware of any ground for not adjudicating the case on the merits; and (3) whether the state court’s opinion suggests reliance upon procedural grounds.”
Sellan,
.
See also Rudenko v. Costello,
.
See generally
Arthur D. Heilman,
Breaking the Banc: The Common-Law Process in the Large Appellate Court,
23 Ariz. St.
L.J.
915, 926-27 (1991) (noting that the binding force of the result in a case derives from the "unique sense of responsibility that comes from knowing that a legal pronouncement will have consequences for an actual dispute”). We note that dicta in
Shih Wei Su
inaccurately characterized
Miranda
as having "held” that no AEDPA deference was due.
Shih Wei Su,
. This is not to necessarily endorse the rule of Wiggins and Boyette. Indeed, one might well question why the extent of the state court's explanation changes the nature of federal habeas review as constrained by § 2254(d). Rather, § 2254(d)(1) might best be read as being satisfied by a finding of unreasonable error as to any one element of a federal claim, regardless of how many elemerits the state court discussed. After all, § 2254(d)(1) speaks of a decision that "involved an” unreasonable application of law, not a decision that "consists entirely of” unreasonable applications of law.
.We note that any intimation from
Boyette's
citation to
Washington v. Schriver,
. We note that
DeBerry
did reconcile
Fama
and
Miranda
doctrinally, stating that "[i]t is self-evident, we believe, that a state court can fail to clearly express its reliance on a procedural basis while, at the same time, not adjudicating the claim on the merits [as required for AEDPA deference to apply].''
DeBeiry,
. Although not of precedential force, it is interesting that some of our cases have assumed without explanation that the
Harris
presumption applies for purposes of AEDPA deference under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). For example, in
Jones v. Stinson,
we applied the
Harris
presumption to deem an ambiguous state-court decision to rest on the merits of the petitioner’s federal claim for procedural-bar purposes and then seamlessly proceeded to hold that AEDPA deference limited our review of the petitioner's claim.
.To reiterate, the three clues to the basis of a state court's decision are (1) the face of the state-court opinion, (2) whether the state court was aware of a procedural bar, and (3) the practice of state courts in similar circumstances.
. If the state waives the right to make this argument,
see Trest,
. Assuming that the independent state procedural bar is adequate to support the judgment and not excused by a showing of either cause and prejudice or a fundamental miscarriage of justice.
Coleman,
. A petitioner may also satisfy § 2254(d) by showing that subsection (d)(2) is met, but that provision, which concerns the state court’s factual determinations, is not in dispute here.
. As we have explained, see supra note 12, it might make more sense for courts to read § 2254(d) as being satisfied by a finding of unreasonable error as to any one element of a federal claim, rather than requiring objectively unreasonable error as to every element of a silently adjudicated claim.
. Those modes are:
(a) reliance on pertinent federal cases employing constitutional analysis,
(b) reliance on state cases employing constitutional analysis in like fact situations,
(c) assertion of the claim in terms so particular as to call to mind a specific right protected by the Constitution, and
(d) allegation of a pattern of facts that is well within the mainstream of constitutional litigation.
Daye,
