These consolidated appeals follow rulings by district courts in Texas on petitions for writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The petitions involved similar issues, yet resulted in different rulings. We REVERSE the district court’s ruling in the Williams, case
I.
Defendant/Petitioner/Appellee Williams pled guilty to three separate indictments charging aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon, a first-degree felony, and to a fourth indictment charging escape from a penal institution, also a felony. On May 17, 1988, Williams was sentenced to serve 60 years on each of the robbery charges, to run concurrently, and to serve 10 years on the escape charge. The convictions were affirmed on direct appeal by the Third Court of Appeals of Texas in a per curiam written unpublished opinion filed April 19, 1989. In Williams’s state court habeas proceeding, he raised only two issues: (1) whether the indictments were fundamentally defective rendering his conviction and sentence void and (2) whether de *68 fense counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to raise the issue of the defective indictments. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied the petition without written order.
Williams filed his federal petition on August 7, 1991. Respondent moved for summary judgment asserting that the state’s highest court of criminal appeals had reviewed the contested indictments and found them sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the state trial court. The magistrate judge to whom the motion was referred issued a report and recommended that summary judgment be granted. The district court rejected the magistrate judge’s recommendation and granted the petition, finding that the indictments were defective to the extent that the state court did not have jurisdiction.
McKay plead guilty to felony murder and was sentenced to serve forty years in prison. He did not pursue a direct appeal, but instead sought habeas relief in the state system. The state petition raised the same two issues raised by Williams 2 and was denied without written order on March 1, 1989. This federal petition for habeas relief was filed, the Director filed a motion for summary judgment which was referred to the magistrate judge who recommended that relief be denied. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation and denied relief.
II.
The initial issue raised by Appellants is whether the district courts erred in their rulings regarding whether the state courts had not reviewed the claimed defects in the indictments and found them sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the trial courts. The sufficiency of a state indictment is not a matter for federal habeas relief unless it can be shown that the indictment is so defective that it deprives the state court of jurisdiction.
Branch v. Estelle,
In
Alexander,
Petitioner asserted that his burglary indictment was fundamentally defective. The petition was denied and Petitioner appealed. The Fifth Circuit affirmed, noting that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in declining to grant relief “necessarily, though not expressly, held that the Texas courts have jurisdiction and that the indictment is sufficient for that purpose.”
Based upon the Court’s statements in Garrett noting the many reasons, other than a ruling on the merits, for which a case could be dismissed as improvidently set and also upon the Garrett court’s apparent recognition that Alexander would still control situations in which the decision was on the merits, we hold that Alexander governs these cases and would preclude federal habeas review of the state courts’ decisions.
*69
Even were we not to apply
Alexander
to these cases to hold that federal habeas review is precluded, we would hold that the district court would be required to accord due deference to the state courts’ interpretations of its own law that a defect of substance in an indictment does not deprive a state trial court of jurisdiction.
Moreno v. Estelle,
Petitioners also assert that, no1> withstanding state law, the defects in the indictments deprived them of notice of the charges against them in violation of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Specifically, Williams argues that the absence of the terms “intentionally or knowingly” resulted in a failure to charge the culpable mental state of intent. We find, however, that the common definition of the word “threaten” necessarily includes intent and substitution of “threaten” for “intentionally or knowingly” provides adequate notice of the charges. The standard for determining the sufficiency of an indictment is based upon practical, not technical considerations.
United States v. Chaney,
Williams’s argument that the culpable mental state has a technical meaning and no substitutions should be allowed, citing
Chance v. State,
In McKay, the term “attempt” by definition includes the element of intent.
Ex parte Bailey,
III.
Pursuant to the Fifth Circuit authority set forth in Alexander v. McCotter, the state courts’ implicit findings in Williams and McKay that the indictments were not fundamentally defective should end the inquiry. The 1985 amendment to the Texas Constitution makes it clear that the presentment of the indictments invested the trial courts with jurisdiction. The substituted terms in the Williams and McKay indictments were constitutionally adequate to give notice of the charges. Consequently, neither Williams nor McKay is entitled to federal habeas relief.
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas in Williams v. Collins is REVERSED AND THE PETITION DISMISSED and the decision of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas in McKay v. Collins is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The alleged defect in McKay’s indictment was the absence from his felony murder charge of the culpable mental state for the predicate offense of forgery, specifically the language "with intent to defraud or harm another.”
. The Williams district court in his opinion includes an extensive discussion of
Ylst v. Nunnemaker,
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