The state of California appeals the district court’s grant of habeas corpus to Michael Hunt. The district court found that Hunt was denied his sixth amendment right to effective assistance of counsel when his trial attorney failed to preserve his right to appeal. The district court remedied this constitutional violation by reinstating Hunt’s appeal rights and ordering the state court to apply the law that would have been in effect at the time Hunt would have perfected a timely appeal but for the constitutional violation. The state only appeals the district court’s order on the application of law issue. We reverse.
FACTS
Michael Hunt was convicted of first degree murder with special circumstances 1 in September 1980, and was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Hunt attempted to have that sentence set aside at a Williams hearing 2 held in February 1983. The trial judge denied Hunt’s motion. Hunt’s trial counsel informed the defendant that he would attempt to appeal, but he in fact failed to take any appeal.
Shortly after Hunt’s February 1983 hearing the California Supreme Court held that a jury instruction on intent to kill was required in a special circumstances felony murder conviction.
Carlos v. Superior Court,
Hunt filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus with the California state courts in June 1986, requesting reinstatement of his appeal rights. The court denied his petition. Hunt exhausted his state post-conviction remedies in October 1986, when the California Supreme Court denied his petition. Hunt then filed for federal habeas relief with the district court.
While Hunt’s petition was pending before the district court, the California Supreme Court overruled
Carlos
and held that the jury need not be instructed on the element of intent to kill to find special circumstances.
People v. Anderson,
The district court found that Hunt’s sixth amendment right to effective assistance of counsel was violated, granted the writ, and ordered the California courts to reinstate
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Hunt’s right to appeal. The district court also ordered the California courts to apply the law that would have been in effect at the time Hunt would have appealed had the constitutional violation not occurred. The state appeals the application of law question. We review de novo.
Carter v. McCarthy,
I. APPLICATION OF LAW
The district court required the state court to use
Carlos
on the new appeal in order to “vindicate petitioner’s constitutional rights and ... to correct the constitutional error committed against him.” The district court reasoned that its “task [was] to structure a remedy which places petitioner in the position he would have occupied but for the ineffective assistance of his counsel.” Federal courts have flexibility in fashioning a habeas remedy,
see
28 U.S.C. § 2243;
Dowd v. United States ex rel. Cook,
First, habeas corpus insures that a federal forum is available to vindicate a violation of a federal right. Pure questions of state substantive law that do not implicate federal rights are not subject to habeas review.
See Wainright v. Sykes,
Second, habeas review serves the related but more instrumental function of deterring state courts from deviating from federal constitutional norms. “ ‘[T]he threat of habeas serves as a necessary incentive for trial and appellate judges throughout the land to conduct their proceedings in a manner consistent with established constitutional principles....’”
Teague,
Finally, habeas corpus insures an untainted guilt-innocence determination,
see Stone v. Powell,
All of the cases Hunt relies upon to support the broad remedial powers of the federal courts in habeas cases deal only with the waiver of the filing deadline for appeals.
See Dowd,
Hunt also argues that to deny him the benefit of the superseded law effectively denies him the right to appeal at all. This argument is flawed, because in the unusual circumstances of this case, where the governing law has changed, the result of the future appeal is not relevant to the
Strickland
test.
See Strickland v. Washington,
II. THE EX POST FACTO CLAIM
Hunt claims that the California Supreme Court’s decisions that mandate retroactive application of the
Anderson
rule violate his due process rights under the ex post facto clause.
See Bouie v. City of Columbia,
REVERSED.
Notes
. In California, first degree murder with special circumstances is defined as the commission of murder in conjunction with one of an enumerated list of aggravating conditions. If a defendant is convicted of murder with special circumstances, his sentence is either life imprisonment without the possibility of parole or the death penalty.
See
Cal.Penal Code § 190.2(a)(17);
Carlos v. Superior Court,
. A
Williams
hearing is an opportunity for a defendant to petition a California trial court to strike a special circumstances finding in a felony murder conviction and thereby make the defendant eligible for parole.
See People
v.
Williams,
