Miсhael Anthony Taylor (“Taylor”) appeals the district court’s 2 denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus. We affirm the result reached by the district court.
1. BACKGROUND
Taylor and Roderick Nunley kidnapped, raped, and killed fifteen-year-old Ann Harrison on March 22, 1989. The details of this horrific crime are discussed in
State v. Taylor,
Taylor brought his first post-conviction relief action (“PCR”) under Missouri Supreme Court Rule 24.035, challenging his guilty plea and sentence, alleging, in relevant part, that Judge Randall had been drinking prior to the sentencing proceeding and that his plea was involuntary because his plea counsel had been ineffective. All of the judges in the Sixteenth Judicial Circuit were recused and the Missouri Supreme Court appointed Special Judge Robert Dierker, Jr. Judge Dierker held an evidentiary hearing and denied Taylor’s PCR motion, including, specifically, Taylor’s ineffective assistance of plea counsel claims. Taylor appealed to the Missouri Supreme Court, 3 which vacated the judg *967 ment and remanded the case for a new penalty hearing without saying more. 4 Taylor filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea because he was no longer going tо be sentenced by Judge Randall. 5 His motion was denied. Judge H. Michael Co-burn conducted the second sentencing procedure, which lasted five days, and Taylor again received a sentence of death. 6
Taylor then filed a second pro se PCR motion,
7
challenging his guilty plea, his second sentencing proceeding, and his sentence of death.
8
Judge Edith Messina held an evidentiary hearing at which Taylor presented evidence on the issue of ineffective assistance of sentencing counsel for failing to investigate and present sufficient mitigating evidence. Tаylor was not allowed to argue ineffective assistance of plea counsel in the second PCR motion because Judge Messina ruled that this issue had been raised and decided in Taylor’s first PCR motion. Judge Messina denied Taylor’s second PCR motion. Taylor appealed his conviction, his sentence, and the denial of his second PCR motion to the Supreme Court of Missouri, which affirmed.
9
Taylor,
Taylor then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus and the district court dеnied the petition. Taylor moved to alter or amend judgment, which was also denied. Taylor filed a notice of appeal and an amended notice of appeal in this court. We issued a certificate of appealability on two issues: (1) whether the denial of Taylor’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea because the plea judge and sentencing judge were not the same person violates his federal constitutional due process rights; and (2) whether the district court erred in ruling that Taylor’s ineffective assistance of plea counsel claim was procedurally defaulted.
II. DISCUSSION
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AED-PA), we apply a deferential standard of review to state court resolutions of law and fact only if the state court adjudicated the
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prisoner’s claim on its merits. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d);
Kenley v. Bowersox,
A.
Taylor argues that he was denied due process when he was not allowed to rescind his guilty plea before the second sentencing hearing. Generally, when a defendant pleads to a charge in reliance on a promise or agreement by the prosecutor, that promise must be fulfilled or else the defendant may withdraw his plea.
Santobello v. New York,
Taylor also argues that, even if the United States Constitution does not directly require Missouri to give a defendant the right to be sentenced by a particular judge, Missouri gave Taylor that right when its legislature enacted Mo.Rev. Stat. § 565.030.
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This section says, in part, “[w]here murder in the first degree is submitted to the trier without a waiver of the death penalty, the triаl shall proceed in two stages before the same trier.” Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.030.2. Taylor argues that this statute creates a “substantial and legitimate expectation” that he would be sentenced by the same judge that accepted his plea, and deviation from the statute violates a liberty interest protected by the due process clause of the United States Constitution. The Missouri Supreme Court has determined that, as a matter of Missouri law, an accused is not entitled to withdraw a guilty plea as a matter of right and thаt the determining factor is “whether the sentencing judge has the familiarity with the prior proceedings to make an informed ruling on sentencing.”
Taylor,
While the Missouri Supreme Court has stated that an accused does not have the right to the same judge at the plea and sentencing stages, the court first made that statement in Taylor’s appeal, after his right was allegedly violated.
Taylor,
Since Taylor has no state-created, federally-protеcted interest in having the same trial and sentencing judge, he must look directly to the language of the Constitution for due process relief. We agree with the district court that there is no independent federal right to be sentenced by the same judge that took a guilty plea and find no constitutional provision that guarantees such a right. Therefore, Taylor’s due process claims must fail.
B.
Taylor also argues that the district court erred in ruling that he has procedurally defaulted his claim that his plea was involuntary because of ineffective assistance of counsel. In his first PCR motion, Taylor clearly raised this issue. Judge Dierker found that Taylor’s plea counsel was not ineffective, but rather was thorough and professional. Taylor appealed this issue and others to the Missouri Supreme Court, which “vacated” Judge Dierker’s judgment and “remanded for new penalty hearing, imposition of sentence, and entry of new judgment.” The court made no mention of the ineffective assistance allegation. After a new sentence was imposed by Judge Coburn, Tаylor again raised this claim in his second PCR motion. Judge Messina acknowledged Taylor’s position that effectiveness of plea counsel remained in question, but she disagreed with this contention and refused to receive evidence or hear arguments on the issue. In Judge Messi-na’s final order, she declined to consider the claim because “[t]he Supreme Court by its order of June 29, 1993, by remanding for resentencing only, affirmed the volun-tariness of the guilty plea, and thus has ruled Movant’s points regarding [plea counsel’s] representation against him.” Taylor v. Missouri, No. Civ. 94-19962 (Mo. Cir. Ct. June 19, 1995). This ruling and the ineffective assistance of plea counsel claim were not raised or briefed in Taylor’s subsequent PCR appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court. The state also did not appeal Judge Messina’s ruling.
Taylor renewed the plea counsel claim in his federal habeas corpus petition, and the federal district court, upon the urging of the state, found that the claim was either waived or already decided by the Missouri Supreme Court, and thus was procedurally defaulted. The district сourt went on to rule that Taylor did not show cause for *970 this default, specifically noting, among other things, that his post-conviction counsel’s failure to appeal the defaulted claims could not constitute legally sufficient cause.
Taylor now argues that his claim is not procedurally barred because he raised objections in his initial PCR motion and in his first appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court. Additionally, he argues that his claim is not procedurally barred because the state agreed not to assert procedural defenses in federal court and that Judge Messina erroneously ruled that he could not assert the claim. The state argues in response that the procedural bar is firmly in place because Taylor failed to appeal Judge Messina’s erroneous determination. The state argues that its “agreement” not to raise procedural objections is not relevant and that Taylor has shown neither cause nor prejudice sufficient to overcome the procedural barrier.
The first question we addrеss is whether the claim is procedurally defaulted at all. If Judge Messina was correct that the Missouri Supreme Court considered and rejected Taylor’s plea counsel assertion, the issues of deference to and comity with the state courts, which underlie the procedural bar doctrine, have been satisfied and there would appear to be no reason that the federal habeas tribunal should not now review the claim on its merits.
See Wainwright v. Sykes,
Judge Messina’s ruling seems clearly wrong. We find neither precedent nor rationale for a holding that an appellate court, in vacating a lower court judgment, affirms by implication, the trial court’s rulings in that judgment. This is especially true when the appellate court says not a single word about the particular claim at issue. Although we agree that there are instances when an affirmance by implication can be gleaned from an appellate court’s rulings, this is not one of them. Accordingly, we turn to Taylor’s contention that Missouri waived its procedural defenses.
Taylor’s counsel in the second penalty proceeding asked Judge Coburn to take judicial notice and to preserve for appeal all issues that had “gone before.” Judge Coburn agreed to do so. Then, counsel asked the state if it “would not object procedurally in the [Missouri] court of appeals, the Supreme Court of Missouri, or the federal courts to all of that [Judge Coburn] took judicial notice of.” Emphasis added. Thereafter, the record reads as follows:
[Bowersox’s Counsel]: I have no objection to the Court taking judicial notice of the prior proceedings and the transcripts which have been prepared in connection therewith.
[Taylor’s Counsel]: I understand, but will you stipulate on behalf of the State of Missouri that the State of Missouri will not object to any procedural issue from those procеedings? That’s what I need.
[Bowersox’s Counsel]: The State will not object to the Court taking judicial notice and preserving all of those proceedings and transcripts for appeal.
*971 The state now argues, of course, that this was not a waiver of its procedural defenses in federal court. Taylor has a different analysis, and, perhaps, rightly so. We can see both points of -view. We think that the state should have been more forthright and definitive in its response to what appears to have been a reasonаbly straightforward request. Nonetheless, in the final analysis, we believe the stipulation is not specific enough to bear the weight that Taylor would have us place upon it, especially since the stipulation was made well before Judge Messina’s disputed ruling on the plea counsel issue.
Thus, if Taylor’s plea counsel allegation was neither decided by the Missouri Supreme Court nor the beneficiary of a waiver of procedural defenses, it is defaulted. If so, it is barred from federal habeas review unless Taylor cаn show cause for and prejudice from the procedural failure.
Engle v. Isaac,
Taylor initially argues that Judge Messi-na’s error was, in itself, objective external state-sponsored cause for his failure to preserve his claim for further consideration. In the alternative, he contends that Judge Messina’s adamant refusal to allow the claim to be asserted or discussed prompted his counsel to fail to raise the issue on appeal and, thus, derivatively caused the procedural failure.
We are reluctant to find that a judicial mistake of this nature creates cause sufficient to excuse a procedural default. It was, after all, an appealable ruling that Taylor ignored when he sought appellate review by the Missouri Supreme Court. Accordingly, he must look elsewhere for relief.
If a procedural default is the result of ineffective assistance of trial or direct appeal counsel, in a matter external to the defense and imputed to the state, the Sixth Amendment requires that the default be excused.
Murray v. Carrier,
Even if Taylor had satisfied the mandates of the exhaustion doctrine and has surmounted the “cause” threshold of an ineffective assistance of appellate coun
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sel claim, hе must also establish the prejudice requirements of the “cause and prejudice” formulation for ineffective assistance of counsel created by
Strickland v. Washington,
While it is true that the ... appeal counsel served as cause for the procedural default, we do not look to direct appeal counsel’s conduct to determine prejudice for the procedural default. To establish prejudice sufficient to excuse a procedural default, [a defendant] must show that the ineffective assistance of trial counsel worked to his actual and substantial disadvantage, and infected his entire trial with constitutional error.
Bums v. Gammon,
Taylor contends that he was prejudiced when thе public defender’s office fired his attorney, Leslie Delk, leaving her without appropriate resources and in a position of needing to devote her time to searching for a new job. Taylor also argues that he was never advised of his right to jury sentencing under Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.006.2 and that counsel was ineffective in not researching and advising him on the sentencing judge’s alcoholic tendencies.
When, as here, a defendant pleads guilty on the advice of counsel, he must demonstrate, in order to later claim that his plea was involuntary because of some infirmity in the advice, that the advice was not “within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.”
McMann v. Richardson,
“An error by counsel, even if professionally unreasonable, does not warrant setting aside the judgment of a criminal proceeding if the error had no effect on the judgment.”
Strickland,
Similarly, we see no prejudice in Taylor not being advised of Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.006.2, because there is no showing that it would have affected his decision to plead guilty. At the time of the plea, it is abundantly clear that Taylor, as well as his counsel, wanted to avoid jury рarticipation in the proceedings. Taylor presented no credible evidence on PCR review that knowing he could plead guilty and be sentenced by a jury, rather than a judge, would have affected his decision to be’sentenced by a judge. Additionally, section 565.006.2 does not grant substantive rights to a defendant. Rather, it is a provision which must be agreed upon by the prosecutor. 14 Taylor presented no evidence to the first PCR court that the prosecutor would have agreed to invoke section 565.006.2; in fact, there was evidence to the contrary.
Furthermore, while there may be instances where an attorney’s personal and professional life unacceptably impacts counsel’s representation of a criminal defendant, this is not such a case. We agree with Judge Dierker’s determination that Leslie Delk, despite being fired by the public defender’s office, performed well within the bounds of professional competence in representing Taylor during his plea proceedings, and in fact, acted in a “very professional manner” during these events and “displayed commendable loyalty to Taylor’s interests.” Taylor v. Missouri, Nos. CV91-20562, CV91-20638, 64 (Mo.Cir.Ct. July 1, 1992). Thus, there being no evidence of constitutionally defective lawyering, there can be no prejudice in upholding the procedural default of Taylor’s ineffective assistance of plea counsel claim.
Taylor’s final contention is that he is “actually innocent” of the charged crime, and thus can avoid the procedural bar. Even assuming that Taylor’s gateway claim of actual innocence is sufficient to lift the procedural bar, we have already determined in the preceding paragraphs that his plea counsel’s performance did not constitute ineffective assistance within the meaning of
Strickland.
Although we reached this conclusion in the context of deciding that Taylor’s claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel did not overcome his procedural default of his claim of ineffective assistance of plea counsel, it is necessarily the same cоnclusion we would reach if we addressed the merits of Taylor’s claim of ineffective assistance of plea counsel. Thus, we would still affirm the district court’s denial of relief even if we found that Taylor’s claim of ineffective assistance of plea counsel was not procedurally defaulted.
See Stephens v. Norris,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the result reached by the district court.
Notes
. The Honоrable Fernando J. Gaitan, Jr., United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Missouri’s appellate procedure allows for the direct appeal from a conviction to be stayed pending the resolution of a post-conviction motion. Then, the direct and post-conviction appeals are heard together. Mis *967 souri Supreme Court Rules 24.035 (guilty pleas) and 29.15 (trials); John M. Morris, Postconviction Practice Under the “New 27.26,” 43 J. Mo. B. 435, 438-39 (Oct/Nov. 1987). One attorney represents the defendant in the consolidated appeal. As of January 1, 1996, Missouri “no longer follows the consolidated post-conviction/direct appeal procedure,” State v. Griddine, 75 S.W.3d 741, 743 n. 2 (Mo.Ct.App.2002), but Taylor's sentences were pronounced by Judge Randall in 1991 and by Judge H. Michael Coburn in 1994, thus the consolidated post-conviction/direct appeal procedure was still in effect.
.The Missouri Supreme Court's order simply said, "Judgment vacated. Cause remanded for new penalty hearing, imposition of sentence, and entry of new judgment.” Missouri v. Taylor, No. 74220, Order (Mo. June 29, 1993).
. Taylor and his plea counsel claim that one of the reasons they decided tо have Taylor plead guilty was because the case was being heard by Judge Randall and they believed that Judge Randall was one of the few Missouri judges who might be lenient in sentencing Taylor.
. Judge Coburn also sentenced Taylor to fifty years for armed criminal action, fifteen years for kidnapping and life imprisonment for rape.
. The court subsequently appointed counsel for the second PCR motion.
. This motion included the claim that plea counsel was ineffective.
. As mentioned earlier, this appeal was a consolidated direct and PCR appeal, pursuant to Missouri appellate procedure.
. The Missouri Supreme Court has not recognized the rights found in
Arbuckle,
and has rejected its application to Taylor's co-defendant's set of facts.
State v. Nunley,
. The state argues that Taylor did not raise this exact claim in his appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court. Nonetheless, we consider it because he did raise a federal due process claim in his appeal and he did mention section 565.030 in the same proceeding.
. Indеed, the state argued to Judge Messina that the ineffective plea counsel claim had already been decided by the Missouri Supreme Court.
. Errors made by PCR counsel are not actionable as cause to excuse procedural defaults for habeas purposes.
Chambers
v.
Bowersox,
. The section says, “No defendant who pleads guilty to a homicide offense ... shall be permitted a trial by jury on the issue of the punishment to be imposed, except by agreement of the state.” Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.006.2.
