We are called upon to decide whether a defendant, whose attorney moved on the morning of trial to withdraw from the case and to postpone proceedings, was denied his right to the counsel of his choice when the trial judge denied the motions.
I
A
Thirty-four-year-old Dustin Vade Miller, unarmed but purporting to be holding a gun, robbed several small retail establishments over a ten-day period in 1998. He was apprehended by police, fought back, and later confessed to the crimes. Miller was charged in Lane County, Oregon, with several counts of robbery, assaulting a public safety officer, and resisting arrest. He pled not guilty to all counts and Janise Augur, of the Lane County Public Defender’s Office, was appointed to represent him. Trial was scheduled, but was continued for thirty days upon Augur’s motion because she had not yet received a tape of Miller’s confession from the State. During this period, Augur and the State attempted to negotiate a plea agreement, but never agreed to the terms.
On the evening before trial, Miller left a telephone message on Augur’s home answering machine stating that he was no longer comfortable with her representation and that he wanted a new lawyer. In response, Augur filed motions the next morning to withdraw as Miller’s counsel and to postpone trial. Oregon Circuit Judge Lyle C. Velure immediately held a proceeding in open court to consider the motions, with Miller present. Augur spoke first and explained that Miller’s father (“Mr.Miller”) had told his son the day before that he would be willing to pay for private representation. In addition, Augur described Miller’s phone call and stated that he had become unwilling to communicate with her further about the case. Given these developments, she told the judge that she felt she could no longer effectively represent Miller. Finally, Augur speculated that a new attorney could be ready to try the case “within a month,” but conceded that Miller had not yet retained a new attorney.
The prosecutor objected to postponement, arguing that the State was ready to proceed and that all of its witnesses were present at the courthouse that morning. Further, the prosecutor characterized Augur as competent and able counsel, noting that she had actively attempted to negotiate a plea on Miller’s behalf and that she had recently filed a pretrial motion to suppress Miller’s confession. The prosecutor also argued that the motions made that morning were simply Miller’s attempt to delay trial and to pressure the State into a more favorable plea agreement than it had offered previously.
Judge Velure also allowed Miller’s father to address the court. Mr. Miller explained his belated willingness to pay for private counsel by noting that his son had informed him of the potential length of his sentence only during a phone conversation the night before. Although Mr. Miller had previously decided to stay out of his son’s legal troubles, he explained that he felt compelled to intervene once he learned of the “totally ridiculous, ridiculous” amount of prison time Miller was facing. Mr. Miller informed the court that he hoped to hire an attorney who could “talk candidly” and be “available to me,” and that he had a particular attorney in mind, Fred Hart-strom, a friend from “many years back.” When asked, Mr. Miller stated that he had not yet been able to reach Hartstrom, but that he had “made the call” that morning.
After his father spoke, Miller reiterated his complaints about Augur’s preparation, and Augur reiterated her belief that Miller would not cooperate with her. The trial judge then took a ten-minute recess, during which he reviewed Augur’s pretrial motion to suppress Miller’s confession. Upon his return, the judge denied Augur’s motions to withdraw and to continue trial, emphasizing his reluctance to encourage criminal defendants in filing last-minute motions to fire their lawyers. He also found Miller’s allegations that Augur was unprepared unfounded, noting specifically that her pretrial motion was “appropriately prepared and appropriately formed.” Nevertheless, in response to Miller’s concerns, the trial judge decided to delay opening statements from the current date, a Friday, until the following Tuesday, giving Augur and Miller the intervening time to work together on his defense. In addition, the judge emphasized to Miller that he would be “extremely liberal” in construing procedural rules in Miller’s favor and that he would permit Augur to introduce any witnesses or evidence Miller revealed to her, even if Augur had not previously supplied such information to the prosecution.
Augur renewed her motion to withdraw, which was again denied. Next, Mr. Miller addressed the court, stating that while he had “no problem” with the ruling, which was “good enough and fair enough,” he remained “really frightened” by the expected sentence. The trial judge assured Mr. Miller that he would ensure that his son would be “fairly and adequately represented” and emphasized that Miller needed to take advantage of the short delay the judge had provided to communicate with his attorney.
Later, in exchange for the State’s promise to recommend a reduced sentence, Mil
B
Miller directly appealed his convictions to the Oregon Court of Appeals, which affirmed without opinion, and the Oregon Supreme Court denied review. Next, Miller filed for post conviction relief in Oregon state court, but the court denied the petition in its entirety. Again, the Oregon Court of Appeals affirmed without opinion, and the Oregon Supreme Court denied review.
On February 5, 2005, Miller filed a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the District of Oregon. The district court construed all of Miller’s claims as waived except his contention that the trial judge violated his Sixth Amendment rights by denying Augur’s motions to withdraw and to postpone trial. The district court denied the petition, concluding that no clearly established federal law provided that (1) the trial judge’s decision was a denial of Miller’s right to counsel of choice, or that (2) the trial judge’s inquiry into the breakdown in Miller and Augur’s relationship deprived him of the effective assistance of counsel. Miller timely filed this appeal, challenging only the first of the district court’s determinations.
II
Miller’s sole claim on appeal is that the state trial judge’s denial of Augur’s motions to withdraw and to postpone violated his right to the counsel of his choice. At the outset, we emphasize that because the question has not been preserved, we do not consider whether the deterioration in Miller and Augur’s relationship prevented the effective assistance of counsel. Instead, our inquiry is limited to the narrower question of whether the trial judge’s denial of Augur’s motions deprived Miller of his right to choice of counsel.
A
Miller’s claim is governed by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, which limits relief in cases such as this to situations in which the state court’s decision was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1);
see Williams v. Taylor,
B
The Sixth Amendment provides that, “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the
The Supreme Court has emphasized, however, that the right to counsel of choice is “circumscribed in several important respects.”
Wheat v. United States,
With these principles set forth, we turn to the question of whether the trial judge’s decision to deny Augur’s motions to withdraw and to continue the trial date either contradicted or unreasonably applied their commands. 3
C
It is clear that the trial judge’s decision was not contrary to clearly established Supreme Court precedent, as the Court has never considered a case involving facts sufficiently similar to those presented here to be controlling, nor did the trial judge apply a rule which contradicted the Court’s instructions.
See Williams,
1
First, at the time Augur moved to withdraw and to postpone trial, Miller had not yet retained another attorney to take her place. In
Gonzalez-Lopez,
the Supreme Court accepted the government’s concession that a trial court wrongfully denied a defendant the right to counsel of choice where the court refused to grant
pro hac vice
admission to an attorney the defendant hired who was willing and prepared to begin representation immediately.
In this case, however, Miller sought a thirty-day continuance during which he hoped to search for and to retain a new lawyer with the funds his father had belatedly offered to provide. At the time of the motions, no such attorney had been retained. While Miller’s father had placed a call to Hartstrom, there was nothing to suggest that Hartstrom would be willing or available to take Miller’s case. Moreover, it was unclear how much time a new attorney, once hired, would have needed to prepare for Miller’s trial. Although Augur speculated that preparation would take approximately one month, other commitments in the new attorney’s schedule may have made such a timeline unrealistic.
2
Second, the trial judge reasonably concluded that Augur was sufficiently prepared for trial. Under our precedents, the trial judge had a duty to inquire into the problems between Augur and Miller when they were first raised.
5
Plumlee v. Masto,
In our view, this information provided the trial judge with reasonable grounds on which to conclude that Augur was prepared to try the case that morning, as scheduled. While we do not address the question of whether an irreconcilable conflict existed between Miller and Augur,
see supra
at 894, we note that “we are not aware of any [Supreme Court precedent] that stands for the proposition that the Sixth Amendment is violated when a defendant is represented by a lawyer free of actual conflicts of interest, but with whom the defendant refuses to cooperate because of dislike or distrust.”
Plumlee,
3
Third, we consider the timing of Augur’s motions to withdraw and to postpone trial. Miller was indicted sixty-eight days before trial, and we are satisfied that such time provided him with ample opportunity to arrange for an alternative to court-appointed counsel by whatever means he saw fit, including by seeking his father’s financial assistance. The fact that Mr. Miller’s generosity was not prompted until the eve of trial in no way suggests that the court denied Miller a full and fair opportunity to seek the counsel of his choice. In any event, we reject Miller’s suggestion that the Sixth Amendment entitled him to a fair opportunity to seek the counsel of his choice starting at the moment when his father offered to pay for private representation.
Moreover, we note that Miller’s attorney did not move to withdraw and to continue the trial date until the morning trial was set to begin. The Supreme Court has held that “only [a trial court’s] unreasoning and arbitrary ‘insistence upon expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable request for delay’ ” violates the Sixth Amendment,
Morris v. Slappy,
In
Wheat,
the defendant moved to substitute his attorney only two court days before trial.
Here, Miller did not express any dissatisfaction with Augur’s representation until the day his father offered to pay for a private attorney, and the trial judge was not presented with the motions until the next morning, the morning trial was set to begin. Of course, the late timing of a motion to substitute counsel or to postpone trial does not always preclude relief.
See Daniels v.
Woodford,
Ill
Viewing the foregoing factors under the deferential standard that § 2254(d)(1) requires, we conclude that the trial judge’s decision to deny the motions to withdraw and to postpone trial did not exceed his discretion to balance Miller’s right to counsel of choice against concerns of fairness and scheduling.
See Gonzalez-Lopez,
Accordingly, the district court’s denial of Miller’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The parties dispute whether this initial continuance, due to the non-delivery of evidence, was caused by the State’s negligence or Augur's, and the record is silent on this point. Still, because this was the trial judge's sole reference to the continuance, we do not view it as a material factor in his ruling on the motions.
. In reviewing a petition for habeas, we look to "the last reasoned state-court decision.”
Van Lynn v. Farmon,
. We reject Miller's suggestion that the district court deemed his Sixth Amendment claim waived. While the district court noted that Miller "may have waived” his right to counsel of choice, it expressly stated that it would treat the claim as preserved and proceeded to assess the merits of Miller's petition at length in a reasoned decision. It is that decision which we review here.
. Both Miller and the State devote significant attention to the procedural adjustments the trial judge made in response to Miller's dissatisfaction with Augur, specifically his decisions to postpone opening statements from Friday to Tuesday, to allow Augur to introduce evidence not disclosed during discovery, and to be “exceedingly liberal” in construing procedural rules in Miller's favor. While such remedies are relevant to a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Gonzalez-Lopez instructs that they are irrelevant to a claim for denial of counsel of choice. See 126 S.Ct. at 2562.
. Miller contends that the trial judge was required to conduct an
ex parte
hearing on the motions. We disagree. We have approved of such devices where a defendant alleges that his attorney has a conflict of interest.
See United States v. Nguyen,
