In
Myers v. Collins,
I. BACKGROUND
Ivey V. Myers (“Myers”) is currently serving a twenty-five-year term of imprisonment in the custody of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for an aggravated robbery conviction. Following his conviction, Myers asked the state district court to allow him to represent himself on appeal. The state court granted his request, but informed Myers that standby counsel would be appointed to assist Myers. Instead, the state court appointed Janet Morrow (“Morrow”) as appellate counsel for Myers, without indicating to her that she was appointed as standby counsel for a pro se appeal. After the record was compiled, Morrow filed an appellate brief on Myers’s behalf, alleging ineffective assistance of trial counsel and requesting that the judgment be reformed to reflect that Myers had only one, not two, previous convictions. Myers asked Morrow for a copy of the transcript, so that he could file a pro se brief, but she failed to provide him with the record. The Texas Fourteenth Court of Appeals affirmed Myers’s conviction and reformed the judgment as requested in Morrow’s brief. Morrow then filed a petition for discretionary review on Myers’s behalf which the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals refused without opinion.
On June 29, 1989, Myers filed a federal habeas corpus petition in the district court, alleging the following:
(1)his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process was violated by:
(a)the inclusion of several abases in the indictment which prejudiced the jury,
(b) his in-court identification which was prompted by the prosecutor,
(c) his identification in an out-of-court photo spread,
(d) the victim’s conflicting testimony to the jury and the police, and
(e) perjury committed by the police investigator and the reporting officer;
(2) his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to self-representation at trial and on appeal were violated;
(3) his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance; and
(4) the evidence was insufficient to sustain his conviction.
The district court dismissed the petition on December 19, 1989, holding that Myers had not exhausted his state remedies. On December 28, 1990, this court vacated the judgment of the district court and remanded for consideration of the merits of Myers’s petition.
On remand, the state filed a motion to dismiss on grounds that “sufficient evidence supported Myers’s conviction, that Myers’s due process rights were not violated, that Myers’s counsel was not constitutionally ineffective and that there was no error in any alleged denial of Myers’s right to represent himself.” On October 1, 1991, the district court granted the state’s motion, treating it as a motion for summary judgment, and denied Myers’s petition for habeas relief.
On appeal from the district court’s denial of habeas relief, this court addressed the question whether Myers had been denied his federal constitutional right to represent himself on direct appeal of his conviction. The court determined that “a state criminal defendant has a constitutional right to present pro se motions and briefs on appeal.”
Myers v. Collins,
Following the evidentiary hearing, the magistrate judge entered recommended findings of fact and conclusions of law. The magistrate judge concluded that Myers was denied his right of self-representation on the first appeal as of right and recommended that the writ be conditionally granted unless the Texas Court of Appeals allowed Myers an out-of-time pro se appeal on the issue of insufficiency of the evidence — the issue not raised by Morrow, his appellate counsel. In response to the state’s objections, the magistrate judge amended her report. Although the magistrate judge still found that Myers had not waived or abandoned his right of self-representation, the magistrate judge concluded that Myers had not demonstrated “substantial and injurious effect from Morrow’s appellate brief,” applying the harmless error standard set out for trial errors in
Brecht v. Abramson,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
In reviewing requests for federal habeas corpus relief, we review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error, but review issues of law de novo.
Dison v. Whitley,
III. DISCUSSION
This appeal presents us with three questions. First, we must determine whether the district court’s determination that Myers did not abandon his right of self-representation on direct appeal is clearly erroneous. Second, we must decide whether a state criminal defendant’s constitutional right to present pro se briefs on the first appeal as of right is amenable to harmless error analysis, applying the standards set forth in
Arizona v. Fulminante,
A. THE RIGHT TO SELF-REPRESENTATION ON DIRECT APPEAL
1. Existence of the Right
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees every criminal defendant the right to the assistance of counsel at trial.
Gideon v. Wainwright,
In
Price v. Johnston,
2. Standby Counsel, Abandonment and Waiver
Because we have so recently recognized the right to present pro se briefs on the first appeal as of right, we have not yet delineated the manner in which this right must be exercised. Thus, we look to the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Faretta
and
McKaskle v. Wiggins,
McKaskle v. Wiggins
addressed “[the] role standby counsel who is present at trial over the defendant’s objection may play consistent with the protection of the defendant’s
Faretta
rights.”
First, the pro se defendant is entitled to preserve actual control over the ease he chooses to present to the jury. This is the core of the Faretta right. If standby counsel’s participation over the defendant’s objection effectively allows counsel to make or substantially interfere with any significant tactical decision, or to control the questioning of witnesses, or to speak instead of the defendant on any matter of importance, the Faretta right is eroded.
Second, participation by standby counsel without the defendant’s consent should not be allowed to destroy the jury’s perception that the defendant is representing himself.
Id.
at 178,
Additionally,
McKaskle
recognized that a criminal defendant may abandon or waive his right to self-representation during the criminal trial.
Id.
at 182,
Applying the reasoning of
McKaskle
to an appellate situation, we hold that a criminal defendant who clearly and unequivocally asserts his right to present pro se briefs on the first direct appeal must be allowed to “preserve actual control over the case he chooses to present” to the appellate court— i.e., he must be allowed to determine the content of his appellate brief.
See McKaskle,
In the present case, the district court 3 found that Myers clearly and unequivocally asserted his right to self-representation on his first appeal as of right. 4 The state trial court, although it had orally assented to Myers’s assertion of his right, effectively denied that right by appointing Morrow as appellate counsel for Myers. Additionally, the district court found that Myers did not subsequently abandon his right to self-representation on direct appeal. The state argues that the district court’s finding that Myers did not abandon his right to self-representation is clearly erroneous because Myers did not advise the state court of his dissatisfaction with Morrow’s representation. The next section will address the district court’s findings and conclusions.
3. The District Court’s Findings
The district court found the following facts:
Myers requested and received permission to represent himself on appeal. Nevertheless, on December 18, 1986, Morrow was appointed as Myers’s counsel on appeal. The appointment form and the official court docket reflected that Morrow’s appointment was standard; no mention was made that Myers had been granted the right to represent himself or that Morrow’s appointment was on a standby basis. Myers testified at the evidentiary hearing that the trial judge denied his request to represent himself. Morrow testified that the state court did not inform her that her appointment was as standby counsel, and that she would not have accepted a standby appointment. She testified that, in March 1987, Myers wrote to her requesting a copy of the transcript and advising her that she was representing him against his will. She stated that he never told her that she was standby counsel, only that he wished to file a pro se brief. Morrow did not take requests from criminal defendants for copies of the transcript seriously. On March 19, 1987, Morrow responded to Myers’s letter, informing him that she was representing him on the direct appeal and that she would begin working on the brief as soon as the record was complete. Morrow believed that she had been appointed as appellate counsel. Myers testified that after Morrow refused to send him the transcript, he felt it was useless to object to the brief she had filed. In December 1987, Myers filed a pro se petition for writ of mandamus before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, complaining that the trial judge had improperly denied his request to represent himself on appeal.
Based on these factual findings, the district court concluded that Myers did not expressly, knowingly, and intelligently waive his right to represent himself on direct appeal. The district court determined that *1336 Myers had requested and received permission to represent himself in the direct appeal of his conviction, but that he believed that his request to represent himself had been denied. This erroneous belief, induced by the court’s written order unconditionally appointing Morrow on appeal, resulted in the denial of Myers’s constitutional right to represent himself. In answer to the state’s argument that Myers abandoned his right of self-representation by failing to contact the state appellate court and advise it that Morrow had taken over his appeal, the district court stated:
The court agrees that Petitioner could have done more to preserve his right to represent himself but cannot agree that Myers abandoned his right to self-representation under the particular facts of this case. It is significant that it was the court’s order which undermined Petitioner’s ability to represent himself, not any action of Petitioner. Once counsel was appointed, the court only communicated with counsel. Because appellate counsel had been appointed, Petitioner could not have obtained a copy of the transcript which he had ordered or been allowed to file his own brief. Based on the facts presented in this ease, the State has not shown by a preponderance of the evidence that the Petitioner abandoned his right to represent himself on appeal.
We agree with the district court’s conclusion that Myers did not abandon his right of self-representation on direct appeal. Although it may be true that to best preserve his rights Myers should have notified the state court that Morrow had taken over his appeal, the district court’s factual finding that Myers believed that his request to be his own attorney had been denied is not clearly erroneous. Myers’s belief that the state court had denied his request to represent himself is reasonable in light of the state district court’s actions in appointing Morrow and Morrow’s statement that she was representing him on appeal, as well as her refusal to deliver a copy of the transcript to Myers. This belief also explains why Myers faded to contact the state court to protest Morrow’s actions.
Furthermore, at no point did Myers invite or agree to Morrow’s substantial participation in the prosecution of his appeal.
See McKaskle,
Myers clearly and unequivocally asserted his right to represent himself on his first direct appeal. The state district court, after orally agreeing to this request, denied Myers’s right by appointing counsel to represent him. The record supports the finding that Myers did not at any time invite or agree to Morrow’s participation in the appeal. Therefore, we affirm the district court’s finding that Myers did not abandon his right to present pro se briefs and motions on his first appeal as of right.
B. DOES HARMLESS ERROR ANALYSIS APPLY?
Having determined that the state court denied Myers’s constitutional right to represent himself on direct appeal, and that Myers did not abandon or waive this right, we must now address the question whether violation of a state criminal defendant’s constitutional right to present pro se briefs on the first appeal as of right is amenable to harmless error analysis. 5
*1337
The United States Supreme Court has determined that harmless error analysis is appropriate for many types of constitutional violations.
Chapman v. California,
In
Arizona v. Fulminante,
the Supreme Court distinguished the types of constitutional errors amenable to harmless error analysis from those requiring automatic reversal by denominating the former, “trial errors,” and the latter, “structural defects.”
In contrast, the Court described those constitutional errors which require automatic reversal as “structural defects in the constitution of the trial mechanism.”
Id.
at 309,
In McKaskle v. Wiggins, the Supreme Court determined that the Faretta right to self-representation at trial was not amenable to harmless error analysis, applying a rationale other than the trial error/structural defect dichotomy:
Since the right of self-representation is a right that when exercised usually increases the likelihood of a trial outcome unfavorable to the defendant, its denial is not amenable to “harmless error” analysis. The right is either respected or denied; its deprivation cannot be harmless.
McKaskle,
Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in
McKaskle,
this court had also recognized that “the nature of the right to defend pro se renders the traditional harmless error doctrine peculiarly inapposite.”
Chapman v. United States,
The Second Circuit expanded on the Supreme Court’s McKaskle rationale and our reasoning in' Chapman in reaching the conclusion that denial of the right of self-representation cannot be harmless:
*1338 The right to self-representation derives principally from interests beyond ensuring that trial outcomes are fair. The Sixth Amendment’s right to self-representation reflects values of individual integrity, autonomy, and self-expression. Violation of the right to self-representation sacrifices these values even in the absence of effect on the outcome of the trial.
Application of harmless error analysis is particularly inappropriate to denial of the right to self-representation because a harmless error standard would, in practical effect, preclude vindication of the right. Since seasoned appointed counsel can almost invariably provide better legal representation than a pro se defendant, denial of a request to proceed pro se could rarely, if ever, be shown to have been prejudicial.
Johnstone v. Kelly,
We find that the reasons that harmless error analysis is inappropriate for denial of the right to self-representation at trial apply equally to the denial of the constitutional right to present pro se briefs on the first appeal as of right.
7
The right to present pro se briefs on direct appeal, as the right to self-representation at trial, arises from the fundamental belief that a criminal defendant should not have counsel forced upon him.
See Myers,
Therefore, we cannot affirm the district court’s judgment denying Myers’s petition for writ of habeas corpus because he failed to show injurious effect from Morrow’s brief or that his pro se brief would have resulted in reversal of his conviction. The denial of Myers’s right to represent himself on direct appeal is reversible error. However, the appropriate remedy is an opportunity to present an out-of-time pro se appellate brief to the state court of appeals.
See Lombard v. Lynaugh,
IV. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court, and we REMAND to the district court with instructions to enter judgment granting the writ of habeas corpus unless the state affords Myers an opportunity to present an out-of-time pro se appellate brief within such reasonable time as the district court may fix.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. In
Myers,
the court recognized that arguably its holding constituted a "new rule” which federal courts are usually barred from announcing in a habeas corpus case by
Teague v. Lane,
. We note that the state of Texas has recognized the right of a defendant to self-representation on appeal (although denying his right to present oral argument).
Webb v. State,
. The magistrate judge entered an amended report and recommendation, including proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, which the district court adopted. For the sake of simplicity, we will refer to the district court.
. The district court found that "the official transcript reflects that Myers requested and received permission to represent himself on appeal,” citing the following colloquy:
MYERS: I would like at this time to file my notice of appeal.
THE COURT: Certainly, sir.
MYERS: I would like to also advise the Court that I'm indigent and cannot afford an attorney nor could I afford a transcript and would the Court provide me these.
THE COURT: Certainly.
MYERS: As well as the right to be my own lawyer.
THE COURT: You want to be your own lawyer with no assistance from a lawyer?
MYERS: This is what I asked the first time and also asked the second time.
THE COURT: You may be your own lawyer, sir, but I think I'll appoint someone to stand by in case you need some assistance.
. The state argues that because the source of the right to present a pro se brief on direct appeal flows from Texas’s statutory grant of a right to an appeal as of right, the statutory basis of the right compels a harmless error analysis. Because this court held in
Myers
that the right to present pro se briefs on direct appeal is a constitutional
*1337
right,
. In
Brecht v. Abramson,
. We recognize that the constitutional right to present pro se briefs on direct appeal stands on different constitutional footing than the right to self-representation at trial.
See Myers,
However, the Sixth Amendment does not protect the right to counsel on appeal. Rather, if a right to appeal is granted by a state, the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses demand that the effective assistance of retained or appointed counsel on appeal also be provided.
See Evitts v. Lucey,
Although determining the constitutional source of the right to present pro se briefs on the first appeal as of right is an important step in recognizing the right, whether the right is a Sixth Amendment or a Due Process right does not affect the determination of whether the right is amenable to harmless error analysis. There are Sixth Amendment and Due Process rights the violation of which constitute trial errors subject to harmless error analysis.
See Fulminante,
. Because we determine that the constitutional right to present pro se briefs on appeal is not amenable to harmless error analysis, we do not reach our third question — whether the denial of Myers's right to self-representation on appeal was harmless error.
