In this Rule 11 petition,
see
SUP. Ct. R. 11, thе State appeals the determination of the Superior Court (Smukler, J.) that the rule announced in
Miller v. Alabama,
I. Background
The respondents were convicted of first degree murder for offenses committed when they were seventeen years old. Accordingly, they each received a statutorily-mandated sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. See RSA 630:l-a, III (2007).
On June 25,2012, after all of the respondents’ convictions had become final, the United States Supreme Court issued its decision in
Miller,
holding “that the
As a result of the Supreme Court’s decision, the respondents each sought post-conviction relief in the superior court, arguing that the rule announced in Miller applied retroactively and that, consistent with Miller, the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, and Part I, Articles 18 and 33 of the New Hampshire Constitution, they are each entitled to a new sentencing hearing. The cases were consolidated to address the threshold question of whether Miller applies retroactively. After hearing arguments, the trial court ruled that Miller applies retroactively so as to entitle each respondent to a new sentencing hearing. Thereafter, the State filed this petition for writ of certiorari challenging the trial court’s ruling.
II. Standard of Review
Certiorari is a remedy that is not granted as a matter of right, but rather at the discretion of the court.
Petition of State of N.H. (State v. MacDonald),
The sole issue for our review is whether the Supreme Court’s decision in
Miller
applies retroactively to cases on collateral review,
i.e.,
whether the decision applies to the respondents in this case whose direct appeals were completed before
Miller
was decided. Because this issue poses a question of law, we review the matter
de novo. See In the Matter of Sullivan & Sullivan,
III. Analysis
A. Miller v. Alabama
We begin our analysis by examining the
Miller
decision itself. In
Miller,
the Supreme Court addressed whether imposing mandatory life-without-parole sentences upon juvenile offenders violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishments.
Miller,
The Supreme Court found that both Miller’s and Jackson’s cases implicated “two strands of precedent reflecting [its] concern with proportionate punishment.”
Id.
at 2463. “The first has adopted categorical bans on sentencing practices based on mismatches between the culpability of a class of offenders and the severity of the penalty.”
Id.
That line of precedent includes several cases that “specially focused on juvenile offenders, because of their lesser culpability.”
Id.
For instance, the Court noted that in
Roper v. Simmons,
Drawing from those cases, the Court explained that juveniles “are constitutionally different from adults for purposes of sentencing.” Id. at 2464. “Roper and Graham emphasized that the distinctive attributes of youth” — such as immaturity, impetuosity, inability to appreciate risks, and vulnerability to family and home environment — “diminish the penalogical justifications for imposing the harshest sentences on juvenile offenders, even when they commit terrible crimes.” Id. at 2465, 2468. The Court explained that although Graham addressed life-without-parole sentences for juveniles convicted оf nonhomicide crimes, “none of what it said about children — about their distinctive (and transitory) mental traits and environmental vulnerabilities — is crime specific.” Id. at 2465. “Those features are evident in the same way, and to the same degree, when ... a botched robbery turns into a killing.” Id. Thus, “Graham’s reasoning implicates any life-without-parole sentence imposed on a juvenile, even as its categorical bar relates only to nonhomicide offenses----Graham insists that youth matters in determining the appropriateness of a lifetime of incarceration without the possibility of parole.” Id. Applying this reasoning, the Court found that, “by subjecting a juvenile to the same life-without-parole sentence applicable to an adult — these laws prohibit the sentencing authority from assessing whether the law’s harshest term of imprisonment proportionately punishes a juvenile offender.” Id. at 2466. This, the Court concluded, contravened the foundational principle in Graham and Roper: “[Ijmposition of a State’s most severe penalties on juvenile offenders cannot proceed as though they were not children.” Id.
The second strand of precedent implicated in
Miller
prohibits “mandatory imposition of capital punishment, requiring that sentencing authorities consider the characteristics of a defendant and the details of his offense before sentencing him to death.”
Id.
at 2463-64. In the Court’s view,
Graham’s
treatment of life-without-parole sentences as analogous to capital punishment made relevant its line of capital punishment precedent “demanding individualized sentencing.”
Id.
at 2467. Citing its decision in
Woodson v. North Carolina,
The states argued that mandatory life-without-parole sentences for juveniles are not unusual and, therefore, not violative of the Eighth Amendment.
Id.
at 2470-71. The Court explained, however, that, unlike other decisions “considering categorical bars to the death penalty and
B. Retroactivity Principles
We next review the legal principles governing the retroactive application of judicial decisions on collateral review. “The determination [of] whether a constitutional decision of the United States Supreme Court is retroactive — that is, whether the decision applies to conduct or events that occurred before the date of the decision — is a matter of federal law.”
State v. Tallard,
In
Teague v. Lane,
“Under the
Teague
framework, an old rule applies both on direct and collateral review, but a new rule is generally apрlicable only to cases that are still on direct review.”
Whorton,
Under the two exceptions, “[a] new rule applies retroactively in a collateral proceeding only if (1) the rule is substantive or (2) the rule is a ‘watershed rule of criminal procedure’ implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.”
Whorton,
The first exception provides that a new rule will “be applied retroactively if it places certain kinds of primary, private individual conduct beyond the power of the criminal law-making authority to proscribe,”
Teague,
C. Application of Retroactivity Principles to Miller
The State argues that the Miller rule “addressed the process by which juvenile defendants who are convicted of first-degree murder should be sentenced” simply by adding “the requirement of a sentencing hearing.” Accordingly, the State contends that the rule announced in Miller constitutes a new рrocedural rule that cannot be applied on collateral review. The respondents disagree, contending that Miller announced a new substantive rule of law that applies retroactively in this case and, therefore, requires that each of them receive a new sentencing hearing.
Federal and state courts across the country “have considered whether
Miller
announced a new rule that should be applied retroactively, with varying outcomes.”
Malvo v. Mathena,
Civil Action No. 2:13-cv-375,
Generally, in consideration of [the Miller decision and federal retroactivity principles], lower courts that hold Miller is retroactive on collateral review find that it announced a new substantive rule, or that because the Supreme Court applied the holding to Jackson, a petitioner before the court on collateral review, the Supreme Court signaled that the rule must be applied retroactively. Alternatively, lower courts that hold Miller is not retroactive find that the new rule was not substantive but instead was a procedural rule that did not rise to the level of a “watershed” rule of procedure for purposes of the Teague analysis.
Id.
After thoroughly reviewing the decision in
Miller
and the jurisprudence on both sides of the matter, we agree with the reasoning of those courts finding the
Miller
Miller did not simply change what entity considered the same facts. And Miller did not simply announce a rule that was designed to enhance accuracy in sentencing. Instead, Miller held that a sentencer must consider specific, individualized factors before handing down a sentence of life imprisonment without parole for a juvenile. Effectively, then, Miller required a sentenсer of a juvenile to consider new facts, i.e., mitigation evidence, before imposing a life imprisonment sentence with no possibility of parole. ... In other words, it imposed a new requirement as to what a sentencer must consider in order to constitutionally impose life imprisonment without parole on a juvenile.
Mantich,
The State maintains that the Supreme Court’s statement in
Miller
that its decision “does not categorically bar a penalty for a сlass of offenders or type of crime,” but “[ijnstead,... mandates only that a sentencer follow a certain process,”
Miller,
When read in context, the statement does not support the conclusion that the
Miller
rule is procedural; to the contrary, it supports the conclusion
that the rule is substantive. Although there is a procedural element to the rule in that it “mandates ... that a sentencer follow a certain process,” that procedural element is the result of the Court’s substantive change in the law prohibiting mandatory life-without-parole sentencing for juveniles because “youth matters for purposes of meting out the law’s most serious punishments.”
Miller,
The decision of the Supreme Court in
Schriro
regarding the retroactivity of the rule announced in
Ring v. Arizona,
[The Ring] holding did not alter the range of conduct [the] law subjected to the death penalty. It could not have; it rested entirely on the Sixth Amendment’s jury-trial guarantee, a provision that has nothing to dо with the range of conduct a State may criminalize. Instead, Ring altered the range of permissible methods for determining whether a defendant’s conduct is punishable by death, requiring that a jury rather than a judge find the essential facts bearing on punishment. Rules that allocate decisionmaking authority in this fashion are prototypical procedural rules, a conclusion we have reached in numerоus other contexts.
Id.
Unlike the holding in
Ring,
the
Miller
rule does more than merely “regulate . . . the manner of determining the defendant’s culpability.”
Id.
(emphasis omitted).
Miller
provides discretion in sentencing where there once was none.
See Maxwell,
We also find it noteworthy that, upon rendering its decision in
Miller,
the Supreme Court reversed the state court decision dismissing Jackson’s state petition for habeas corpus relief.
See Miller,
Relying upon
Tyler v. Cain,
IV. Conclusion
We conclude that, pursuant to the Teague framework, the rule announced in Miller constitutes a new substantive rule of law that applies retroactively to cases on collateral review. Consequently, we find that the respondents are entitled to the retroactive benefit of the Miller rule in post-conviction proceedings. In light of our decision, we decline to address the respondents’ argument that we should “apply a broader retroactivity doctrine than the federal courts apply.” ■
Affirmed.
