Richard A. LEAVITT, Petitioner-Appellee,
v.
Arvon J. ARAVE, Warden, Idaho State Correctional Institution, Respondent-Appellant.
Richard A. Leavitt, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Arvon J. Arave, Warden, Idaho State Correctional Institution, Respondent-Appellee.
No. 01-99008.
No. 01-99009.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted July 10, 2003.
Filed June 14, 2004.
Amended September 7, 2004.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED David Z. Nevin, Nevin, Herzfeld, Benjamin & McKay, LLP, Boise, ID; Andrew H. Parness (argued), Ketchum, ID, for the petitioner-appellee/cross-appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Idaho; B. Lynn Winmill, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CV-93-00024-S-BLW.
Before KOZINSKI, FERNANDEZ, and RYMER, Circuit Judges.
ORDER AMENDING OPINION, DENYING PETITION FOR REHEARING, AND DENYING PETITION FOR REHEARING AND FOR REHEARING EN BANC AND AMENDED OPINION
PER CURIAM.
ORDER
In light of the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Schriro v. Summerlin, ___ U.S. ___,
(1) We revoke the introductory paragraph and subparagraph A under part VI SENTENCING ISSUES, which appear at slip op. 7818(688), and substitute the following in their place:
Leavitt also attacks his sentencing on various grounds. We reject all of them.
A. Ring v. Arizona.
As is well known by now, in Ring v. Arizona,
(2) We revoke the last sentence of part VIII, which appears at slip op. 7829(694) and substitute the following in its place:
Therefore, we remand these ineffective assistance of counsel issues to the district court for further proceedings.
(3) We revoke the CONCLUSION, which appears at slip op. 7829(694), including footnote 41 thereof, and substitute the following in its place:
CONCLUSION
Leavitt is not entitled to habeas corpus relief as far as his conviction and the sentencing issues disposed of in this opinion are concerned. However, he is entitled to have the district court consider his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel at his second sentencing hearing.
Thus, we AFFIRM on all issues raised in Leavitt's cross appeal, other than the second sentencing hearing ineffective assistance of counsel issues, and REVERSE on the State's appeal. We REMAND so that the district court can consider the issues regarding Leavitt's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel at the second sentencing hearing.
AFFIRMED in part; REVERSED in part; and REMANDED.
With the above amendments, A.J. Arave's petition for rehearing is DENIED. Richard A. Leavitt's petition for rehearing and for rehearing en banc is also DENIED.
Notes:
Notes
This case is reported asLeavitt v. Arave,
OPINION
PER CURIAM:
Richard A. Leavitt, a State of Idaho prisoner under sentence of death, brought a petition for habeas corpus in the district court. 28 U.S.C. § 2254. He filed a myriad of attacks on his conviction and sentence, ranging from alleged evidentiary errors through instructional errors and onto attacks on the Idaho death penalty scheme. He also asserted ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court granted habeas corpus relief on one claim: the assertion that a burden of proof instruction violated Leavitt's due process rights. However, it denied relief as to all of his other claims.
The State of Idaho appeals the former, and Leavitt appeals the latter. We reverse as to the former, affirm as to all of the latter, with the exception of an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, and remand for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
In the small town of Blackfoot, Idaho, on July 17, 1984, the victim of this brutal crime, Danette Elg, was viciously attacked in her own bedroom by a knife-wielding assailant. The relentless and merciless assault took place on her waterbed and with such implacable force that the bed itself was punctured and torn, while the victim sustained numerous cuts and slashes as she fought for her life. She was also stabbed multiple times: One thrust caused the knife to enter her right lung, another the right side of her heart, still another her left lung, and others penetrated her stomach, her chest cavity, and her neck. One even went through her eye and into her brain. Another exceedingly peculiar and unique wound inflicted during this attack was a cut made by the attacker through which he then removed her sexual organs. He did that in a manner that showed that he had some knowledge of female anatomy, for it was done in a manner that is difficult to accomplish.
The evidence pointing to Leavitt was powerful, if circumstantial — he was not caught redhanded, nor did he confess. Unfortunately, the victim's body was not found for several days which caused the destruction of some evidentiary markers, but gave rise to others.
On the night of July 16, the victim had been severely frightened and shaken when a prowler tried to enter her home. She called the emergency 911 number and the police came, but they found nothing other than signs of attempted entry and a petrified young lady, who thought that Leavitt was the culprit. They then searched the area and the town but, alas, failed to find Leavitt. Strangely enough, during the period between the murder and the discovery of the body with Leavitt's help, he became exceedingly "interested" in the victim's whereabouts. He finally obtained permission to enter the house with the police and discovered the body. Another strange aspect of the case was that a person supposedly named Mike Jenkins also called the police a couple of times during that period and showed knowledge of details of the crime that only the killer himself would know. Mike Jenkins was not known in Blackfoot and was not heard of thereafter. Leavitt, however, is adept at disguising his voice on the telephone, and could even fool his own wife when he did so.
What else? On the very night of the killing, Leavitt suffered a severe cut to his finger, for which he was treated in an emergency room. The killer was also wounded and left behind his blood — TypeO — which was mixed with the blood of his hapless victim — Type A. Of all the possible suspects, the only likely source of the Type O blood was Leavitt himself.
How could that damning connection be explained? Well, said Leavitt, he had somehow cut his hand on a fan at home — a story that was shown to be a lie. At trial he changed that to a story that he had really sustained the cut while preventing his wife from committing suicide. And the crime scene blood? Leavitt could not, at first, imagine how his blood could have been found there, but he had an epiphany by the time of trial. At trial, he managed to recall that a week before the killing he had a nosebleed in the victim's bedroom. That, supposedly, resulted in his blood being mixed with hers when she was killed on her bed a week later. It also supposedly explained how his blood was elsewhere in her room — on the walls and at the window, and even on her underclothes — he wiped his nose on them — as well as on shorts that she had worn between the date of the "nosebleed" and the date of her death. Along the way, Leavitt also tried to send his wife a letter from jail in which he sought to have her memorize a story he had concocted, which would, not surprisingly, tend to exculpate him.
Neither the jury, nor any court which has since reviewed the evidence in this case, has been impressed with Leavitt's stories. The jury found him guilty, and an Idaho judge sentenced him to death. The Idaho Supreme Court affirmed and denied post-conviction relief.1 But the district court found error in the jury instructions and issued the writ of habeas corpus, and these appeals followed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The district court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291, 2253(c).
We review the district court's decision to grant or deny a petition for habeas corpus de novo. Martinez-Villareal v. Lewis,
DISCUSSION
While we are faced with numerous issues, if the district court properly granted habeas corpus on the innocence instruction issue, the others fall by the wayside. Thus, we will first take up the state's appeal of the decision of that issue. We will thereafter consider the others.
I. THE INNOCENCE INSTRUCTION
The state argues that the district court created a new rule of law in violation of Teague v. Lane,
If a state properly argues that the district court granted a habeas petition on the basis of a new rule of constitutional law that is Teague-barred, we must address the Teague issue first. Caspari v. Bohlen,
* Whether the rule is "new" depends upon whether it was dictated by controlling precedent at the time when Leavitt's conviction became final in 1989, not when his sentence became final in 1992. This is because the guilt phase and sentencing phase were bifurcated, Gretzler v. Stewart,
B
The rule that Leavitt advocates, and that the district court adopted, is that there was a reasonable likelihood that the jury understood the instructions as a whole to allow conviction based upon proof less demanding than proof beyond a reasonable doubt. En route, Leavitt argues (and the district court held) that instruction 12 is erroneous because it eroded the reasonable doubt standard by allowing the jury to convict if it believed that he was "in fact" guilty.
The principle that the Due Process Clause requires proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt was established in Winship. And the principle that an instruction may not shift the burden of proof or lift it by a presumption as to an element of the crime charged was established in Sandstrom v. Montana,
Existing precedent did not "dictate" or "compel" the conclusion that there was a reasonable likelihood that the jury interpreted the instructions to allow for conviction by proof less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Reasonable jurists in 1989 would have known that a flawed instruction must be viewed in the context of the instructions overall. See Cupp v. Naughten,
A good argument can be made that we should start and stop with the law as determined by the Supreme Court. See Bell v. Hill,
We had held before Leavitt's conviction was final that instructing a jury that the presumption of innocence is not intended to aid the guilty-in-fact was "prejudicial error." Reynolds v. United States,
Other federal courts of appeals had considered similar instructions, but no consensus had emerged by 1989. Compare Gomila v. United States,
State-court decisions (assuming they have some relevance as a reference point for determining what federal law was established at the time) were split as well. Compare Gilleylen v. State,
In sum, jurists in 1989 considering Supreme Court, circuit, and state court precedent would not have felt compelled to hold that Leavitt's jury convicted him on a diluted burden of proof solely because some courts had disapproved instruction 12.
Even so, Leavitt contends that the other reasonable doubt instructions were themselves fraught with error, such that they could not undo the misleading impression left by instruction 12. In particular, he faults instructions 10, 11, 13, 36 and 39,5 which he claims (and the district concluded) were confusing, ambiguous, and possibly misleading to the jury. We disagree. The trial judge unequivocally told the jury at least nine times that the prosecution had the burden of proving the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Set against these correct admonitions, existing precedent did not compel the conclusion argued for by Leavitt (and accepted by the district court) that, taken as a whole, the giving of instruction 12 created a reasonable likelihood that the jury interpreted the instructions as allowing Leavitt to be convicted on proof less than beyond a reasonable doubt.
Whatever error there was in instruction 10 was immediately cured. To the extent that the judge's statement at the beginning of this instruction that the jury "should" require proof beyond a reasonable doubt may have misstated the obligation,6 the judge immediately followed up by explaining that if "you entertain a reasonable doubt of the truth of any one of these material allegations, then it is your duty to give the Defendant the benefit of such doubt and acquit him," and by summing up with the unequivocal statement: "There must be proof beyond a reasonable doubt." Thus, even if a layperson would have understood "should" as precatory rather than mandatory, any such impression was promptly corrected. Cf. Boyde v. California,
Instruction 11 is virtually identical to the reasonable doubt instruction upheld in Victor v. Nebraska,
Instruction 39 is more troublesome because it imposed the burden of proving an alibi on Leavitt, which is clearly wrong. See Thomas v. United States,
Accordingly, reasonable jurists in 1989 would not have felt compelled to hold that, on account of instruction 12 in the context of the instructions as a whole, there was a reasonable likelihood that the jury interpreted the instructions to allow conviction by proof less than beyond a reasonable doubt. Because it would be a new rule to decide so now, we must determine whether it should nevertheless apply retroactively to Leavitt's case. If not, there is no need to consider Leavitt's remaining argument that structural error — which a Cage error is7 — precludes harmless error analysis even on habeas review.
C
Under Teague,"a new rule can be retroactive to cases on collateral review if, and only if, it falls within one of two narrow exceptions to the general rule of nonretroactivity." Tyler v. Cain,
Whether the district court announced (or we would be announcing if we affirmed) a "watershed" rule by holding that the jury charge given at Leavitt's trial was unconstitutional under Winship and Cage is an open question in the Ninth Circuit. In Ramirez v. Hatcher,
We also considered a similar question in
elements of the charged crime. But
does not shed light on the distinct question of whether
is a "watershed" rule.
Although we have never decided whether to apply Cage retroactively on habeas review, six other circuits have and they all concluded that Cage announced a watershed rule primarily on the footing that Sullivan held that a Cage error is structural error.9 See Tillman v. Cook,
Ordinarily, the unanimity of six circuits on a question of first impression for us would counsel against our reaching a contrary result. Cf. Zimmerman v. Oregon Dep't. of Justice,
Considering the issue afresh, it is clear that the first "watershed" requirement is met because a defective reasonable doubt instruction affects the accuracy of the finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Indeed, it destroys it. Misdescribing the burden of proof "vitiates all the jury's findings," has "consequences that are necessarily unquantifiable and indeterminate," and transforms appellate review into "pure speculation." Sullivan,
However, we now know that it does not necessarily follow from Sullivan that the Cage rule alters our understanding of bedrock procedures. Tyler,
Accordingly, even if we were to hold that instruction 12 and the instructions as a whole were unconstitutional in light of Cage because they were ambiguous and misled the jury as to the meaning of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, we would not be making a sweeping or groundbreaking pronouncement. We would simply be holding that Leavitt's trial was infirm because the instructions were so ambiguous and confusing that it is reasonably likely the jury understood them overall to allow conviction on proof less than beyond a reasonable doubt, which would, of course, violate due process under Winship.
Given that Cage error of the type claimed here would be a new rule not available at the time Leavitt's conviction became final, but not a watershed rule of the sort from which he can retroactively benefit on federal habeas review, his claim is Teague-barred. Therefore, it is unnecessary to determine whether the jury instruction actually ran afoul of Cage.
For these reasons, the district court could not grant the petition and its order must be reversed.
II. PRETRIAL PUBLICITY
Leavitt complains that pretrial publicity in Blackfoot required a change of venue. The Idaho trial court and the Idaho Supreme Court held to the contrary. The latter reviewed the record and concluded: "[T]he pretrial publicity had little if any effect on the potential jurors, and [we] find no indication that potential jurors would prejudge the case." Leavitt I,
We, too, "must independently examine the news reports for volume, content, and timing to determine if they were prejudicial." Jeffries v. Blodgett,
Having reviewed the record, we agree that Leavitt was not deprived of his right to "a panel of impartial, indifferent jurors." Irvin v. Dowd,
Second, no actual prejudice was shown here. On the contrary, each individual who was seated on Leavitt's jury swore that he or she could impartially judge Leavitt's guilt or innocence. Cf. Blodgett,
III. EVIDENTIARY ISSUES
Leavitt complains about the admission of some items of evidence against him and about the failure of the prosecution to disclose or preserve other items.
A. Evidence Related to Cooperation
Leavitt grumbles about the fact that the prosecutor elicited evidence about and commented upon, Leavitt's failure to cooperate with the investigation and to tell his ultimate story before he testified at trial. Most of his complaints arise out of his confusing true silence with lies, and cooperation with feints at cooperation coupled with suggestions to the jury that he had, in fact, cooperated.
A defendant who has received Miranda13 warnings can, thereafter, remain silent without running the risk that the prosecutor will comment upon that fact. See Doyle v. Ohio,
Thus, the prosecutor may point out inconsistencies. See United States v. Ochoa-Sanchez,
In this instance, statements that Leavitt made to the police psychologist were admissible to demonstrate inconsistencies with the story he told at trial and to cast doubt upon his claim of cooperation with the police. Leavitt conceded at trial that his decision to speak with the psychologist was voluntary, and there is no evidentiary support of Leavitt's claim that the police promised him use immunity in exchange for agreeing to talk with the psychologist. There was no error in admitting that evidence.
The same may not be quite as true of his silence at the special inquiry, which is arguably a judicial,14 rather than a police, proceeding. The distinction between the two is enough to suggest that his silence at the special inquiry may not have been relevant to his claim of cooperation with the police, and that it was arguably improper to comment upon the exercise of his right to remain silent as to certain questions. However, in the context of all of the evidence in this case, including the myriad of other inconsistencies in his stories, any error was harmless as far as this habeas corpus proceeding is concerned. See Brecht v. Abrahamson,
Of the same ilk are Leavitt's ululations about the prosecutor's comment on the fact that a wholly new blood story surfaced at trial. When speaking to the police, Leavitt indicated that he had no idea how his blood could have been found at the murder scene, but by trial he had developed a wholly inconsistent explanation of its presence — the nosebleed scenario. His jeremiad about the prosecutor's exploration of his revenant memory avails him nothing. That surely was proper impeachment. See Anderson,
In a slightly different vein, Leavitt complains of the prosecutor's showing that of all of the suspects, only Leavitt had refused to give a blood sample voluntarily. Leavitt asserts that it was improper to comment on the exercise of his right under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution to refuse to consent to a search. We have indicated that, taken by themselves, comments on the exercise of one's Fourth Amendment rights are improper.15 See United States v. Prescott,
B. Other Acts
Leavitt next argues that the admission of other-act evidence denied him a fair trial. Under Idaho law the evidence was admissible. See Leavitt I,
Leavitt demurs to the fact that his ex-wife testified that once, while hunting, she came upon him as he carefully and rather surreptitiously was cutting at the female sexual organs of a deer. He then removed those organs, examined them, and played with them because, he said, he wanted to see how they worked. It will be recalled that the victim in this case (or her body if she was then deceased) was subjected to a highly unusual removal of her female organs. Other evidence showed that it would be difficult to accomplish that in the way it was done and that it would help to have knowledge of anatomy when doing it.
We agree with the Idaho Supreme Court that the evidence in question was relevant to identifying the killer. We cannot find that the Idaho Supreme Court committed constitutional error when it opined that:
In the instant case the corpse of the victim had been brutalized by the removal of her sexual organs by a person who clearly had certain anatomical knowledge. That evidence tended to indicate that the defendant had a morbid and sadistic interest in sexual organs, had a knowledge of anatomy, a possible motive for the crime, and a modus operandi which tended to identify the defendant as the killer.
Leavitt I,
The same can be said about the episode testified to by Leavitt's girlfriend to the effect that he showed her a knife, which was never produced, at a rather peculiar point during a sexual encounter with her. Leavitt's failure to produce that particular knife for the police officers went to the question of his alleged cooperation with them. Because that, of all knives, was missing, some inference was also possible that it was the murder weapon itself or the knife that was used to cut Elg's screen. See McKinney,
Nevertheless, considering the other evidence in this case, we are unable to say that, error or not, the knife evidence by itself or in tandem with other errors "`had substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury's verdict.'" Brecht,
C. Victim's Statements
The doomed victim of this crime had, as we have already noted, been severely frightened on the night before her death by a prowler, who tried to break into her home. In a great state of agitation,17 she called the police and spoke to dispatchers and to police officers. Among other things, she said that she thought the prowler was Leavitt, because he had tried to talk himself into her home earlier that day,18 but she had refused him entry. Leavitt claims that the admission of the hearsay testimony violated his rights under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Of course, one cannot confront a hearsay declarant, but not all uses of hearsay violate the Confrontation Clause. See Idaho v. Wright,
The Idaho courts relied upon the state's residual exception,19 which is not firmly rooted, but the evidence could properly have come in under the excited utterance exception,20 which is. See Wright,
D. Undisclosed and Lost Evidence
That mysterious phantom, Mike Jenkins, looms large in an objection by Leavitt regarding an alleged Brady23 violation by the prosecutor. Jenkins, who evidenced detailed knowledge of the murder, called and spoke to two different police dispatchers — Lisa Pugmire and Theta Duchscher. He first spoke with Pugmire, who never gave out her first name, and later spoke with Duchscher to whom he mentioned Pugmire's first name. Leavitt and Pugmire had a friendly relationship and had often spoken to each other before. Both dispatchers testified.
Pugmire testified that she could not say that Jenkins had Leavitt's voice. Duchscher was not asked, and did not say, whether she recognized his voice. At a later time, however, it was revealed that a police investigation had asked Duchscher whether she could make a connection between the voices, and she had said no. Later on, she had said that the voice could have been Leavitt's. Those facts were not disclosed to Leavitt and that, he says, constitutes the violation.
Even if there were some error, it was entirely harmless; it simply is not reasonably probable that the result of the proceeding would have been any different if Leavitt had obtained the information in question. The Leavitt-Jenkins connection was not based on voice recognition, but rather on Mike Jenkins's use of Pugmire's first name and on Mike Jenkins's response, when queried, that his address was near Leavitt's address. See Williams v. Woodford,
The other evidence of which Leavitt deems himself improperly deprived was blood samples from the murder scene, which he could have subjected to further testing. But no more useable samples existed after the state serologists had performed their tests. Because it is undisputed that no bad faith was involved in the destruction of the possibly helpful blood samples, Leavitt simply cannot prevail on this claim. See Arizona v. Youngblood,
IV. ALIBI INSTRUCTION
Leavitt maintains that the alibi instruction, instruction 39,24 impermissibly shifted the burden of proof on his alibi, his only defense. We understand his argument to be that the issue was not procedurally defaulted based on the doctrine of invited error, as the district court held, because — as the court also held — the Idaho Supreme Court said that it had reviewed all trial issues on the merits, including instruction 39, and thus so would the habeas court. We agree with Leavitt that the issue is not procedurally defaulted, which means that the merits are before us.25 On the merits, we have already held that the instruction is erroneous, Thomas v. United States,
Leavitt unquestionably invited the alibi instruction by proposing it to the trial court. The Idaho Supreme Court could have refused to consider his challenge to the alibi instruction on this basis, State v. Carlson,
We are not persuaded by Idaho's contention that federal habeas courts may independently rely on the invited error rule regardless of whether it was actually applied in state court. The state points to a number of cases in which a habeas claim was rejected on invited error grounds without the decision being expressly conditioned on prior invocation of the rule by the highest state court to consider the claim,26 but in these cases the state court had clearly and expressly invoked the invited error doctrine.27 There is no reason that we should treat the invited error rule differently from other state procedural bars.
Turning to the merits, Thomas held that there is no burden of proof on the accused regarding an alibi. But habeas relief is not available for every flawed instruction; the question is "`whether the ailing instruction by itself so infected the entire trial that the resulting conviction violates due process.'" Estelle,
V. PROSECUTOR'S ARGUMENT
Leavitt asserts that the prosecutor committed misconduct in arguing the case to the jury. Leavitt first complains about arguments that would be erroneous only if we had decided the evidentiary issues discussed in Part III in Leavitt's favor. Because we did not, we find no impropriety in those respects.28 Nor was it improper for the prosecutor to argue that Leavitt — by legal strategy or otherwise — had delayed revealing or suggesting the "true new" story until after he had heard all of the evidence against him at trial. To any cognoscente of the trial process, one of the transaction costs of our system is that the order of proof can allow a defendant to tailor his testimony, but "[t]he adversary system surely envisions — indeed, it requires — that the prosecutor be allowed to bring [the tailoring danger] to the jury's attention." Portuondo v. Agard,
Much more problematic is the prosecutor's link-in-the-chain-of-law-enforcement argument. Here it is in all of its glory:
In closing let me just say that you are part of a very important chain called the chain of law enforcement. And law enforcement and justice don't work in our country unless you do your part. The police officers can be as well trained as you want them and the forensic sciences can be as well trained as you want in the sciences. And they can go out an[d] investigate crimes as competently and professionally as this group has done. And I think that Officer Robinson and those associated with him have done an excellent job. You can have the best prosecutors around. And I want to tell you that I believe Mr. Moss is one of the best prosecutors in the State. And they work together like this because they are part of the chain of law enforcement that keeps our community safe.
But the third link in that chain is a jury, which when they're given the proper evidence and they are given the proof beyond a reasonable doubt, they have the fortitude to be able to act upon that and to preserve that chain unbroken.
And the fourth link in the chain, of course, is the judge who has the courage and also the wisdom to impose the appropriate sentence. Now, none of this works unless you do your job.
This suggestion that the jury is simply a link in a chain of law enforcement which includes the police, the prosecutor, and the judge is just plain wrong. It minimizes the important role of the jury and tends to align neutrals — judge and jury — with a party to the case — the state itself. The Tenth Circuit put the matter very well when it was presented with a link-in-the-chain argument. It said:
By suggesting that the jury is only the last link in a long decision, the statement tends to trivialize the jury's importance. This argument also misstates the role of the jury, placing it in an adversarial position with the respect to the defendant. To the extent that the prosecutor's argument portrayed the jury as part of a team opposing the defendant, it was improper.
Coleman v. Brown,
Although the argument is wholly undesirable, we cannot say that it alone — and it does essentially stand alone29 — is enough to result in a determination that the trial was so infected with unfairness as to be a denial of due process. See Sassounian v. Roe,
VI. SENTENCING ISSUES
Leavitt also attacks his sentencing on various grounds. We reject all of them.
A. Ring v. Arizona
As is well known by now, in Ring v. Arizona,
B. Idaho's Heinous, Atrocious or Cruel Aggravator
Under Idaho law, a first degree murderer, like Leavitt, may be sentenced to death, if the court finds at least one aggravating circumstance beyond a reasonable doubt. See Idaho Code §§ 18-4004, 19-2515(c). One of those aggravators is: "The murder was especially heinous, atrocious or cruel, manifesting exceptional depravity." Id. § 19-2515(h)(5) (formerly § 19-2515(g)(5)). That is the one which was found to apply to Leavitt. See Leavitt II,
As the Supreme Court has directed, we "must attempt to determine whether the state courts have further defined the vague terms, and if they have done so, whether those definitions are constitutionally sufficient, i.e., whether they provide some guidance to the sentencer." Walton,
The Idaho Supreme Court has construed the aggravator by relying in part on the limiting constructions given to similar language by other states. As to the phrase "especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel," it looked to the Florida Supreme Court's definition, which it quoted as follows:
[W]e feel that the meaning of such terms is a matter of common knowledge, so that an ordinary man would not have to guess at what was intended. It is our interpretation that heinous means extremely wicked or shockingly evil; that atrocious means outrageously wicked and vile; and, that cruel means designed to inflict a high degree of pain with utter indifference to, or even enjoyment of, the suffering of others. What is intended to be included are those capital crimes where the actual commission of the capital felony was accompanied by such additional acts as to set the crime apart from the norm of capital felonies the conscienceless or pitiless crime which is unnecessarily torturous to the victim.
State v. Osborn,
In interpreting this portion of the statute, the key word is "exceptional." It might be argued that every murder involves depravity. The use of the word "exceptional," however, confines it only to those situations where depravity is apparent to such an extent as to obviously offend all standards of morality and intelligence.
Id. (quoting State v. Simants,
With these constructions, i.e., that the murder must be accompanied by acts setting it apart from the norm of murders and that its commission manifests such depravity as to offend all standards of morality and intelligence, the aggravating circumstance contained in I.C. § 19-2515(h)(5) is sufficiently definite and limited to guide the sentencing court's discretion in imposing the death penalty.
Id. Those were the rules utilized in the review of Leavitt's case. See Leavitt II,
Is that enough "to permit the sentencer to make a principled distinction between those who deserve the death penalty and those who do not"? Lewis v. Jeffers,
Leavitt objects that the Idaho language is larded up with other words that may not, themselves, be sufficient to delimit the overall definition. But that can make no real difference to our analysis. We do not sit to issue pronunciamentos about the elegance, beauty, sophistication, or timelessness of Idaho's prose. Nor can we ask ourselves whether language sufficient to limit a factor to the point that it meets constitutional requirements, but which then purports to limit it even further, really does limit it further.
Thus, the fact that the Supreme Court has looked askance at some of the Idaho language,33 when it was the sole adornment of a statute, is beside the point. In fact, the same inappropriate language appeared in the instruction approved in Proffitt.34 Similarly, we need not ask ourselves whether the definition of "exceptional depravity" used in Nebraska sufficiently limits that concept.35 Again, whether it does or not is of no consequence. The language that makes it part of the heinous, atrocious or cruel aggravator is not disjunctive — it is conjunctive in nature. See Idaho Code § 19-2515(h)(5). Once it is decided that the murder was heinous, atrocious or cruel under the properly limited definition of that phrase, the fact that for Idaho purposes it must also "manifest exceptional depravity" can do nothing but help a murderer like Leavitt, even if we thought that the latter phrase would be a bit too spongy standing alone.36
In fine, taken as a whole, Idaho's delineation of the meaning of heinous, atrocious or cruel aggravation is sufficient to guide the discretion of the sentencer.
C. Evidence to Support Aggravation
Leavitt next argues that the evidence will not support a determination that he earned the heinous, atrocious or cruel aggravator. We beg to differ.
While Leavitt may well be able to envision slayings that are even more heinous, atrocious or cruel, the evidence here was sufficient to allow the Idaho courts to determine that this especially vile murder was a "conscienceless or pitiless crime which is unnecessarily torturous to the victim." Osborn,
Leavitt's repeated and pitiless stabbing and cutting of his victim in all parts of her body, including even a thrust through her eye and into her brain, was vicious and remarkable enough for the most jaded reviewer of this genre of crimes. The added organ-removing mutilation of the victim "[a]s part of the death dealing attack or as a grisly aftermath" is yet another marker of the unnecessary torturousness of this crime. Leavitt II,
But, says Leavitt, if the mutilation took place just after the victim expired, it does not count. He cites a Florida case for that supposed proposition. See Halliwell v. State,
We fail to see how use of that conduct could constitute federal constitutional error.37 Of course, neither the Idaho courts, nor we, know whether the victim still had life in her when Leavitt undertook his bizarre organ-removal activity, nor do we know if she was conscious, nor do we know what her nerves and brain might have registered if she was unconscious but still living. Still and all, neither the Idaho courts, nor we, should have to engage in such refined, theoretical timeline calculations when determining whether Leavitt could qualify for the aggravator. The simple fact is that the whole of Leavitt's behavior during the murderous assault depicted an attack that was conscienceless, pitiless and unnecessarily torturous to the victim. The mutilation was part of that.
In sum, a rational trier of fact could have found that the heinous, atrocious or cruel aggravator was satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt.
VII. IDAHO APPELLATE ERROR
In deciding whether Leavitt was eligible for the death penalty, the Idaho Supreme Court first had to note that he had been convicted of first degree murder. See Idaho Code § 18-4004. It had no doubt he had been, but it referred particularly to torture38 rather than to premeditated murder as such — both of which are distinct forms of premeditated murder in Idaho — although the case went to the jury on a premeditated murder theory. That, says Leavitt, violated his due process rights because his conviction was upheld on the basis of an offense not presented to the jury. See Presnell v. Georgia,
We are inclined to think that Leavitt now overstates what the Idaho Supreme Court was doing when it made reference to torture murder — it surely did not say that there was not sufficient evidence of premeditated murder. More importantly, however, we agree with the district court that Leavitt procedurally defaulted on this claim because he never argued it to the Idaho courts.
Thus, Leavitt can only avoid procedural default if he "can demonstrate cause for the default and actual prejudice as a result of the alleged violation of federal law, or demonstrate that failure to consider the claims will result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice." Coleman v. Thompson,
In order to establish prejudice, Leavitt "must establish not merely that the [alleged Presnell error] constituted a possibility of prejudice, but that [it] worked to his actual and substantial disadvantage, infecting his entire trial with error of constitutional dimensions." Correll v. Stewart,
Nor can Leavitt show that he would be subjected to a fundamental miscarriage of justice if his procedural default is not waived. The evidence that he committed this murder is powerful to say the least, and, while he has now found an ambiguity in the Idaho Supreme Court opinion, that is a far cry from saying, or even suggesting, that he is actually innocent of first degree murder under Idaho law. See Bousley v. United States,
Therefore, the district court properly refused to consider the Presnell issue.
VIII. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
Leavitt was tried and sentenced in the Idaho trial court, had a first appeal to the Idaho Supreme Court at which his conviction was affirmed but his sentence vacated, was again sentenced, and had a second appeal to the Idaho Supreme Court at which time his sentence was affirmed. He now complains of ineffective assistance of counsel in the first three of those proceedings,39 but he never argued most of the claims in the Idaho courts. The district court, therefore, found procedural default and refused to consider them.
Leavitt's only claim on appeal is that we have held that Idaho's procedural default rules unreasonably restrict the ability of Idaho prisoners to raise ineffective assistance of counsel claims. That, he says, allows him to raise all of the claims here. See Hoffman,
In an attempt to accelerate proceedings in death penalty cases, Idaho has declared that any challenge to a "sentence or conviction that is known or reasonably should be known" must be filed within forty-two days of the filing of the judgment in the trial court. Idaho Code § 19-2719(3). That includes post-conviction claims. Id. § 19-2719(4). A failure to raise the claims within that time waives them. Id. § 19-2719(5). In Hoffman, the defendant did not adhere to those time constraints. He attempted to file an ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim in a later post-conviction petition, but his petition was dismissed as untimely. Hoffman,
In Hoffman's case, the Idaho Supreme Court held that petitioner's ineffective assistance of counsel claims were procedurally barred because they were filed after the expiration of the state's forty-two day statutory deadline. The Idaho Supreme Court applied the rule despite the fact that Hoffman continued to be represented by his original trial counsel during the forty-two day period.
Id. We continued: "As a result, Hoffman was deprived of counsel who could review the record objectively for ineffective assistance of counsel claims. Not surprisingly, Hoffman's trial counsel failed to raise and argue the issue of their own ineffectiveness in post-conviction proceedings." Id. at 534. Therefore, we determined that Idaho law "effectively prevented Hoffman from timely raising his ineffective assistance of counsel claims." Id. at 535-36. As a result, federal review was not barred. Id. at 530.
That is all well and good, but it does not apply to Leavitt's appeal from (and request for post-conviction relief) his first trial and sentencing. He did not have the same trial and appellate counsel. Rather, he had new appellate counsel, and those attorneys actually raised ineffective assistance of trial counsel claims before the Idaho Supreme Court. See Leavitt I,
Similarly, Hoffman has nothing to say about Leavitt's claims that appellate counsel was himself ineffective in the handling of the first appeal. Wisely enough, the Idaho Supreme Court has recognized that a person cannot really raise the question of ineffective appellate counsel within forty-two days of the entry of judgment in the trial court. On the contrary, those kinds of claims need only "be asserted within a reasonable time after they are known or reasonably could have been known." Paz v. State,
Leavitt has a considerably better point regarding his claim that he had ineffective assistance of counsel at the time of his second sentencing hearing. The same attorney represented him there and on his resulting appeal. That attorney did not raise the possibility of his own ineffectiveness at that time, although he did question imposition of the death penalty. See Leavitt II,
CONCLUSION
Leavitt is not entitled to habeas corpus relief as far as his conviction and the sentencing issues disposed of in this opinion are concerned. However, he is entitled to have the district court consider his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel at his second sentencing hearing.
Thus, we AFFIRM on all issues raised in Leavitt's cross appeal, other than the second sentencing hearing ineffective assistance of counsel issues, and REVERSE on the State's appeal. We REMAND so that the district court can consider the issues regarding Leavitt's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel at the second sentencing hearing.
AFFIRMED in part; REVERSED in part; and REMANDED.
Notes:
See State v. Leavitt,
The Court has since clarified that the standard of review articulated inCage — whether, in construing an instruction, reasonable jurors could have understood the charge as a whole as lessening the burden of proof — should instead be "whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury has applied the challenged instruction in a way that violates the Constitution." Estelle v. McGuire,
There are nine different instructions that state the burden of proof correctly: instructions 10 and 11 (notwithstanding Leavitt's challenge to some of the wording), 24, 25, 28, 32, 33, 35, and 44. In addition, three instructions made clear that the decision to convict must be based only on evidence adduced at trial: one unnumbered preliminary instruction and instructions 6 and 15
10:"Before you can convict the Defendant of the crime charged against him ... you should require the prosecution to prove every material allegation ... beyond a reasonable doubt. ... And if, after a consideration of all the evidence in the case, you entertain a reasonable doubt of the truth of any one of these material allegations, then it is your duty to give the Defendant the benefit of such doubt and acquit him.... There must be proof beyond a reasonable doubt."
11:"A defendant in a criminal action is presumed to be innocent until the contrary is proved. And in case of a reasonable doubt whether his guilt is satisfactorily shown, he's entitled to an acquittal. This presumption places upon the State the burden of proving him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt."
24:"If you are not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the Defendant is guilty of the offense charged, he may, however, be guilty of any lesser offense...."
25:"In order to prove the commission of the crime of Murder in the First Degree each of the following elements must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt...."
28:"You will first determine whether or not the Defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of First Degree Murder. If you determine the Defendant is not guilty of First Degree Murder, you will then determine whether or not he is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of Second Degree Murder...."
32:"In order to prove the commission of the crime of Murder in the Second Degree, each of the following elements must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt...."
33:"If you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the crime of murder has been committed by the Defendant but you have reasonable doubt whether such murder was of First or of Second Degree, you must give to the Defendant the benefit of the doubt and return a verdict fixing the murder as of the Second Degree."
35:"Where the case of the State rests substantially or entirely on circumstantial evidence, you are not permitted to find the Defendant guilty of the crime charged against him unless... each fact which is essential to complete a set of circumstances necessary to establish the Defendant's guilt must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.... Also if the evidence is susceptible of two reasonable interpretations, one of which points to the Defendant's guilt and the other to his innocence, it is your duty to adopt that interpretation which points to the Defendant's innocence and reject the other which points to his guilt."
44:"You should consider the included offenses only in the event the State has failed to convince you beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused with respect to the crime charged. The jury will bear in mind that the burden is always upon the Prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt every essential element of any lesser offense which is necessarily included in any crime charged in the Information. The law never imposes upon a Defendant in a criminal case the burden or duty of calling any witnesses or producing any evidence."
Preliminary instruction (unnumbered):"It is your duty to determine the facts and to determine them from the evidence produced in open court."
6:"The law requires that your decision be made solely upon the competent evidence before you."
15:"In determining whether the Defendant is guilty or not guilty, you must be governed solely by the evidence received in this trial...."
Since 1989, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has both affirmed and reversed convictions following trials at which this type of instruction was givenCompare United States v. Ciak,
Instruction 10 stated:
Before you can convict ... you should require the Prosecution to prove every material allegation contained in the Information beyond a reasonable doubt. And if, after a consideration of all the evidence in the case, you entertain a reasonable doubt of the truth of anyone of these material allegations, then it is your duty to give the Defendant the benefit of such doubt and acquit him. Probabilities, or that the greater weight or the preponderance of the evidence supporting the allegations in the Information, will not support a conviction. There must be proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Instruction 11 stated:
It's not a mere possible doubt because everything relating to human affairs and depending on moral evidence is open to some possible or imaginary doubt. It is that state of the case which, after the entire comparison and consideration of all the evidence, leaves the mind of the juror in that condition that they cannot say they feel an abiding conviction to a moral certainty of the truth of the charge.
Instruction 13 stated:
It is not necessary that all of the facts and circumstances surrounding the testimony and evidence that is given on behalf of the State shall be established beyond a reasonable doubt. All that is necessary is that all of the facts and circumstances and evidence together shall establish the Defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Instruction 36 stated:
A doubt produced by undue sensibility in the mind of the juror in view of the consequences of a guilty verdict is not a reasonable doubt. And the jury are not allowed to create sources or materials of doubt by trivial or fanciful suppositions or by remote conjectures as to possible state of facts different from those established by the evidence. Your oath imposes upon you no obligation to doubt when no doubt would exist if no oath had been administered, and in consideration of the case, the jury is not to go beyond the evidence to hunt up doubts. A doubt to justify an acquittal must be reasonable.
Instruction 39 stated:
You are further instructed that an alibi is an affirmative defense. And it is incumbent upon the Defendant where he relies upon the defense of an alibi to prove it, not beyond a reasonable doubt nor a preponderance of the evidence, but by such evidence and to such a degree of certainty as will, when the whole evidence is considered, create and leave in the minds of the jury a reasonable doubt of his guilt.
This is by no means clear, as common definitions of "should," "shall" and "must" include both an obligatory and an exhortatory connotationSee, e.g., Webster's Third New International Dictionary (unabridged 1986).
Sullivan v. Louisiana,
It is now clear that we are not free to do thisSee Horn,
BeforeSullivan several appellate courts had declined to apply Cage retroactively. See Adams v. Aiken,
Seven out of a sixty-person venireSee Ainsworth,
Five people in the venire
We are aware of Leavitt's later attack on one of the seated jurors. Suffice it to say that no certificate of appealability has been issued on that question, which, therefore, is not properly before usSee United States v. Martin,
Miranda v. Arizona,
A special inquiry is an evidence-gathering proceeding initiated by the prosecutor before a state district court magistrate. Idaho Code §§ 19-1116 to 19-1123. Those who appear are informed of the privilege against self-incriminationId. § 19-1121.
Whether the Supreme Court has directed that conclusion is another matter. It has alluded to it and has hinted that it might so holdSee Schmerber v. California,
Similarly, Leavitt's failure to produce a knife that was in his possession — one that he had displayed to a girlfriend as part of a sexual encounter — went to offset his claim of cooperation
When speaking with the dispatcher she was crying, while breathing quickly and heavily, and when speaking to the police officers both her voice and her hands were shaking
She told the officers that Leavitt asserted that the cops were after him. That was a lie; they were not
Idaho R. Evid. 804(b)(5)
Idaho R. Evid. 803(2)
See Lilly v. Virginia,
Since we heard oral argument in this case, the Supreme Court issuedCrawford v. Washington, ___ U.S. ___,
Brady v. Maryland,
See note 5 supra.
The state makes noTeague argument on Leavitt's cross-appeal. However, it does submit that we lack jurisdiction because Leavitt failed to obtain a certificate of appealability (COA) on instruction 39. This is incorrect, as Leavitt's challenge to the alibi instruction was part of the eleventh claim in his habeas petition, as to all of which the district court granted a COA.
See, e.g., Fields v. Bagley,
See, e.g., Leverett,
We did note that there may have been error — the silence at the inquest and some of the knife evidence. But just as the evidence itself was harmless, so, too, was argument about it
We are aware of the vouching elements lurking in the argumentSee, e.g., United States v. Leon-Reyes,
Leavitt asks us not only to peruse the raiment itself, but also to see if the state has consistently used it. We cannot do the latterSee Creech,
We have had an opportunity to confront the issue in the past, but have been able to resolve the cases then before us on other groundsSee Pizzuto v. Arave,
Id. at 255,
See Shell,
If the Supreme Court no longer likes the language it approved, it, not we, will have to overrule this portion ofProffitt. See Agostini v. Felton,
The Eighth Circuit once said it does notSee Moore v. Clarke,
We do not opine on whether it would be wise to include all of the current language in a jury instruction. We need not resolve that issue here
Cf. Jeffers,
Leavitt I,
He also claims ineffective assistance of counsel at state post-conviction proceedings. That he cannot successfully doSee Coleman,
Although Idaho's procedural default rules were not unfairly applied to Leavitt, the district court did err in holding thatall of Leavitt's trial-based claims of ineffective assistance were procedurally defaulted. Two of the ineffective assistance claims that Leavitt raised in his habeas petition — challenging his trial counsel's failure (1) to call the serology expert and (2) to demonstrate prejudice by calling police officers — were actually considered and rejected on the merits in state court. Therefore, these two claims were not procedurally defaulted. However, both claims do lose on the merits, as a defendant's disagreement with his trial counsel's tactical decisions cannot form the basis for an ineffective assistance claim. See Wildman v. Johnson,
FERNANDEZ, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I concur in the per curiam opinion, but as to parts I and IV, I do so for somewhat different reasons.1
I. THE INNOCENCE INSTRUCTION
The Idaho trial court gave numerous instructions on the state's burden of persuasion,2 and, while it was at it, gave an instruction on the presumption of innocence, which Leavitt neither objected to nor presented as a separate issue to the Idaho Supreme Court.3 That instruction read as follows:
The rule of law which clothes every person accused of a crime with the presumption of innocence and imposes upon the State the burden of proving his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt is not intended to aid anyone who is in fact guilty to escape, but is a humane provision of the law intended, so far as human agencies can, to guard against the danger of an innocent person being unjustly punished.
The State essentially argues that even if the instruction injected a note of ambiguity into the trial performance, issuance of a writ of habeas corpus on that account is barred by Teague v. Lane,
As is well known, the Teague rule provides that: "Unless they fall within an exception to the general rule, new constitutional rules of criminal procedure will not be applicable to those cases which have become final before the new rules are announced." Teague,
There are generally four steps to the analysis. At the threshold, a court must decide if it is dealing with a criminal procedure rule. See Bousley v. United States,
To apply Teague, a federal court engages in a three-step process. First, it determines the date upon which the defendant's conviction became final. Second, it must [s]urve[y] the legal landscape as it then existed, and determine whether a state court considering[the defendant's] claim at the time his conviction became final would have felt compelled by existing precedent to conclude that the rule [he] seeks was required by the Constitution.... Finally, if the court determines that the habeas petitioner seeks the benefit of a new rule, the court must consider whether the relief sought falls within one of the two narrow exceptions to nonretroactivity.
Lambrix v. Singletary,
I agree with Leavitt that, in general, an issue not raised at the district court is, and should be, deemed waived. See, e.g., Taniguchi v. Schultz,
A. Procedural Rule
The threshold step is mounted successfully. It is rather apparent that Leavitt's attack on the innocence instruction is based upon the thought that it had an effect on the burden of persuasion. That does not go to the substance of the crime; it is a matter of procedure. See, e.g., In re Winship,
B. Finality
When was Leavitt's conviction final? The general rule of finality is easy enough to recite. "A state conviction and sentence become final for purposes of retroactivity analysis when the availability of direct appeal to the state courts has been exhausted and the time for filing a petition for a writ of certiorari has elapsed or a timely filed petition has been finally decided." Caspari,
C. Landscape
Turning to the next element, a court must examine the legal landscape on October 16, 1989, to see if the rule it is asked to adopt was then so clearly established that "a reasonable jurist" would have thought that it was "dictated by [Supreme Court] precedents." Caspari,
When I survey the landscape through those binoculars, it is drear indeed as far as Leavitt's hopes are concerned. As of that date, the Supreme Court had not said that an instruction like the one at hand violates the United States Constitution. What it had said was that no presumption of innocence instruction need be given. See Kentucky v. Whorton,
In so stating, I hasten to add that I am well aware of the fact that by 1989 this circuit had already declared itself to be on the side of those who reject the instruction. See Reynolds v. United States,
Also, I am aware of the fact that the presumption of innocence instruction in this case alluded to the beyond a reasonable doubt burden of persuasion. But, in context, that does not make the instruction more or less ambiguous, and does not change the legal landscape as of 1989 in any significant way. In a sense, the two are different sides of the same coin, and courts have not placed weight upon that difference. Rather, they have treated the instruction as one about the presumption of innocence itself. See, e.g., Doyle,
D. Exceptions
Finally, a court must ask whether the new rule, were it adopted, would come within one of the two Teague exceptions. Those exceptions are: (1) determinations that place private conduct beyond the proscriptive power of the state15 and (2) those that establish "watershed rules of criminal procedure."16 Leavitt does not assert that the first of these applies to his case; he could not do so successfully. He does assert that the second exception applies here; I think not.
As the Supreme Court has explained, it is not enough that a rule improves trial accuracy; "[a] rule that qualifies under this exception must not only improve accuracy, but also alter our understanding of the bedrock procedural elements essential to the fairness of a proceeding." Sawyer v. Smith,
That thought is very relevant because the Court has recently had occasion to reflect upon the retroactivity of Cage v. Louisiana,
While Tyler did not decide the Teague question, it did have some interesting and important ruminations about it. Tyler had argued that still another Supreme Court decision,17 which said that Cage error was structural, "makes clear that retroactive application [of Cage] is warranted by the principles of Teague...." Id. at 665,
Again, Tyler did not actually decide the issue, but its tenor cannot help but give one pause despite (or, perhaps, because of) the fact that before it was decided, a number of courts of appeals had stated that Cage was, indeed, within the second Teague exception. See Williams v. Cain,
Especially is that true when I reflect upon the fact that many cases have refused to find that instructions which lower the prosecution's burden of persuasion in some respects are within the second Teague exception. That has been notable in the area of so-called Sandstrom19 error. In Sandstrom, the Supreme Court declared that a presumption instruction was unconstitutional because it lifted from the state's shoulders the burden that it "prove `beyond a reasonable doubt ... every fact necessary to constitute the crime ... charged.'" Id. at 523,
On a continuum, the innocence instruction at hand is closer in effect to the Sandstrom case than it is to the Cage case. That is, assuming that the instruction does inject some ambiguity into consideration of the role of the presumption of innocence, it certainly does not inform the jury that it need not find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Considering the Tyler cloud that Cage retroactivity itself is under, I cannot say that the innocence instruction comes within the second Teague exception.
In fine, were I to declare that the ambiguous presumed innocence instruction was unconstitutional and apply it to this case, I would be adopting a new rule in violation of Teague. The district court did just that and, for that reason, I agree that we are required to reverse its decision to issue a writ of habeas corpus on that basis.
II. ALIBI INSTRUCTION
Leavitt asked the trial judge to give an alibi instruction in a particular form. The trial judge complied with his request and, not surprisingly, Leavitt did not object or suggest any changes. Nor did he raise the question on appeal to the Idaho Supreme Court. Yet, by the time he reached the district court he was arguing that the instruction had some defect. The district court said that if the instruction contained an error,20 that error was invited and, therefore, the Idaho courts would have rejected an appeal based upon it.21 On appeal Leavitt argues that the district court could not so decide because there is no Idaho doctrine of invited error when it comes to instructions.22 That claim invites us to commit error.
Long ago, the Idaho Supreme Court stated that a defendant who induces the trial court to instruct in a particular manner cannot then argue error on appeal. See State v. Lopez,
That authority is the broadside which sinks Leavitt's argument here. He did not merely fail to object to an instruction; he asked that it be given. He cannot now be heard to say that he is entitled to habeas corpus relief because his wishes were acceded to by the trial court.23 The district court did not err when it rejected this claim.24
Thus, I respectfully concur in the per curiam opinion.
Notes:
In addition, I do not join in footnote 28 of the per curiam opinion because the issues discussed there were not raised at the district court. Had they been, I would agree with their resolution in the per curiam
The innocence instruction was given with a group of others that explicated the state's burden to prove Leavitt's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. No serious claim is made that the others, alone or together, violated Leavitt's constitutional rights. Thus, the attack here comes down to an assault on the innocence instruction itself within its overall contextual setting, and it is to that instruction that I, therefore, direct my attention. I take up Leavitt's separate attack on an alibi instruction in part II of this concurring opinion
However, taking the Idaho Supreme Court at its word, as I must, I presume that it reviewed this claim because it said: "Since the instant case involves a conviction of first degree murder and the imposition of the death penalty, we have carefully reviewed the record for any indication of prejudicial error occurring at trial, regardless of whether or not error has been specifically asserted by the defendant."Leavitt I,
We have done the same regarding procedural default issuesSee Windham v. Merkle,
Garceau v. Woodford,
Leavitt I,
Idaho v. Leavitt,
Leavitt II,
Leavitt v. Idaho,
Lambrix,
See, e.g., Turner v. State,
Incidentally, while inDoyle the court came down on the side of those who disapprove of the instruction, it expressly declined to decide that its decision would apply to state proceedings on habeas corpus review. Id. at 540 n. 14. Later on, the court declared that the rule was limited to direct review cases. See DelValle v. Armstrong,
See, e.g., State v. Schiappa,
Bell v. Hill,
Lambrix,
Lambrix,
Sullivan v. Louisiana,
We have recognized that, in light ofTyler, the second exception of Teague is even more stringent than structural error. See United States v. Sanchez-Cervantes,
Sandstrom v. Montana,
The district court thought that the instruction was erroneous, but, as I see it, we need not decide that question
Of course, that is a basis for deciding not to reach the merits of an issue on habeas corpus reviewSee Fields v. Bagley,
Aside from his argument about the propriety of the instruction itself, the only other argument made by Leavitt is that when the district court said it would not consider issues procedurally defaulted, it could not thereafter consider invited error. That is an interesting semantic argument, but it is plain that the district court considered invited error to be a separate concept, and I am in no position to tell it that it really meant no such thing
Leavitt makes an ineffective attempt to save his ship by asserting that the broadside actually fired blanks due toState v. Nunez,
Even if the instruction was constitutionally defective, an issue I see no need to reach, it is plain that any error would be harmless. The only evidence of alibi was Leavitt's own statement, that he was at home watching T.V. which, that starkly put, is not really different from: "I did not do it." Even that, by the way, was significantly impeached. In light of the evidence in this case, and the jury's obvious rejection of Leavitt's stories, it is almost inconceivable that the error had any injurious effect or influence upon the jury's verdict, much less a substantial oneBrecht,
