Petitioner Richard Winkler appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Gerard L. Goettel,
Judge),
dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
BACKGROUND
In the early morning hours of August 2, 1980, after snorting cocaine and smoking marijuana, petitioner Winkler, his co-defendant, Merrill Williams, and Robert Gruber drove to Winkler’s home. Williams and Winkler entered the house, where Williams shot and killed Winkler’s father with a .22 caliber rifle. After Winkler and Williams returned to the car, Winkler told Gruber, “you don’t know anything” and then asked Williams, “what do you want?”. Williams indicated that he wanted $10,000, and Wink-ler replied, “You can have anything but my car.” On October 24, 1980, Winkler and Williams were indicted for second degree murder and criminal possession of a weapon.
Winkler’s family retained Robert A. Huf-jay, Esq. to defend Winkler. Hufjay entered into a contingent fee arrangement with Winkler’s mother, Lanie Sattler, and grandmother, Annie Winkler, subject to Winkler’s signature, that provided in relevant part:
First: The fee for legal representation shall be paid as follows:
(a) $2,000.00 on execution hereof, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged;
(b) $18,000.00 to be paid by Annie WiNKLER from a bequest to be received from the Estate of Irving Winkler, at such time as said bequest is received.
Second: It is agreed that any disbursements for investigation or psychiatric examinations, etc., shall be in addition to the above fees.
* * * * * *
Fourth: Annie Winkler has been advised and understands that in the event that Richard Wineler is convicted in Westchester County Court, that she would stand to inherit the entire estate of Irving Winkler....
Sixth: It is understood and agreed, subject to the approval of Richard Winkler that in the event Richard Winkler is acquitted or found not guilty by reason of insanity, or some other legal reasons, and inherits from the Estate of Irving Winkler, that Richard Winkler shall pay, as additional legal fees, the sum of $15,000,000.
Hufjay visited Winkler at the Westchester County Jail and presented the retainer agreement to him for signature. Winkler crossed out the “$15,000” set forth in paragraph “Sixth,” inserted “$25,000” in its place, and signed the agreement. Hufjay represented Winkler throughout the trial in West-chester County Court which ended when the jury found him guilty of murder in the second degree in violation of § 125.25 of New York State Penal Law. On October 30,1981, Winkler was sentenced to 25 years to life imprisonment, which he is currently serving.
After his conviction and sentencing, Wink-ler moved collaterally in Westchester County to vacate the judgment pursuant to New York Criminal Procedure Law § 440.10, on the ground the contingency fee agreement he entered into with Hufjay denied him his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel.
The motion was denied without a hearing,
People v. Winkler,
Indictment No. 80-1085, slip. op. at 8 (Westchester County Ct. July 13, 1984). The court held that it was unnecessary to pass upon the legality of the agreement since Winkler received effective assistance of counsel.
Id.
at 4, 7-8. The Appellate Division, Second Department, reversed and vacated Winkler’s conviction, holding that the contingency fee agreement in this case gave rise to a
per se
Sixth Amendment violation.
People v. Winkler,
The New York Court of Appeals reversed. The court concluded that a denial of effective assistance of counsel occurs only if the defendant can establish that “a contingent fee agreement ... affected the manner in which his attorney conducted the defense prejudi-cially to the defendant.”
People v. Winkler,
In July 1990, after the hearing, the County Court found that "there is no reason to believe [trial counsel's] representation of the defendant would have been any different if a proper fee arrangement had been utilized." People v. Winkler, Indictment No. 1085-80, slip op. at 16 (July 20, 1990). Accordingly, the court found that Winkler failed to demonstrate that his Sixth Amendment rights were violated. This decision was affirmed by the Appellate Division,
On August 4, 1992, Winkler filed the instant petition pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the District Court for the Southern District of New York (Goettel, J.). In denying the petition without a hearing, the district court held that the existence of a contingency fee agreement in a criminal case does not amount to a per se violation of Winkler's Sixth Amendment right to counsel as set forth by Solina v. United States,
The district court issued a certificate of probable cause and this appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Winkler argues that his counsel had an actual conflict of interest giving rise to a per se violation of his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel, in accordance with our decision in Solina, and, alternatively, that the actual conflict adversely affected his counsel's representation. While we agree that the contingency arrangement at issue in this case created an actual conflict of interest, we hold that it did not constitute a per se violation of Winkler's Sixth Amendment rights. Since there is no basis for disturbing the state court's finding that Winkler was not adversely affected by his counsel's representation, we affirm the judgment of the district court denying the petition.
I. Defense Counsel's Conflict of Interest
Under Strickland v. Washington,
An attorney has an actual, as opposed to a potential, conflict of interest when, during the course of the representation, the attorney's and defendant's interests "diverge with respect to a material factual or legal issue or to a course of action." Cuyler,
Winkler argues that the contingency fee created an actual conflict of interest for trial counsel because Winkler's interests in effective representation were pitted against trial counsel's monetary interest. We agree. The contingency fee agreement in this case provided trial counsel with an extra $25,000 only if Winkler was acquitted or otherwise not found guilty. Thus, trial counsel had a *308 disincentive to seek a plea agreement, or to put forth mitigating defenses that would result in conviction of a lesser included offense. Plainly the contingency fee agreement created an actual conflict of interest.
The Government argues that following
Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered v. United States,
Winkler argues that the
per se
rule of this circuit applies in this case, so that he need not prove that the conflict adversely affected his lawyer’s performance, as required by
Cuyler. See Strouse v. Leonardo,
II. Whether Winkler’s Representation was Adversely Affected
Whether a defendant’s representation was constitutionally inadequate is a mixed question of law and fact and thus we exercise
de novo
review.
Cuyler,
Winkler argues that the record establishes that trial counsel, ignoring his client’s best interests, forged an “all or nothing” trial strategy in order to obtain his $25,000 “bonus” fee. He contends that trial counsel’s conflict resulted in his failure to investigate Winkler’s psychiatric history and drug use, his failure to explore plea bargaining options prior to trial, and his general passivity in allowing Winkler, an eighteen-year old youth, “adamant[ly]” to claim innocence in the face of significant evidence to the contrary rather *309 than seeking a conviction of a lesser included offense.
To demonstrate adverse effect, a defendant must establish that an “actual lapse in representation,”
Cuyler,
Similarly, Winkler argues that he was adversely affected by trial counsel’s failure to take certain actions. In
United States v. Gambino,
[a defendant first] must demonstrate that some plausible alternative defense strategy or tactic might have been pursued. He need not show that the defense would necessarily have been successful if it had been used, but that it possessed sufficient substance to be a viable alternative. Second, he must establish that the alternative defense was inherently in conflict with or not undertaken due to the attorney’s other loyalties or interests.
Id.,
at 1070 (quoting
United States v. Fahey,
Winkler first submits that trial counsel failed to initiate or engage in plea bargaining. Although the state court’s findings indicate that in this alleged contract murder case the prosecution would have been highly unlikely to accept a plea agreement, Winkler need not show that a strategy would have been successful, only that it “possessed sufficient substance to be a viable alternative.”
Gambino,
However, Winkler’s contention that trial counsel chose not to explore plea bargain alternatives because of his interest in the $25,000 “bonus” flies in the face of the state court’s findings after the hearing on Wink-ler’s § CPL 440.10 motion. The court found credible trial counsel’s testimony that “defendant specifically advised him that as he was totally innocent, he was not interested in pleading to a manslaughter count even if it were offered.” Moreover, the state court found that immediately before trial when the trial judge inquired whether Winkler would be interested in the minimum sentence for murder, fifteen years to life, the defendant rejected such a disposition. The court discredited the testimony of Winkler’s mother, Lanie Sattler, that during the trial Winkler passed her a note indicating that he was willing to plead to a lesser charge. The state court noted that Sattler did not produce the note, no one else saw the note being passed or the note itself, and “in the entire post-trial history of the case no reference has ever been made to such a note.” The state court’s factual findings on this score are reasonable, and we accord them deference in concluding that trial counsel did not pursue a plea bargain because Winkler rejected this path, not because of trial counsel’s monetary interest in the outcome.
Second, Winkler argues that trial counsel should have developed “an intoxication defense” to the second degree murder charge, and that his failure to mount this defense was motivated by his pecuniary interest in *310 total acquittal. Intoxication alone is not a defense to a murder charge, but, under New York law, a jury may find that a defendant was too intoxicated to form the specific intent to cause death. N.Y.Penal Law §§ 15.25, 125.25. Given that Winkler had snorted cocaine and smoked marijuana before the fatal event, this strategy also has sufficient substance to provide a viable alternative defense.
Again, however, Winkler’s argument that his attorney failed to proffer this defense due to the conflict is controverted by the state court’s findings. Winkler told trial counsel and testified at trial to the following story: after using drugs, he and the other two men drove to Winkler’s house so that Winkler could repay Williams. Gruber stayed in the car while Winkler and Williams went inside. Winkler gave Williams $50, but Williams got angry because he was owed $100. Williams then demanded a rifle he loaned to Winkler a few days before. While looking around the house for more money, Williams went into Winkler’s father’s room, and Winkler heard two shots. Williams emerged from the room with money, and threatened to kill Winkler and his mother if Winkler said anything. According to trial counsel, Winkler remained adamant throughout the proceedings and at trial that this version of the facts was correct, and that he was totally innocent.
Trial counsel testified that prior to Wink-ler’s testimony, trial counsel discussed with him the possibility of arguing for a conviction of lesser charges, including manslaughter in the second degree on the basis of intoxication. Trial counsel testified that Winkler again asserted his innocence and did not want trial counsel to request charges for these offenses. Sattler acknowledged that trial counsel brought up the possibility of lesser charges, and that Winkler always insisted he was innocent. The state court found that Winkler was advised of the option of lesser charges, but rejected it, and sought an acquittal based on his version of the events. Moreover, trial counsel testified that although he was aware that Winkler had a history of drug use, and that Winkler had used drugs the night of the murder, he thought that Winkler’s recollection of the events was “so precise and clear that he could not have been impaired to the extent necessary to provide a viable defense....” The state court concluded that Winkler failed to establish that the fee arrangement caused trial counsel not to seek a conviction for lesser charges.
The state court found that “there is no reason to believe Mr. Hufjay’s representation of the defendant would have been any different if a proper fee arrangement had been utilized.” Because the state court’s findings are supported by the record, and entitled to deference, we conclude that Winkler has failed to prove that trial counsel’s representation was adversely affected by the conflict of interest. Thus, his Sixth Amendment right to counsel was not violated.
CONCLUSION
The district court’s denial of the § 2254 petition is affirmed.
