Robbins was convicted in California state court of second-degree murder and grand theft auto. His petition for habeas corpus alleges that his rights under the United States Constitution were violated because of constitutional errors in his trial and also because of ineffective assistance of counsel in his direct appeal. The district court held that Robbins was denied effective assistance of counsel on appeal because of the failure of his appointed counsel to comply with the minimum requirements of Anders v. California,
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253 and we affirm the district court’s granting of Robbins’s habeas petition on the Anders issue. We remand, however, to the district court for consideration of the alleged constitutional violations at trial that have been properly exhausted in the state courts. We hold that Robbins is entitled to consideration of these issues at this time. If the petition is granted on any of those grounds, it would obviate the necessity for an appeal. If the petition is denied on those grounds, the new appeal in the state court as required by the district court order would, of course, not be confined to exhausted issues, but would be a renewed direct appeal.
I. FACTS AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
Lee Robbins, an indigent defendant, represented himself at trial, where he was convicted of second-degree murder and grand theft auto. He was sentenced to seventeen years to life in the California state prison on September 5,1990.
Robbins received appointed counsel for his state appeal. His attorney filed a no-merit brief before the court, which briefly outlined the facts surrounding Robbins’s trial and failed to present any possible grounds for appeal. Included in the short document was a request that the court itself review the record for arguable issues. Counsel pledged to remain “available to brief any [issue(s) ] upon invitation of the court.”
Robbins subsequently filed a brief on his own behalf. After the California Court of Appeals found Robbins’s claims to be unsupported by the record and that no other arguable issues existed, his appeal was denied on December 12, 1991. Robbins’s petition for review by the California Supreme Court was denied on October 21 of the following year.
After exhausting his state remedies on January 26,1994,
After counsel was appointed to represent Robbins, and after several rounds of supplemental briefing, the district court granted his habeas petition on October 24, 1995, “to the extent that petitioner shall be discharged from custody unless the California Court of Appeal accepts jurisdiction over petitioner’s direct appeal within 30 days.” The State of California appealed. Robbins cross-appealed, arguing that the district court should have granted relief on his claims of constitutional error in the trial, thereby entitling him to a new trial.
II. Applicability Of AEDPA
As a threshold matter, we must decide whether the new substantive and procedural requirements of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), signed into law on April 24,1996, are applicable to this case. Though the answer to the question was not clear at the time of oral argument, the Supreme Court has since held that the sections of AEDPA relevant to this case do not apply to eases filed in the federal courts prior to the Act’s effective date of April 24, 1996. See Lindh v. Murphy, — U.S. —, —,
III. The State’s Appeal
The district court held that Robbins’s representation during his direct appeal was ineffective under Anders v. California,
Anders is the Supreme Court’s landmark pronouncement setting forth court-appointed appellate counsel’s duty to further a client’s ease after determining the appeal to be without merit. Anders involved the situation where an indigent defendant’s appointed counsel, after concluding an appeal was frivolous, filed a letter brief so informing the court. The letter noted that counsel remained at the court’s disposal to brief any issues that the court were to see fit. The defendant’s request for replacement counsel was denied, and the California Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction.
Anders subsequently filed a federal habeas petition, arguing that his right to effective counsel on appeal had been violated. The Supreme Court agreed. The Court was convinced that the appellate court reviewed Anders’s claim without the benefit of briefing or advocacy based on “counsel’s bare conclusion” that the appeal was frivolous. Anders,
In Penson v. Ohio, the Supreme Court explained that “Anders, in essence, recognizes a limited exception to the requirement articulated in [Douglas v. California,
The California Supreme Court interpreted Anders in People v. Feggans,
Accepting the State’s contention, that the state court decision in Wende allows a departure from the strict requirements of Anders, would override Supreme Court precedent. Our obligation in this habeas action is to determine whether appellate counsel met his obligations under the United States Supreme Court’s requirements set forth in Anders and its progeny. It is apparent that those requirements were not met. Robbins’s appointed counsel neither provided active and vigorous appellate representation nor complied with Anders. The brief filed on Robbins’s behalf completely failed to identify any grounds that arguably supported an appeal. Rather, it briefly summarized the procedural and historical facts of the case and requested that the state appellate court “independently review the entire record for arguable issues.” Accordingly, the district court correctly found that Robbins’s counsel did not comply with Anders.
The State also argues that the district court erred in basing its grant of Robbins’s habeas petition on the finding that at least two arguable issues existed for appeal. In making this argument, the State assumes that the nonexistence of arguable issues would render appointed counsel’s failure to comply with Anders harmless. We need not decide whether this assumption is correct because we conclude that the district court correctly determined that arguably nonfrivolous issues existed.
The district court found that at least two nonfrivolous appellate issues existed in Robbins’s case: (1) that the denial of Robbins’s attempt to withdraw the waiver of his right to counsel constituted error; and (2) that the inadequacy of the county jail’s library deprived him of a meaningful opportunity to prepare his defense. It further noted that there may well be other arguable issues. Robbins also points to several other exhausted, arguably nonfrivolous appellate issues, including prosecutorial misconduct in violation of Brady v. Maryland, wrongful denial of Robbins’s Marsden motions (motions under California law relating to the substitution of counsel), and interference with Robbins’s constitutional right to prepare an adequate defense on his own behalf.
Anders creates a very low threshold for which arguments counsel must brief for the court. See United States v. Griffy,
The two issues identified by the district court — (1) whether the denial of Robbins’s attempt to withdraw the waiver of his right to counsel constituted error; and (2) whether the inadequacy of the county jail’s library deprived him of a meaningful opportunity to prepare his defense — are arguably nonfrivolous and should have caused the state appellate court to appoint new counsel for Robbins.
The right guaranteed by the Fourteenth and Sixth Amendments to waive one’s right to counsel and proceed in pro per “is premised upon the right of the defendant to make a defense.” Milton v. Morris,767 F.2d 1443 , 1445-46 (9th Cir.1985) (citing Faretta v. California,422 U.S. 806 , 819-20,95 S.Ct. 2525 , 2533-34,45 L.Ed.2d 562 (1975)). An incarcerated defendant cannot meaningfully exercise this right without access to tools such as law books. Id. at 1446; Taylor v. List,880 F.2d 1040 , 1047 (9th Cir.1989).
The California trial judge’s own words — “it’s almost impossible as a pro per to prepare yourself a decent defense, especially given the law library” — justify the district court’s conclusion that Robbins’s inability to prepare an adequate defense was, in the very least, an arguable issue. The California trial judge even told Robbins that “if you are looking up law, you are not going to be able to find it because somebody has torn it out before you got there.” There is some potential, had Robbins’s appointed counsel raised and vigorously advanced this issue on appeal, that Robbins’s conviction would have been reversed.
As the district court noted, the California trial court’s treatment of Robbins’s request to withdraw his waiver of his right to counsel also raises a serious constitutional question. The district court stated, “[f]airly read, petitioner asked for the appointment of counsel as an alternative to advisory counsel. Because the judge failed to even consider whether petitioner was reasserting his right to counsel, it too is a nonfrivolous issue which should have been raised by petitioner’s appellate counsel.” We agree.
Finally, the State argues that granting relief on Robbins’s Anders claim violates Teague v. Lane. Teague held that new constitutional rules cannot be applied retroactively to cases on collateral review unless they fall into one of two narrow exceptions. “[A] case announces a new rule if the result was not dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.” Teague,
It is clear that the district court’s holding in this case did not involve a new rule. Our discussion above indicates that the outcome of Robbins’s case was predetermined by the controlling analysis provided by the Supreme Court in Anders and Penson, both of which were handed down before Robbins’s conviction. The consequences of counsel’s failure to raise arguable issues were unambiguously detailed in Anders. Application of Anders to this case required no extension of precedent or logical interpolation. The facts of Robbins’s case almost directly mirror those of Anders. In light of these considerations, the Goeke test confirms that no “new” constitutional rule was invoked in this case.
IV. Robbins’s Cross-Appeal
Robbins argues in his cross-appeal that the district court erred when it failed to consider and to rule upon his allegations of constitutional error in the state court trial.
The Eleventh Circuit has, in the exercise of its supervisory authority, directed district courts to rule on all claims raised in a petition for habeas corpus, even if the petition is granted on one claim. Clisby v. Jones,
We have taken a different approach in our circuit. In Blazak v. Ricketts,
Moreover, unlike habeas grants exclusively on sentencing issues, the grant of a habeas petition because of the constitutional invalidity of a conviction raises concerns that a possibly innocent person has been unjustifiably incarcerated on death row for a number of years. Delaying retrial in such cases, while attorneys fight over a sentence that may no longer exist, risks the perpetuation of a monumental injustice, should retrial ultimately result in an acquittal.
Id. at 1414 n. 7; see also Rice v. Wood,
Penson v. Ohio, cited by California in opposition to Robbins’s claim, is inapposite. Penson was an indigent defendant who was convicted of several serious felonies. His appointed appellate counsel filed a letter brief certifying his appeal to be meritless and asking to withdraw. In violation of Anders, the Ohio Court of Appeals allowed counsel to withdraw and conducted its own review of the record without the benefit of advocacy or briefing. Penson,
Penson is unlike the case at bar because it involved the Supreme Court’s review of the Ohio appellate court’s dismissal of Penson’s direct appeal. When the Court recognized that “several arguably meritorious grounds for reversal” existed, it remanded the matter to the Ohio appellate court for further proceedings. Id. It was, however, reviewing the direct appeal of a state court action, and not a habeas petition. In this circumstance, the Court explained that it would not “sit in place of the Ohio Court of Appeals in the first instance to determine whether petitioner was prejudiced as to any appellate issue.” Id. at 87 n. 9,
Because the district court should have addressed the claims of trial error first, it might not have needed to address Robbins’s claims of appellate error as well. Because it did address the appellate claims, however, and because it decided those questions correctly, it is in the interest of judicial economy and efficiency to affirm them now. If trial error is found to have occurred and to require vacation of the conviction, the appellate errors will become immaterial. If no such trial errors are found, however, the district court’s original order will again become applicable. Cf. Penson,
Y. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED IN PART but the case is REMANDED to the district court for consideration of whether the alleged constitutional trial errors that defendant raises merit reversal of Robbins’s underlying convictions and the granting of a new trial.
Notes
. Robbins filed a habeas petition in slate court, which the California Supreme Court ultimately denied on the merits. The petition raised the same issues that Robbins now raises in his federal habeas petition.
. Because we conclude that the district court correctly identified at least two arguably nonfrivolous issues, we need not determine whether other arguably nonfrivolous issues exist.
