Robert Levine was convicted of using interstate commerce to commit murder for hire. 18 U.S.C. § 1958(a). After we upheld his conviction,
United States v. Levine,
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Most cases answer “no,” e.g.,
Peeler v. Hughes,
Not only would this be a paradoxical result, depreciating and in some cases wholly offsetting the plaintiffs criminal punishment, but it would be contrary to fundamental principles of both tort and criminal law. Tort law provides damages only for harms to the plaintiffs legally protected interests, Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 1 comment d, § 7(1) (1965), and the liberty of a guilty criminal is not one of them. The guilty criminal may be able to obtain an acquittal if he is skillfully represented, but he has no right to that result (just as he has no right to have the jury nullify the law, though juries sometimes do that), and the law provides no relief if the “right” is denied him.
Criminal law entitles á criminal defendant to competent counsel, but the consequence if counsel is incompetent and conviction results is a new trial, not an acquittal. E.g.,
Holman v. Page,
We used the awkward term “guilty in law” to distinguish the case in which the defendant is guilty in fact but has a sound legal defense, such as double jeopardy, from a case in which he is both guilty in fact and has no sound legal defense yet might, because of the heavy burden of proof on the prosecution, have obtained an acquittal if he had had a skillful lawyer. Only in the second case is the malpractice suit against the less-than-skillful lawyer barred.
We cannot see what difference it makes that the malpractice alleged here is that of appellate rather than trial counsel A victory on appeal is worth little unless it results in an acquittal. More important, a victory on appeal by a “guilty” defendant in the sense of a defendant who should be convicted on remand again vindicates an interest, that of the acquittal of the guilty, that the law does not protect. The guilty have procedural rights, but they are vindicated by arguments and submissions at trial, by appeals, and by post-conviction attacks on the conviction or sentence, not by acquittal, or by damages in lieu of acquittal as sought here.
But the district court should not have dismissed Levine’s suit with prejudice. He has not yet exhausted his postconviction
