Third Time’s A Charm
Appellant, Texas Department of Corrections, appeals from the District Court’s granting of habeas corpus relief, 28 U.S. C.A. § 2254 to appellee, Ronald Clyde Nelson. Nelson was indicted on three counts for the sale of heroin and tried on a plea of not guilty in March of 1973. The state prosecution presented only two witnesses at trial — an undercover agent and a state chemist. In the course of the chemist’s testimony three narcotics lab submission reports — State’s exhibits nos. 13,14,15 — were offered into evidence and admitted, over the objection of Nelson’s counsel. These reports were identical except that each cor *905 responded to only one of the respective heroin counts. 1
Nelson’s counsel objected to the admission of exhibit number 13 on the basis that a proper predicate had not been established, number 14 claiming that there had been no showing of a chain of custody, and number 15 as hearsay. All objections were overruled. The jury convicted Nelson of all three charges and the trial judge sentenced him to serve concurrent 50 year terms on each count.
Represented by new counsel, Nelson directly appealed his conviction based on the admission of State’s exhibits 13, 14 and 15. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals,
Nelson v. State,
However, the District Court declined to follow that recommendation and held that “the failure of Nelson's trial counsel to preserve reversible error by objecting to the hearsay nature of the submission reports admitted into evidence ... actually prejudiced Nelson’s defense and caused trial counsel’s assistance to fall below the Sixth Amendment standard.” This appeal followed and we are now required to determine whether appointed counsel’s assistance was less than reasonably effective because he failed to preserve reversible error by objecting to the hearsay nature of two submission reports admitted into evidence. We are
not
required or even allowed to consider the evidentiary wisdom of the State of Texas in this issue. Unquestionably, federal habeas corpus is available only for the vindication of rights existing under federal law; not rights existing solely under the
*906
rules of state procedure.
Butts
v.
Wainwright,
Sixth’s Guarantees
The Sixth Amendment rights to counsel entitles the accused in a criminal proceeding to representation by an attorney reasonably likely to render and rendering reasonably effective assistance.
See, e. g., Hill v. Wainwright,
In the present case, the record of state proceedings readily discloses that overall, Nelson’s counsel rendered effective assistance by (i) filing meaningful pre-trial motions, (ii) cross-examining each of the state’s witnesses rigorously and in a manner favorable to Nelson’s apparent trial strategy, and (iii) making specific meaningful objections to testimony and exhibits. In closing argument, counsel artfully interwove defensive theories with specific references to areas of testimony and evidence in support of defendant’s trial strategy. Thus, in its totality, counsel’s assistance was more than reasonably effective. Yet, we are asked to consider counsel’s single error which resulted in a violation of state law and a partial reversal of conviction, to be so prejudicial as to render the trial as a whole “fundamentally unfair”. We cannot so hold.
Nelson relies heavily on the language found in
Nero
in support of his position. In that case, Nero’s counsel failed to request a mistrial following improper prosecutorial comments of prior convictions. Counsel’s ignorance of Louisiana statutory law caused a conviction when an automatic mistrial would have been granted if defense counsel had merely asked for one. This Court held that “[sjometimes a single error is so substantial that it alone causes the attorney’s assistance to fall below the Sixth Amendment standard.”
Nero,
*907 Where counsel has induced defendant to plead guilty on the patently erroneous advice that if he does not do so, he may be subject to a sentence six times more severe than that which the law would really allow, the proceeding surely fits the mold we describe as a ‘farce and a mockery of justice’. 4
Cooks,
Two Types Of “Prejudice”
Neither do we accept Nelson’s collateral argument that counsel’s error was so prejudicial that it affected the jury’s verdict and resulted in a violation of due process rights. Nelson relies on the authority of
United States v. Ware,
Although both of these cases appear to be directly on point with the case at hand, a vital distinction exists in the type of “prejudice” spoken of there in comparison with this case. This Court has distinguished between two types of “prejudice”; that which might (i) affect the jury verdict, and (ii) which renders the trial as a whole “fundamentally unfair.”
See, e. g., Spiegel v. Sandstrom,
Two Month’s Clairvoyance?
Finally, we address the State’s argument that counsel should not be judged ineffective or negligent by hindsight, in failing to foresee that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals would hold in Coulter two months after Nelson’s trial that these narcotic submission reports constituted inadmissible hearsay. The decisions in Nero and Cooks make it clear that a failure of counsel to be aware of prior controlling precedents in even a single prejudicial instance might render counsel’s assistance ineffective under the Sixth Amendment. However, counsel is normally not expected to foresee future new developments in the law or for that matter to research parallel jurisdictions — federal rules of evidence in preparation for a state proceeding.
Of course, counsel’s inability to foresee future pronouncements which will dispossess the Court of power to impose a particular sentence which is presently sought viable does not render counsel’s representation ineffective, nor does a plea later become invalid because it is predicated upon advice correct at the time but later proved to be erroneous by reason of a subsequent decision ... Clairvoyance is not a required attribute of effective representation.
Cooks,
Moreover, the
Coulter
decision can be distinguished. A thorough reading of
Coulter
reveals that the Court in reaching its holding relied on the language in both
Ware,
One Error — Not Ineffective Assistance
To reiterate, the Sixth Amendment does not guarantee errorless counsel, and in single error cases which hold ineffective assistance, the mistakes depicted are of constitutional proportions and at a level or degree of incompetence that disregards the client’s interest as a whole. That is lacking here. Simply stated, counsel’s performance did not reach that high degree of ineptitude forbidden by the Sixth Amendment which would render the trial as a whole “fundamentally unfair”. The fact that counsel objected in a different manner to each of the three reports and prevailed upon appeal in regard to only one, does not per se render the assistance of counsel incompetent or ineffective because there was no constitutional violation involving fundamental unfairness. To hold counsel to an errorless standard — much less an errorless reversible standard — is both to require an unattainable, unrealistic standard of perfection and, more so, would permit the Federal Court to disregard its sole, but important, role of monitoring errors of constitutional magnitude. The more realistic approach is to continue to apply a case-by-case totality of circumstances standard with which to judge counsel’s ineffectiveness or lack of it. Judged by that standard, we do not find that Nelson’s counsel rendered ineffective assistance as a whole and accordingly, reverse the granting of the habeas corpus.
REVERSED.
Notes
. The reports contained the offender’s name, the chargeable offense, and the agent’s conclusions that the substance analyzed was heroin.
. In both
Coulter v. State,
. We observe that this Court has not clearly held that a habeas petitioner must demonstrate any degree of prejudice suffered by his counsel’s ineffectiveness in similar situations, although there is dicta in
Davis v. State of Alabama,
. We no longer use the farce and mockery of justice standard.
See Herring v. Estelle,
. This is the famous “keys left in jail door case”. The fact that the keys were left in the jail house door is conclusive evidence that the keys were taken for temporary use only thus negating an intent to permanently deprive. Hence, a robbery conviction for taking the keys could not be proved.
