In 1972 an Ohio jury convicted Petitioner-Appellant Ronald Krzeminski of first degree murder. After properly exhausting all avenues of relief in the Ohio state courts, he filed the instant petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court. The district court denied relief and petitioner appeals. We affirm District Judge Don Young.
FACTS
The underlying facts of this case present a sordid tale of marital strife resulting in murder. Petitioner’s own testimony at trial outlined what occurred. The petitioner married in 1969 after a stormy engagement period of over two years. The marriage was filled with conflict, and in December of 1970 the couple separated. Thereafter, a series of conversations and meetings took place between Petitioner and his wife Patricia in an attempt to salvage the marriage. On March 25, 1971, the petitioner called his sister and brother-in-law and asked them to accompany him on a visit to his wife’s apartment. He asked them to go along because he feared that his wife might falsely accuse him of breaking and entering or other similar offense. His wife was not at home when the trio first drove by, but a bit later she had returned. Petitioner’s sister and brother-in-law accompanied him to the apartment house entrance, but he went on alone to his wife’s apartment. Petitioner testified that his wife sexually teased him and then taunted him. He admitted choking his wife until she stopped breathing and then stabbing her several times with a knife obtained from the kitchen.
The petitioner returned to the car where his sister and brother-in-law were waiting for him. He told them that he had killed his wife although when he saw their horrified reactions, he said it was a joke. They dropped him off at his apartment. There, he told a neighbor that he had killed his wife. He penned a suicide note admitting the killing and took a bottle of sleeping tablets. He left the apartment to find a place to die, but ended up at a friend’s *123 apartment where he again admitted the killing. He was taken to a local hospital where he recovered to stand trial for murder.
The petitioner’s defense at trial was that he was not guilty by reason of insanity. Alternately, his attorneys argued that because of his deep anger, he should be convicted at most of manslaughter, a lesser included offense of murder. Defense counsel urged that at the very least, petitioner’s anger operated to negate malice or intent to kill, which were elements of the crime of murder under Ohio law in 1972. 1 The jury, however, returned a verdict of guilty of first degree murder with a recommendation of mercy. The petitioner was sentenced to life imprisonment.
I.
In his habeas corpus petition, petitioner raises four separate claims regarding the state trial judge’s jury instructions. 2 Two of these claims can be summarily rejected, the other two require more extended treatment.
The state trial judge instructed the jury on the elements of first degree murder, second degree murder and voluntary manslaughter. He then instructed the jury on the elements of the insanity defense and the effect of sudden anger on the murder charges. The judge instructed the jury that the petitioner had the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that he was not guilty by reason of insanity. Similarly, the judge instructed the jury that anger negating intent or premeditation was an affirmative defense which the defendant also had to show by a preponderance of the evidence.
The petitioner claims that the imposition of these burdens of proof on him violated due process. He relies on
Mullaney v. Wilbur,
Petitioner’s claim is foreclosed by
Patterson v. New York,
Under Ohio law at the time of petitioner’s trial, insanity and anger were affirmative defenses which had to be both raised and proved by a defendant.
See
e. g.
State v. Vargo,
II.
Two other instructions given to the jury are more troublesome. The state trial judge told the jury:
The defendant, having admitted in open court that he killed the deceased, a verdict of not guilty cannot be returned in this case, and it is your duty to determine whether the defendant is guilty of murder in the first degree, murder in the second degree, or manslaughter in that order, or whether the defendant is not guilty by reason of insanity.
In addition, while instructing the jury on the lesser included offense of manslaughter, the trial court stated:
To constitute manslaughter in the first degree, the killing of another must be done unlawfully, that is, that the killing of Patricia Krzeminski by this defendant was done unlawfully.
If one person kills another and no circumstances of excuse or justification are shown, the law presumes that the killing was unlawful.
The first of the above-quoted instructions presents a patent constitutional violation. No matter how overwhelming the evidence, a judge cannot direct a verdict of guilty or instruct a jury that it must find the defendant guilty.
See e. g. Sparf v. United States,
The second of the above-quoted instructions also presents a constitutional violation. Sandstrom v. Montana, supra makes it clear that a judge cannot instruct a jury that it must presume an element of a crime has been established on a showing that certain conduct took place. 4 Such an *125 instruction effectively shifts the burden to the defendant of disproving an element of the crime. This is constitutionally forbidden.
Both the Ohio courts and the district court below found that the first instruction, supra was erroneous. 5 Both concluded, however, that the error was harmless. We agree.
There are two similar approaches to analyzing harmless error when dealing with constitutional violations in a trial setting. The first is the straightforward test of
Chapman v. California,
Our examination of the record convinces us that the first error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The defense at trial never argued that the defendant should be found not guilty. It argued that the defendant should be found not guilty by reason of insanity, or alternatively, guilty of a lesser included offense of first degree murder. The defendant admitted the murder to numerous other people and recounted the details of the murder from the witness stand to the jury. Five people testified that the petitioner admitted the murder to them. A friend of the petitioner testified that on two different occasions, the petitioner stated that he was going to kill his wife. The only effect of the judge’s instruction that the jury could not acquit the defendant was to minimize the possibility of jury nullification. Only an irrational jury could have acquitted the defendant outright.
Similarly, we think that the second error was also harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The trial judge’s instructions to the jury that the law presumed that a killing was “unlawful” from the fact that a killing had occurred related only to the lesser-included offense of manslaughter. The defendant at trial never denied that the killing of his wife was unlawful. He argued only that he was not guilty by reason of insanity. Indeed, his alternative argument was that he was guilty only of manslaughter because he had acted in anger. Thus, he conceded that to the extent that he was culpable, he was guilty of an “unlawful” killing.
III.
We are aware that there is language in
Brotherhood of Carpenters v. United
*126
States,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. See 29 Ohio Rev.Code §§ 2901.01 et seq. (1953), superceded, 29 Ohio Rev.Code §§ 2903.01 et seq. (1975).
. The state respondents argue that because no objection to the jury instruction was made at trial, the petitioner is barred from raising any questions about them in this habeas corpus proceeding.
Wainwright v. Sykes,
. It is true that after petitioner’s trial in 1972, the law in Ohio changed. Effective January 1, 1974, a defendant in Ohio need only go forward with sufficient evidence to raise a defense. A defendant no longer has the burden of proving the defense by a preponderance of the evidence.
See State v. Robinson,
. In contrast, the trial judge properly instructed the jury that it could infer intent or malice from the facts:
If a wound is inflicted upon a person with a deadly weapon in a manner calculated to *125 destroy life, the intent or purpose to kill may be inferred from the use of the weapon. Where one intentionally cuts or stabs another with a deadly weapon in a manner likely to cause death, you may infer that the act was done maliciously.
This distinction between a permissible inference and a mandatory or burden-shifting presumption is critical.
See United States v. Davis,
. In addition to violating federal law, the instruction was contrary to established state law.
See Fouts v. State,
. Students of federal-state relations will be interested in reading the various opinions drafted by several Kentucky Supreme Court justices in this case.
. In
Sandstrom v. Montana,
