OPINION
Jоhn David Ruelas pleaded guilty to “open murder” for causing his mother’s death. At his “degree hearing,” where a judge was to find the proper level of criminal homicide for Ruelas based on his plea, he was found guilty of second-degree murder. Ruelas has now filed a petition for a writ of federal habeas corpus, contending *406 that his plea was not made knowingly or voluntarily and was thus unconstitutional. The district court agreed, and granted him a conditional writ of habeas corpus. Because we believe that even if his plea was involuntary any constitutional error was harmless, we REVERSE.
I.
In 2002, Ruelas, then thirty-eight years old, moved back into his mother’s house after he and his wife divorced. Ruelas and his mother frequently argued, and in January of that year, he referred to his ex-wife as a “bitch.” His mother scolded him, and he gave her “a couple of strikings.” J.A. 217. As a result, his mother, seventy-six years old, died.
Ruelas was arrested and, in July 2002, pleaded guilty to “open murder” in exchange for the dismissal of a second felony offender charge. In Michigan, “open murder” pleаs permit a judge to determine, based on the plea agreement, what level of criminal homicide is appropriate. The plea agreement between Ruelas and the prosecutor stated that the circuit court would consider first-degree murder, second-degree murder, and manslaughter. First-degree murder carried a possible sentence of up to life with no parole; second was life with the opportunity for parole; manslaughter was capped at fifteen years in jail. The circuit court, after ruling out first-degree, found Ruelas guilty of second-degree murder. Ruelas was sentenced to 250 months to 40 years in prison with the possibility of parole.
Ruelas then began a series of challenges to his guilty plea and conviction. These culminated in an attempt to withdraw his plea. The trial court construed his motion to withdraw his plea as a motion for relief from judgment and denied it. Ruelas argued first that the circuit court never mentioned manslaughter when it found him guilty of second-degree murder, and, second, that аt the time Ruelas pleaded to and was found guilty of second-degree murder, manslaughter could not have been considered during an “open murder” hearing under Michigan law. Ruelas argued that this rendered his plea involuntary because he thought he had a shot of being found guilty of merely manslaughter.
The state courts denied this claim, finding that his plea was not involuntary and, even if it was, any such error was “harmless.” Ruelas then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal court, alleging (among other things), that his plea was unknowing and involuntary and that his guilty plea must be vacated as a result. Ruelas does not argue that someone else killed his mother; he argues that the highest charge sustainable against him is manslaughter. Br. of Petitioner/Appellee at 12. The district court rejected most of Ruelas’s arguments but agreed that his guilty plea was improper and further that this defect had a substantial and injurious effect on his conviction. The district court granted the writ because it concluded that Ruelas was likely to have pleaded innocent if hе had known he was ineligible for manslaughter, and therefore he was entitled to habeas relief. Michigan appeals.
II.
Two minor points must be cleared up before addressing the merits. First, Michigan argues that, though Ruelas otherwise exhausted his state remedies before filing his habeas petition, we should nevertheless dismiss his claim as unexhausted because there is a chance that, were he to file a new motion in state court, Michigan’s courts might change the law and allow his petition to proceed. Speсifically, Michigan argues that, were we to dismiss Ruelas’s case, the Michigan courts might find the Supreme Court’s decision in
Castro v. United States,
But no Michigan court has ever cited
Castro,
and, being grounded in the Court’s supervisory power over lower federal courts, it is not directly binding on them.
Id.
at 382-84,
Second, after the district court granted judgment in favor of Ruelas on his involuntary guilty plea claim, Michigan filed a motion for relief from judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). Michigan then appealed this case to this Court two days later, and then re-filed its 60(b) motion with the district court. That motion sought an evidentiary hearing into whether Ruelas’s plea was voluntary, and the state submitted affidavits from the trial prosecutor and defense counsel. The district court has not yet acted on this 60(b) motion.
In its brief in this case, Michigan improperly relies on evidence it submitted when it filed its 60(b) motion. This evidence is not prоperly before us. First, the district court correctly did not rule on the 60(b) motion while this appeal remained pending, as it lost jurisdiction over it: “After an appeal of a trial court’s final judgment has been perfected by the filing of a notice of appeal, the trial court no longer has jurisdiction to grant a Rule 60(b) motion.”
Pickens v. Howes,
III.
On a federal habeas appeal from a state court judgment, we review a district court’s legal conclusions and mixed questions of law and fact de novo, and we review its factual findings for clear error.
Armstrong v. Morgan,
IV.
A defendant who pleads guilty waives a number of federal constitutional rights, including the right to a jury trial and the right to confront his accusers.
Boykin v. Alabama,
While a defendant need not know all the possible consequences of his plea, like the loss of his right to vote or own a gun, or the effect on future sentence, he must be aware of the maximum sentence to which he is exposed.
King v. Dutton,
Ruelas argues that his guilty plea was invalid because, contrary to the plea’s terms, manslaughter was not a permissible option during his “open murder hearing” under then-applicable Michigan law. (The law has since сhanged: were Ruelas to plead guilty to “open murder” today, manslaughter could be considered.) He argues that his plea was thus “involuntary” and that he should be permitted to withdraw it. In support, Ruelas contends both that Michigan law forbade manslaughter from being imposed, so the guilty plea should be held invalid on some kind of mutual mistake theory, and further that the circuit court never discussed manslaughter during his degree hearing, instead concluding that second-degree murder applied after ruling out first-degree murder. But things are not quite sо simple.
Michigan law was in flux when Ruelas pleaded guilty. It was not clear whether manslaughter was a lesser included offense of murder — and thus could be considered during an “open murder” hearing — or was not. Plea agreements may be held invalid if prosecutors, defense counsel, and the court are confused or mistaken as to the law,
Bousley,
Yet, even if we assume that Michigan law forbade the circuit court from considering manslaughter, it is ambiguous what it in fact considered; if it did consider manslaughter, even if that was contrary to the law at the time, then it is not clear what Ruelas lost. Indeed, the circuit court simply never used the word manslaughter, stating only:
The Court could not find any specific intent in this case. The Court could not find a premeditated murder. And so, murder one is out. But, I do think that murder two was well demonstrated. The Defendant did great bodily harm to the victim knowing that he created a high risk of death, or great bodily harm knowing that death from such harm would like result [from] his actions. And so, the Court does make a finding [that] Mr. Ruelas is guilty of second-degree murder under the laws of this State.
*410
It explained that it was sentencing Ruelas to second-degree rather than first-degree murder because he lacked premeditation. Ruelas argues, however, that the court’s failure to distinguish manslaughter from second-degree murder, which the court found him guilty of, indicated that manslaughter was not considered. Yet, under Michigan law, the difference between second-degree murder and manslaughter is that a manslaughter conviction requires the defendant to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he killed in the “heat of passion,” with such passion caused by “adequate provocation,” without “a lapse of time during which a reasonable person could control his actions.”
Mendoza,
The final sticky point is, even assuming that the judge could not consider manslaughter, whethеr that is legally sufficient to render his plea involuntary. On one hand, courts have focused on whether the defendant was aware of the maximum possible sentence, not the minimum.
Dutton,
But we need not resolve these conundrums — both factual and legal — because the simplest way to resolve this case is to assume that Michigan either could not or did not consider manslaughter, and to further assume such error rendered Ruelas’s guilty plea involuntary. We thus assume а constitutional violation, so the question is whether that violation was harmless or not.
V.
A.
Ruelas argues that a finding that his guilty plea was involuntary ought to end his case because all such errors are “structural.” “Structural errors” are those that “defy” analysis by normal harmless error standards,
Arizona v. Fulminante,
B.
Determining whether an error is harmless on habeas review requires us to ask whether the error “had [a] substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
The
Fry
Court also observed that post-
Brecht
developments (namely, the passage of the AEDPA) did not undermine
Brecht,
and that standard continues to apply today.
Id.
at 119-20,
The answer in this Circuit is that
Brecht
is always the test, and there is no reason tо ask both whether the state court “unreasonably” applied
Chapman
under the AEDPA and, further, whether the constitutional error had a “substantial and injurious” effect on the jury’s verdict.
See, e.g., Hall v. Vasbinder,
Yet one of our sister circuits recently held otherwise. In
Johnson v. Acevedo,
Although we agree with the Seventh Circuit that
“Fry
did not overrule
Esparza,” Johnson,
C.
So the
Brecht
test applies. Ruelas flunks it. Assuming that the state courts unreasonably applied federal law in determining that Ruelas’s plea was not improper, the inquiry becomes whether the circuit сourt’s failure to consider manslaughter “had a substantial and injurious effect or influence” on the determination that he was guilty of second-degree murder.
Brecht,
In Michigan second-degree murder requires the government to prove that there was (1) a “death, (2) caused by the defendant’s act,” (3) the act was done “with malice, and (4) without justification.”
Mendoza,
Ruelas’s only support for his contention that he merited only manslaughter and not second-degree murder, was that his mother provoked him when she slapped him across the face and told him not to refer to his ex-wife as a “bitch.” J.A. 217. This is not powerful evidence. Moreover, that the circuit court, at the degree-hearing, did not explicitly “rule out” manslaughter is of no moment because it was not the government’s burden to prove it. And, we believe, had the judge considered manslaughter at Ruelas’s degree hearing, he would have still been found guilty of second-degree murder because he proffered no *414 evidence establishing sufficient “provocation” under Michigan law. As a result, the failure to consider manslaughter did not have a substantial and injurious effect on Ruelas’s chance of receiving a manslaughter charge, as the chargе of second-degree murder was well supported and Ruelas offered little evidence of provocation.
VI.
For the above reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s judgment and vacate the order to issue the conditional writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. Ruelas also relies on the supposed semantic distinction between '"structural” and “trial errors,” arguing that because there was no trial in this case, the error
must
be structural. That does not follow. While it is true that errors susceptible to normal harmless error analysis are often colloquially referred to as "trial errors,”
see, e.g., Hedgpeth
v. Pulido,U.S. -, -,
.
Compare Eddleman v. McKee,
