ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
(Opinion August 27, 1992, 5th Cir., 1992,
John Henry Selvage petitions for rehearing urging that the court erred in determining that his failure to raise “Penry”
Absent a showing of cause and actual prejudice, federal habeas petitioners may not assert new claims in a second federal habeas petition. McCleskey v. Zant, — U.S. -,
Selvage agrees that the cause requirement is not satisfied if the claim was “reasonably available” at the time of the first federal petition. He argues, however, that we have employed the wrong standard in determining that Penry claims were “available.” Selvage maintains that Reed v. Ross,
This standard, which Selvage would locate in Reed, is inconsistent with Engle's holding that futility does not constitute cause. The argument thus supposes that Reed marked a dramatic, and sustained, departure from the rule laid down in En-gle. The Supreme Court, however, has read the two decisions together and has confirmed that perceived futility does not justify a failure to raise a claim.
The petitioners in Engle contended that their failure to raise a claim in state court should be excused on grounds that such an objection was novel or “unknown” to them and, if known, would at any rate have been “futile.”
The Reed Court resolved the issue of “novel” claims left open in Engle, holding that “where a constitutional claim is so novel that its legal basis is not reasonably available to counsel, a defendant has cause for his failure to raise the claim.” Reed,
The Supreme Court, however, has not given this language in Reed the broad effect Selvage proposes. Rather, the Court has read Reed to supplement, not supplant, Engle. The cause standard formed by the two decisions provides that a failure to assert truly novel claims may be excused; futile claims, however, are in no way novel, and the omission of such “reasonably available” claims will not be excused. As the Court held in Smith v. Murray,
Our application of the cause requirement has tracked these decisions in treating En-gle and Reed as standing for the same rule. This is especially true of the cases upon which we have relied in holding that Selvage’s failure to assert Penry claims in his first federal petition may not be excused. In Selvage v. Lynaugh,
[T]he issue is not a recently found legal theory not knowable by competent trial counsel. Reed v. Ross,468 U.S. 1 [104 S.Ct. 2901 ,82 L.Ed.2d 1 ] (1984) (so novel that its legal basis is not reasonably available). Nor is its rejection by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals a legal excuse for not objecting. “If a defendant perceives a constitutional claim and believes it may find favor in the federal courts, he may not bypass the state courts simply because he thinks they will be unsympathetic to the claim.’ ” Engle v. Isaac, [456 U.S. 107 , 130],102 S.Ct. 1558 , 1573 [71 L.Ed.2d 783 ] (1982). It is true that the Texas statute had been upheld.... We cannot read these cases to so foreclose Selvage’s argument that his counsel should not have preserved the point.
Id. at 94; Cuevas,
Our interpretation of the cause requirement accords with those of other circuits. See, e.g., Pitts v. Cook,
It is clear that an omission of a claim may be excused for cause only if the question was so novel that it lacked a reasonable basis in existing law. It is equally clear, however, that Teague v. Lane,
A claim is “novel” under Engle and Reed if “counsel has no reasonable basis upon which to formulate a constitutional question.” Reed,
We do not believe that these considerations have rendered superfluous our identification of the narrow class of claims that might be deemed “novel” and thus excused for cause. We have previously indicated that “[w]e cannot categorically say that a habeas petitioner could never steer among the[ ] shoals [of Reed and Teague].” Skelton,
Our discussion confirms, however, that “newness” does not have a consistent meaning. The reach of this category is very limited under Reed but quite broad under Teague. The novelty cause standard is thus wholly contained, with much room to spare, by Teague’s new rule doctrine; there is no gray area. These considerations lead us to conclude that a rule found novel for cause purposes will not be available in a federal habeas proceeding, and that a determination that a rule will be applied precludes a finding that the claim’s novelty constitutes cause.
Petition for rehearing is DENIED.
Notes
. Penry v. Lynaugh,
. We should add that a claim's novelty is not, of course, the only basis upon which procedural default or writ abuse might be excused. Habeas petitioners may also meet the cause requirement by demonstrating "constitutionally ‘ineffective assistance of counsel’ ’’ or " ‘interference
