Patrick Marvin SIMMONS, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Robert KAPTURE, Warden, Respondent-Appellee.
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
ARGUED: E. Michael Rossman, Jones Day, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. Eric Restuccia, Assistant Attorney General, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: E. Michael Rossman, Jones Day, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. Eric Restuccia, Assistant Attorney General, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellee.
Before: BOGGS, Chief Judge; MARTIN, BATCHELDER, DAUGHTREY, MOORE, COLE, CLAY, GILMAN, GIBBONS, ROGERS, COOK, McKEAGUE, and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges.[*]
*451 ROGERS, J., delivered, the opinion of the court, in which BOGGS, C.J., BATCHELDER, GILMAN, GIBBONS, COOK, McKEAGUE, and GRIFFIN, JJ., joined. MARTIN, J. (pp. 451-58), delivered a separate dissenting opinion, in which DAUGHTREY, MOORE, COLE, and CLAY, JJ., joined.
OPINION
ROGERS, Circuit Judge.
The issue in this case is whether the rule of criminal procedure recently articulated by the Supreme Court in Halbert v. Michigan,
Supreme Court precedent compels the conclusion that Teague bars the retroactive application of Halbert on collateral review. In short, Halbert announced a "new rule," and that new rule neither decriminalizes a class of conduct nor is a "watershed" rule. The legal analysis in support of these conclusions which fully addresses the arguments presented in the en banc dissent is thoroughly set forth in the panel dissenting opinion of District Judge Reeves, sitting by designation, and no purpose would be served by recapitulating it. We incorporate that analysis here. See id. at 879-88 (Reeves, J., dissenting). Because Halbert is inapplicable to this case under Teague, we need not address the warden's contention that, in any event, the language of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) forbids reliance on a new rule that is sought to be applied retroactively.
The panel did not reach petitioner's additional claims that his plea was not knowing and voluntary, and that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance. We return those claims to the panel for review and decision.
BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge, dissenting, in which Judges DAUGHTREY, MOORE, COLE and CLAY join.
The majority's adopted opinion[1] finds that the rule announced in Halbert v. Michigan,
I.
The majority creates an arbitrary window in time during which acknowledged constitutional rights continue to be denied. A bit of background illuminates the problem. In 1994, Michigan amended its constitution to restrict appeals from pleas of guilty or nolo contendere in an effort to reduce the workload of the Michigan Court of Appeals. The purpose of the amendment, however, was never to deny poor defendants the right to counsel. Indeed, the Michigan State Bar Task force, which was charged with recommending solutions to the Appellate Court backlog, stated in its recommendations that "the rights to counsel and to a transcript of the proceedings would remain" in both guilty plea and nolo contendere appeals. Robert B. Webster, Introduction to the Report of the Task Force on Appellate Courts, 7 MICH. B.J. 895 (1993), cited in Note, Limiting Michigan's Guilty and Nolo Contendere Plea Appeals, 73 U. DET. MERCY L.R. 431, 448 (1996). Recognizing that some trial judges and legislators were reading the amendment as abolishing the right to appointed counsel for defendants who sought to appeal their guilty or nolo contendere pleas, the State Appellate Defender's Office Director, James R. Neuhard, wrote a letter to Chief Justice Cavanagh on the Michigan Supreme Court stating that "the language of the amendment very obviously does not change the language regarding the right to counsel on appeal." Letter *453 from the State Appellate Defender Office to Chief Justice Michael F. Cavanagh, at 2 (Dec. 22, 1994) (on file with University of Detroit Mercy Law Review), cited in 73 U. DET. MERCY L.R. at 449. The Michigan Supreme Court later reiterated this understanding. People v. Bulger,
The unfortunate window opened with the help of a law providing that those who plead guilty generally "shall not have appellate counsel appointed for review of the defendant's conviction or sentence," MICH COMP. LAWS ANN. § 770.3a (2000), a law this Court found unconstitutional in Tesmer v. Granholm,
II.
In 1963, the Supreme Court established the rule that a state must provide counsel for indigent defendants in a first-level appeal from a criminal conviction. See Douglas v. California,
Under this approach, Halbert did not announce a new rule but merely applied the forty-year-old rule from Douglas that in a first-level appeal from a criminal conviction, a state must provide appointed counsel for indigent defendants. This conclusion is apparent not only in the language of Halbert itself, but also in the rationale behind Ross v. Melt, in the error-correcting function of the appellate *454 courts in Michigan, and in our own Court's prior treatment of this topic.
I turn first to the language of Halbert and the adopted majority's contention that the discretionary nature of the appeals at issue made its ruling "new." The Supreme Court itself squarely and explicitly rejected this analysis, stating instead that it was the error-correction role of the court that made the difference:
Michigan urges that review in the Court of Appeals following a plea-based conviction is as "discretionary" as review in the Michigan' Supreme Court because both require an application for leave to appeal. . . . Therefore, Michigan maintains, Ross is dispositive of this case. The Court in Ross, however, recognized that leave-granting determinations by North Carolina's Supreme Court turned on considerations other than the commission of error by a lower court. . . . By contrast, the Michigan Court of Appeals, because it is an error-correction instance, is guided in responding to leave to appeal applications by the merits of the particular defendant's claims, not by the general importance of the questions presented.
Halbert,
Next, I examine the language and rationale behind Ross v. Moffit,
Second, and more importantly, the Ross Court explained that a defendant seeking leave to appeal in the North Carolina Supreme Court had already "received the benefit of counsel in examining the record of his trial and in preparing an appellate brief on his behalf for the state Court of Appeals, [and t]hus prior to his seeking discretionary review in the State Supreme Court, his claims had `once been presented by a lawyer and passed upon by an appellate court.'" Ross,
It is the "error correction" role of the Michigan Court of Appeals that dictated the result in Halbert not whether the appeal in question was discretionary. See Halbert,
Notably, before the Supreme Court's decision in Halbert, this Court addressed en banc the very same question presented here and concluded that Halbert was dictated by Douglas. See Tesmer v. Granholm,
Michigan's statute creates unequal access even to the first part of the appellate system. Though the judge-appellants argue that any distinctions in Michigan's appellate system stem from the fact the indigent pleads guilty, or that the appeal is merely discretionary, the effect is to create a different opportunity for access to the appellate system based upon indigency. As applied, the statute violates the due process provision of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and is thus unconstitutional.
*456 That decision was later reversed by the Supreme Court, which held, without reaching the merits, that the plaintiffs did not have standing to bring suit. Kowalski v. Tesmer,
III.
Even assuming, arguendo, that Halbert did establish a new rule, this rule amounts to an extension of the right to counsel after a plea-based conviction and should be applied retroactively under Teague because it pertains to the right to counsel and has a significant impact on the accuracy of a conviction.
Under Teague, even if a rule of criminal procedure is "new," it still may apply retroactively on collateral review if it meets one of two exceptions.
The Supreme Court has continued to emphasize that decisions involving the right to counsel are the paradigmatic examples of watershed rules. Id. at 417,
The adopted majority opinion argues against the proposition that all fundamental right-to-counsel cases fall within the Teague exception, citing instead the need to guarantee fundamental fairness "at trial." This interpretation ignores the purpose of such a guarantee. The reason that trial guarantees are so important is that without them, "the likelihood of an accurate conviction is seriously diminished." Teague,
The Halbert decision gives significant emphasis to the accuracy and fairness that appointed counsel would add to first-tier appeals.
IV.
The Federal Constitution imposes on the States no obligation to provide appellate review of criminal convictions, McKane v. Durston,
NOTES
Notes
[*] Judge Sutton took no part in the consideration or decision of this case,
[1] The en banc court merely adopted the dissent of the prior panel's opinion, Simmons v. Kapture,
[2] I reiterate the concerns expressed by Judge Moore in her dissent in Bell v. Bell,
[3] Howard involved collateral review of a federal conviction under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
