Gerald M. SMITH, By and Through the MISSOURI PUBLIC DEFENDER
COMMISSION and Joseph W. Downey, Public Defender
for the Twenty-second Judicial Circuit
of Missouri, as Next Friends, Appellants,
v.
William ARMONTROUT, Appellee.
No. 86-1457.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted Nov. 10, 1986.
Decided March 2, 1987.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied April 8, 1987.
Jordan Cherrick, St. Louis, Mo., for appellants.
Stephen D. Hawke, Asst. Atty. Gen., Jefferson City, Mo., for appellee.
Before ARNOLD, JOHN R. GIBSON, and FAGG, Circuit Judges.
ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
Appellants Missouri Public Defender Commission and Joseph W. Downey1 seek to present a next-friend petition for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2254 on behalf of Gerald M. Smith, a death-row inmate at the Missouri State Penitentiary who declared that he wished to cease pursuit of post-conviction relief and proceed to his execution. The District Court2 dismissed the next-friend petition for lack of standing, ruling that under Rees v. Peyton,
I.
A.
In 1981, Gerald Smith was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1980 slaying of Karen Roberts in St. Louis, Missouri. Since Smith's conviction, a direct appeal and several state- and federal-court collateral proceedings attacking the conviction and sentence have been filed by Smith or by his brother, Eugene Smith, Jr., acting as a next friend. From the time of the conviction to the filing of the present habeas corpus petition, Smith changed his mind about the desirability of post-conviction relief at least eight times.
Smith shifted his position on this question several times during the course of his direct appeal. However, the Missouri Supreme Court ruled that the appeal was mandatory; it went on to affirm Smith's capital murder conviction and death sentence. State v. Smith,
Eugene Smith then filed a next-friend petition in the District Court, which stayed Smith's execution pending a competency hearing.
Eugene Smith returned to the District Court, filing the petition now before us, in which he alleged that his brother was not competent and that his decision was not voluntary. As grounds for overturning Gerald Smith's conviction and sentence, Eugene Smith alleged, inter alia, that Missouri's death-penalty procedures violate the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, and that Smith did not have effective assistance of counsel at trial. The District Court stayed Smith's execution pending an up-to-date evaluation of his competence, and ordered him transferred to the Federal Medical Center in Springfield, Missouri, for examination and testing.
B.
A person generally lacks standing to prosecute a federal habeas corpus petition on behalf of another unless he or she can show a reasonable excuse as to why the detainee did not sign and verify the petition, and a sufficient relationship and interest linking the would-be next friend to the detainee. Weber v. Garza,
Gerald Smith testified in the District Court that the reason for his decision to acquiesce in the imposition of his death penalty was that he hated confinement and preferred death to life imprisonment. Smith observed that the most he could hope to gain through post-conviction proceedings would be a new trial, that in a new trial he would have no realistic chance of avoiding a guilty verdict, and that the lightest sentence he could receive would be life imprisonment without parole for 50 years. See R.S.Mo. Sec. 565.008.
Besides Smith's testimony, the Court received a variety of evidence that assisted it in evaluating his decision and the rationale he articulated for it. There was evidence from a number of sources concerning Smith's life and medical history. The Court heard live or videotaped expert testimony from six psychiatrists who had examined Smith to evaluate his competency; it also received these witnesses' written reports, as well as those of two psychiatrists and one psychologist who did not testify. Finally, Missouri prison officials and two death-row inmates testified about Smith's behavior and prison conditions.
Smith's childhood and adolescence were chaotic and disruptive. The District Court noted, inter alia, that Smith, who was born October 7, 1958, suffered serious head injuries and was treated for lead poisoning as a child, that Smith's father was an alcoholic given to beating his wife and children, and that Smith began using drugs and alcohol by age 13. Further, Smith had begun petty thievery by age ten, and was placed in a Missouri juvenile-detention center at age 15. After his release from this center, Smith had no steady job, and instead continued to steal to support himself. Smith had a girlfriend whom he abused physically; she gave birth to their daughter in July 1979.
On September 8, 1980, Smith killed Karen Roberts, bludgeoning her with a heavy iron bar. Smith stated that he did this because Roberts gave him a venereal disease, which caused his girlfriend to take their child and leave him. A few months later, after Smith's arrest for the murder, Smith's lawyer and the prosecutor were on the verge of entering a plea-bargain agreement for a second-degree murder plea when the St. Louis Globe-Democrat published a letter from Smith. Smith signed the letter "Gerald Smith, the cold-blooded killer," and claimed in it that he had planned the murder for four months, and that, though he had a gun with him, he bludgeoned Roberts so that she would feel more pain. As a result, the prosecutor ended plea negotiations, and Smith was tried and convicted for capital murder. Smith testified in the competency hearing that he had not, in fact, planned the murder or carried a gun at the time. Though Smith has told psychiatrists that he wrote the Globe-Democrat letter because he wished to die, he testified in the District Court that he did not know why he had written the letter.
Before the murder, Smith had attempted suicide three times. On the last such occasion, Smith was admitted to Alexian Brothers Hospital in St. Louis; he was diagnosed as suffering from depression and a personality disorder, but was released from the hospital. In 1981 and 1982, after his imprisonment, Smith on several occasions engaged in self-mutilation, such as the infliction of multiple lacerations on his wrist and forearm. In May 1983, Smith attempted suicide a fourth time, overdosing on Elavil, an antidepressant.
As discussed above, Smith has frequently shifted his position on the desirability of post-conviction proceedings. When he has opposed ongoing proceedings, he has written a number of letters to the courts involved, calling them vulgar names, and urging and daring them to permit his execution. Smith has also threatened to kill his attorneys and prison guards if his wish to be executed is not respected. On the other hand, when he has favored pursuing relief, Smith has apologized profusely for his statements and behavior.
Smith's latest change of position before the District Court hearing, a change to opposition to relief, came in June 1985, while the first federal habeas petition was pending. Smith was then incarcerated on death row. The District Court received "considerable evidence that life on death row was dismal," including testimony concerning lack of exercise, the back-up of raw sewage into cells, infestation of pests, and a lack of ventilation.
C.
The psychiatrists and psychologist who examined Smith were, the District Court noted,
Although the expert witnesses generally shared this analysis of Smith's mental disorders, they divided into two camps in appraising the relationship between his disorders and his decision to abandon post-conviction proceedings. Drs. Daniel and Harry, who examined Smith in 1983 after his last suicide attempt, concluded in their written reports that Smith's opposition to pursuing his remedies was a direct result of his mental disorders, rather than a product of rational decisionmaking. This conclusion was shared by Drs. Perlswig and Ratner, who examined Smith near the time of the hearing and testified for Eugene Smith.
On the other side, the State's experts, Dr. Ajans, who examined Smith in October 1984 and February 1986, and Dr. Parwatikar, who examined Smith four times, most recently in 1985, concluded that despite Smith's mental disorders, his decision was the product of a rational thought process and appreciation of his circumstances. Drs. Foster and Pettipiece, independent experts who examined Smith during his stay at the Federal Medical Center, also concluded that Smith's decision was rational. These psychiatrists emphasized that Smith, who scored above average on intelligence tests administered at the Federal Medical Center, possessed a good cognitive awareness of his situation and legal prospects, and that he values freedom highly and finds his physical confinement intolerable. Dr. Foster observed that Smith's certainty of and commitment to his decision was evidenced by his willingness to undergo the spectacle and humiliation of a competency hearing; this contrasts sharply with Smith's usual efforts to mask his weaknesses through presentation of a macho persona. Hence, these four psychiatrists concluded that when Smith explained his decision by stating that he preferred death to life imprisonment, he accurately reported his thought processes.
The District Court, in evaluating the evidence before it, found Dr. Foster's testimony particularly helpful; the Court noted that Dr. Foster was not associated with either party, had spent far more time on Smith's case than any of the other experts, had wrestled long with the competency question, and had candidly acknowledged the uncertainties inherent in resolving this question.
II.
Before addressing the merits of this appeal, we must first consider whether a development since the District Court issued its decision has rendered this case moot. In a letter to this Court dated August 25, 1986, Gerald Smith states that he now desires to prosecute his habeas petition. Smith indicates that he has just been transferred back to death row, where conditions have improved, and attributes his earlier opposition to habeas proceedings to the conditions of his confinement in SMU, despite his District Court testimony to the contrary.
We note first that notwithstanding Smith's new stance, the controversy over his competency remains live, in that, were it accepted that he is incompetent, the petitioners would be prejudiced if they were deprived of the opportunity to vindicate their position in this Court. Incompetence could cause Smith to prosecute his case in a manner that would actually subvert his claims. Indeed, it is conceivable that Smith's recent statements were a ploy through which Smith, seeking to effectuate an incompetent decision to forego post-conviction proceedings, hoped to ensure that this case was dismissed; see Rumbaugh v. Procunier,
In any case, it is also our view that Smith's past inconstancy on this question indicates that it is likely that Smith will change his mind yet again and resume his opposition to post-conviction proceedings. Consequently, we conclude that Smith's frequent about-faces bring this case within the "capable of repetition, yet evading review" exception to the mootness doctrine. See Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court,
III.
The petitioners contend that the District Court misinterpreted and misapplied Rees v. Peyton's competency standard. They also attack the District Court's factual findings that Smith was competent and that his decision was voluntary. Finally, the petitioners maintain that the District Court "improperly sanctioned Smith's state-aided suicide by allowing him to waive his post-conviction appeals in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments." Appellants' Brief at 42.
A.
Rees v. Peyton concerned a death-row inmate who sought to withdraw his petition for certiorari to review the denial of his federal habeas corpus petition. The Supreme Court stated the standard for determining the inmate's competence to do so as:
whether he has capacity to appreciate his position and make a rational choice with respect to continuing or abandoning further litigation or on the other hand whether he is suffering from a mental disease, disorder, or defect which may substantially affect his capacity in the premises.
The petitioners assert that the District Court misinterpreted this standard when it proceeded to determine whether Smith's waiver decision was in fact a product of his mental disorders. Rees, they maintain, indicates through its use of the word "may" that an inmate must be found incompetent where the evidence establishes even a mere possibility that a mental disorder substantially affected the decision. See Rumbaugh v. Procunier,
We do not agree with this interpretation of the Rees per curiam. While there is no Supreme Court decision applying Rees, see note 7 supra, and, indeed, a dearth of other caselaw addressing the issue, we note that the only other circuit court opinion applying Rees supports the District Court's interpretation. See Rumbaugh v. Procunier, supra,
Furthermore, we think it very probable, given the circumstances that perforce accompany a sentence of death, that in every case where a death-row inmate elects to abandon further legal proceedings, there will be a possibility that the decision is the product of a mental disease, disorder, or defect. Yet, Rees clearly contemplates that competent waivers are possible, see also Gilmore v. Utah,
The petitioners also assert that the District Court erred by construing Rees's requirement that Smith have the capacity to appreciate his position and to make a rational choice to require only that he be cognizant of his factual circumstances, and that his choice be logical, the product of a process of reason. The problem with this, they explain, is that in evaluating competency, it is necessary not only to test the individual's ability to reason, but also to determine whether he or she is reasoning from premises or values that are within the pale of those which our society accepts as rational. Logic employed in the service of irrational premises does not produce a rational decision. We agree with the petitioners that it is not sufficient simply to determine whether a waiver decision has been arrived at logically, but we conclude that the District Court did not limit its inquiry in this manner. The District Court's opinion does not articulate such a constricted view of the question, see, e.g.,
The petitioners launch a number of assaults upon the factual findings underlying the District Court's competency determination, arguing, inter alia, that the District Court erred in relying upon the psychiatrists who found Smith competent rather than those who found him incompetent, and in failing to find that Smith irrationally failed to consider all his values and alternatives. We review these factual findings under the clearly erroneous standard. Rumbaugh,
As the District Court frankly acknowledged, "[n]ecessarily, this issue cannot be resolved with absolute certainty: no one can be sure of what goes on in the human mind."
We therefore affirm the District Court's conclusion that Gerald Smith's decision to forego further struggle against the imposition of his death sentence was competent.
B.
We are also unable to agree with the petitioners' assertion that the District Court erred in finding that Smith's decision was voluntary.9 The record, particularly the testimony of Dr. Foster, Tr. 2:124-26, supports the District Court's conclusion that conditions on SMU were not coercive. We think that the District Court was justified in concluding that, even if death row's conditions were in violation of the Eighth Amendment, the fact that Smith continued to adhere to his decision over the months between his transfer to SMU and the District Court hearing negated any inference of coercion.
The petitioners make much of Smith's recent letter to this Court, in which he asserts that, notwithstanding his District Court testimony, the conditions of his confinement did affect his decision. However, this letter obviously was not before the District Court, nor is it properly part of the record here; the statements in it were not made under oath, nor have they been subjected to cross-examination. Moreover, we are not convinced that Smith's letter alters matters; the evidence concerning the actual conditions that obtain in the SMU remains unchanged, and the District Court found them not coercive. We therefore affirm the District Court's conclusion that Smith's decision was voluntary.
C.
The petitioners' final argument is that the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments prohibit permitting a capital defendant to waive his right to post-conviction review of his death sentence. They maintain that to allow such a waiver constitutes "state-aided suicide," which is fundamentally unfair and inconsistent with our society's "evolving standards of decency," Trop v. Dulles,
We believe that this argument is foreclosed by Gilmore v. Utah,
IV.
We affirm the District Court's conclusion that Smith was competent to forego pursuit of federal habeas corpus review, and that his decision to do so was voluntary. Accordingly, we also affirm the District Court's dismissal of the petitioners' next-friend petition for lack of standing.
Notes
Eugene Smith, Jr., who is Gerald Smith's brother, originally filed this petition. During the pendency of this appeal, the District Court granted Eugene Smith's request to be relieved of his duties as next friend, and we granted the current appellants' request to be substituted as next friends for Gerald Smith
The Hon. Scott O. Wright, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri
After this appeal was filed, Smith wrote a letter to the Clerk of this Court stating that he now wishes to prosecute his habeas corpus petition. This letter and its effect on the issues before us are discussed later in this opinion
The circuit court did have before it the report of one psychiatrist who believed Smith competent, and also heard Smith testify in response to his own attorney's questions. Not before the court were two other then-extant psychiatrists' reports which concluded that Smith was incompetent.
We are told that a "mental disease" is a mental condition, such as schizophrenia, that causes one to lose contact with reality and be unable to cope with day-to-day life. Whether a condition constitutes a mental disease is largely a matter of how severely it disorients one from reality.
The various experts disagreed about the degree and permanence of Smith's depression, but several of them supported the District Court's finding of chronic mild-to-moderate depression
The Supreme Court retained jurisdiction of Rees while directing the District Court to evaluate Rees's competence,
Since the District Court found that the State had met this burden, and since we affirm its findings, we need not reach the propriety of this allocation of the burden of proof
We reject the State's argument that the petitioners could not raise this claim; as the District Court made clear,
Justice Marshall also filed a separate dissent, arguing the inadequacy of the procedures through which Gilmore was determined to be competent.
