Petitioner-appellant Glendle Ray Sones (Sones) appeals the district court’s denial of his section 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. We affirm.
Facts and Proceedings Below
Following a March 1980 bench trial in Mississippi state court, Sones was convicted of burglary and, pursuant to the state’s habitual offender statute, sentenced to life in prison without parole. 1 Miss.Code Ann. § 99-19-83 (1994). At sentencing, the state called B.C. Ruth (Ruth), a former records custodian for the Mississippi Department of Corrections, to prove up the prior convictions that were alleged in the indictment as the predicate for Sones’s sentence as a habitual offender. See id. (requiring at least two prior felony convictions “where any one (1) of such felonies shall have been a crime of violence” and where both of the convictions resulted in separate prison terms of one year or more in any state or federal penal institution). Ruth, who was records custodian at the time of Sones’s prior convictions, identified Sones’s original prison file and identified him as the person who had served the terms reflected in the file. Ruth also authenticated original commitment papers issued by the circuit clerks of the counties where Sones had been sentenced. These papers reflected that Sones had been convicted of three felonies and had actually served sentences based on these convictions. 2 Sones objected to the introduction of this evidence, arguing that to prove that he was a habitual offender the State needed to produce the actual judgments of conviction instead of merely the commitment papers. Sones also argued at sentencing that the habitual offender statute was unconstitutional.
Sones appealed his conviction and sentence to the Mississippi Supreme Court,
Pace v. State,
On June 5, 1989, more than seven years after his unsuccessful direct appeal, Sones moved the Mississippi Supreme Court for leave to pursue post-conviction relief in the trial court, 4 Miss.Code Ann. § 99-39-1 et seq., claiming that his life sentence should be set aside for violating the Ex Post Facto and Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clauses of the Federal Constitution; he also reasserted that the proof of his prior convictions was inadequate to support the trial court’s finding that he was a habitual offender. On July 26, 1989, the Mississippi Supreme Court denied Sones’s motion, concluding that his claims were time barred under the applicable three-year statute of limitations on claims for post-conviction relief. See id. § 99-39-5(2). The court, accordingly, did not reach the merits of his claims.
On May 31, 1991, Sones filed the instant habeas petition, his first in federal court. In the district court, Sones raised the following six claims: (1) that his sentence as a habitual offender constituted cruel and unusual punishment; (2) that the habitual offender statute is itself unconstitutional; (3) that there was insufficient evidence to establish whether he was a habitual offender; (4) that the indictment was fatally defective; (5) that his arrest was the result of entrapment; and (6) that his trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to object to the allegedly defective indictment. On May 3, 1993, the district court entered a memorandum opinion concluding that all Sones’s claims were time barred and, in the alternative, meritless and ordering that the petition be dismissed with prejudice. The district court thereafter granted Sones’s motion for an extension of time to file “objections” to the memorandum opinion. Thereafter, Sones, on June 1, 1993, filed his “Plaintiff’s Objections To The Judge’s Memorandum Opinion,” in which he raised a new basis for his Sixth Amendment claim: that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and challenge the validity of his prior conviction for armed robbery, his only prior crime of violence. The district court in a September 7, 1993, memorandum opinion overruled these objections, rejecting the additional Sixth Amendment claim because Sones did not “specify how the prior convictions were invalid.” On the same date, the district court entered judgment dismissing the case with prejudice. This Court granted Sones a certificate of probable cause and appointed appellate counsel for him.
Discussion
We must first decide which of Sones’s claims are properly before us. Federal courts will generally not consider claims in a section 2254 habeas petition that have not been first presented to the state courts. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b). In other words, the petitioner must exhaust all available state remedies before he may obtain federal habeas relief.
Rodriguez v. McKaskle,
In his federal habeas petition, Sones essentially raised all those issues decided by the Mississippi Supreme Court in his direct appeal, but added for the first time in any court the claim that his trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective.
5
In his motion for post-conviction relief in state court, moreover, Sones did not raise any claims that had not already been disposed of on direct appeal, although he did not raise every issue submitted on direct appeal or in the instant federal petition. So long as the claims have been presented to the state supreme court, however, it is not necessary for the prisoner to ask the state for collateral relief on the same issues.
6
Brown v. Allen,
For the first time, Sones argues in the instant federal proceeding, in his objections to the district judge’s May 3,1993, memoran
*416
dum opinion directing that the habeas petition be dismissed, that trial counsel was ineffective for not challenging the validity of his prior convictions; specifically, he contends that his trial counsel should have objected to the use of his 1960 conviction for armed robbery because, allegedly, he was without counsel during the preliminary hearing and sentencing phase for that particular conviction.
See Gardner v. Florida,
When, however, state remedies are rendered unavailable by the petitioner’s own procedural default, federal courts are barred from reviewing those claims. As the Supreme Court stated in
Coleman v. Thompson,
“[I]f the petitioner failed to exhaust state remedies and the court to which petitioner would be required to present his claims in order to meet the exhaustion requirement would now find the claims proeedurally barred, ... [then] there is a procedural default for purposes of federal habe-as....” Id. at 735 n. 1,111 S.Ct. at 2557 n. I. 8
There is no question that Sones is now unable to pursue his Sixth Amendment claim in state court.
9
Sones concedes that this claim would have been time barred had it been included in his prior state petition and that, consequently, a refiling in state court would be futile. Sones has thus defaulted this claim.
See Steele v. Young,
Sones contends first that his claim should not be considered defaulted because Mississippi’s statute of limitations is not an independent and adequate procedural rule.
10
The doctrine of procedural default presupposes that a state court’s reliance on a procedural bar functions as an independent and adequate ground in support of the judgment.
Coleman,
Section 99-39-5(2), the state procedural bar in question, provides as follows:
“A motion for relief under this chapter shall be made within three (3) years after the time in which the prisoner’s direct appeal is ruled upon by the supreme court of Mississippi or, in case no appeal is taken, within three (3) years after the time for taking an appeal from the judgment of conviction or sentence has expired....” 11
In
Odom v. State,
Sones has failed to demonstrate that Mississippi’s three-year limitations rule is not regularly followed. In
Luckett v. State,
The only cases Sones cites, besides
Luckett,
are
Grubb
and
Smith v. State,
and they do not advance his argument. Neither case involved any limitations rule, much less the one at issue here, nor did they involve Sixth Amendment claims. Although the petition in
Smith v. State
was filed four years after the petitioner’s conviction, that fact had nothing to do with the court’s disposition. Indeed, Smith’s claims were not time barred; he had until April 17, 1987, to raise them,
Odom,
Because section 99-39-5(2) operates as an independent and adequate state ground, the procedural default doctrine applies, and federal review of his Sixth Amendment claim is barred unless Sones “can demonstrate cause for the default and actual prejudice as a result of the alleged violation of federal law, or demonstrate that failure to consider the claims will result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice.”
Coleman,
Sones has failed to demonstrate actual innocence. The error he alleges is, essentially, that trial counsel should have attacked the validity of his prior convictions at sentencing. Sones has alleged, both belatedly below and on this appeal, that he was without counsel at the sentencing and preliminary hearing phases of his 1960 conviction for armed robbery. 17 Consequently, he argues, trial counsel was ineffective for not challenging his sentence as a habitual offender on that basis. 18 The Mississippi Supreme Court has made it clear, however, that attacks on prior convictions that are not facially invalid must be made collaterally, in a motion for relief from the prior judgment of conviction, not at trial or sentencing:
“In fulfilling its mission to determine whether a prior conviction is constitutionally valid for the purpose of enhancing a defendant’s sentence, the trial court must not be placed in position of ‘retrying’ the prior case. Certainly any such frontal assault upon the constitutionality of a prior conviction should be conducted in the form of an entirely separate procedure solely concerned with attacking that conviction. This role is neither the function nor the duty of the trial judge in a hearing to determine habitual offender status.” Phillips,421 So.2d at 481-82 .
See also Culberson,
On the face of the commitment papers there is no affirmative indication that Sones was not represented by counsel. Citing
Burgett v. Texas,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Had Sones not been found to be a habitual offender under section 99-19-83, his maximum sentence would have been seven years. Miss. Code Ann. § 97-17-33 (burglary of a building other than a dwelling); see also id. § 99-19-81.
. The commitment papers reflect the following. On January 4, 1960, Sones was sentenced by the Harrison County Circuit Court to two years in prison for grand larceny and five years for armed robbery, both sentences to run concurrently. At sentencing in the present case, the state maintained that it considered these two convictions to be one for purposes of section 99-19-83. Sones was incarcerated on January 19, 1960, and discharged almost four years later, on December 14, 1963. On February 15, 1973, Sones was sentenced by the Lee County Circuit Court to three years in prison for possession of a controlled substance. He was incarcerated on this charge from February 15, 1973, until July 25, 1974. These documents further indicate that Sones pleaded guilty to all three offenses.
. The Court also rejected Sones's contention that the trial court erred in not acquitting him on the basis of entrapment.
. Motions for post-conviction relief are, as a rule, filed in the county circuit court where the prisoner was tried. Miss.Code Ann. § 99-39-7. However, because Sones had directly appealed his conviction to the Mississippi Supreme Court and because his conviction had been affirmed there, he first had to move that court for leave to file for post-conviction relief in the trial court. Id. § 99-39-27. For this reason, the Mississippi Supreme Court passed first, and conclusively, on Sones's application for post-conviction relief.
. Below and on appeal, before the appointment of counsel, Sones also argued for the first time that the indictment was defective because it did not contain a signed affidavit by the grand jury foreman, as required by state law.
See
Miss. Code Ann. § 99-7-9. The record flatly contradicts this allegation; the indictment does contain just such an affidavit. Whatever its procedural status, this claim is thus frivolous, and consequently so too is Sones's claim that counsel was ineffective for not objecting to this allegedly defective indictment. Counsel cannot be deficient for failing to press a frivolous point.
Koch v. Puckett,
. We note that, under Mississippi statutory law, any motion for post-conviction relief does not affect "any remedy incident to the ... direct review of the conviction or sentence.” Miss. Code Ann. § 99-39-5(3).
. We note that Sones's Eighth Amendment cruel and unusual punishment claim has evolved since his direct appeal. At trial and on direct appeal, Sones did not base this claim on a theory of gross disproportionality between his crime and sentence, the way in which he has framed this argument in his state and federal petitions for collateral relief. This claim was found to be time barred in state court. Here on appeal, Sones has not attempted to explain why he should be excused from any procedural default on this claim, as he has with regard to his Sixth Amendment claim.
In any event, even assuming that this particular claim was considered and rejected on direct appeal and is thus now properly before us, we believe it fails on the merits for the reasons stated by this Court in
McGruder v. Puckett,
. For a general justification of this rule, see Lariy W. Yackle,
Postconviction Remedies
§ 70 (1981).
See also Coleman,
. We recognize that a habeas petitioner typically is not required to present a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on direct appeal in Mississippi, at least when the same counsel represented him both at trial and on appeal.
Wiley v. State,
.This same contention was raised but not ruled on in our recent decision in
Glover v. Hargett,
. There are exceptions to this rule, but Sones has not argued that they are applicable here.
. Moreover, we note that in
Cole v. State,
. Shortly before oral argument in this case, the Mississippi Supreme Court issued its opinion in
Strickland v. Howell,
. We emphasize that Sones has never directly challenged the validity of his prior armed robbery conviction (except for his guilty plea argument raised for the first time on this appeal;
see infra
note 18). As discussed below, the Mississippi Supreme Court has consistently held that an attack on a facially valid prior conviction, used either as an aggravating circumstance in capital sentencing or as a basis for a sentence as a habitual offender, must be brought after sentencing in a petition for post-conviction relief from that
prior
judgment of conviction.
Phillips v. State,
At oral argument, counsel for the State implied that all attacks on prior convictions occurring before 1984 (the year Mississippi enacted its three-year limitations on post-conviction relief) became time barred in 1987. The situation may arise, then, that a defendant sentenced today as a habitual offender on the basis of convictions occurring anytime before 1984 may have no opportunity in state court to challenge those prior convictions, at least if they are facially valid. The Seventh Circuit has held that a defendant in such a situation must be allowed some post-enhancement review of his prior convictions, either in state or federal court.
Smith v. Farley,
As mentioned above, however, Sones has claimed only that his counsel was ineffective for not challenging, or investigating, the validity of his prior conviction for armed robbery; he has not directly challenged the use of this prior conviction for sentencing enhancement. In any event, Sones, unlike the petitioner in
Tredway, did
have a post-enhancement opportunity to challenge the use of his prior convictions at sentencing; he had approximately five years to do so but, because of delay, forfeited this opportunity.
See Smith v. Farley,
. In the instant proceedings, Sones stated (in his June 1, 1993, "objections”) that he informed trial counsel of the facts indicating the invalidity of the prior convictions, but that counsel failed to investigate them. Because Sones thus "knew or should have known, as early as the date of affir-mance of his conviction, of the circumstances that he now describes as incompetence of counsel, he cannot establish 'cause' ... for failure to raise that claim” in a prior, timely petition in state court.
Woods v. Whitley,
. We note that this Circuit has never explicitly held that the actual innocence standard can extend to non-capital sentencing procedures, an issue the Supreme Court has not yet addressed. Our decision in
Smith v. Collins,
cited above, assumed without deciding that the standard would so extend and, on that assumption, announced the test we use here today.
. We are baffled by Sones's counsel's assertion at oral argument before us that Sones has never alleged that he was not represented by counsel during proceedings in his armed robbery conviction. In his June 1, 1993, "objections" filed below, Sones states, “Petitioner was in fact without counsel at sentencing” and "[T]he fact [is] that petitioner was not represented by counsel during guilty plea proceedings of armed robbery used to enhance habitual sentence of life without possibility of parole." In his pro se brief on this appeal, Sones states that he was not appointed counsel until after the preliminary hearing in his armed robbery conviction and, further, that the "court appointed counsel was not present at [his] sentencing ... in prior armed robbery conviction.” Sones's counsel in this appeal also suggested that Sones has never alleged any more than a general constitutional challenge and thus has never asserted a specific Sixth Amendment claim. This too is contradicted by the record; Sones asserted a Sixth Amendment counsel claim, both in his original federal petition (ineffectiveness of counsel for failure to challenge indictment) and in his June 1, 1993, objections to the district court's original opinion.
.For the first time on this appeal, Sones's counsel argues that his prior convictions are void on their face for failing to indicate whether the guilty pleas on which they were based were knowing and voluntary. We consider this novel argument forfeited.
Lincecum v. Collins,
. The Mississippi Supreme Court has been reluctant to presume the facial invalidity of prior convictions used for sentencing enhancement. In
Estelle v. State,
.
The record positively indicates that Mrs. Clare Sekul Hornsby was appointed Sones's counsel “in the trial of” the 1960 armed robbery conviction. There is no affirmative indication, one way or the other, that Mrs. Hornsby was not present at either Sones's preliminary hearing or at sentencing for the armed robbery. Sones contends that the absence of any mention of counsel in the record of his armed robbery sentencing, as compared with its presence in other cases, raises the inference that counsel was not present then.
Mattheson,
however, interpreted
Burgett
to require that the absence of counsel be affirmatively indicated by the record, not inferentially.
. Since
Custis v. United States,
— U.S. —,
It is thus pure speculation, undercut by Mississippi's subsequent and continuing adherence to its rule, that counsel would have better served Sones by not following the
Phillips
rule at sentencing and by instead launching a novel, and prophetic,
Custis
-style challenge against it.
See Bradford v. Whitley,
