MEMORANDUM OPINION
The issue in this § 2254 habeas action is whether the holding in Miller v. Alabama,
Those courts which have held that Miller applies retroactively have reached the result by different paths. Some based their decisions on the Miller Court’s application of its holding to the companion case, Jackson v. Hobbs,
Courts holding that Miller is not retroactive have concluded that the new rule announced in Miller was a procedural one and did not qualify as a “watershed rule of criminal procedure.”
We conclude that the Miller Court both applied the new rule to the case on collateral review and established a substantive constitutional rule that applies to all defendants similarly situated to the petitioner in Jackson, Miller’s companion case, who was on collateral review.
Miller Applied Its Holding Retroactively
Only the Supreme Court can make a new rule retroactive. Tyler v. Cain,
Miller v. Alabama, a case on direct appeal, was argued with Jackson v. Hobbs, a case on collateral review.. The Court applied the new rule to both cases. Had it not intended its holding to apply retroactively, it could have declined to take Jackson; or, once having taken it, the Court could have then made it clear that its holding applied to Miller, but not to Jackson because the latter was on collateral review. Instead, it applied the new rule to Jackson and remanded his case for resen-tencing.
In Roper v. Simmons,
It would be fundamentally unfair to find that because Jackson was paired with Miller he gets relief in the form of resen-tencing and the possibility of release while others similarly situated will not and will die in prison. Therefore, considering the Court’s application of the new rule to Jackson, who was on collateral review, it logically follows that the Miller holding applies retroactively.
The Miller Rule is a Substantive Rule
Miller is not only retroactive because it was applied to a case on collateral review, it is retroactive under the Teague analysis. The new rule falls within the first Teague exception as a substantive rule.
In Teague, the Supreme Court announced the general rule that “new constitutional rules of criminal procedure will not be applicable to those cases which have become final before the new rules are announced.”
A new rule falling within the first exception is one that “places ‘certain kinds’ of primary, private conduct beyond the power of the criminal law-making authority to proscribe.” Id. at 311,
Since it created the two exceptions to the general rule of non-retroactivity in Teague, the Supreme Court has elucidated the retroactivity analysis. In Schriro v. Summerlin,
A substantive rule is one that “places a class of private conduct beyond the power of the state to proscribe,” Saffle v. Parks,
Summerlin made clear that “[a] rule is substantive rather than procedural if it alters the range of conduct or the class of persons that the law punishes.”
The Miller rule has both substantive and procedural elements. Substantively, it bans mandatory life without parole sentences for juvenile homicide defendants. Procedurally, it mandates a minimal process for sentencing those in that class of defendants. The former is a new substantive rule of criminal law. The latter is an implementation of the substantive rule.
Miller struck down sentencing schemes that mandated life without parole for juveniles. In doing so, it declared that states could not impose such a sentence on a class of persons — juveniles convicted of murder. It eliminated the “significant risk” that a punishment that the law cannot impose would be imposed — a juvenile would be sentenced to die in prison when he would not otherwise be sentenced because of his peculiar characteristics associated with his youth.
In reaching its decision in Miller, the Court relied and built upon the rationale for the Roper v. Simmons
The Miller court drew on Graham’s “likening life-without parole sentences imposed on juveniles to the death penalty
Those courts holding that Miller is not retroactive have concluded that the Miller rule is procedural and not substantive.
Miller may not have banned a sentence of life without parole for juveniles convicted of murder. But, it did categorically ban mandatory imposition of such a sentence. That ban is substantive. Thus, contrary to the attempt of those courts to distinguish Roper and Graham from Miller because the former cases banned a specific sentence and the latter case did not, there is no real distinction because the substantive bases of all three holdings are the same.
Miller may allow the imposition of a life without parole sentence on a convicted juvenile murderer. But, it explicitly does not allow it to be imposed automatically, and any sentencing scheme that mandates such a sentence is unconstitutional. Thus, because it categorically bans a sentencing practice or a scheme as applied to all juveniles convicted of murder, Miller announces a new substantive rule.
At the time Songster was sentenced, there was no process or procedure in place in Pennsylvania. Juveniles convicted of first degree or second degree murder were automatically sentenced to life without parole, regardless of their age, their individual characteristics and the circumstances of the crime.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 29th day of July, 2014, it is ORDERED that the Clerk shall docket the Memorandum Opinion of this date and transmit it to the Clerk of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit to supplement the record on appeal in CA 12-3941.
Notes
. — U.S.-,
. In re Morgan,
. Jackson v. Norris,
. See, e.g., In re Rainey,
. See, e.g., Ex parte Maxwell,
Two federal district courts have summarily concluded that the Miller rule applies retroactively as a new substantive rule. See Hill v. Snyder, No. 10-14568,
. People v. Croft,
. See, e.g., In re Morgan,
. When it granted certiorari, the Court ordered that Miller and Jackson be argued "in tandem." Miller v. Alabama, - U.S. -,
The decision could just as easily have taken the moniker Jackson rather than Miller. Miller was the earlier docket number, No. 10-9646, and Jackson was No. 10-9647. Fortuitously, Miller was given the earlier number. As a consequence, the new principle bears Miller's name, rather than Jackson’s.
. Landry v. Baskerville, 3:13CV367,
. "[B]ecause any qualifying rule would be so central to an accurate determination of innocence or guilt that it is unlikely that many such components of basic due process have yet to emerge, it should come as no surprise that we have yet to find a new rule that falls under the second Teague exception.” Beard v. Banks,
.
.
. See, e.g., In re Evans,
. Because we conclude that Miller, through its holding and as a substantive rule, is retroactive, we do not consider whether the second Teague exception applies.
. It is no surprise that courts are divided in their characterizations of the Miller rule as substantive or procedural. See United. States v. Tayman,
.In response to Miller, the Pennsylvania legislature amended the state sentencing law to eliminate mandatory life without parole and to provide a different sentencing scheme for juveniles convicted of murder. The amendments only apply to individuals convicted after June 24, 2012. See 18 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 1102.1 (2014).
