Lead Opinion
GRIFFIN, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which BOGGS, BATCHELDER, GIBBONS, ROGERS, SUTTON, COOK, McKEAGUE, and KETHLEDGE, JJ„ joined. DONALD, J. (pp. 681-700), delivered a separate dissenting opinion in which COLE, C.J., MOORE, CLAY, WHITE, and STRANCH, JJ., joined.
OPINION
Congress passed and President Clinton signed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), Pub.L. No. 104-182, 110 Stat. 1214, effective April 24, 1996. All habeas corpus actions filed thereafter, such as the present petition, are governed by AEDPA’s considerable restrictions on federal court review of state court judgments. In this case, the district court ruled that the limitations of AEDPA compelled the denial of the habe-as petition. We agree and therefore affirm.
I.
On the first day of Thomas Hill’s criminal trial, as potential jurors were “on their way up to the courtroom,” Hill informed the Wayne County (Michigan) Circuit Court that he wanted to represent himself. The state trial judge denied the request as follows:
No. The court is not going to allow that, especially at the last minute. Also, it’s not going to be helpful. There is no early indication of this. We are ready to proceed with the trial at this time. To be prepared for that, and to inform the defendant and have him prepared for following the rules of asking questions and rules of evidence, the court is going to have to do that during the trial. So at this point it’s not going to work.
You may consult with your attorney. We are going to have you sitting right next to him. If you would like paper and pen to tell him what you would like, how you would like things, you can do that.
We expect and want you to have all the participation you want. We also want you to have a legal representative to follow the rules of the courtroom. So at this time it is denied.
On September 11, 2007, a jury convicted Hill of armed robbery, Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.529, and carjacking, Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.529a(l). People v. Hill,
On direct appeal, the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed Hill’s convictions and sentences. Id. at 27. Regarding self-representation, it held that although the lower court failed to comply with People v. Anderson,
[T]he ruling of the Wayne Circuit Court denying the request for self-representation “at this time” did not deny the defendant his constitutional right to self-representation where the defendant’s request was not timely and granting the request at that moment would have disrupted, unduly inconvenienced, and burdened the administration of the court’s business. The trial court also did not foreclose the defendant’s opportunity to raise the self-representation issue again after jury selection. The record reflects, however, that the defendant never' renewed his untimely request. For this reason, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the defendant’s constitutional right to self-representation was not violated.
Id. (citation omitted). The U.S. Supreme Court denied Hill’s petition for certiorari. Hill v. Michigan,
Shortly thereafter, Hill filed a timely habeas corpus petition. The magistrate judge issued a report recommending that the district court deny the petition because “[n]o United States Supreme Court case has directly addressed the timing of a request for self representation,” and, in light of clearly established law, the Michigan Supreme Court’s application was not unreasonable. The district court adopted the report over Hill’s objection, denied the petition, and declined to issue a certificate of appealability.
On appeal, we granted Hill a certificate of appealability on the sole issue of whether his right to self-representation had been violated. A panel of this court subsequently issued an unpublished order reversing the district court and granting the writ. Hill v. Curtin, No. 12-2528,
II.
Congress enacted AEDPA to “reduce delays in the execution of state and federal criminal sentences, particularly in capital cases,” and “to further the principles of comity, finality, and federalism.” Woodford v. Garceau,
An application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings unless the adjudication of the claim—
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
A state court adjudication is “contrary to” Supreme Court precedent under § 2254(d)(1) “if the state court applies a rule that contradicts the governing law set forth in [Supreme Court] cases” or “if the state court confronts a set of facts that are materially indistinguishable from a decision [of the Supreme Court] and nevertheless arrives at a [different result].” Lockyer v. Andrade,
even clear error will not suffice. Rather, as a condition for obtaining habeas corpus from a federal court, a state prisoner must show that the state court’s ruling on the claim being presented in federal court was so lacking in justification that there was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement.
White v. Woodall, — U.S. -,
III.
The Sixth Amendment provides that a criminal defendant shall have the right to the assistance of counsel for his defense. U.S. Const, amend. VI. In Faret-ta v. California, the Supreme Court recognized a corollary constitutional right “to proceed without counsel when [a defendant] voluntarily and intelligently elects to do so.”
However, “[a]s the Faretta opinion recognized, the right to self-representation is not absolute.” Martinez v. Ct. of Appeal of Cal., Fourth App. Dist.,
Second, a defendant’s decision to represent himself — and thereby waive counsel — must be knowingly and voluntarily made. Faretta,
IV.
Habeas relief is not required on the ground that the trial court did not inquire into the basis of Hill’s self-repre
It is not clearly established that a trial court must conduct a Fareiia-compliant inquiry under the facts of this case. Although the Supreme Court has required such an inquiry before granting a self-representation request — which is, in effect, a waiver of the right to counsel — it has not required a court to inquire before denying a request as untimely. See Faretta,
Faretta did not establish a bright-line rule for timeliness. Its holding does, however, necessarily incorporate a loose timing element. The Faretta Court explicitly stated that the defendant’s request was “[w]ell before the date of trial,” and “weeks before trial.”
Beyond this loose limit, the Faretta Court did not address timeliness. Indeed, timing was one of the unanswered concerns that vexed the dissenting Justice Blackmun. Justice Blackmun raised a series of questions on how the right to self-representation would operate in practice, including: “How soon in the criminal proceeding must a defendant decide between proceeding by counsel or pro se? Must he be allowed to switch in midtrial?” Faretta,
Given the general standard articulated in Faretta, “a state court has even more latitude to reasonably determine that a defendant has not satisfied that standard.” Knowles v. Mirzayance,
In this case, in light of Faretta’s general standard and Martinez’s unequivocal pronouncement that the right to self-representation is “not absolute” and observation that most courts find the right may be forfeited if not asserted “in .a timely manner,” the Michigan Supreme Court did not unreasonably apply clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court.
V.
On appeal, Hill maintains that the government lacked a sufficient interest to outweigh his right to self-representation. First, he argues that a court may not deny a request based on timeliness alone — without regard to its effect on the proceedings — and, second, even considering its effect, his right outweighed the government’s interests. His assertions are unpersuasive under Faretta’s general standard and AEDPA deference.
Regarding his first point, the state court did not deny Hill’s request independent of the timing’s effect on the proceedings. Rather, the Michigan Supreme Court upheld the trial court’s denial specifically because “granting the request at that moment would have disrupted, unduly inconvenienced, and burdened the administration of the court’s business.” Hill,
The dissenting opinion suggests that our opinion in Moore v. Haviland,
Finally, Hill asserts that the Michigan Supreme Court’s decision was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts because the trial judge did not make a record of the reasons Hill’s last-minute request would have delayed or disrupted the proceedings. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2). However, because the state court’s interpretation of the record was debatable, and therefore not unreasonable, habeas relief is not permissible.
“The term ‘unreasonable’ is no doubt difficult to define.” Wood v. Allen,
In this case, the Michigan Supreme Court affirmed the lower court’s denial of defendant’s request as “not timely” where “granting the request at that moment would have disrupted, unduly inconvenienced, and burdened the administration of the court’s business.” Hill,
VII.
For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court denying the petition for habeas corpus.
Notes
. Hill does not argue that the state trial court erred in failing to conduct an inquiry. Appellant Supp. Reply Br., at 8 ("Hill never so argued.”).
. The dissent also addresses an argument not raised by Hill, but raised only in an amicus brief: that the Michigan trial court, by denying Hill’s request for self-representation on timeliness grounds, invoked a state-law procedural "rule” to justify avoiding the merits of his request. Because the procedural rule supposedly invoked — that a request for self-representation must be made if at all prior to the day of trial — is said to be inconsistent with pre-existing Michigan law and had not been previously announced, the dissent reasons that the Michigan courts applied an inadequate procedural bar.
The argument is not simply a variation on the claim at issue; it poses an entirely new challenge never before raised in the parties' briefing or in any court ruling. This new argument has been effectively forfeited by Hill.
In any event, the argument is without merit because the object of our scrutiny, the Michigan Supreme Court's succinct ruling, makes clear that Michigan law does not recognize a per se rule precluding a day-of-trial assertion of the right to self-representation. The Michigan Supreme Court’s ruling also makes clear that no per se procedural bar was invoked in this case. See Hill,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In 2007, a Michigan jury convicted Thomas Hill of armed robbery and carjacking. The trial court sentenced him to concurrent prison terms of twenty to forty years for each conviction. Hill appealed, asserting, among other claims, that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to self-representation when the trial court denied his request to represent himself on the first day of trial but before the jury was empaneled. See Faretta v. California,
The majority’s decision to affirm the district court’s denial of Hill’s habeas petition can be summed up in just three words: “under these circumstances.” The “circumstances” in question are the underlying facts of Faretta, where it was uncontested that Faretta’s request for self-representation came “weeks” before his scheduled trial. The majority finds that— because the Supreme Court stated that “forcing Faretta, under these circumstances, to accept against his will a state-appointed public defender” contravened Faretta’s constitutional right to conduct his own defense, Faretta,
My reasoning is threefold. First, timing is not essential to Faretta’s principal holding, which is that a trial court may not constitutionally force a lawyer on a defendant who intelligently and voluntarily chooses to waive his right to counsel and represent himself. Id. at 807,
I.
A.
Hill’s troubles with his court-appointed counsel began almost immediately. At his arraignment on July 23, 2007, Hill’s counsel waived a formal reading of the charges against his client. (R. 7-3, Arraignment
Problems arose again as Hill and his counsel prepared for trial. At a pretriаl conference on August 15, 2007, almost four weeks before trial, court-appointed counsel noted that Hill had written a letter to the trial court requesting another attorney.
The court instructed Hill and his attorney to talk through their problems, noting that it had not heard any reasons to warrant new counsel, from either Hill or counsel. (Id. PagelD # 135.) After “a long discussion over the lunch hour[,]” court-apрointed counsel indicated he was “happy to report” to the court that he and Hill had “resolved [their] differences” and that Hill wanted to continue with court-appointed counsel representing him. (Id. PagelD # 137.) Hill confirmed that he believed that he and his attorney had come to an understanding, and that he would continue to trial with his court-appointed attorney. (Id.)
At a special pretrial conference held four days before Hill’s trial began on September 10, 2007, court-appointed counsel indicated that he had conveyed the prosecutor’s plea offer to Hill. Hill had previously declined the offer because he maintained his innocence. (R. 7-6, Special Pretrial Conference Tr., PagelD # 146.) The court stated that it “ha[d] no knowledge of the facts of this case,” but explained to Hill that the prosecutor had made a plea offer and that Hill faced the possibility of life in prison. (Id. PagelD # 146-47.) Hill then
When the first day of trial arrived, the trial court asked if there were any issues or motions to address before the jury arrived. (R. 7-7, Trial Tr. 9/10/07, PagelD # 154.) Court-appointed counsel replied, “Not at this time.” (Id.) The court then told counsel that the jury was “on their way up.” (PagelD # 154.) As the court was explaining its voir-dire procedures, it noticed Hill trying to speak with his attorney. (Id. PagelD # 155.) The court took a brief recess so that Hill and his counsel could talk. (Id.) After the recess, and still before the jury entered the courtroom, Hill’s counsel told the court that “Mr. Hill ... would like to ask the court to represent himself in pro per.” (Id.)
Hill claims that he and his attorney disagreed about whether to file a pre-trial motion. Hill further asserts that this previous conflict was resolved when his attorney assured him that he would file such a motion. When Hill realized on the first day of trial that his attorney had not followed through on this assurance, Hill felt that he could no longer trust his attorney to represent him and therefore requested to represent himself.
The trial court, however, did not know any of this because it swiftly denied Hill’s request, emphasizing its last-minute nature:
No. The court is not going to allow that, especially at the last minute. Also, it’s not going to be helpful. There is no early indication of this. We are ready to proceed with the trial at this time. To be prepared for that, and to inform the defendant and have him prepared for following the rules of asking questions and rules of evidence, the court is going to have to do that during the trial. So at this point it’s not going to work.
You may consult with your attorney. We are going to have you sitting right next to him. If you would like paper and pen to tell him what you would like, how you would like things, you can do that.
We expect and want you to have all the participation you want. We also want you to have a legal representative to follow the rules of the courtroom. So at this time it is denied.
(Id. PagelD # 155-56.) With that, Hill’s two-day trial commenced. Hill’s court-appointed counsel continued to represent him throughout the proceedings. Barely a’ half-hour after it began deliberations, the jury convicted Hill of armed robbery and carjacking, but acquitted him of the two weapons offenses. (R. 7-8, Trial Tr. 9/11/07, PagelD #388-93.) The trial court later sentenced Hill as a third-felony habitual offender to concurrent prison terms of twenty to forty years, for each conviction. (R. 7-9, Sentencing Tr., Pa-gelD # 404-08.)
B.
Hill appealed his conviction, arguing, inter alia, that the trial court violated his
Despite these findings, the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed Hill’s conviction on the ground that he raised his request for self-representation only through counsel and the record did not show his request was knowingly and intelligently made. Id. Judge Jansen dissented with respect to Hill’s self-representation claim, finding that the trial court “summarily denied his request without ever inquiring into his reasons or attempting to estаblish whether his expressed desire for self-representation was unequivocal, knowing, intelligent, and voluntary.” Id. at 27-28 (Jansen, P.J., dissenting).
After Hill sought leave to appeal, the Michigan Supreme Court upheld the Michigan Court of Appeals on alternate grounds. The Michigan Supreme Court first recognized that nothing in federal or state law “require[s] that the defendant must personally assert his constitutional right to self-representation” in order for the request to be valid. Hill,
The United States Supreme Court denied a writ of certiorari. Hill,
II.
When reviewing a district court’s ruling on a petition for writ of habeas corpus, we review legal conclusions de novo. King v.
Under Richter, “[wjhen a federal claim has been presented to a state court and the state court has denied relief, it may be presumed that the state courts adjudicated the claim on its merits, in the absence of any indication or state-law procedural principles to the contrary.”
III.
Where the majority and I first part company is in answering this question: what is Faretta’s holding, and to what extent is that holding specific to the facts of that case? The majority concedes, “Faretta did not establish a bright-line rule for timeliness.” Maj. Op. at 678. The majority reasons, however, that Faretta’s “holding does ... necessarily incоrporate a loose timing element.” Id. By underscoring that Faret-ta’s request for self-representation came “[wjell before the date of trial” and “weeks before trial,” id. (alteration in original) (quoting Faretta,
The majority’s cramped reading of Far-etta essentially dictates that a criminal defendant’s self-representation request must be honored only if the exact factual circumstance of Faretta repeats itself. The
The case law relied upon .by the majority also tends to support this conclusion. For instance, the majority derives its assertion that Faretta’s holding “necessarily incorporates a loose timing element” by selectively quoting from the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Marshall v. Taylor,
Supreme Court precedent regarding the permissible timing of a Faretta request is scarce. No Supreme Court case has directly addressed the timing of a request for self-representation. However, the holding in Faretta indirectly incorporated a timing element.... Thus, the Supreme Court incorporated the facts of Faretta into its holding. Accordingly, the holding may be read to require a court to grant a Faretta request when the request occurs “weeks before trial.” However, the holding does not define when such a request would become untimely.
Id. at 1060-61 (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted). What is an “indirect ... element,” other than something that is nonessential to the result in a particular case?
To the extent Faretta’s holding acknowledges a “loose timing element,” it is merely that courts may look to the state’s rules about when a defendant must assert his or her right to self-representation and the defendant’s individual circumstances. I readily acknowledge that Faretta and the Supreme Court’s subsequent cases do not foreclose a state from imposing adequate and independent state procedural requirements on the assertion of the right to self-representation, or from considering the timing and purpose of the request as part of a matrix of factors in determining whether a self-representation request is intelligent and voluntary and in assessing its effect on the integrity and efficiency of the trial. However, in focusing so intently on this “loose timing element,” the majority conflates these two discrete aspects of the timing inquiry.
The former aspect is procedural, implicates waiver, and arguably may justify the complete failure to engage in the Faretta
The timeline and circumstances of this ease necessitate the conclusion that Hill’s substantive constitutional right to self-representation was violated. Although Hill made only one “clear[ ] and unequivocal[ ],”
As early as July 23, 2007 — seven weeks before trial — the trial court first became aware of communication difficulties between Hill and his court-appointed counsel, and encouraged them to talk things out. Sometime after this, but before August 15, 2007, Hill sent a letter to the court, which the court acknowledged receiving, requesting new counsel — due in part to Hill’s lingering concerns from his July 23, 2007, arraignment. By August 15, 2007 — roughly four weeks before trial — court-appointed counsel reiterated to the court his continued difficulties in communicating with Hill. The trial court dismissed every concern Hill expressed in his letter and at his August 15, 2007, pretrial conference, and encouraged Hill to “talk these matters over” with counsel and to press forward with counsel’s continued representation.
By September 6, 2007- — still four days before trial — court-appointed counsel again informed the court оf his difficulties with Hill, this time making it clear that there was a difference of opinion regarding strategy between him and his client. Hill wanted an evidentiary hearing regarding a missing police report, while court-appointed counsel insisted that this issue would be explored through witness testimony at trial. (R. 7-6, Special Pretrial Conference Tr., PagelD # 148.) Hill, protesting his innocence, even went so far as to turn down a generous plea offer. The trial court — rather than simply continuing the trial date — validated counsel’s assertion that the evidence would be explored through witness testimony at trial, and again emphasized the stiff penalties Hill was facing if he turned down the plea offer. Only then did Hill resolve that he
Ultimately, on the day of trial, Hill made his request for self-representation almost immediately after his court-appointed counsel informed the court that he had no issues to raise or motions in limine to argue before the jury was ushered in. At this moment, Hill realized that his counsel was not honoring the agreement Hill thought they had reached: that counsel would make a certain pre-trial motion. Only then did Hill determine that he could no longer trust his court-appointed counsel to represent him and asserted his right to self-representation.
This timeline is clear and largely undisputed. The majority, however, suggests that Hill’s request was untimely under “the Supreme Court’s general timing standard.” Maj. Op. at 680. Hill’s request for self-representation is only “untimely” if we necessarily prioritize the court’s ease of administration over Hill’s clearly established Sixth Amendment right to self-representation. As the majority notes, the Supreme Court has recognized that “the government’s interest in ensuring the integrity and efficiency of the trial at times outweighs the defendant’s interests in acting as his own lawyer.” Maj. Op. at 680, -(quoting Martinez v. Ct. of Appeal of Cal., Fourth App. Dist.,
The trial court was plainly on notice, weeks in advance of trial, of the breakdown in relations occurring between Hill and his court-appointed counsel. Hill made his request at the only possible time it could have been made: the moment he learned his court-appointed counsel would file no pre-trial motions. According to Hill, he had conditioned his continued acceptance of counsel’s representation on the assurance that a particular motion would be filed. Counsel neglected to file the promised motion, and Hill withdrew his consent to counsel’s representation for that reason. Accordingly, counsel’s continued representation of Hill was impermissible under the Sixth Amendment. Faretta, 422 U.S. at- 820,
Under the majority’s apprqach, Hill is to be denied habeas relief simply because he complied with the trial court’s repeated exhortations to talk out and work through his issues with his court-appointed counsel. Under the majority’s approach, had Hill made his self-representation request earlier — at the seven-week mark or at the four-week mark-then he would unequivocally have satisfied the supposed requirements of Faretta. Maj. Op. at 678. But because Hill made every attempt to do exactly what the trial court instructed him to do, the majority finds that his request came too late. The lesson for criminal defendants, then, is to disregard the court’s urgings and invoke one’s right to self-
IV.
A.
Unlike the majority, I focus on the core, rather than the fringe, of the Supreme Court’s analysis in Faretta. The question actually presented in Faretta is apparent in the very first paragraph of the Court’s opinion: “[Wjhether a defendant in a state criminal trial has a constitutional right to proceed without counsel when he voluntarily and intelligently elects to do so.” Faretta,
Since Faretta, the Court has repeated its directive to the lower courts to warn defendants about the dangers of self-representation. In McKaskle v. Wiggins, the Court refined its holding in Faretta: “[A]n accused has a ... right to conduct his own defense, provided only that he knowingly and intelligently forgoes his right to counsel and that he is able and willing to abide by rules of procedure and courtroom protocol.”
In Iowa v. Tovar, the Court held that the Constitution does not require that courts read a specific script of warnings about the dangers of proceeding pro se so long as the substance of the inquiry provided the defendant with a warning, but reiterated that “before a defendant may bе allowed to proceed pro se, he must be warned specifically of the hazards ahead.”
Since Faretta, the Court has altered the courts’ required line of inquiry slightly. In Godinez v. Moran, the Court added an additional question trial courts must ask when a defendant asserts his right to self-representation: whether the defendant is competent to stand trial.
The only other Supreme Court case addressing a criminal defendant’s right to self-representation — the case on which the majority relies heavily — is inapposite. In Martinez, the Court addressed whether a defendant has a constitutional right to self-representation on appeal.
Thus, the central tenet of Faretta remains: a state may not “force a lawyer upon [a criminal defendant], ... when he insists that he wants to conduct his own defense” as long as the defendant waives his right to counsel intelligently and voluntarily. Faretta,
Just as we must be watchful not to find a waiver of the right to counsel where none was intended, so must we be cautious not to overlook an asserted right to proceed pro se in our well-meant effort to protect the right to counsel. Accordingly, in Faretta we indicated that a defendant’s clear and unequivocal assertion of a desire to represent himself*692 must be followed by a hearing, in which he is “made aware of the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation,, so that the record will establish that ‘he knows what he is doing and his choice is made with eyes open.’ ” A Faretta hearing offers a court ample opportunity to assure that a defendant understands and accepts the consequences of his decision, and to create a record to support its finding of a knowing waiver. As a result, once a defendant affirmatively states^his desire to proceed pro se, a court should cease other business and make the required inquiry. It is through this hearing that the right to counsel is protected.
[T]he failure to hold a Faretta inquiry at this time will do injury to the right recognized in Faretta.
Raulerson v. Wainwright,
That is also the rule of this court. In Moore v. Haviland, we expressly held that a court’s failure to conduct a Faretta-inqui-ry is an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent.
Moore raisés significant questions regarding the majority’s approach in the instant case. In Moore, the defendant asserted his right to represent himself at trial on the third day of a four-day jury trial. Id. at 395-400. We held that the defendant’s request was not untimely because he raised the claim as soon as he became aware of grounds for his dissatisfaction with counsel:
We have no quarrel of course with the notion that a defendant’s invocation of the right of self-representation must be timely — but here it was not until the trial was well under way that Moore’s grounds for dissatisfaction with counsel’s representation arose — and he then acted swiftly. Moore can scarcely bе faulted on some concept of tardiness under those circumstances.' If he had not acted when he did — if he had waited for the trial to conclude and then sought post-conviction relief on the basis of constitutionally ineffective representation by his appointed counsel — we can be quite cer*693 tain that he would have been met not only with arguments as to asserted substantive inadequacies of that contention but with the added argument that he should have raised that issue when it first arose at trial.
Id. at 403. We granted a conditional writ of habeas corpus because “for the judge not to have engaged [the defendant] in a Fareiia-eompliant colloquy upon” hearing the defendant’s assertion of his right to self-representation “was an unreasonable application of Faretta.” Id. Thus, our own precedent makes clear that timeliness is not a component of the substantive right to self-representation, and establishes that a trial court applies Faretta unreasonably if it does not engage in a Faretta-compliant inquiry after the unequivocal and timely assertion of the right to self-representation.
Recognizing this, my colleagues in the májority attempt to distinguish Moore. First, they suggest, the instant case differs from Moore because “the defendant in Moore requested to represent himself multiple times.” Maj. Op. at 680. The majority cites no authority, from Faretta or elsewhere, that a request for self-representation must be repeated “multiple times” in order to trigger a trial’s court’s obligations under Faretta. The majority’s suggestion to the contrary is but a reiteration of its general belief that the facts of Faretta are integral to the Supreme Court’s holding in that case. Second, the majority suggests, Moore is distinguishable because the trial court there “flat-out failed to exercise its discretion and ultimately did not rule on those requests [and] let the issue go by default instead.” Id. (quoting Moore,
Finally, the majority states that “in Moore we expressly observed that the defendant’s requests ‘were not rejected for untimeliness, either at trial or by the state appellate court,’ thus distinguishing it from the instant ease.” Id.- (quoting Moore,
B.
The Michigan trial court did not conduct the requisite Faretta inquiry after Hill as
Nor do I stand alone in this view. A careful reading of the Michigan Court of Appeals’ and Michigan Supreme Court’s decisions makes clear that these courts, too, believe the trial court did not satisfy the requirements of Faretta in this ease. The Michigan Court of Appeals acknowledged that the trial court utterly failed to ask Hill questions to determine whether he waived his right to counsel intelligently and voluntarily. Hill,
Nonetheless, despite finding in Hill’s favor on the substantive merits of his self-representation claim, the Michigan Supreme Court affirmed his conviction on several other grounds — all either implicitly or explicitly related to timeliness: (1) Hill’s request was “not timely”; (2) “granting the request at that moment would have disrupted, unduly inconveniencеd, and burdened the administration of the court’s business”; and (3) the trial court, in stating it would deny Hill’s request “at this time,” did not permanently foreclose Hill’s opportunity to raise the self-representation issue again after jury selection, but Hill “never renewed his untimely request.” Id. Only the second rationale is substantive; the other two are both procedural. I will first address rationales two and three. I will then discuss rationale one, which is the same rationale relied upon by the majority in affirming the district court’s denial of habeas relief.
1. Disruption and Inconvenience
The Michigan Supreme Court concluded that “granting [Hill’s] request at that moment would have disrupted, unduly inconvenienced, and burdened the administration of the court’s business.” Hill,
To the extent the Michigan Supreme Court’s finding that “granting [Hill’s] request at that moment would have disrupted, unduly inconvenienced, and burdened the administration of the court’s business,” Hill,
2. Hill’s “Failure” to Renew his Request
In addition to holding that Hill asserted his right to self-representation too late, the because he did not renew the request. Hill,
This rationale can be viewed only as a feeble attempt to distinguish Faretta, where it appears that Faretta made his request for self-representation at least twice.
Additionally, this asserted rationale is not even remotely credible given the trial court’s dismissive comments when Hill made his self-representation request. The trial court told Hill his request was “not going to be helpful,” “[tjhere [had been] no early indication of this,” the court was “ready to proceed with the trial at this time,” the court had no time “to inform [Hill] and have him prepared for following the rules of asking questions and rules of evidence,” - and “at this point it’s not going to work.” (R. 7-7, Trial Tr. 9/10/07, Pa-gelD # 155-56.) There is absolutely nothing in these remarks that would have suggested to Hill that the trial court would be more amenable to considering his request after jury selection. On the contrary, everything about these comments informed Hill that the trial court was summarily .denying his request because he had not made it earlier. If, as the trial court claimed, Hill’s request was untimely when he made it before jury selection, the request was not magically going to become any timelier if Hill repeated it after jury selection. Nor would the request be any less “disruptive” following jury selection. Thus, even assuming AEDPA deference applies, it is unreasonable to require a defendant to raise the issue again after-the court has made it clear that the court would be hostile to that motion and unlikely to grant it.
Accordingly, the Michigan Supreme Court’s contrary conclusion is “so lacking in justification that there was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement.” Richter,
S. Untimeliness
Finally, the majority concludes that timeliness is the crucial factor in this case and that the' Michigan Supreme Court’s reliance on the timing of Hill’s request is not an unreasonable application of Faretta because the Faretta inquiry into whether a defendant’s assertion of the right to self-representation is voluntary and intelligent is unnecessary where the request is untimely. But, Hill’s argument is not and never has been that courts apply Faretta unreasonably if they enforce an existing state rule that defendants must assert their right to represent themselves before trial. See Appellant Br. at 2; Appellant Reply Br. at 3-4; Supp. Appellant Br. at 10. Rather, Hill argues that Michigan had no such rules, and absent such rules the trial court was required to ask him ques
The crux of the case is this: the majority and the Michigan Supreme Court excuse the trial court’s failure to make any Faretta inquiry at all on the basis of Hill’s alleged failure to make a timely request; this can only be understood as a procedural ruling. I conclude that although Faret-ta and the cases that followed impliedly allow both the imposition of independent and adequate procedural requirements, which Michigan did not impose, and also permit a trial court’s consideration of the timeliness of the request and the defendant’s purpose in making the request as part of the matrix in making the Faretta inquiry, it is an unreasonable application of Faretta and its progeny to conclude that a trial court can dismiss a defendant’s self-representation request without any meaningful inquiry where the request is not barred by an adequate and independent state procedural rule. Simply stated, a state rule that a defendant must make his request by a certain time is a 'procedural requirement, not part of the substance of the right to self-representation. This is because a timeliness inquiry is not a part of Faretta’s holding; it can be an independent and adequate state ground for denying reliеf,
Michigan argues that the holding of Faretta is that a defendant has the right to proceed without counsel when he voluntarily and intelligently elects to do so in a timely manner. Supp. Appellee Br. at 12. Michigan bases its argument on the Supreme Court’s references to the timing of Faretta’s requests to represent himself and the Court’s conclusion that “under these circumstances, ... the California courts deprived him of his constitutional right to conduct his own defense.” Id. (quoting Faretta,
But, as also previously discussed, the Supreme. Court’s holding in Faretta does not promulgate a timeliness requirement. And why would it? States are free to impose various procedural and timing requirements on the assertion of constitutional rights. See Ford v. Georgia,
The Michigan Supreme Court held that Hill’s claim was barred by procedure, ignoring the substantive question of whether the trial court violated the Sixth Amendment by failing to conduct a Faretta inquiry. Whether that procedural timing requirement bars this court’s review
Procedural rules are matters of state law. But states cannot use a timeliness rule to dispose of a defendant’s claim unless the state has “timely exercise[d] ... the local power to set procedure.” Ford,
The same is true with respect to the timeliness requirement that the trial court enforced in Hill’s case. At the time of Hill’s trial, Michigan did not have a rule establishing that a defendant may not assert his right to self-representation on the day of the trial. Michigan has not cited any state court rules or caselaw to show that defendants must assert their right to self-representation before the day of trial. To the contrary, a review of Michigan’s caselaw at the time of Hill’s trial rеveals that Michigan had a different rule in place: requests to proceed to trial pro se on the day of trial are not untimely per se. See Anderson,
The majority objects to discussion of this issue, asserting that it “addresses an argument not raised by Hill, but raised only in an amicus brief’ that “is not simply a variation on the claim at issue” but “poses an entirely new challenge never before raised in the parties’ briefing or in any court ruling,” and which “has been effectively forfeited by Hill.” Maj. Op. at 680 n. 2. However, Hill argues:
[I]f a state required (by statute, ease law, etc.) that any Faretta request be made by a certain deadline, or if in a particular case a court had entered an order to the same effect, then the court likely could deny a request solely because it was made after that deadline (certainly absent a good excuse for the delay). That is because the government hаs a valid interest in ensuring compliance with its statutes, court orders, etc. See Faretta,422 U.S. at 834 n. 46,95 S.Ct. 2525 (noting that the right of self-representation is not “a license not to comply with the relevant rules of procedural and substantive law”). But here there was no formal deadline, i.e., no pre-existing rule, order, etc., requiring*700 Hill to make his request earlier than he did.15
Supp. Appellant’s Br. at 10.
Hill may not have used magic words to the majority’s liking, but the gist of the quoted argument is clear: Faretta allows a state to impose timing constraints on the assertion of the right to self-representation, but Michigan has not done so. This is hardly a forfeiture of the issue. There was no procedural default and in the absence of such a procedural default, Faretta and the cases that followed require trial courts to meaningfully address the substance of a defendant’s self-representation request.
Accordingly, all of the reasons the Michigan Supreme Court provided for upholding the trial court’s denial of Hill’s right to self-representation fail. The trial court deprived Hill of his Sixth Amendment right to self-representation.
V.
Based on the foregoing, I would find that the Michigan trial court violated Hill’s constitutional right to self-representation by failing to inquire into whether Hill was choosing to waive his right to counsel intelligently and voluntarily. The Michigan Supreme Court’s decision to affirm Hill’s conviction, despite this clear violation, rested solely on procedural grounds that are neither supported by Michigan law nor entitled to deference under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act. Accordingly, I would REVERSE the district court’s denial of a writ of habeas corpus.
. The letter itself is not part of the record.
. The Michigan rule provides:
The court may not permit the defendant to make an initial waiver of the right to be represented by a lawyer without first
(1) advising the defendant of the charge, the maximum possible prison sentence for the offense, any mandatory minimum sentence required by law, and the risk involved in self-representation, and
(2) offering the defendant the opportunity to consult with a retained lawyer or, if the defendant is indigent, the opportunity to consult with an appointed lawyer.
Mich. Ct. R. 6.005(D).
. In Anderson, the Michigan Supreme Court held that a trial court must engage in a three-part inquiry to determine whether a defendant's request to proceed pro se should be granted.
. Instead, the State argued: (1) there was no constitutional right to self-representation in criminal proceedings, and (2) even if there was such a right, “a defendant who represented himself at trial should not be allowed to raise the issue of the quality of that representation on appeal” and the "denial of self-representation is subject to the harmless error test.” Respondent’s Br., Faretta v. California,
. Not only does nothing in Faretta sanction such a result, but this result also cuts against the very governmental efficiency concerns that the majority now emphasizes.
. In McKaskle, the Court addressed the appropriate role of standby counsel.
.Patterson was not, however, a case about the right to self-representation. See
. I also note that the majority ignores the most significant factual distinction between the instant case and Moore: that Hill’s request for self-representation came on the first day of trial, before the jury was empaneled, while Moore's request for self-representation came on the third day of trial, after the jury was empaneled. Moore,
. The Criminal Procedure Professors as ami-cus curiae dispute this point. Law Professor Amicus Br. at 5-6. They note that empirical research shows that pro se state felony defendants are more successful than felony defendants represented by counsel. Id. at 6 (quoting Edwards,
. As amicus, Garry Jones argues that the timeliness requirement is a procedural issue governed by state law. Jones Amicus Br. at 3-6. I agree.
. See, e.g., District of Columbia v. Heller,
. Federal courts do.not have jurisdiction to review state court adjudications of federal constitutional questions if the state court's decision "rests on a state law ground that is independent of the federal question and adequate to support the judgment.” Coleman v. Thompson,
. Batson v. Kentucky,
. To the contrary, as noted the Michigan Supreme Court had long refused to adopt a categorical before-trial deadline for making Faretta requests. See ... [Hill,
