In
Simmons v. Lockhart,
Recall of mandate is an extraordinary remedy. We may grant it “to prevent injustice,” 8th Cir.R. 18, but we normally will not do so when some other, less unusual remedy is avаilable. The normal course for a petitioner in Simmons’s position would be to file a second habeas petition in the District Court. In that petition, he would assert his new grounds for relief and attempt to overcome the considerable procedural barriers — for example, abuse of the writ — that a successive habeas petition must typically face. Once the District Court had ruled one way or the other, an appeal would lie to us. In the particular circumstances of this case, we think requiring Simmons to follow that course would be a needless procedural complication. When the State moved the District Court to dissolve the stay, Simmons responded, placing before that Court the same рleadings he has filed here, and arguing that the State’s motion should be denied for the reasons given in those pleadings. The District Court rejected Simmons’s position in short order, observing that it sаw no reason for any further stay. That Court, in other words, has already expressed its own view of Simmons’s new grounds. If a second habeas petition were filed, it would almost certainly be summarily dismissed. So in ruling on Simmons’s motion for recall of mandate and rehearing, we are, as a practical matter, in the same position we would be in if Simmons were appealing frоm the dismissal of a second habeas petition.
We turn to the new grounds Simmons now asserts. First, Simmons argues that he was convicted under a statutory scheme for murder which is so vague as to violate the Eighth Amendment. 1 He claims the capital murder and first degree murder statutes in Arkansas overlap impermissibly, giving the jury unbridled discretion to select between the two penalties, in violation of Eighth Amendment principles requiring certainty and reliability in death cases. We cannot reach the merits of this argument, however, until a prior procedural problem is rеsolved. The statutory-overlap issue was presented to the District Court in Simmons’s original habeas petition. That Court denied him relief. The issue was not appealed to this Court, howеver. Thus, we must decide whether Simmons’s failure to appeal the question should now be excused for some reason.
Simmons claims the overlap issue was not pursued on appeal because his lawyer was suffering from alcoholism or was otherwise constitutionally ineffective. This is the first question we remand to the District Court. That Court should make findings as to why previous counsel failed to press the statutory-overlap issue on appeal, and decide whether that choice constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. Simmons was prejudiced by his lawyer’s failure to *1146 appeal the issue; the question is nonfrivo-lous. The District Court must determine, however, why counsel failed to raise the issue, and whether a rеasonably competent lawyer could have made such a decision.
Next Simmons contends he was denied the effective assistance of counsel because his triаl attorneys were hampered by a conflict of interest. One of the lawyers who represented Simmons also represented one of the State’s key witnesses against Simmons, James Davis, on an unrelated matter. Simmons claims that because the lawyer had earlier represented Davis, the lawyer could not vigorously cross-examine the witness on matters that had come to his attention through the attorney-client relationship. We cannot reach the merits of this claim, either, unless two prior procedural hurdles are clеared.
Simmons never raised the issue of ineffective assistance of trial counsel before the state courts. Thus, unless he can demonstrate cause for the procеdural default and prejudice from it, no federal court can consider this claim. See
Wainwright v. Sykes,
There still remains another procedural hurdle: this issue was not raised in Simmоns’s habeas petition. Raising it now constitutes an abuse of the writ, see R. 9(b) of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases, unless Simmons can show a good enough reason why this issue was not presentеd before. See
Sanders v. United States,
Unlike the statutory-overlap issue, the District Court has not had a chance to resolve the ineffective-assistance questiоn on its merits. Should that Court find that Simmons clears the two procedural hurdles, then it should resolve whether Simmons’s lawyer was faced with an actual conflict of interest that prevented him frоm vigorously cross-examining Davis on his military record, psychiatric problems, and any deals Davis made with the prosecution. See
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
The other issues raised by Simmons, thе failure of the trial court to give certain jury instructions, his counsel’s alleged failure to investigate exculpatory witnesses, and an assortment of trial and sentencing errors, are clearly insubstantial and need not be further explored. 3
*1147 Thus, we grant the motion to recall mandate, and remand to the District Court to hold an evidentiary hearing and to make the fаctual findings and legal conclusions outlined. The District Court should then certify the case back to us for review. While these proceedings are going on, the stay will remain in effect. We ask the District Court to proceed as quickly as practicable. The remand will be effective immediately upon the filing of this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. We recognize, as the State pоints out, that this issue affects the validity of only three of the four death sentences imposed on Simmons.
. There is no question that Simmons has exhausted his state remedies. No presently available state procedure exists by which he can claim ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
. The issues that are thus now finally decided against Simmons are as follows:
(1) whеther he was constitutionally entitled to a jury instruction on lesser included offenses with respect to the murder of Officer Tate;
(2) whether the death sentence he received fоr the murder of Officer Tate should be set aside because the jury was improperly influenced after making its other sentencing decisions;
(3) whether he was denied the effective assistance of counsel due to the failure or inability of his trial counsel to investigate an exculpatory witness;
(4) whether he was denied the effective assistance of cоunsel when his trial counsel failed to request a continuance in order to interview the person who discovered the body of Larry Price;
(5) whether he was denied the effectivе assistance of counsel when his trial counsel failed to ask for a jury instruction on lesser included *1147 offenses with respect to the murder of Officer Tate;
(6) whether he was denied the effective assistance of counsel when his trial counsel failed to object or move for a mistrial during the prosecution’s closing argument;
(7) whether he was denied the effective assistance of counsel when his trial counsеl failed to present evidence of mitigating circumstances during the penalty phase;
(8)whether the cumulative effect of the aforementioned errors at trial and sentencing was to deny him the effective assistance of counsel.
