Bessie Fleming appeals the district court’s denial of her petition for habeas corpus relief. She claims, as did the petitioners in
United States ex rel. Falconer v. Lane,
I
On March 6, 1986, Bessie Fleming shot and killed her husband. The State charged her with murder under Ill.Rev.Stat.1985, ch. 38, para. 9-l(a). At trial, Fleming presented evidence that she was a victim of the battered wife syndrome. Her husband, an alcoholic with three previous failed marriages, abused her verbally, psychologically and physically many times during their five-year relationship. Most of the incidents of abuse occurred after Fleming’s husband had been drinking, and they were almost always followed by periods of apologetic remorse. The abuse temporarily subsided after a failed suicide attempt by Ms. Fleming and Mr. Fleming’s agreement to undergo clinical treatment for alcohol addiction. The abuse resumed, however, *680 when Mr. Fleming began drinking again. At trial, the doctor who testified in Ms. Fleming’s defense case found this to be a classic case of battered wife syndrome, and the State, though it presented its own expert witness as to the nature of this malady, did not challenge that diagnosis.
The facts surrounding the shooting are basically as follows. No longer able to take the abuse, and assured by Mr. Fleming’s sister in Florida that she could move down and live with her, Ms. Fleming told her husband that she was going to leave him. He responded, “The only way you will leave me is feet first.” The following morning, when Ms. Fleming again told her husband that she was going to leave, he assured her that he meant his threat. The two then went to the trucking company they operated. Mr. Fleming went out to move a trailer, and then, from the loading dock, began shouting at Ms. Fleming. Ms. Fleming got Mr. Fleming’s loaded gun out of his desk drawer, put on a rubber glove so she wouldn’t get any gunpowder on herself, grabbed a rug, and went out to the dock. As her husband was climbing down off the rig and coming toward her, Ms. Fleming lifted the rug in front of the gun to muffle the sound, and fired at Mr. Fleming. The first shot missed, but the second shot hit Mr. Fleming in the head and killed him.
It was Fleming’s theory at trial that the killing was justified as self-defense. It was the State’s theory that Fleming killed her husband in a deliberate and premeditated manner for financial reasons. (The State introduced evidence concerning irregularities in the books kept by the Flemings’ trucking company, as well as several delinquent debts owed by the Flemings that ended up being paid out of Mr. Fleming’s life insurance proceeds.) Under the Illinois criminal statutes applicable at the time, murder was defined as the killing of an individual with either intent to kill or do great bodily harm, or knowledge that the acts would cause, or create a strong probability of, death or great bodily harm. Ill. Rev.Stat.1985, ch. 38, para. 9-l(a). Voluntary manslaughter was defined as the killing of an individual while acting under either sudden, intense passion due to serious provocation, or an unreasonable belief that force was justified to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm to oneself. Ill.Rev.Stat.1985, ch. 38, para. 9-2. Thus, under these statutes, if Fleming shot her husband because she was provoked to murderous passion by him, or because of an honest but unreasonable belief that firing the shots was necessary to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm to herself, she would be guilty not of murder but of voluntary manslaughter.
1
(Note that if Fleming honestly and
reasonably
believed that she had to shoot her husband to protect herself from imminent danger of death or great bodily harm, then she would be guilty of no crime at all.
See
Ill.Rev.Stat. 1985, ch. 38, para. 7-1;
People v. Aguero,
Because of the evidence as to the abuse suffered by Fleming, the trial court decided to instruct the jury as to both murder and voluntary manslaughter. The court used the then-applicable Illinois pattern jury instructions on murder, I.P.I. Criminal No. 7.02 (2d ed. 1981), voluntary manslaughter —provocation, I.P.I. Criminal No. 7.04 (2d ed. 1981), and voluntary manslaughter — unreasonable belief of justification, I.P.I. Criminal No. 7.06 (2d ed. 1981). The murder instruction gave the jury the elements the State had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt to sustain that charge, but made no mention of the “manslaughter defenses” of provocation and unreasonable belief of justification. The voluntary manslaughter instructions told the jury that, to sustain such a charge, the State had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt either that Fleming “acted under a sudden and intense passion resulting from serious provocation” or *681 that she held an unreasonable belief that “circumstances existed which would have justified killing the decedent.”
The jury rejected Fleming’s self-defense argument and the “manslaughter defenses” and found her guilty of murder. She was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment. Fleming appealed, raising, among other challenges, the argument that the jury should have been instructed that the burden of proof was on the State to negate the partial affirmative defense of voluntary manslaughter. The appellate court rejected this argument and affirmed,
People v. Fleming,
The Illinois Supreme Court then decided the case of
People v. Reddick,
Citing
Reddick,
Fleming filed a post-conviction petition in Illinois state court seeking collateral relief from her conviction.
See
Ill.Rev.Stat.1985, ch. 38, paras. 122-1
et seq.
She alleged that the jury instructions violated her rights under the due process clause. The state circuit court denied the petition and, by unpublished order, the appellate court affirmed.
See People v. Fleming,
Her state remedies exhausted, Fleming brought this habeas corpus proceeding in the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Agreeing with the Illinois appellate court that the error in the manslaughter instructions, “while violative of state law, did not violate Petitioner’s due process rights,” the district court denied the writ.
United States ex rel. Fleming v. Gramley,
From this decision, Fleming brought a timely appeal.
II
That the jury instructions used in Fleming’s trial violated due process is clear. We said as much in
United States ex rel. Falconer v. Lane,
At oral argument, the State basically (and wisely) conceded that, after
Falconer
and
Rose,
it cannot be disputed that the errors in these jury instructions constitute a violation of due process. The State suggested, however, that an ambiguity exists as to the precise nature of the due process violation. The State noted that, in
Falconer,
we expressly disavowed reliance on “presumption and burden of proof questions” in defining the due process violation occasioned by these instructions.
A brief review of the context of the statement in
Rose,
however, dispels any “ambiguity.” In footnote one of
Rose,
our purpose was to determine whether the
Falconer/
due process issue properly was before our court; the petitioner had pursued
*683
a due process claim in the state system and in the district court that differed from the claim discussed in
Falconer.
(An understandable situation, as both
Reddick
and
Falconer
came down after the petitioner argued his claim to the state courts and to the district court.) In the sentence in which we differentiated the petitioner’s earlier due process argument (right to lesser included offense instruction) from the
Falconer/Reddick
claim, we used the above-quoted phrase linking
Reddick
and
Winship.
The rest of our opinion makes clear, however, that we did not intend in
Rose
to alter the analysis of
Falconer
as to the nature of the due process violation found in these instructions. In fact, we expressly found
Falconer
and its reasoning to be dispositive with little or no further discussion.
See Rose,
A closer question than whether the jury instructions violated due process is whether that constitutional violation was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Chapman v. California,
Ill
For the foregoing reasons, the denial of the writ of habeas corpus is Reversed. Unless the State of. Illinois retries Fleming within 120 days herefrom, the respondent shall discharge her.
Notes
. Effective July 1, 1987, this portion of Lhe Illinois Criminal Code has been changed. Intentional or knowing killing under ¶ 9-1 is now "first degree murder," and what was voluntary manslaughter under ¶ 9-2 is now "second degree murder.” See Haddad, Second Degree Murder Replaces Voluntary Manslaughter in Illinois: Problems Solved, Problems Created, 19 Loy.U. Chi.L.J. 995 (1988).
. In both
Falconer
and
Rose,
we went on to address various procedural default arguments raised by the State.
See Rose,
