Charles Vieux was charged in a Massachusetts state proceeding with rape and indecent assault and battery stemming from an encounter with Marie Dorcely. After the incident Marquise Dorcely, Marie’s younger sister, eavesdropped on a telephone conversation Vieux had with Marie’s mother. Over Vieux’s objection on hearsay grounds, the court admitted Marquise’s testimony regarding a comment Vieux had made. On appeal Vieux claimed ineffective assistance of counsel for failure to object on other grounds. After the Massachusetts Appeals Court disagreed and affirmed his conviction, he filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal court. The district court also rebuffed Ms entreaty, and he has now appealed to us. We agree that his argument lacks merit, and address once again the difficult issue of ascertaining the precise contours of federal court appraisal of habeas petitions filed by state prisoners.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Vieux was a close friend of the Dorcely family. On June 19, 1994, after spending the day at a beach with some friends, Vieux took them to the Dorcelys’ house for something to drink. While his friends waited in the car, Vieux went inside and called out to see if anyone was present. Alone in the house, Marie allowed him upstairs, and, after he inspected some recent carpentry work, they both went to the kitchen to get him some ice water.
At this point their accounts of the events differ. She claims that he pinned her against the refrigerator, fondled her breasts and inserted his finger into her vagina. She says that he then dragged her a couple feet to the living room where he pushed her forward over the back of a couch, lifted up her dress and had intercourse with her from behind. She asserts that throughout the episode she attempted to get him to stop and he told her not to make him exert himself too much. His version of events has her being the sexual aggressor, kissing him and leading him to the couch where they had brief consensual intercourse.
Afterwards, he brought drinks out to his friends in the car. When they all eventually left, Marie called Dina Casimir and told Casimir she had been raped. Casimir immediately called an ambulance, and Marie was taken to the hospital. The hospital staff discovered semen but noted that Marie appeared to have no bruising or lacerations.
That night, Marie’s mother, Degrace Dorcely, called Vieux to discuss the incident. He admitted that he and Marie had engaged in intercourse, but claimed it was consensual. They spoke a couple of times over the next few days, repeating the basic elements of that conversation. On one call Vieux turned on the speaker phone so other mechanics at the shop where Vieux worked could listen to the conversation. Vieux testified that the other mechanics listened and laughed.
*62 Also during one of the calls, unbeknownst to either Degrace or Vieux, Marquise eavesdropped from a telephone extension because she “wanted to know what was going on.” After the end of the conversation, Degrace hung up, but Marquise stayed on the line and heard Vieux telling the other mechanics that Degrace should allow him to marry Marie, and explaining that he just “got a little pussy.” Vieux denies ever making such a vulgar comment.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Vieux was charged with rape and indecent assault and battery. The central issue at trial involved whether Marie had consented to the intercourse. Both Marie and Vieux took the stand, and because they were the only witnesses to the encounter and had conflicting accounts, the jury was forced to weigh their credibility. Believing that the comment Marquise allegedly overheard would tarnish Vieux’s image in the minds of the jury, Vieux’s lawyer unsuccessfully attempted to suppress this evidence by objecting on hearsay grounds.
After deliberating for approximately six hours, the jury reported that it was deadlocked. The court then issued a supplemental charge, and the jury deliberated for another several hours before finding Vieux guilty of rape and not guilty of indecent assault and battery.
On appeal, Vieux claimed that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. Vieux argued that the federal wiretapping statute (outlawing “any electronic ... device” used to intercept a telephone conversation and the evidence therefrom) prohibits the introduction of the statement Marquise claims to have overheard while eavesdropping. Vieux asserted that his lawyer should have objected on that basis, and the failure to do so constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. The Massachusetts Appeals Court found that an objection based on the federal wiretapping statute would have been futile because the evidence fell into the statute’s “ordinary course of business” exception (exempting from the definition of an “electronic ... device” a telephone “being used ... in the ordinary course of ... business”). Consequently, the court concluded that counsel was not ineffective, and affirmed Vieux’s conviction. He unsuccessfully sought review before the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and the United States Supreme Court, but each denied his request.
Vieux then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal district court. In a lengthy and thoughtful opinion, the court agreed with the Massachusetts Appeals Court and dismissed his petition.
III. REVIEW UNDER AEDPA
Before addressing the merits of Vieux’s claim, we must first delve into an explication of our standard of review. When Congress passed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), it significantly altered our review of habeas petitions brought by state prisoners. Federal courts are now barred from granting a writ of habeas corpus to such individuals unless the underlying adjudication:
(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). The Massachusetts Appeals Court did not determine any facts, 1 so we need analyze its decision only *63 under subsection (1), i.e., we must decide whether it was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law.”
When we addressed this provision at length in
O’Brien v. Dubois,
Massachusetts argues that if a claim can be analyzed under the first prong, the court is not allowed to reach the second step in the analysis. As we shall demonstrate, this is simply incorrect.
The initial challenge in applying this statutory language is in determining precisely how similar the case must be to Supreme Court precedent to justify “contrary to” analysis, Quite obviously, the closer a case is to the factual and legal posture of a given Supreme Court decision, the easier it is to say that the Supreme Court has prescribed a governing rule, thereby triggering the “contrary to” clause. However, precise identieality of facts and legal issues is not required, for, if it were, no cases would be analyzed under the “contrary to” prong. Therefore, we commented that some “Supreme Court holdings are ‘general’ in the sense that they erect a framework specifically intended for application to variant factual situations.”
Id.
at 25. In a footnote by way of example we cited a number of familiar cases that would fit this mold, including
Strickland v. Washington,
The fact that “framework” claims may be analyzed under the “contrary to” clause does not, however, obviate the need also to apply the “unreasonable application” clause as well. Rather, O’Brien held that relief under the “contrary to” prong requires both: (1) identification of controlling Court precedent, whether a “framework” case like Strickland or not; and (2) a ruling that the identified precedent demands a particular outcome, i.e., one contrary to that reached by the state court. Specifically, we stated that the “key inquiry” was whether the relevant Supreme Court decision “can fairly be said to require a particular result in a particular case.” Id. (emphasis added). “If no Supreme Court precedent is dispositive of a petitioner’s claim, then, a fortiori, there is no specific rule to which the state court’s decision can be ‘contrary.’ ” Id. (emphasis added).
Thus, the petitioner may succeed under the “contrary to” clause only if Supreme Court caselaw directly governs the claim and the state court got it wrong. The case is not over, however, if the state court decision cannot be termed “contrary to” Court precedent. Instead, just as in cases where there is no specific rule on point, we must assess whether it is an *64 “unreasonable application” of the Court’s pronouncements. Admittedly, in certain cases, especially those involving non-“framework” claims, Court precedent will be sufficiently specific that petitioner’s claim will either be contrary to or entirely consonant with the Court’s rulings. If the state decision is consistent with the relevant Court decision, it plainly would not be an unreasonable application of Court precedent. Therefore, the federal court will be able to dispatch swiftly any argument under the second step of analysis.
To say this, however, is not to say that the second step analysis is unnecessary, for unless a habeas court grants relief under the “contrary to” prong, it will be required to analyze the petitioner’s claim under the “unreasonable application” prong as well. To rule otherwise would be to ignore the word “or” in the statute limiting our power to grant the writ if the state decision was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of,” federal law. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) (emphasis added).
IV. PETITIONER’S CLAIMS
We turn to the merits of Vieux’s appeal. Vieux’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is analyzed under the familiar
Strickland
rubric, which requires Vieux to prove that his counsel’s performance both was deficient and prejudiced his defense.
See United States v. Ortiz,
We start by noting that the Massachusetts Appeals Court conducted a proper
Strickland
analysis.
2
It identified both essential elements of an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, and properly recognized that “failing to pursue a futile tactic does not amount to constitutional ineffectiveness.”
Commonwealth v. Vieux,
In relevant part, the federal wiretapping statute outlaws the unauthorized use of “any electronic, mechanical, or other device” to intercept a telephone conversation. 18 U.S.C. § 2511(b). The statute also prohibits courts from receiving any such illegally intercepted telephone conversations into evidence at trial. See 18 U.S.C. § 2515. At issue is whether Marquise’s telephone extension constitutes an “electronic, mechanical or other device.” The statute defines that term as “any device ... other than ... any telephone ... being used by the subscriber or user in the ordinary course of its business!.]” 18 U.S.C. § 2510(5). Consequently, if Marquise was using the phone in the ordinary course of her business, she did not illegally intercept Vieux’s alleged comment. On the other hand, if she was not using the *65 phone in the ordinary course of her business, then her eavesdropping constituted the use of “any electronic, mechanical or other device,” and the trial court would have been barred from allowing the statement she overheard into evidence. Under this scenario, any objection on this basis should have been successful.
The Massachusetts Appeals Court conducted an extensive survey of the caselaw interpreting the contours of the “ordinary course of business” exception.
See Commonwealth v. Vieux,
The Supreme Court has not directly addressed the scope of the “ordinary course of business” exception. It has considered the statute on a number of occasions, but most decisions involve the authority of law enforcement personnel to wiretap criminal suspects.
See, e.g., United States v. Ojeda Rios,
At issue in
Gelbard
was a witness’s attempt to invoke the statute to refuse to testify before a grand jury because any testimony would be based on illegally intercepted conversations. In the course of allowing this claim as a defense to the witness’s contempt proceeding, the Court stated that unless “expressly authorized in [the statute] ... all interceptions of wire and oral communications are flatly prohibited.”
Gelbard,
Giordano
provides equally little ammunition for Vieux’s challenge.
Giordano
involved a motion to suppress evidence because the authority for a given wiretap did not come from one of the officials empowered to authorize electronic surveillance under the statute. Again Vieux highlights the Court’s sweeping language, namely that “[t]he purpose of the legislation ... was effectively to prohibit ... all interceptions of oral and wire communications, except those specifically provided for in the Act,” most notably law enforcement personnel acting under a court order.
Giordano,
Hence the Supreme Court has not ruled directly on the scope of the ordinary business exception, and its more general pronouncements provide no guidance as to whether Marquise’s eavesdropping was done in the “ordinary course of business.” Consequently, we cannot say that the Massachusetts Appeals Court’s decision that counsel was not deficient because the objection would be futile was “contrary to” Supreme Court caselaw.
We thus proceed to the second step of the inquiry: whether the state court ruling
*66
was an “unreasonable application” of the Court’s precedent. As we said in
O’Brien,
the issue “reduces to a question of whether the state court’s derivation of a case-specific rule from the Court’s generally relevant jurisprudence appears objectively reasonable.”
O’Brien,
In divining the reasonableness of the Appeals Court’s decision, we start by noting that the scope of the “ordinary course of business” exception has been the subject of a significant split in authority.
3
Relying on legislative history concerning the extensive use of electronic surveillance in marital disputes, some courts have ruled that the intra-family use of an extension phone does not fall within the ordinary course of business exception, and hence any conversation heard by some family members when eavesdropping on other family members is inadmissible in court.
See, e.g., Kempf v. Kempf,
Other courts, concerned about intruding on intra-family matters better left to state law, have ruled that eavesdropping by family members on an extension telephone falls within the ordinary course of the family member’s business and thus is not outlawed by the federal electronic surveillance statute.
See, e.g., Scheib v. Grant,
It seems to us that both positions are supportable. The Massachusetts Appeals Court’s conclusion that an objection under the federal wiretapping statute would have been overruled was therefore not an “unreasonable application” of federal law. 4
Let us be clear. We are not deciding that, were the question presented to us, Marquise’s use of the telephone extension was done in the ordinary course of busi *67 ness and thus was exempted from the federal wiretapping statute’s restrictions. 5 Rather, we are holding only that the Massachusetts Appeals Court’s decision to that effect was not “contrary to” or “an unreasonable application of’ federal law. Consequently, its decision that Vieux’s lawyer was not constitutionally ineffective for failing to object on that basis was equally not contrary to or an unreasonable application of federal law. 6
In essence, Vieux wants us to announce our views as to the scope of the ordinary business exception, and then apply the result, if favorable to him, to his trial in state court three years ago. We refuse to do so. As we said in O’Brien,
Teague taught that, apart from the Supreme Court, federal habeas courts ought not act as innovators in the field of criminal procedure, thereby upsetting state convictions because state courts were not prescient and thus failed to comply with federal law that did not exist at the time they ruled.
O’Brien,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Vieux claims that the Massachusetts Appeals Court engaged in improper factfinding when it described Marquise's motivation as "concern for her sister."
Commonwealth v. Vieux,
. Although, as we noted in
O'Brien,
. As we said in
O’Brien,
notwithstanding the statutory emphasis on Supreme Court case-law, "reference to [factually similar decisions by inferior federal courts] is appropriate in assessing the reasonableness
vel non
of the state court’s treatment of the contested issue.”
O’Brien,
. This case demonstrates precisely why claims must be analyzed under both the "contrary to” and the "unreasonable application” prongs. Hypothetically speaking, if all courts, in applying the Supreme Court's broad language, had determined that intra-family eavesdropping was a violation of the federal wiretapping statute, it is more likely that we would have found the Massachusetts Appeals Court's decision to be unreasonable, even though not actually "contrary to” the Court's pronouncements. This possibility arises entirely as a consequence of O’Brien's appropriate statement permitting habeas courts to consider decisions by other inferior federal courts in the course of assessing whether the state decision was an unreasonable application of Court caselaw.
. However, were the question, in fact, squarely before us, we note that this case, involving statements regarding an alleged crime against another family member, wouldn't be so close a question as one that fell within the scope of Congress's concern about evidence from wiretaps being used in marital disputes.
. While the Massachusetts Appeals court did not reach the issue, we note, only in passing, that we believe Vieux also failed to establish prejudice, the other Strickland, element. He claims that Marquise’s testimony prejudiced him because it depicted him as cruel and insensitive. However, he himself had testified that during one of the phone calls he had turned on the speaker phone for the amusement of the other mechanics in the shop. This act alone demonstrated his callous nature; any harm from Marquise’s eavesdropping was merely cumulative. Consequently, he has not shown that the failure to object to Marquise’s testimony actually prejudiced his defense.
