During voir dire, a prospective juror stated that she could not be fair because she knew the defendant, the defendant’s grandmother, the victim’s family, and the attorneys. The trial judge denied a joint challenge for cause. The defendant did not strike the juror with any of her available peremptory challenges, and the juror served on the jury. We hold that the defendant’s claim of error regarding the denial of the challenge for cause is procedurally defaulted, and thus unavailable for review, because she failed to exhaust her peremptory challenges. We also hold that her claim is not reviewable for fundamental error.
Background
On the night of Sunday, September 7, 2008, the defendant, Tina Whiting, along with Addison Pijnapples and her husband Thomas Smith, Roderick Berry, and Michael Heffern, hatched a plan to rob Shawn Buckner of his prescription narcotics. In pursuit of the plan, Whiting and Pijnapples successfully lured Buckner to Whiting’s apartment with promises of a three-way sex act. When Whiting took Buckner to her bedroom, Pijnapples gave a predetermined signal, prompting the three men to come out of hiding and enter Whiting’s bedroom, where their attack on Buckner commenced. After punching and kicking Buckner to the point that he was barely moving, the assailants began searching him for drugs, as Whiting yelled, “he’s got pfflst,] I know he’s got pills!” Trial Tr. 52-53. At some point, one of the men “requested a knife so they could finish this”; Whiting retrieved a large knife from her bedroom, but the men declined it. Id. at 469, 471; State’s Ex. 87. Although there were no drugs, Smith found twenty dollars in Buckner’s sock and told Pijnap-ples to go buy beer. The group then agreed that the men would drive Buckner, who was still alive, to a bar and leave him in an alley.
Whiting and Pijnapples drove to Ohio to purchase beer and, while en route, discarded several items of Buckner’s personal property. Meanwhile, the men began driving, but instead of going to a bar, they drove to a secluded cornfield where they stabbed Buckner in the torso twenty times and nearly severed his penis, using a small knife Smith had taken from Whiting’s apartment. Smith then delivered a fatal blow by cutting Buckner’s throat to his spine, severing the major blood vessels in his neck. They left the body in the cornfield and returned to the apartment and began cleaning. Whiting and Pijnapples *27 returned to the apartment a few minutes later and joined in the cleaning effort, during which they all drank the beer that had been purchased with Buckner’s money. A few days later, Smith, Berry, and Pijnapples moved Buckner’s body to a shallow grave they had dug, and to mislead investigators further, Whiting taped a note to Buckner’s apartment door expressing feigned concern for his well-being. On September 10, the police discovered Buckner’s body.
Whiting and her cohorts were each charged in Jay Circuit Court with murder and robbery. 1 Whiting and Pijnapples were tried jointly. 2 On July 12, 2010, Whiting’s and Pijnapples’s four-day trial commenced with a full day of jury selection. During voir dire, eventual juror Cynthia Wright explained at a sidebar conference that she had served for many years as a secretary at a local church and in that capacity had become acquainted with Whiting and her grandmother (who had raised Whiting), Pijnapples, Buckner’s family, and all of the attorneys. 3 In light of this, Juror Wright “stated that she would feel very uncomfortable making a decision that was so important to everyone involved.” Appellant’s App. 225; Appellant’s Supp. App. 2. Immediately following sidebar, the prosecutor asked Juror Wright if she thought she could provide a fair trial, to which she replied “No I can not.” Voir Dire Tr. 128. Neither Whiting’s nor Pijnapples’s defense counsel asked Juror Wright any questions about her ability to remain impartial and instead asked only generalized questions about witness credibility and the State’s burden of proof. The State moved to strike Juror Wright and two others on the panel for cause; Whiting joined the State’s motion. The trial judge dismissed the two others but denied the motion to excuse Juror Wright for cause. At that point, the defense had six peremptory challenges remaining and the State had eight; neither party exercised a peremptory strike to ■remove Juror Wright, and she was later empaneled and sworn as a regular juror.
Whiting and Pijnapples were each convicted of one count of felony murder, Ind. Code § 35-42-1-1(2) (2008), and one count of Class A felony robbery resulting in seri *28 ous bodily injury, id. § 35^42-5-1. After merging the robbery convictions with the felony murder convictions, the trial court sentenced Whiting and Pijnapples each to 55 years’ imprisonment.
On appeal,
4
Whiting raised four issues, all of which were rejected by the Court of Appeals.
Whiting v. State,
No. 38A05-1008-CR-505,
Whiting sought transfer, and we heard oral argument on December 15, 2011. We now grant transfer, thereby vacating the decision of the Court of Appeals, Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A), but we address only the juror-bias claim. We summarily affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals in all other respects. App. R. 58(A)(2).
Discussion
This case tests the limits of State procedural-default rules when the defaulted claim is one of juror bias. The right to a fair trial before an impartial jury is a cornerstone of our criminal justice system.
Caruthers v. State,
To secure an impartial jury, the Sixth Amendment requires that the venire be drawn from a fair cross-section of the community,
e.g., Holland v. Illinois,
Challenges for cause are the primary means by which biased jurors are struck. There are no limits on the number of for-cause challenges but each “must be supported by specified causes or reasons that demonstrate that, as a matter of law, the venire member is not qualified to serve.”
Gray v. Mississippi,
“Impartiality is not a technical conception. It is a state of mind. For the ascertainment of this mental attitude of appropriate indifference, the Constitution lays down no particular tests and procedure is not chained to any ancient and artificial formula.”
United States v. Wood,
Whiting contends that the trial judge erred by not excusing Juror Wright for cause and, as a result, that she was denied her right to a fair trial before an impartial jury. The State counters that this claim is procedurally defaulted, and thus unavailable for review, because Whiting chose not to remove Juror Wright with one of her peremptory strikes. In response, Whiting acknowledges failing to exhaust her peremptory challenges but claims that the so-called “exhaustion rule” should not apply in criminal trials; alternatively, she claims that Juror Wright’s service on the jury constituted fundamental error, thereby excusing any procedural default.
I
Indiana law is well settled. To preserve for appeal a claim that the trial judge erred in denying a challenge for cause, the defendant
must
demonstrate
*30
that he or she either used a peremptory-challenge to remove the challenged juror or had already exhausted his or her allotment of peremptories.
6
E.g., Merritt v. Evansville-Vanderburgh Sch. Corp.,
An appellate court will review a trial court’s denial of a challenge for cause
only
if the defendant complies with the exhaustion rule.
E.g., id.
at 1235;
Sutton v. State,
It is undisputed that Whiting failed to comply with the exhaustion rule. She was given ten peremptory challenges to select regular jurors, I.C. § 35 — 37—1—3(b); J.R. 18(a)(2), and an additional one to select the alternate jurors, J.R. 18(c)(1), though she was required to use them collectively with Pijnapples, I.C. § 35-37-l-3(d); J.R. 18(a). When the motion to remove Juror Wright for cause was denied, the trial judge informed the defense that it had six peremptory challenges remaining, and Whiting chose not to strike Juror Wright peremptorily. Moreover, the defense used only nine of its ten peremptory challenges in selecting the regular jury. Whiting has therefore forfeited any claim that the trial judge erred in not removing Juror Wright for cause.
A
The exhaustion rule is sound policy. In
Merritt,
Chief Justice Shepard, writing for a unanimous Court, explained that permitting litigants “to seek a new trial when they had a remedial tool available and chose not to use it could lead to harsh results.”
*31
It is true that these costs are incurred any time an appellate court sets aside a jury verdict and remands for a new trial. But, unlike with other types of error, litigants in this context have been provided with a means to cure the alleged error at the outset. It seems “eminently fair and more sensible” to require parties to use their available peremptory challenges cu-ratively than to impose these significant, preventable costs and inefficiencies on the justice system and the public.
Merritt,
An additional policy reason supports the exhaustion rule. “Reviewing courts are properly resistant to second-guessing the trial judge’s estimation of a juror’s impartiality, for that judge’s appraisal is ordinarily influenced by a host of factors impossible to capture fully in the record— among them, the prospective juror’s inflection, sincerity, demeanor, candor, body language, and apprehension of duty.”
Skilling,
B
Much of Whiting’s argument to avoid the exhaustion rule is premised on her contention that a claim of structural error cannot be proeedurally defaulted. But the Supreme Court observed long ago, “No procedural principle is more familiar to this Court than that a constitutional right may be forfeited in criminal as well as civil cases by the failure to make timely assertion of the right before a tribunal having jurisdiction to determine it.”
Ya
*32
kus v. United States,
More to the point here, in
Ross v. Oklahoma,
Whiting also claims that applying the exhaustion rule in criminal cases is “too harsh,” particularly when there are multiple defendants. But it is difficult to see the harshness in requiring a defendant to use a peremptory challenge in accordance with one of the traditional reasons for its existence.
See, e.g., Martinez-Salazar,
Moreover, we see no difference between the right to jury impartiality in civil and criminal trials — impartiality is a basic principle of due process, whether it is life, liberty, or property that is at stake.
See, e.g., McDonough Power Equip., Inc. v. Greenwood,
C
In sum, Whiting’s claim of error regarding the trial court’s refusal to dismiss Juror Wright for cause is procedurally defaulted. We continue to adhere to the exhaustion rule in both civil and criminal cases because of the sound policy supporting it. And Whiting’s challenges to its soundness and validity in criminal cases do not withstand scrutiny.
II
Whiting seeks to escape procedural default by invoking our fundamental-error doctrine. Her argument that we should review her procedurally defaulted claim for fundamental error has some persuasive force. After all, “[a] fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement of due process.”
In re Murchison,
*34
It is not surprising that there is no precedent in this regard. When default occurs under the exhaustion rule, the defendant has objected to a juror and the trial judge has rendered a decision based on counsel’s arguments and what the judge has observed during voir dire. This circumstance is inconsistent with the underlying premise of fundamental-error review because, at bottom, the fundamental-error doctrine asks whether the error was so egregious and abhorrent to fundamental due process that the trial judge should or should not have acted, irrespective of the parties’ failure to object or otherwise preserve the error for appeal. A finding of fundamental error essentially means that the trial judge erred either by not acting when he or she should have,
see, e.g., Addison v. State,
Moreover, applying the fundamental-error exception in this context would both weaken the exhaustion rule and utilize fundamental error not as a “narrow exception” but as the general rule. This provides no incentive for counsel to exercise peremptory challenges curatively and would drastically upset the careful balance drawn by the exhaustion rule. The exception would swallow the rule.
Finally, not reviewing for fundamental error in this context does not necessarily end the matter. Whiting and other similarly situated defendants may seek relief through a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel under the well-established standard of
Strickland v. Washington,
Although fundamental-error and ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims are different, they often yield the same result.
McCorker v. State,
Conclusion
In sum, we hold that Whiting’s juror-bias claim is procedurally defaulted because she failed to exhaust her peremptory challenges. We also hold that a procedural default under the exhaustion rule is not amenable to fundamental-error review. Accordingly, we affirm Whiting’s conviction for felony murder and summarily affirm her sentence. We remand to the trial court so that it can correct the abstract of judgment to reflect that Whiting was convicted of felony murder under Indiana Code section 35-42-1-1(2).
Notes
. Whiting's and the others’ motions for a change of judge were denied, and those decisions were affirmed.
Smith v. State,
No. 38A05-0812-CR-720,
. Berry and Smith pled guilty, and Heffern was convicted by a jury shortly before Whiting’s trial.
Smith v. State,
No. 38A04-1008-CR-478,
. This sidebar conference was not transcribed, so Whiting's appellate counsel filed a Motion to Certify a Statement of the Evidence under Indiana Appellate Rule 31, along with a Verified Statement of the Evidence from Whiting's trial counsel. The trial court subsequently issued an order in which it certified some of trial counsel's statements but declined to certify, others, and only this order constitutes part of the record.
See
Ind. Appellate Rule 31(C). Whiting argues that Appellate Rule 31(D) requires us to consider both trial counsel's verified statement and the trial court's certification. But Rule 31(D) does not apply here because the issue is not what the trial judge said or did but what Juror Wright and counsel said or did. To accept Whiting's position that Rule 31(D) applies any time "a party's assertion of the missing evidence differs from the trial court’s,” Appellant’s Reply Br. 3, would negate the certification requirement of Rule 31(C).
Cf. Morse v. State, 274
Ind. 652,
. This appeal concerns only Whiting. In a separate appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed Pijnapples's conviction against a sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge.
Pijnapples
v.
State.
No. 38A05-1008-CR510,
. The Sixth Amendment is applicable to the states through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Duncan v. Louisiana,
. The rule applies in both civil and criminal cases, so it may not always be a defendant seeking to challenge a trial court's denial of a for-cause challenge.
See, e.g., Merritt,
. An "incompetent” juror is one who is removable for cause, while an "objectionable” juror is one who is not removable for cause but whom the party wishes to strike. Id. at 1234 n. 1.
. The main exception is a claim that the court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction, which can be raised at any point during the proceeding and by the court
sua sponte. Freytag,
. In
Martinez-Salazar,
the Court declined to read an exhaustion requirement into Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 24(b) and concluded, in dictum, that a defendant could either use a peremptory curatively or appeal on Sixth Amendment grounds,
. Whiting’s final contention that the exhaustion rule renders appellate review illusory is undercut by the fact that this Court periodically reviews properly preserved claims of this nature.
E.g., Ward,
. Whiting cites
Riggs v. State,
. Thus, Whiting's claim that her default is excusable because the judge was on notice misses the mark.
