Lead Opinion
Robert Wilkerson was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1975. Prior to the conviction’s becoming final, the United States Supreme Court declared Louisiana’s jury selection system unconstitutional but declined to apply the ruling retroactively.
Fourteen years later, after significant revision of retroactivity jurisprudence by the Court, Wilkerson unsuccessfully sought post-conviction relief, claiming, inter alia, that he was indicted by a grand jury that unconstitutionally excluded women. Wilkerson then brought a habeas corpus action in federal district court, which also denied relief. Concluding that we may apply retroactively neither the Supreme Court’s rule declaring unconstitutional Louisiana’s system of exempting women from jury venires nor modern retroactivity rules themselves, we affirm.
I.
Wilkerson and his codefendant, Grady Brewer, currently inmates at the Louisiana State Penitentiary, were indicted in September 1973 for second-degree murder. They moved to quash the indictment on the ground that the grand jury venire contained no women, and consequently none served on the grand jury that indicted them.
Wilkerson’s second trial (on the same indictment) began on January 15, 1975. The same attorney represented him in both trials. Again he was convicted, and he appealed.
A panel of this court, bound by circuit precedent in Leichman v. Secretary, La. Dep’t of Corrections,
II.
A.
Wilkerson argues that he should receive the benefit of Taylor because the decision was announced before his conviction became final. The panel assumed that a decision declaring unconstitutional Louisiana’s petit jury selection system would also apply to grand juries. Id. at 65 (“Wilkerson was indicted by a grand jury that unconstitutionally excluded women-”). We do not find it necessary to decide whether this assumption is valid, as we resolve this case by applying Daniel, as we explain infra. Nonetheless, we explore the assumption to show that there is a colorable argument that a holding regarding the exclusion of women from grand juries would constitute a new rule.
If our decision here would be the first time a court had declared Louisiana’s former grand jury system unconstitutional, arguably we would be declaring a new rule. If so, Wilkerson could not take advantage of it, as his direct appeal long ago became final.
1.
The Taylor Court limited its holding to petit jury selection and did not announce a rule about the exclusion of women from grand juries.
In Alexander v. Louisiana,
2.
“[A] case announces a new rule when it breaks new ground or imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government.” Teague,
3.
The right to trial by jury finds its constitutional bases in article III, § 2, cl. 3, of the Constitution (“The Trial of all Crimes ... shall be by Jury_”) and the Sixth Amendment (“In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a ... trial[ ] by an impartial jury-”). The Founding Fathers obviously considered the right to a jury trial of paramount importance; Hamilton called this right “the very palladium of free government.” The FEDERALIST No. 83, at 499 (Alexander Hamilton) (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961); see also Letter from Richard Henry Lee to Edmund Randolph (Oct. 16, 1787) (describing trial by jury as “this great security of human rights”). Colonial revolutionaries listed in the Declaration of Independence the deprivation of the right as a grievance against England. And, as Joseph Story noted in the Commentaries on the Constitution,
[Trial by jury] was from very early times insisted on by our ancestors in the parent country, as the great bulwark of their civil and political liberties, and watched with an unceasing jealousy and solicitude....
... “A celebrated French writer, who concludes, that because Rome, Sparta, and Carthage have lost their liberties, therefore those of England in time must perish, should have recollected, that Rome, Sparta, and Carthage, at the time, when their liberties were lost, were strangers to the trial by jury.”
3 Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution, §§ 1773-1774 (1833) (quoting Justice Blackstone).
The right to indictment by a grand jury finds its constitutional basis in the Fifth Amendment (“No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on ... indictment of a Grand Jury_”). In contrast to the right to trial by jury, the right to grand jury indictment received liftle attention at the Constitutional Convention. The provision does not prevent states from instituting prosecutions without
By the end of the nineteenth century, many states had abandoned the grand jury system and amended their constitutions to allow the initiation of prosecution by information. Currently, only twenty-three states require indictment by grand jury, four of which require an indictment only in cases punishable by life imprisonment or death. 1 SARA S. Beale & William C. Bryson, Grand Jury Law & PRACTICE § 2.04 (1986).
The grand jury determines (by majority vote
Despite these differences, the Supreme Court has said that “[t]he principles that apply to the systematic exclusion of potential jurors on the ground of race are essentially the same for grand juries and for petit juries.” Alexander,
4.
Although an exemption for women seems archaic and even offensive by today’s standards, we present the foregoing discussion to show that there is a colorable argument that, at the time Taylor was decided, Taylor did not dictate the result Wilkerson seeks to employ. If the result was not dictated, Wilkerson could not, under Teague, benefit even if it were squarely announced today that the former Louisiana grand jury provision was unconstitutional. And, as the following discussion concludes, even if the result was dictated, Daniel bars its application in this case. Accordingly, we pretermit the new-rule issue and decide this case on the basis of the applicability of Daniel.
B.
Even if Taylor dictates the result here— and Louisiana’s grand jury selection system was unconstitutional — we still must resolve whether Wilkerson can take advantage of that result under Griffith and Teague. We conclude that he may not.
In Leichman, a panel of this court held that a habeas petitioner could take advantage of the rule announced in Taylor before his
Although bound by Leichman to grant ha-beas relief, another panel in Williams v. Whitley,
In Williams, Judge Higginbotham, writing for the panel, discussed the retroactivity issue at length. See id. at 234-36. The petitioners in Williams presented the same claims Wilkerson now asserts. “Recognizing that they would have been entitled to new trials had Griffith governed questions of ret-roactivity at the time Taylor was decided, [the petitioners] asserted they should now be given the benefit of that decision because Griffith had ‘overruled’ Daniel.” Id. at 230. The panel observed that the petitioners sought to apply selectively the law prevailing at the time their convictions became final, as they wanted to invoke Taylor but avoid Daniel. Id. at 235.
Wilkerson follows Williams and Fulford in arguing that Griffith overruled Daniel. As Judge Higginbotham stated, however, “absent clear indications from the Supreme Court itself, lower courts should not lightly assume that a prior decision has been overruled sub silentio merely because its reasoning and result appear inconsistent with later cases.”
In his en bane brief, Wilkerson makes four arguments regarding the grand jury. He contends, first, that the state waived the retroactivity defense; second, that Griffith overruled Daniel; third, that Griffith should apply retroactively; and fourth, that his claim is independent of Taylor.
1.
Wilkerson claims that the state waived the retroactivity defense. Because Griffith’s nonretroactivity doctrine is nonjurisdictional, Collins v. Youngblood,
It is true that the state failed to raise this issue in its original brief and failed to attend oral argument before the panel. Nonetheless, we elect to reach the retroactivity issue, first because we have discretion to do so, arid second because it was the primary reason given by the district court for its judgment. This case has been about retroactivity from its inception; this question demands resolution.
2.
The crux of Wilkerson’s argument is that Leichman was correctly decided, because Griffith overruled Daniel. As stated in Williams, however, this argument is flawed.
In Linkletter v. Walker,
The Court determined that the Linkletter analysis applied both to convictions that were final and to those pending on direct review. Johnson v. New Jersey,
Griffith overruled Linkletter’s retroactivity test (as clarified by Johnson v. New Jersey, Stovall, and Desist) by creating a bright-line rule that applies new rules to all cases not yet final. This line of cases had established the test for how to apply new constitutional decisions. On the other hand, cases such as Daniel merely applied the test to particular new constitutional rules. Thus, while Griffith changed the methodology for determining retroactivity, it did not abrogate the results of the prior retroactivity test. In the absence of explicit language overruling eases such as Daniel, we must assume that these results are still valid as to those new rules for which retroactive application was rejected.
Wilkerson argues that Griffith “accuses Daniel by name.” But Griffith mentions Daniel only as a case applying the Linkletter /Stovall retroactivity analysis. Wilkerson argues that the Williams panel was mistaken in concluding that the Supreme Court has “given no indication Daniel is no longer good law.” Significantly, however, Teague cites Daniel, apparently with approval: “[b]ut as we stated in Daniel, which held that Taylor was not to be given retroactive effect....” Teague,
Of course, Daniel does not reflect the current state of the law. In the absence of Linkletter and Stovall, the Daniel court presumably would have reached a contrary result. But the question is whether, for eases on collateral review, to apply the Daniel rule or the Griffith rule to cases not yet final when Taylor was announced.
Teague instructs us to ‘“apply the law prevailing at the time a conviction became
3.
In a conceptually similar line of reasoning, Wilkerson argues that Griffith should itself apply retroactively. He relies upon Penry v. Lynaugh,
Although the Penry Court did not explain its reasoning, Wilkerson argues that the retroactive application of a retroactivity rule does not raise the problems voiced in Teague concerning the state’s interest in finality. He contends that a retroactivity rule imposes no new obligations on law enforcement or on the judicial system. Moreover, Wilkerson points out that in the only five cases where the issue of the retroactivity of Griffith has come up, the courts applied Griffith retroactively.
We reject this argument for four reasons. First, Penry dealt with a capital murder habeas petitioner whom in 1980 the trial
Second, the Court concluded that the relief Penry sought was not a “new rule,” because it did not impose a new obligation on the state, as the obligation to present special issues to the jury already existed in Jurek v. Texas,
Third, Wilkerson claims that the retroactive application of a retroactivity rule does not impair a state’s interest in finality. But a retroactivity rule is exactly the type of decision that would seriously disrupt a state’s interest in finality: If the laws of retroactivity change, any future decision conceivably could be employed by a habeas petitioner, regardless of how long ago his appeal became final. Depending upon the change in the retroactivity rule, convictions could be subject to collateral attack indefinitely.
As Judge Higginbotham notes, “the Court has made plain that the rule established in Teague is asymmetric, cutting only one way — in the state’s favor.” Patrick E. Higginbotham, The Future of Habeas Corpus: Reflections on Teague v. Lane and Beyond, 66 Cal.L.Rev. 2433, 2440 (1993) (citing Lockhart v. Fretwell, — U.S. —, —,
Thus, Teague acts as a substantial limitation on the availability of habeas relief by protecting the state’s interest in finality. The retroactive application of Griffith unavoidably would upset that interest. See supra note 11. As this court explained in Williams,
And fourth, even if, arguendo, we were to conclude that in Penry,
We are not called upon here merely to determine which retroactivity principles to apply to a new rule. Instead, we are bound by stare decisis. The specific question of whether a particular new rule (Taylor) should be applied retroactively has already been resolved by Daniel. Thus, retroactive application of Griffith is blocked by Daniel.
In other words, where a determination of retroactivity has been made for a particular new rule, stare decisis prohibits revisiting the question with new retroactivity principles. In every case cited by Wilkerson, the court applied Griffith retroactively where no specific ease precluded the result by deciding the retroactivity of the new rule. Here, Daniel blocks that result. This distinction defeats Wilkerson’s argument.
4.
Finally, Wilkerson argues opaquely that the right to a fair cross-section of the community in state grand juries was firmly rooted before Taylor. This argument seeks to avoid the Daniel bar because the relief Wilkerson wants would be dictated by earlier authorities, not by Taylor. And the argument avoids the Teague bar because he claims the relief is dictated by these earlier cases (so that no new rule would be announced today by declaring the grand jury system unconstitutional).
The problem with this analysis is that earlier eases do not necessarily dictate that Louisiana’s grand jury exemption of women was unconstitutional, see supra part II.A., and, to the extent that Taylor dictates the result, Daniel would bar the application of the rule, and Teague would prohibit us from ignoring Daniel. Wilkerson cites Smith v. Texas,
The closest the Supreme Court has come to declaring unconstitutional Louisiana’s grand jury selection system is Taylor, which held the state’s petit jury selection system unconstitutional. Although the same system was used to select both petit and grand juries, the constitutional rights that attach to each vary. Accordingly, these earlier grand jury cases do not come close to dictating the result Wilkerson seeks, so the result is barred by Daniel and Teague,
In summary, the pivotal issue in this ease is whether Daniel was overruled. Since the Supreme Court has never explicitly overruled Daniel, it is still valid, but only, as here, where habeas petitioners seek to take advantage of the rule announced in Taylor but whose convictions became final before Griffith. Even if Daniel was overruled, the retroactive application of Griffith is barred by Teague.
Daniel is a specific case that reaches a specific result regarding a particular new rule. We are not free merely to apply the modern set of retroactivity principles instead of the old ones. We would have to ignore not only the square holding of Daniel, but the Teague ban on retroactive application of new rales on collateral review. Finding that result impermissible, we overrule Leichman v. Secretary, La. Dep’t of Corrections,
IV.
Wilkerson raises several other assignments of eraor. These issues were adequately addressed by the panel opinion. In all respects other than as to matters discussed herein, the panel opinion is reinstated. The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Louisiana did not exclude women from grand juries but merely provided them with an exemption. At the time of Wilkerson’s trial, the state constitution provided that "no woman shall be drawn for jury service unless she shall have previously filed with the clerk of the District Court a written declaration of her desire to be subject to such service.” La. Const, art. VII, § 41 (repealed eff. Jan. 1, 1975).
. Griffith v. Kentucky,
.
. J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B., - U.S. -,
. See 2 The Debates in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution as Recommended by the General Convention at Philadelphia in 1787, at 109 (Jonathan Elliot, ed., 1888) (remarks of Mr. Holmes at Massachusetts Ratifying Convention, Jan. 30, 1788).
. Most states that require a grand jury indictment require only a majority or supermajority vote; three states may require a unanimous vote, depending upon the number of jurors. 1 Beale & Bryson, supra, § 2.04. A federal grand jury must have an affirmative vote of at least 12 of the 16 to 23 jurors to indict. Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(a)(1), (f).
. Take, for example, then-justice Rehnquist’s dissent in Taylor, tie would have required a showing of prejudice to the defendant by the exemption of women from service.
. Id. (citing Rodriquez de Quijos v. Shearson/Am. Express, Inc.,
. See Kuhn v. Fairmont Coal Co.,
. See supra note 8.
. Wilkerson’s argument, if accepted, would prove too much. Logically, if Griffith controls instead of Daniel, it also controls instead of the following cases: Johnson v. New Jersey,
. Wiley v. Puckett,
. Although the Penry Court purported to apply Griffith retroactively, see
. Furthermore, the retroactive application of Griffith would violate Teague because it would be applying a new rule on collateral review. We decline to follow the other circuits that implicitly, and perhaps inadvertently, have applied Griffith retroactively. See supra note 12.
In his well-intentioned concurrence, Judge Parker does not appear to recognize that it is in fact Griffith that constitutes the "new rule" that we may not apply on collateral review, under Teague, because Griffith was announced in 1987, well after Wilkerson's conviction became final in 1976. Thus, when Judge Parker quotes Teague for the proposition that " 'new constitutional rules of criminal procedure will not be applicable to those cases which have become final before the new rules are announced,' " special concurrence, infra at 511 (quoting Teague,
Judge Parker would have us fashion, out of whole cloth, a third Teague exception for habeas petitioners whose convictions became final after some directly relevant Supreme Court decision was announced, but before Griffith, unless a ret-roactivity "companion case" (such as Daniel) blocked the result. We find no support for this third exception in Teague or elsewhere.
. Moreover, even if we applied these earlier cases to provide the relief Wilkerson seeks, we would still be bound by Teague to apply the retroactivity rules at the time the conviction became final. Under Linkletter, the then-binding authority on retroactivity, the result would not have been applied retroactively.
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
Judge Smith’s thorough and commendable attempt to navigate through retroactivity jurisprudence with a less than consistent Supreme Court roadmap leaves me in agreement with the result obtained and with some of the reasons for the result. Yet I am sufficiently troubled by other reasoning in the opinion that I have found myself constrained to the options of concurring in the result only or writing a special concurrence. I choose the latter.
I agree with the majority’s assumption that the “Taylor rule” applies to the grand jury context. In my view, the Fourteenth Amendment’s equal protection clause undoubtedly requires a fair cross-section of the community with respect to grand juries. There may be no requirement for states to utilize grand juries, but when they do, this fair cross-section requirement exists. Because I see no legitimate basis for distinguishing between petit and grand juries in this regard, I agree with the majority’s course in this particular case — of assuming that Taylor applies to grand juries.
I cannot, however, join the majority’s position about the nonretroactivity of Griffith. In addition to reversing the law in the Fifth Circuit, the majority’s conclusion that Teague v. Lane bars the retroactive application of the approach to “new rule” retroactivity embraced in Griffith places this Circuit at odds with all of the other circuits that have addressed the issue and with the Supreme Court. The First Circuit in Hill v. Maloney,
Penry’s conviction became final on January 13, 1986, when this Court denied his petition for certiorari on direct review of his conviction and sentence. This Court’s decisions in Lockett v. Ohio and Eddings v. Oklahoma were rendered before his conviction became final. Under the retroac-tivity principles adopted in Griffith v. Kentucky, Penry is entitled to the benefit of those decisions.
Penry,
The majority takes the position that the Supreme Court does not mean what it says in Penry — because, given that the case rules to which Mr. Penry claimed entitlement were announced before his trial even started, their retroactivity was not really in issue and thus Gñffith was not squarely implicated. Majority Opinion at 507 n. 13 (“Although the Penry Court purported to apply Griffith retroactively, ... it did not appear actually to do so. It granted relief based upon Lockett and Jurek, both of which were decided before Penry’s trial began.”). The majority’s characterization of Penry in this respect is incomplete. It is accurate as far as Lockett and Jurek are concerned. However, the Penry Court gives at least equal billing to Ed-dings — which came down in 1982, after the start of Mr. Penry’s trial but nonetheless before his conviction and sentence became final.
We could of course debate whether the Eddings decision announces a “new rule” or whether it merely reaffirms and refines the rule of Lockett. Essentially, such a debate would be a replay of the one that took place between the majority and dissenting opinions in Eddings itself. But Eddings certainly seems to fit the majority’s understanding of what constitutes a “new rule.” See Majority Opinion at 5699 (“If the conclusion is ‘susceptible to debate among reasonable minds,’ the ... decision is a new rule, even if ‘controlled’ or ‘governed’ by the earlier decision.”) (quoting Butler v. McKellar,
At any rate, the Penry Court relies heavily upon Eddings in order to provide relief to Mr. Penry, and it applies Griffith retroactively in order to do so. If the Penry Court had viewed only Lockett and Jurek as important to its holding, and not Eddings, the Court knew how to say so. Instead, Penry’s plain language clarifies the Court’s intention that Griffith be given retroactive application to habeas petitioners claiming the entitlement to benefit from “new rules” announced before their convictions and sentences became final. I think we must take the Supreme Court at its word, rather than effectively “picking and choosing” the Supreme Court precedents we will and will not faithfully follow.
The majority views this case as presenting a choice between Daniel and Griffith, apparently concluding that the two cases are in conflict. I see no such conflict as these opinions relate to Mr. Wilkerson’s case.
Mr. Wilkerson was in the state’s direct review system, after his jury had been empaneled but before his case had become final, when the Taylor was announced by the Supreme Court. Six days after announcing Taylor, the Court rendered its decision in Daniel — specifically holding that the “Taylor rule” should be applied only to cases in which the juries had not yet been empaneled at the time Taylor was decided. In United States v. Johnson,
In my view, the “Griffith” retroactivity approach to “new rule” entitlement claims applies to all eases that were not yet final at the time the “new rule” in question was announced, unless (pursuant to Johnson) the issue of the new rule’s retroactivity is already settled by precedent — that is, by a specific, retroactivity-focused, companion case. It matters not to this analysis whether one raises entitlement to the benefit of a “new rule” by way of direct review or by waf of collateral attack. See e.g., Teague, supra,
The majority effectively holds that, in any circumstance, Teague bars the retroactive application of the “Griffith” retroactivity approach to eases that are on collateral review. This holding stretches Teague beyond its elastic limits. Teague itself says:
We ... now adopt Justice Harlan’s view of retroactivity for cases on collateral review. [That is,] [u]nless they fall within an exception to the general rule, new constitutional rules of criminal procedure will not be applicable to those cases which have become final before the new rules are announced.
Teague, supra,
The law appears settled. Assuming no specific, retroactivity-focused “companion case” exists to foreclose application, the following represent the “seldom” areas in which “new rules” are to be applied on § 2254 collateral review:
1. cases not yet final when the “new rule” was announced;
2. eases that had become final before the “new rule” was announced, but which concern a “new rule” that places “certain kinds of primary, private individual eon-duct beyond the power of the criminal lawmaking authority to proscribe;”
and
3.cases that had become final before the “new rule” was announced, but which concern a “new rule” requiring the observance of “those procedures that ... are ‘implicit in the concept or ordered liberty.’ ”
See Teague, supra,
Thus, in light of Johnson, supra, I agree with the majority that Daniel prevents Mr. Wilkerson from benefiting from the Taylor rule. I regret that the majority has found it necessary to commit the Fifth Circuit to the lonely and novel position that Teague effectively forecloses the collateral application of the “Griffith ” approach to “new rule” retro-activity questions — even when the “new rule” in issue was announced before the petitioner’s case became final; and even when there is no specific, retroactivity-focused, “companion case” foreclosing such application.
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
I concur in the judgment on the sole grounds that the doctrine of stare decisis commands that Daniel v. Louisiana,
