Lead Opinion
Petitioner William James Rummel appeals the district court’s denial of habeas corpus relief from state confinement. He complains that the enhanced sentence he received constituted cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the eighth amendment and that his court-appointed attorney rendered ineffective assistance of counsel in violation of his sixth amendment rights. Because we hold that Rummel’s life sen
In January 1973, a Texas grand jury indicted Rummel for the felony offense of obtaining $120.75 under false pretenses. The indictment also charged him with having two prior felony convictions: In 1964 he presented a credit card with the intent to defraud of approximately $80, and in 1969 he passed a forged instrument with a face value of $28.36. Rummel pled not guilty to the false pretense indictment, but a jury found him guilty as charged. After the state proved his two prior convictions, Rummel received an enhanced sentence of life imprisonment under the Texas habitual criminal statute then applicable, Tex. Penal Code Ann. art. 63 (Vernon 1925).
Article 63 requires the trial court to sentence a defendant to life imprisonment upon a third conviction for any felony, without consideration of any lesser penalty. On its face, this statute does not violate the eighth amendment. Spencer v. Texas,
In addition to limiting the kinds of punishment that a state may impose and placing substantive limits on what a state may declare criminal and punish as such, the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause proscribes amounts of punishment which are grossly disproportionate to the severity of the crime. Ingraham v. Wright,
[T]he existence of the death penalty [as punishment acceptable under the Constitution] is not a license to the Government to devise any punishment short of death within the limit of its imagination.
[T]he severity of the penalty, in the case of a serious offense, is not enough to invalidate it where the nature of the penalty is rationally directed to achieve the legitimate ends of punishment.
Coker involved capital punishment, but that is not the only sentence which can be disproportionate. A sentence to imprisonment for life is surely not so lenient as to be unquestionably proportional under the eighth amendment wherever a state might impose it. Texas points out that a life sentence under its law amounts to less than a life sentence because a prisoner becomes eligible for parole after serving 20 years. With good conduct credit, eligibility accrues in 12 years; and with trusty status, in ten years. Texas argues that we should view its recidivist statute as a requirement that a defendant with two or more prior felonies prove himself within the prison system to achieve early release. Therefore, since a well-behaved prisoner could receive a term not grossly disproportionate for one committing a third offense, Texas argues that this court should not equate Rummel’s sentence with one for actual incarceration for life.
The grant or denial of parole by a state, in the absence of some unusual circumstance, is not reviewable in federal court. If Rummel’ has a constitutional right not to be committed to prison for the remainder of his life to punish his offenses, then Texas may not deprive him of that right by suggesting it may be willing to interdict its denial by the future exercise of discretion which we have characterized as a matter of administrative grace.
In most jurisdictions, a sentence to imprisonment for life now stands in the place where the death penalty stood earlier in this century — the ultimate punishment imposed by this society for those crimes most abhorrent to it. Therefore, the question of the proportionality of Rummel’s life sentence to the crime of which he was convicted deserves a consideration which may be unnecessary for a lesser sentence.
Rummel draws support for his eighth amendment claim from Hart v. Coiner,
The analysis in Hart is not inconsistent with our prior applications of the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause. We have held that a punishment violates the eighth amendment only if it “is so greatly disproportionate to the offense committed as to be completely arbitrary and shocking to the sense of justice.” Rogers v. United States,
The factors set forth in Hart have been central to the Supreme Court’s major decisions applying the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause, although the Court has not applied them as systematically as did the Fourth Circuit. The nature of the crime figures prominently in Coker v. Georgia,
In considering the constitutionality of Rummel’s sentence, we look first to the nature of the crimes for which he was convicted. Our prior cases found this factor alone determinative where one or more offenses forming the basis for the sentence involved violence, a potential for violence, or a strong social interest. In Yeager v. Estelle,
None of Rummel’s offenses present exacerbating factors justifying a severe penalty. Considered in combination, Rummel’s crimes, although felonies under Texas law, lack those indicia of depravity generally associated with felonies and the heinousness of the offenses for which life imprisonment is a common punishment. They were substantially separated in time. None involved violence or the potential of violence. Each was solely a property crime and the amounts taken were not substantial.
Second, we consider the legislative objective in making the conduct a punishable offense. Here the inquiry seeks to determine whether a significantly less severe punishment could achieve the purposes for which the challenged punishment is inflicted. Hart, supra,
The Texas recidivist statute aims at protecting citizens from incorrigible repeat offenders. While Rummel’s offenses merit punishment, not only individually but also because of their cumulative impact, they hardly suggest that he presents such a threat to society as to call forth its harshest penalty short of death. Whether a particular punishment is grossly disproportionate to a rational penological objective is best answered by the last points of the Hart analysis, which compare the punishment imposed with available penalties for other offenses and with penalties in other jurisdictions.
Compared with those statutory punishments for violent felonies for which Texas does not bind the trial court’s hand in granting leniency, the punishment indiscriminately imposed on Rummel is too harsh. In combination, Rummel’s deceitful acts deprived his victims of approximately $230. The record suggests that no harmful consequences beyond the loss of the money itself flowed from his offenses. Intervening action by the Texas legislature underscores the relatively trivial nature of Rummel’s third offense, because Texas law now treats a first offense of theft by false pretext only as a misdemeanor.
Comparing Rummel’s sentence with the sentence imposed in other jurisdictions for similar offenses, confirms the gross disproportionality between his crime and his sentence.
.Our assessment of Rummel’s sentence in light of the Hart factors leads us to conclude that imposing a life sentence for these three crimes is so grossly disproportionate to the offenses as to constitute cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the eighth amendment. Rummel’s offenses involved no special factor sufficient to call forth so severe a sentence. The legislative objective of punishing recidivists certainly is legitimate. However, in view of the dramatically lower minimum penalties that Texas imposes upon defendants who commit even the most violent crimes short of capital murder and even upon defendants with a second conviction and a prior offense involving violent second-degree felonies, it clearly appears that a significantly less severe penalty would fulfill the legislative objectives of protecting citizens and deterring crime. The recent reclassification of Rummel’s third offense as a misdemeanor under Texas law buttresses this view. That at most two other states and perhaps none would require life imprisonment for a defendant in Rummel’s circumstances confirms the constitutional disproportionality of the sentence given Rummel.
Rummel maintains that a finding that the Texas habitual criminal statute violates the eighth amendment requires his immediate release. He points out that because a jury sentenced him, Texas law requires a trial de novo in which he may elect to be tried under the new Texas Penal Code, which classifies his third offense as a misdemeanor. Even if he were to receive the maximum sentence as a repeat misdemeanant, he would have served his sentence already. We do not pass upon this theory, but leave the question for the courts of Texas to decide.
We add an important caveat to our holding that the Texas habitual criminal statute, as applied to Rummel in this instance, violates the eighth amendment. Today’s precedent signals no beginning for appellate review of judicial sentencing discretion. We expressly recognize both that the prerogative to fix sentence ranges for proscribed criminal conduct belongs to the legislative and not the judicial branch and that it is extremely broad. We hold only that it is not unbounded. We overturn this non-discretionary judicial action in applying an inflexible legislative edict because it can be objectively demonstrated to be grossly disproportionate to any rational penological objective to be served in this particular case.
The decision of the district court is reversed with directions to grant a writ of habeas corpus for the release of Rummel, unless within 60 days the state of Texas shall resentence him to punishment according to Texas law but not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED with directions.
Notes
. Article 63 provides:
Whoever shall have been three times convicted of a felony less than capital shall on such third conviction be imprisoned for life in the penitentiary.
With slight rewording, the new Texas Penal Code preserves the provisions of Article 63, now codified as Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 12.-42(d) (Vernon 1974).
. A state may apply a concededly valid statute in a particular case in such a way as to violate provisions of the Constitution. Edwards v. South Carolina,
. But cf. Ingraham v. Wright,
. Brown v. Kearney,
It is no answer to suggest that the sentence imposed may never be carried out in fact, because the threat itself makes the punishment obnoxious. Trop v. Dulles,
. Cf. Hall v. McKenzie,
. Capuchino v. Estelle,
. See, e. g, Coker v. Georgia,
. The Circuit which decided Hart has taken a similarly restrictive view of the sorts of crimes for which a life sentence can give rise to more than a frivolous claim of constitutional disproportionality. Griffin v. Warden,
Courts applying Hart have overturned few sentences. Davis v. Zahradnick,
. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.03 (Vernon 1974) defines capital murder. Id. § 12.31 sets the punishment at life imprisonment or death.
. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 12.32 (Vernon 1974) punishes first-degree felonies with a prison sentence of 5 to 99 years. Murder, id. § 19.02, aggravated rape, id. § 21.03, and arson, id. § 28.02, are among the crimes treated as first-degree felonies.
. Aggravated kidnapping, Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 20.04 (Vernon 1974), rape, id. § 21.03, voluntary manslaughter, id. § 19.04, and burglary, id. § 30.02(a)-(c) are second-degree felonies, punishable under id. § 12.33 for a prison term of from 2 to 20 years. Under id. § 12.-42(b), a defendant convicted of his second felony in the second degree is punished as a first-degree felon, thereby requiring a 5-year minimum sentence under id. § 12.32.
. Under the new Texas Penal Code, theft of $120 by false pretext constitutes a Class A misdemeanor. Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 31.-03(b)(1) & (d)(3) (Vernon 1974 & 1977 Supp.). A Class A misdemeanor carries a maximum jail term of one year, id. § 12.21. This legislative change suggests that Rummel’s offense ranked low in the hierarchy of felonies under Texas law, although standing alone it has little persuasive value. Capuchino v. Estelle,
. This is not a search for a norm or a demand for conformity in these diverse jurisdictions. Some states might validly impose an uncustomarily harsh sentence for an offense not regarded so seriously in others where it has a larger interest in controlling that deviation. It also may impose a stiffer penalty where an offense, non-serious in itself, forms part of a pattern of conduct which is a particular problem for that state. Crimes involving dangerous drugs may fall in this category. None of Rummel’s offenses presents such an interest.
. Under Indiana’s new statute, the sentencing court adds a 30-year additional term to the maximum sentence imposed upon a third-time felon. Ind.Code Ann. § 35-50-2-8 (Burns 1977 Supp.). West Virginia’s recidivist statute remains on the books, but Hart limits its application. W.Va.Code § 61-11-18. Although most
In addition to Indiana, Washington, and West Virginia, the following state statutes appear to require the strictest mandatory punishment for one in Rummel’s situation: N.C.Gen.Stat. §§ 14-7.1, -7.6 (20-year minimum); Okla.Stat. Ann. tit. 21, § 51 (West) (20 years plus maximum for third offense). Several states provide for a ten-year minimum for a third offense and a few provide for a mandatory life sentence for a fourth felony conviction.
. In State v. Lee,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
With deference, I must dissent.
Perhaps, if I were the prosecutor, I would not have sought an indictment charging the defendant with an habitual count; if I were a state lawmaker I would vote to amend the statute so that it would not be applied as has been done here; or if I were governor of the State of Texas, I would consider the petitioner a prime candidate for clemency. But I do not hold these offices and my decision must be guided by the eighth amendment rather than my feelings of compassion and justice. In that amendment, I find nothing that compels the result reached by the majority.
The majority accepts Rummel’s argument that a life sentence is so grossly disproportionate to the crimes he committed that it cannot withstand an eighth amendment attack. To reach that result the majority focuses on the small amount of money involved and the asserted triviality of all of Rummel’s offenses. But Rummel was not sentenced to life imprisonment for stealing $230.00; the life sentence resulted from his having committed three separate and distinct felonies under the laws of Texas. If the state is entitled to characterize a particular criminal act as a felony,
While it is well-settled that the eighth amendment circumscribes legislative power to punish crime,
In doing so, the majority deprecates the state’s interest in protecting its citizens from the repetition of property crimes. Having found that Rummel was not “depraved,” “heinous,” or “incorrigible,” the majority facilely submits that he does not pose such a threat to society to merit life imprisonment. In spite of an attempt to limit this case through an “unconstitutional-as-applied approach,” the result of its conclusion will surely be an attack on the habitual offender statute in every instance of its attempted application to property crime. However, nothing in the court’s opinion informs state prosecutors, courts, or legislatures of the possible limits of error.
Moreover, today’s decision signals a departure from longstanding precedent in this circuit. In Rogers v. United States,
This Circuit has long followed the principle that a sentence within the statutory limits set by a legislature is not to be considered cruel or unusual, (citations omitted). A sentence of thirty years is within the range of punishment prescribed by the Texas Penal Code for a second offense of possession of marijuana.
If the majority’s analysis is correct, Rummel’s case is indeed the “easy” one in which to apply it. Here the court faces an individual charged with what may seem to many to be insignificant offenses when the spotlight is on the amount of money involved. Surely the principle of decision cannot be the dollar sign, and the court gives no other, indication where the line is to be drawn. Whatever sociological analysis I might apply to this case, I cannot avoid the conclusion that with this decision we stand on the brink of the “slippery slope” in its most classic sense. For that reason I cannot add my voice to that of the majority and must respectfully — but firmly — DISSENT.
ON PETITION FOR REHEARING AND PETITION FOR REHEARING EN BANC
Before BROWN, Chief Judge, THORN-BERRY, COLEMAN, GOLDBERG, AINS
BY THE COURT:
A member of the Court in active service having requested a poll on the application for rehearing en banc and a majority of the judges in active service having voted in favor of granting a rehearing en banc,
IT IS ORDERED that the cause shall be reheard by the Court en banc with oral argument on a date hereafter to be fixed. The Clerk will specify a briefing schedule for the filing of supplemental briefs.
. The state’s right to categorize an offense as a felony and to determine appropriate punishment in the first instance is beyond dispute. That this is so is demonstrated by the variety of statutory schemes relating to the type of offenses for which Rummel received habitual criminal treatment. Not only do some statutes retain the technical common law distinctions, compare Fla.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 812.021 (grand larceny statute) with Ga.Code Ann. 26-1803, et seq. (theft statutes), but the dollar amounts necessary to comprise a felony offense vary considerably. See Alabama Code Ann., Tit. 14, § 331 (Cum.Supp.1973) (felony to take personal property worth more than $25.00); Fla.Rev. Stat.Ann. § 812.021 (felony to take property worth more than $100 or of an aggregate value of $200 in a twelve month period); Miss.Code Ann. § 97-17-41 (felony to take property worth more than $100). Thus I assume that Texas’ right to impose a monetary boundary on felony offenses could not have been challenged by the petitioner. That Texas has since raised that limit is irrelevant. Prior law in this circuit so dictates. In Capuchino v. Estelle,
. Spencer v. Texas,
. The majority embraces the disproportionality rationale of Hart v. Coiner, supra, because it “applies objective criteria” to eighth amendment determinations. With due respect to my colleagues, I find no such objectivity in today’s decision. The first of the four criteria requires a court inquiry into the “nature of the crime.” The characterization of Rummel’s crimes as minor property offenses is a subjective one based on the majority’s decision that there simply was not enough money involved to permit the state to exact a life imprisonment. For many $200.00 is not an insignificant sum of money. To state that a crime is one against property does not dispose of the difficulty involved in these cases. That difficulty is apparent in later Fourth Circuit decisions. Two years after Hart was written, its own author refused to apply it in Griffin v. Warden, West Virginia State Penitentiary,
These and grand larceny are serious offenses that clearly involved the potentiality of violence and danger to life as well as property. Whether or not Griffin may be actually deserving of such extreme punishment is not within our province to decide; .
See also Wood v. State of South Carolina,
. See Ingraham v. Wright,
. See also Yeager v. Estelle,
