In 1974 William R. Phillips was tried and convicted in New York State Supreme Court of two counts of murder and one count of attempted murder. In 1978 he moved to vacate the judgment in state court alleging that his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights were violated by the admission at trial of allegedly immunized testimony. The state judge denied his motion ruling alternatively that Phillips’ claim of immunity was not timely made and that, in any event, the error was harmless. The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Gagliardi, J., denied habeas relief based on the procedural default rule of
Wainwright v. Sykes,
Affirmed.
BACKGROUND
William R. Phillips was a New York City police officer when, in 1971, he agreed to cooperate with the Knapp Commission’s investigation into police corruption. In return, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York allegedly agreed to grant Phillips full transactional immunity for all matters which he might disclose. Later that year Phillips testified at televised hearings conducted by the Commission. A detective watching those hearings noted a resemblance between Phillips and composite sketches of a suspect in the 1968 murders of Jimmy Smith, a pimp and bookmaker, and Sharon Stango, a prostitute. Soon thereafter, several of Smith’s ex-prostitutes and customers identified Phillips as having been acquainted with Smith. Among them was Charles Gonzalez, an eyewitness to the Smith/Stango murders who had also been shot by the suspect.
Phillips was charged by a New York County grand jury with the Smith/Stango murders and the attempted murder of Gonzalez. His first trial in 1972 ended in a hung jury, 10-2 for acquittal. His second trial began in 1974 in the New York State Supreme Court. During the nine week trial, several witnesses testified that Phillips had been extorting money from Smith for many years prior to 1968 and that shortly before the murders Phillips had threatened to “blow Smith’s ... head off” if he did not *46 pay him $1,000. Gonzalez identified Phillips as the man who shot him, Smith and Stango.
Phillips took the stand, denied having committed the murders and offered an alibi defense. He insisted that he had not extorted money from Smith or visited him since the close of the 1965 college football season. On cross-examination, the government introduced a tape recording made in connection with the Knapp Commission investigation in which Phillips admitted to extorting $100 monthly from Smith after 1965. The defense objected on the ground that it had not been afforded a prior opportunity to hear the entire tape. The court admitted the recorded testimony, but ruled that the defense could challenge the integrity of the recording. The jury found Phillips guilty of the Smith/Stango murders and the attempted murder of Gonzalez.
Phillips moved to vacate the verdict on the ground of jury bias because one of the jurors had a job application pending with the District Attorney’s office. This motion was denied and Phillips was sentenced to concurrent terms of 20 and 25 years to life for the murders and 8V3 to 25 years for the attempted murder,
People v. Phillips,
Two years later, in 1978, Phillips moved in state court pursuant to N.Y.Crim.Proc.Law § 440.10 (McKinney 1971) to vacate his conviction claiming, for the first time, that his recorded testimony introduced at the second trial was covered by transactional immunity allegedly granted by the United States Attorney in connection with the Knapp Commission investigation. The state court denied the motion because Phillips had failed timely to raise his immunity claim in accordance with the New York Criminal Procedure Law. Even if his claim had been timely raised, the court questioned whether a United States Attorney could lawfully immunize Phillips from state prosecution and noted that, in any event, the recording was lawfully used for impeachment purposes.
People v. Phillips,
This court denied [Phillips’] motion to vacate on the grounds that his claims of immunity were not timely raised. The court also held, as an alternative ground, that even if defendant had been granted immunity, his recorded testimony was admissible because it was used to impeach him when he took the stand at trial.
Since this court’s decision, the Supreme Court of the United States has held, in State of New Jersey v. Portash, [440 U.S. 450 ,99 S.Ct. 1292 ,59 L.Ed.2d 501 (1978)] that testimony for which a grant of use immunity is given cannot subsequently be [used] to impeach a witness at trial. Defendant now moves for reargument of his motion to vacate on the grounds that the Portash decision invalidates this court’s denial of his motion.
Defendant’s motion to reargue is granted, to the extent that this court acknowledges that the Portash decision prohibits immunized testimony from being used to impeach a witness at trial. However, the major thrust of this court’s decision in its denial of defendant’s motion to vacate was that the defendant’s claims of immunity were not timely made. This holding is unaffected by Por-tash. The court therefore adheres to its original order denying defendant’s motion to vacate. Moreover, the court finds that given the evidence of defendant’s guilt, the use of his recorded testimony was harmless error beyond a reasonable doubt.
Br. of Appellee, App. at 2-3 (emphasis added).
Phillips then filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Judge Pierce granted the writ on the ground of juror bias,
Phillips v.
*47
Smith,
On remand, Judge Gagliardi found that Phillips had forfeited federal habeas review of his immunity claim due to his procedural default. Phillips v. Smith, 552 F.Supp. 653, 656-57 (S.D.N.Y.1982). Finding that Phillips had failed to show cause for his failure to timely raise his immunity claim, Judge Gagliardi denied the petition. Phillips brings this appeal.
DISCUSSION
In
Wainwright v. Sykes,
In this case, the state court held that Phillips had forfeited his constitutional immunity claim because it had not been timely raised. But, the state court also rejected Phillips’ immunity claim on its merits. The state court held in the alternative. Phillips argues that where the state court reaches the merits of a federal constitutional claim despite a procedural default, the cause and prejudice test of Wainwright v. Sykes does not apply. The state responds that an alternative procedural holding provides an adequate and independent state ground for decision having the same preclusive effect under Wainwright v. Sykes as a procedural holding that stands alone. Thus, the issue presented is whether a federal habeas court must apply the cause and prejudice analysis where the state court denied post-judgment relief relying alternatively on procedural grounds and on the merits of the federal constitutional claim. This question is one of first impression in this Circuit although it has been addressed in other circuits with divided results.
On one side of the question are the Fifth, Ninth and Eleventh Circuits. Each of these courts believes that
Wainwright v. Sykes
does not bar federal habeas review of federal constitutional claims unless the state court relied exclusively or solely on the petitioner's procedural default.
See, e.g., Darden v. Wainwright,
On the other side of the question are the Third and Seventh Circuits which hold that the cause and prejudice analysis applies whenever the state court expressly relied on an adequate and independent state proce
*48
dural ground.
See, e.g., United States ex rel. Veal v. DeRobertis,
The district court found most persuasive the Third Circuit’s decision in
United States ex rel. Caruso v. Zelinsky,
which held that “state court reliance on a procedural rule as an alternate holding suffices to implicate the procedural default doctrine.”
We agree and hold that explicit state court reliance on a procedural default bars federal habeas review of the forfeited claim absent a showing of cause and prejudice regardless of whether the state court ruled alternatively on the merits of the forfeited claim. We adopt this rule because it (1) is more consistent with the policies underlying the procedural default rule of Wainwright v. Sykes; (2) is more consistent with the greater weight of courts of appeals decisions; (3) is more consistent with related decisions of this Court and the Supreme Court; and (4) is more logical than the rule advanced by Phillips.
Because the circuits are divided and because there is no controlling precedent from the Supreme Court or from this Court, our inquiry begins with the policies underlying the procedural default rule of
Wainwright v. Sykes. See United States ex rel. Caruso v. Zelinsky,
Both Phillips and the state argue that their position will best advance the goals of comity, finality, accuracy and trial integrity. Phillips contends that comity does not require a federal habeas court to give effect to a state procedural rule if the state court fails to do so. In his view, if the state court elects to address the merits of a defendant’s federal constitutional claim despite his procedural default, a federal habeas court can do likewise without disrespect for comity. This is because when a state court invites federal intervention by ruling on the merits of federal constitutional issues despite a procedural default, it manifests a judgment that the state’s interest in resolving the *49 constitutional question outweighs its interest in finality, accuracy and trial integrity.
The state, of course, interprets Wain wright v. Sykes differently. In its view, the goals of finality, accuracy and trial integrity are best served when state courts are free to dispose of all issues without having to fear federal habeas intervention. The state argues that an alternative disposition on the merits does not undermine the validity, adequacy or independence of the procedural ground.
We believe that the state is correct. Comity requires that federal courts respect state procedural rules to the extent those rules do not unjustly extinguish rights guaranteed by the federal Constitution.
Engle v. Isaac,
The rule advanced by Phillips also runs counter to the goals of finality, accuracy and trial integrity. He asks that we ignore the effect of his noncompliance with New York procedural law because the state court reached the merits of his immunity claim. The state court did not ignore his procedural default, but rather stated explicitly that Phillips had forfeited his immunity claim. With this holding, the state court fully and finally disposed of the issue and clearly demonstrated the importance it attaches to the goals of finality, accuracy and trial integrity. We will not penalize the state court for addressing the merits in the alternative, particularly when it may have done so in order to provide an alternative basis for affirmance in the event the procedural ruling is reversed. Rather than encouraging adjudication of all issues in as few proceedings as possible, Phillips’ position would prolong and fragment the full and final disposition of state criminal cases.
See United States ex rel. Caruso v. Zelinsky,
It is for these same reasons that a majority of courts of appeals addressing this issue have concluded that the cause and prejudice analysis applies whenever the state court relied on a procedural default.
See United States ex rel. Veal
v.
DeRobertis,
Although the Fifth, Eleventh and Ninth Circuits support Phillips’ position, we find their opinions to be less persuasive. The Ninth Circuit in
Bradford
v.
Stone,
594 F.2d
*50
1294 (9th Cir.1979), chose “to
assume
[that] the state’s failure to rest exclusively upon procedural default permits us to reach the federal question.”
Id.
at 1296 n. 2 (emphasis added). The Eleventh Circuit
1
in
Darden v. Wainwright,
The state court in this case denied Phillips’ application for post-judgment relief primarily because he had failed timely to raise his immunity claim.
Cf. Hearn v. Mintzes,
Even if Judge Lang had not expressly stated that the “major thrust” of his decision was Phillips’ procedural default, our decision would be the same. The Supreme Court in
County Court of Ulster County v. Allen,
We recognize the appeal of Phillips’ position. He advocates a bright-line test — if the state court addresses the federal question, its decision is open to federal review. However, the appeal sours when the implications are considered. The Third Circuit recognized in
United States ex rel. Caruso v. Zelinsky
that “[t]here may be occasions when the state courts believe that the interests of justice are better served by denying the [petitioner’s] arguments for both procedural and substantive reasons.”
From our examination of the record, we are satisfied that Phillips has failed to show cause for not timely raising his immunity claim. Phillips contends that because neither he nor his attorneys knew during the second trial that his recorded testimony was covered by a grant of immunity, his failure to object to the admission of that testimony should be excused for cause. In addition, Phillips argues cause in that three Assistant United States Attorneys allegedly told him after his involvement with the Commission had ended that he had not been granted immunity when, in fact, he had. The district court ruled without an evidentiary hearing that Phillips had failed to demonstrate cause because “on the basis of petitioner’s own submissions both here and in the state courts, ... petitioner had knowledge of at least a colorable claim of immunity prior to the commencement of his trial.”
Phillips v. Smith,
We cannot reconcile Phillips’ argument that he lacked sufficient knowledge to inform his counsel of the immunity claim with his own sworn statements establishing just the opposite. Phillips swore in an affidavit accompanying his motion to vacate that he had been advised while working with the Knapp Commission of an agreement between its chief counsel and the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York under which Phillips was to receive full immunity in exchange for his assistance. In addition, Phillips averred that he agreed to have his testimony recorded “with the understanding that
*52
he had full immunity for any and all statements made concerning his past illegal activities.” Michael F. Armstrong, former Chief Counsel of the Knapp Commission, submitted an affidavit accompanying Phillips’ motion in which he states that Phillips’ cooperation was obtained “on the condition that he would be afforded immunity for matters which he described to the Commission.” App. of Appellant at 24. On the basis of these statements, the state court found, the district court agreed and so do we that “long prior to his indictment, the defendant was aware that he had, at least, a colorable claim of immunity.”
Phillips’ additional argument for cause is similarly unavailing. He contends that he failed to raise his immunity claim at trial because three former Assistant United States Attorneys had told him prior to trial that he did not have an immunity claim. Assuming the truth of this allegation, 3 these circumstances do not establish cause for his failure timely to raise the claim because Phillips was aware, despite the alleged misrepresentations, that he had been promised immunity. Because Phillips knew that he had been promised immunity, he has not established cause for his failure timely to raise that claim.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Eleventh Circuit was not free to consider the question at bar as one of first impression. In
Rogers v. McMullen,
. In an analogous context, the Supreme Court will decline to review a state court decision that rests on adequate and independent state grounds. “Respect for the independence of state courts, as well as avoidance of rendering advisory opinions, have been the cornerstones of [the] Court’s refusal to decide cases where there is an adequate and independent state ground.”
Michigan v. Long,
— U.S. —, —,
[W]hen, as in this case, a state court decision fairly appears to rest primarily on federal law, or to be interwoven with the federal law, and when the adequacy and independence of any possible state law ground is not clear from the face of the opinion, we will accept as the most reasonable explanation that the state court decided the case the way it did because it believed that federal law required it to do so.
Id.
at-,
Our inquiry in this case is similar to the question before the Court in Michigan v. Long and we are guided by the Court’s analysis in that case. Since Judge Lang clearly and expressly based his decision primarily on Phillips’ failure timely to raise his immunity claim, we find that the state court’s decision rested on an adequate and independent state procedural ground.
. The only evidence offered in support of this allegation is a letter dated two years after Phillips’ trial from one of the former Assistant United States Attorneys connected with the Knapp Commission investigation in which he advises Phillips that “whatever your immunity status, these tapes would be admissable [sic].” App. of Appellant at 35.
