Libby v. Duval ( 1994 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 93-1588

    CLAYTON LIBBY,

    Petitioner, Appellant,

    v.

    RONALD DUVAL AND SCOTT HARSHBARGER,

    Respondents, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Cyr, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    Patricia A. O'Neill for appellant.
    ___________________
    Elisabeth J. Medvedow, Assistant Attorney General, with whom
    _____________________
    Scott Harshbarger, Attorney General, was on brief for appellees.
    _________________


    ____________________

    March 24, 1994
    ____________________


























    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. In this appeal,
    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.
    _____________________

    Clayton Libby, a Massachusetts state prisoner serving a life

    sentence on a 1971 conviction for murder in the first degree,

    challenges the district court's denial of his petition for a

    writ of habeas corpus. In so doing, petitioner primarily

    contends that the court erred in deeming harmless a jury

    instruction on the issue of malice which set up an

    unconstitutional mandatory presumption. See Sandstrom v.
    ___ _________

    Montana, 442 U.S. 510, 520-24 (1979) (instruction containing
    _______

    presumption which has the effect of relieving the prosecution

    of the burden of proof on an element of a charged crime

    violates the Due Process Clause) (hereinafter "Sandstrom
    _________

    error").1 We affirm.

    I.
    I.
    __

    BACKGROUND
    BACKGROUND
    __________

    Early in the morning of August 9, 1970, Bruce

    Cullen, a New Hampshire resident, was stabbed to death in a

    brawl that erupted outside of a South Boston housing project.

    Petitioner and George Cooper were indicted and tried for the



    ____________________

    1. Petitioner also argues that an instruction on
    manslaughter given at this trial effectuated an
    unconstitutional shift in the burden of proof. As we will
    explain more fully infra in discussing the effects of the
    _____
    presumption-creating instruction, we do not believe it at all
    likely that the jury would have returned a verdict of
    manslaughter even if it had been perfectly instructed. We,
    therefore, regard any error in the manslaughter instruction
    as harmless and confine our discussion to petitioner's claim
    under Sandstrom.
    _________

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    killing. Cooper was acquitted; Libby, however, was convicted

    of murder in the first degree.

    Although the circumstances in which the stabbing

    took place are sketchy, the trial record reveals that, on the

    night of August 8, 1970, petitioner was drinking beer,

    smoking marijuana, and possibly taking diet pills. Sometime

    early in the morning of August 9, 1970, petitioner, along

    with Francis Barton and Kevin Martin, went to George Cooper's

    South Boston apartment building and began to converse with

    Cooper through a rear apartment window. After a while,

    petitioner and Martin walked to the front of the building

    where they met several other men. Included among these men

    were the victim, Cullen, and another New Hampshire resident,

    Dennis Bates.

    At some point, a fight broke out. The reason for

    the fight is not entirely clear, although there was testimony

    indicating that it started simply because Cullen and Bates

    were not from the area. There also was testimony indicating

    that petitioner and Cullen were arguing about whether Cullen

    had been in a certain federal prison. In any event, during

    the course of the fight, Cullen was stabbed nine times. Six

    of the stab wounds were to his chest; the other three were to

    his back or side. One of the chest wounds was to the

    victim's heart, and apparently was delivered by a "downward"

    blow.



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    No witness testified to actually observing the

    stabbing.2 Instead, petitioner was inculpated through the

    testimony of eyewitnesses who observed him both before and

    after the fight. Specifically, there was testimony that,

    inter alia, petitioner (1) had been carrying a knife prior to
    _____ ____

    the fight; (2) was seen running away from the site of the

    fight with blood on his clothes; (3) was seen holding a knife

    shortly after the stabbing; (4) admitted, on several

    occasions after the fight, that he had done the stabbing; and

    (5) made threats against anyone who might "snitch[] on him."

    There also was testimony that petitioner had stabbed Cullen

    because he thought Cullen was "going to jump him from behind"

    and/or because he thought Cullen was "beating up Kevin

    Martin."

    At the conclusion of a seven-day jury trial, the

    trial judge instructed the jury on theories of first degree

    murder,3 second degree murder, and manslaughter. In the


    ____________________

    2. One witness, Mary VanGordon, who lived in a neighboring
    apartment, did testify to seeing Cooper hold the victim while
    a short, stocky man with dark hair (a description that did
    not fit petitioner) thrust an object towards Cullen's stomach
    five times. VanGordon further testified that, after the
    attack, Cooper ran into the hallway of a nearby building
    while the man who had thrust the object towards Cullen's
    stomach ran around to the back of the same building.

    3. The trial court instructed the jury that it could convict
    for first degree murder if it determined, after other
    requisite findings, that the stabbing had been either
    deliberately premeditated or had been committed with extreme
    atrocity or cruelty. A review of the trial record, however,
    reveals that the prosecution relied exclusively on the

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    course of defining malice, which is "the requisite mental

    element" of murder under Massachusetts law, see Commonwealth
    ___ ____________

    v. Huot, 403 N.E.2d 411, 414 (Mass. 1980), overruled on other
    ____ _________ __ _____

    grounds, Commonwealth v. Bray, 553 N.E.2d 538 (Mass. 1990),4
    _______ ____________ ____

    the judge told the jury that "[m]alice is implied in every

    deliberate cruel act by one against another." The jury

    convicted petitioner of first degree murder and recommended a

    sentence of life imprisonment.

    On appeal, petitioner argued, inter alia, that the
    _____ ____

    aforementioned instruction constituted Sandstrom error and
    _________

    required reversal of his conviction.5 More particularly,


    ____________________

    extreme atrocity or cruelty theory in arguing that first
    degree murder had been committed.

    4. Unlawful killings committed without malice are considered
    manslaughter. See Commonwealth v. Todd, 563 N.E.2d 211, 214
    ___ ____________ ____
    (Mass. 1990).

    5. Sandstrom was not decided until eight years after
    _________
    petitioner's conviction. However, because petitioner's
    direct appeal was not perfected until nearly eighteen years
    after his conviction, see Commonwealth v. Libby, 580 N.E.2d
    ___ ____________ _____
    1025, 1026-27 (Mass. 1991) (hereinafter "Libby II")
    _________
    (explaining the neglect by court-appointed counsel, the
    clerk's office, and the prosecutor's office which led to the
    delay in perfecting petitioner's appeal), and because new
    rules announced in Supreme Court decisions apply to all
    criminal cases "pending on direct review or not yet final,"
    Griffith v. Kentucky, 479 U.S. 314, 328 (1987), both the
    ________ ________
    Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ("SJC"), at least in
    Libby II, and the district court treated petitioner's
    _________
    Sandstrom argument as properly raised on direct appellate
    _________
    review. We will do likewise.
    Similarly, although petitioner did not object to
    the challenged instruction at the time it was given,
    Massachusetts has waived its contemporaneous objection rule
    in the Sandstrom error context where the error occurred prior
    _________
    to the Sandstrom decision. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Hill,
    _________ ___ ____ ____________ ____

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    petitioner asserted that the instruction had the effect of

    directing the jury to find malice if it found that petitioner

    had committed a "deliberate cruel" act against the victim

    despite the fact that a "deliberate cruel" act is not

    necessarily malicious. The SJC disagreed, holding: "In the

    context of the facts of this case and in light of the judge's

    entire instruction on malice (which is not otherwise

    challenged), we see neither a substantial likelihood of a

    miscarriage of justice calling for relief . . . nor an

    unconstitutional presumption dictated to the jury."

    Commonwealth v. Libby, 540 N.E.2d 154, 158 (Mass. 1989)
    ____________ _____

    (hereinafter "Libby I"). The SJC then went on to affirm the
    _______

    conviction, although it remanded to the superior court for

    consideration of a previously-filed motion to dismiss the

    indictment on account of delay.

    In August 1990, petitioner's motion to dismiss was

    denied by the superior court. In September 1990, petitioner



    ____________________

    442 N.E.2d 24, 28 n.9 (Mass. 1982), vacated and remanded on
    _______ ___ ________ __
    other grounds, Hill v. Maloney, 927 F.2d 646 (1st Cir. 1990).
    _____ _______ ____ _______
    Because this condition is met, petitioner's failure to object
    at trial does not procedurally bar us, see Wainwright v.
    ___ __________
    Sykes, 433 U.S. 72, 84 (1977) (failure to object at trial as
    _____
    required by a state contemporaneous objection rule
    constitutes "independent and adequate ground" sufficient to
    foreclose federal habeas review of alleged error), from
    reaching the merits of his argument in this instance, cf.
    ___
    Puleio v. Vose, 830 F.2d 1197, 1199 (1st Cir. 1987)
    ______ ____
    (indicating that waiver of state contemporaneous objection
    rule removes procedural bar that ordinarily would preclude
    habeas court from reaching claim on merits where there was no
    objection at trial), cert. denied, 485 U.S. 990 (1988).
    _____ ______

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    6















    filed a timely notice of appeal from this denial. While that

    appeal was pending, this court handed down its decision in

    Hill v. Maloney, 927 F.2d 646 (1st Cir. 1990). See supra
    ____ _______ ___ _____

    note 5. In Hill, we held unconstitutional a jury instruction
    ____

    quite similar to the one here at issue. Id. at 649-51.6
    ___

    Relying on Hill, petitioner argued for a second time to the
    ____

    SJC that his conviction should be set aside because the trial

    judge's instruction had the effect of setting up an

    unconstitutional mandatory presumption. Once again, the SJC

    rejected petitioner's argument and affirmed his conviction.

    See Libby II, 580 N.E.2d at 1028.
    ___ ________

    Finally, petitioner sought relief in the district

    court by means of a writ of habeas corpus. In a

    comprehensive memorandum and order, the court applied the

    three-part test set forth in Hill for review of alleged
    ____

    Sandstrom errors and denied the writ. First, the court
    _________

    determined that the challenged instruction set up an

    unconstitutional mandatory presumption and therefore

    constituted Sandstrom error. See Libby v. Duval, No. 86-
    _________ ___ _____ _____

    2187-WD, slip op. at 8-9 (D. Mass. April 20, 1993)

    (hereinafter "Libby III"); see also Hill, 927 F.2d at 648-49.
    _________ ___ ____ ____

    Next, the court found that the instructions as a whole did

    not sufficiently explain the erroneous instruction on malice,


    ____________________

    6. In Hill, the jury was instructed that "malice is implied
    ____
    from any deliberate or cruel act against another, however
    __
    sudden." Id. at 648 (emphasis added).
    ___

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    and the jury therefore was not properly instructed on the

    law. See Libby III, slip op. at 10-13; see also Hill, 927
    ___ _________ ___ ____ ____

    F.2d at 649. Finally, the court concluded that the

    instruction, although erroneous, was harmless beyond a

    reasonable doubt. See Libby III, slip op. at 13-19; see also
    ___ _________ ___ ____

    Hill, 927 F.2d at 649. It is from this last conclusion that
    ____

    petitioner appeals.

    II.
    II.
    ___

    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    __________

    We agree with the district court that the

    tripartite Hill test applies to the merits of petitioner's
    ____

    claim. Accordingly, we organize our discussion within the

    Hill framework.
    ____

    A.
    A.

    Because the Hill opinion rehearses in great detail
    ____

    the legal standards applicable to challenges to jury

    instructions which set up presumptions, and because

    respondents7 concede that the instruction challenged here

    established a mandatory presumption, we do not believe that

    either a highly detailed discussion of the law of

    presumptions or an extensive explanation of why the




    ____________________

    7. Respondents in this matter are Ronald Duval, the
    Superintendent of the Massachusetts Correctional Institution
    at Cedar Junction, where respondent is being detained, and
    Scott Harshbarger, the Attorney General of the Commonwealth
    of Massachusetts.

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    8















    instruction was defective is required.8 Instead, we think

    it sufficient to note our belief that it was reasonably

    likely that the jurors construed the trial judge's

    instruction as requiring a finding of malice upon a finding

    that the stabbing was "deliberate" and "cruel." See Estelle
    ___ _______

    v. McGuire, 112 S. Ct. 475, 482 (1991) (habeas challenges to
    _______

    jury instructions reviewed for "reasonable likelihood" that

    the jury has applied the challenged instruction in an

    unconstitutional manner). Thus, because the instruction had

    the effect of relieving the prosecution of the burden of

    proof on an element of the crime charged, see Sandstrom, 442
    ___ _________

    U.S. at 520-24, the district court's conclusion that the

    instruction established a mandatory presumption was clearly

    correct. Accordingly, we move to step two of the Hill test.
    ____

    B.
    B.

    Once we have determined that the specific language

    challenged by a petitioner set up a mandatory presumption, we

    consider whether other parts of the instruction explained the

    particular infirm language to the extent that there is no

    reasonable likelihood that the jurors applied the

    unconstitutional presumption. See Boyde v. California, 494
    ___ _____ __________

    U.S. 370, 380 (1990). General instructions regarding the

    presumption of innocence and the government's burden of


    ____________________

    8. Readers interested in such a discussion should review
    both the Hill decision and the Supreme Court's decision in
    ____
    Yates v. Evatt, 111 S. Ct. 1884 (1991).
    _____ _____

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    proving all elements of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt are

    insufficient to fulfill this explanatory role. Id. at 651.9
    ___

    So too are instructions directly contrary to the erroneous

    one which themselves correctly state the law. Id.10
    ___

    Instead, there must be other language in the instructions

    which actually "explains the infirm language sufficiently so
    ________

    that there is no reasonable likelihood that the jury believed

    it must [in the context of an erroneous malice instruction]

    find malice if it found petitioner [acted in such a way so as

    to trigger the unconstitutional presumption]." Id.
    ___

    Respondents contend that four sections of the

    instructions, when taken together, sufficiently explain the

    infirm language. After reviewing these four sections, and

    after further reviewing the instructions as a whole, we

    cannot agree.

    The first two sections adduced by respondents

    involve definitions of malice given prior to the







    ____________________

    9. This is because "`[t]he jury could have interpreted the
    two sets of instructions as indicating that the presumption
    was a means by which proof beyond a reasonable doubt as to
    [malice] could be satisfied.'" Id. (quoting Sandstrom, 442
    ___ _________
    U.S. at 518-19 n.7) (alteration in original).

    10. This is because "`[a] reviewing court has no way of
    knowing which of the two irreconcilable instructions the
    jurors applied in reaching their verdict.'" Id. (quoting
    ___
    Franklin, 471 U.S. at 322) (alteration in original).
    ________

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    unconstitutional instruction.11 In each of these two

    instances, the trial judge correctly instructed the jurors

    that malice was not proved where, among other things, there

    were "extenuating circumstances" sufficient to "reduce the

    crime to manslaughter." At most, we think that these two

    definitions of malice might have allowed the jurors to infer
    _____

    that the presumption set up by the subsequent

    unconstitutional charge could be rebutted in certain

    extenuating circumstances. Cf. id. at 653. We do not,
    ___ ___

    however, see how these definitions could have explained to
    _________

    the jurors that the upcoming instruction was not going to

    mean what it actually and clearly stated. At any rate, we

    reiterate that correct instructions, which directly

    contradict the erroneous instruction, are not sufficient to

    cure the error. See supra at p.10 and note 10.
    ___ _____

    The other two sections cited by respondents are

    less compelling. The first of these two, which again

    preceded the infirm instruction, primarily defined the terms




    ____________________

    11. The first passage relied upon by respondents reads as
    follows: "[M]urder is the killing of a human being without
    legal justification or without excuse or without such
    extenuating circumstances as may reduce the crime to
    manslaughter; but with what is called in the law, malice
    aforethought."
    The second passage is very similar: "Any
    intentional killing of a human being without legal
    justification or excuse and with no extenuating
    circumstances, sufficient in law to reduce the crime to
    manslaughter, is malicious."

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    "aforethought" and "murder."12 The second defined the term

    "premeditated."13

    Both of the passages are jumbled and confusing, especially

    when compared to the short and relatively straightforward

    statement which set up the unconstitutional mandatory

    presumption. Cf. Hill, 927 F.2d at 652 (juxtaposing
    ___ ____

    clumsily-worded correct instruction with clear and concise

    unconstitutional instruction in deciding that correct

    portions of charge as a whole did not negate the effects of

    the presumption-creating language). Moreover, neither

    passage explicitly touched on the concept of malice, except


    ____________________

    12. In its entirety, this section reads:

    If the wicked intent to do injury to
    another person precedes the act by which
    the injury was done, it is malice
    aforethought. If the homicide is
    committed without legal justification or
    that is to say, without due authority of
    law and not in self defense, and there is
    no issue here of self defense, nor in the
    heat of passion on great provocation, but
    with the specific intent to take the one
    killed, or an unlawful act, the natural
    consequence of which would be to deprive
    another person of life, it is murder.

    13. This passage states:

    Because it was a cruel act of the will
    and unlike an intent stimulated by a
    sudden anger or quarrel where someone
    suddenly, not having intended violence
    beforehand, does. It must have been a
    design actually formed and formed upon
    before the act and the murder must have
    been committed pursuant to design or plan
    that has thus been formed.

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    insofar as the first one briefly discussed the "aforethought"

    component of the term "malice aforethought." In light of

    these deficiencies, we do not see how these passages could

    have actually explained the challenged instruction "so as to

    offset any erroneous impression given by [it]." See id. at
    ___ ___

    651.

    Before concluding our analysis of the entire

    charge, we pause to note that, because it was framed in

    irrefutable and unvarying terms ("[m]alice is implied in
    __

    every deliberate and cruel act by one against another"), we
    _____

    think it at least reasonably likely that the challenged

    instruction completely removed the element of malice from the

    case once the Commonwealth established that petitioner had

    acted deliberately and cruelly.14 Therefore, in conducting

    our harmless-error analysis, we will regard the instruction

    as having erected a conclusive mandatory presumption. See
    ___

    Hill, 927 F.2d at 649 n.3 (distinguishing between conclusive
    ____

    mandatory presumptions and rebuttable mandatory

    presumptions).





    ____________________

    14. We concede, as noted earlier, that the jurors might have
    _____
    inferred from the correct definitions of malice that the
    "implication" of malice created by deliberate and cruel acts
    was rebuttable. See supra at p.11. Such a reading would,
    ___ _____
    however, have been quite strained. In any case, we think it
    at least as likely that the jurors ignored the correct malice
    instructions which are facially irreconcilable with the
    challenged instruction. See supra note 10.
    ___ _____

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    In sum, we agree with the district court that the

    charge as a whole did not neutralize the effect of the

    presumption-creating language. Accordingly, the effect of

    the instruction here was unconstitutional.

    C.
    C.

    Having determined that the overall charge did not

    adequately explain the challenged instruction, we still must

    ascertain whether the error was harmless. See id. at 654;
    ___ ___

    see also Sullivan v. Louisiana, 113 S. Ct. 2078, 2082 (1993)
    ___ ____ ________ _________

    (reiterating that Sandstrom error is subject to harmless-
    _________

    error review). In Hill, because the Supreme Court had sent
    ____

    mixed signals regarding the proper harmless-error analysis to

    be employed where there has been a mandatory presumption, we

    applied two separate approaches. First, we looked at the

    trial record as a whole to determine whether it was clear

    "beyond a reasonable doubt" that the error was harmless. See
    ___

    Hill, 927 F.2d at 655 (applying the Chapman v. California,
    ____ _______ __________

    386 U.S. 18, 24 (1967), standard for determining, on direct

    review, whether a conviction must be set aside because of

    federal constitutional error); see also Rose v. Clark, 478
    ___ ____ ____ _____

    U.S. 570, 580-82 (1986) (applying Chapman harmless-error
    _______

    standard to a presumption-creating jury instruction

    challenged on habeas). Alternatively, we utilized a narrower

    approach, derived from Chapman, for analyzing the effects of
    _______

    a conclusive mandatory presumption urged by Justice Scalia in



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    a concurring opinion in Carella v. California, 491 U.S. 263,
    _______ __________

    267-73 (1989) (hereinafter the "Carella test"). See Hill,
    _______ ___ ____

    927 F.2d at 654-56. Under both approaches we determined that

    the error was not harmless. Id. at 657.
    ___

    Since the decision in Hill, however, (and since the
    ____

    district court passed on whether or not the presumption-

    creating instruction was harmless), the Supreme Court has

    issued Brecht v. Abrahamson, 113 S. Ct. 1710 (1993), which
    ______ __________

    clarifies that the two approaches employed in Hill are no
    ____

    longer applicable on collateral review. In Brecht, the
    ______

    Supreme Court announced that the Chapman "harmless beyond a
    _______

    reasonable doubt" test should not be utilized by courts

    reviewing claims of constitutional error of the trial type on

    habeas, id. at 1717; instead, reviewing courts should now
    ___

    look to whether error "`had substantial and injurious effect

    or influence in determining the jury's verdict.'" Id. at
    ___

    1722 (quoting Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. 750, 776
    _________ ______________

    (1946)).

    Petitioner contends that the Brecht approach is
    ______

    inappropriate in the conclusive presumption context. He

    therefore urges us to explicitly adopt the Carella test for
    _______

    determining whether or not an instruction creating such a

    presumption can be viewed as harmless error. In light of the

    clear and uncompromising language employed by the Court in

    Brecht, we decline to do so.
    ______



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    The issue presented in Brecht was whether the
    ______

    prosecutor's use of petitioner's post-Miranda silence for
    _______

    impeachment purposes at petitioner's trial, which violated

    petitioner's due process rights under Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S.
    _____ ____

    610 (1976) (hereinafter "Doyle" error"), was harmless. In
    _____

    concluding that it was, the majority decided, as we have

    noted, that the Kotteakos harmless-error standard was the
    _________

    appropriate lens through which to view the claim on habeas.

    See Brecht, 113 S. Ct. at 1722. In so doing, the Court
    ___ ______

    departed from the approach taken in certain other habeas

    cases where it had assumed the applicability of the Chapman
    _______

    standard. Id. at 1718 (citing Yates v. Evatt, 111 S. Ct.
    ___ _____ _____

    1884 (1991); Rose v. Clark, 478 U.S. 570 (1986); Milton v.
    ____ _____ ______

    Wainwright, 407 U.S. 371 (1972); Anderson v. Nelson, 390 U.S.
    __________ ________ ______

    (1968) (per curiam)).

    In conducting its analysis, the Court began by

    observing that Doyle error fit into the category of
    _____

    constitutional error known as "trial error." See Brecht, 113
    ___ ______

    S. Ct. at 1717. These are errors which "`occur[] during the

    presentation of the case to the jury,' and [are] amenable to

    harmless error analysis because [they] `may be quantitatively

    assessed in the context of other evidence presented in order

    to determine the effect [they] had on the trial.'" Id.
    ___

    (quoting Arizona v. Fulminante, 499 U.S. 279, 307-08 (1991)).
    _______ __________





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    Errors of the trial type have, since Chapman, been reviewed
    _______

    under the "harmless-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt" standard.

    The Court also noted that, at the other end of the

    spectrum of constitutional errors are "`structural defects in

    the constitution of the trial mechanism, which defy analysis

    by `harmless-error' standards'. . . because they infect the

    entire trial process." Id. (quoting Fulminante, 499 U.S. at
    ___ __________

    309). Listed as an example of such a structural defect was

    deprivation of the right to counsel. Id. (citing Gideon v.
    ___ ______

    Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (1963)).
    __________

    After reaching this conclusion, and determining

    that neither the doctrine of stare decisis nor congressional
    _____ _______

    silence prevented it from considering the merits of

    respondent's argument that the Kotteakos standard, and not
    _________

    the Chapman standard, should be employed in determining
    _______

    whether the Doyle error was harmless, see generally id. at
    _____ ___ _________ ___

    1718-19, the Court turned to an analysis of whether the

    Chapman standard appropriately served certain interests
    _______

    implicated in habeas cases but not in the direct review

    context whence it sprang. Pointing to (1) the state's

    interest in finality of convictions that have survived direct

    review within the state court system; (2) the interests of

    comity; (3) the interests of federalism; and (4) the interest

    of maintaining the prominence of the trial itself, the Court

    decided that application of the Chapman standard to trial
    _______



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    17















    errors challenged on habeas resulted in an "imbalance of . .

    . costs and benefits." Id. at 1721. Accordingly, the Court
    ___

    embraced the less onerous Kotteakos standard, holding that it
    _________

    applies "in determining whether habeas relief must be granted

    because of constitutional error of the trial type." Id. at
    ___

    1722. Like the Chapman test, this "actual prejudice" inquiry
    _______

    presumes that the reviewing court will conduct its

    harmlessness assessment "in light of the record as a whole."

    Id.
    ___

    After Brecht, we think it apparent that the
    ______

    question of whether to apply the Kotteakos test in conducting
    _________

    our harmless error inquiry turns on whether the conclusive

    presumption here at issue constitutes "trial error." Despite

    the force of some of our dissenting brother's arguments, we

    are constrained by the Supreme Court's teaching that it

    should be so considered. See Arizona v. Fulminante, 499 U.S.
    ___ _______ __________

    279, 306-07 (1990) (citing Carella). Thus, we train our
    _______

    sights on whether, in light of the whole record, respondents

    have met their burden15 of demonstrating that the


    ____________________

    15. We acknowledge that the majority opinion in Brecht
    ______
    treats the burden as petitioner's. See Brecht, 113 S. Ct. at
    ___ ______
    1722. Nonetheless, as Justice Stevens, who provided the
    crucial fifth vote in Brecht, convincingly explains in his
    ______
    concurring opinion, the Kotteakos test requires that the
    _________
    party arguing the harmlessness of an error which tends to
    prejudice a litigant's "substantial rights" (as all
    constitutional errors surely do) must bear the burden of
    proof. Id. at 1723-24 and n.1 (Stevens, J., concurring).
    ___
    Given this authority, and given the further fact that there
    appear to be five votes for this position and only four votes

    -18-
    18















    conclusive presumption did not actually prejudice petitioner

    because it did not have a substantial and injurious effect or

    influence in determining the jury's verdict. In our view,

    respondents have met their burden.

    The thrust of petitioner's harmfulness claim is not

    that, in the absence of the conclusive presumption, he would

    have been acquitted. Rather, petitioner's argument is that

    the conclusive presumption precluded the jury from convicting

    him of manslaughter on a theory of "sudden combat." See
    ___

    Commonwealth v. Richard, 384 N.E.2d 636, 638 (Mass. 1979)
    ____________ _______

    (the presence of sudden combat constitutes a mitigating

    circumstance sufficient to reduce a verdict of murder to

    manslaughter under Massachusetts law). While we concede (1)

    that there was evidence (i.e., the testimony that petitioner
    ____

    stabbed Cullen because he thought Cullen was "going to jump

    him from behind" and/or because he thought Cullen was

    "beating up Kevin Martin") which might conceivably have
    _____

    provided a basis for the jury to have concluded that the

    government had not proved an absence of sudden combat; and

    (2) that the conclusive presumption tended to deter the jury

    from considering this evidence, see Yates, 111 S. Ct. at 1894
    ___ _____

    n.10 (conclusive presumptions tend to deter a jury from

    considering any evidence for the presumed fact beyond the



    ____________________

    for placing the burden on petitioner, we will regard the
    burden of proof as resting upon the respondents.

    -19-
    19















    predicate evidence), we think it extremely unlikely that the

    jury would have relied on this evidence and returned a

    verdict of manslaughter. Mary VanGordon testified that the

    stabbing was administered while the victim was being held by

    another man. Moreover, the evidence reveals that the victim

    was stabbed nine times, with six of the stab wounds being
    ____

    delivered to the chest area. In our view, such evidence,

    when combined with the fact that the defense never

    specifically argued a sudden combat theory to the jury,16

    strongly undermines any claim that petitioner was, throughout

    the entirety of the stabbing, acting in response to sudden

    combat.

    We do not believe that the erroneous instruction

    had a substantial and injurious effect or influence on the

    jury's verdict. Accordingly, we affirm the district court's

    conclusion that the instructional error was harmless.17

    Affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    _________



    CYR, Circuit Judge (concurring): Although I share
    CYR, Circuit Judge (concurring):
    ______________

    my dissenting brother's belief that the Carella concurrence
    _______



    ____________________

    16. It is clear from the record that petitioner focused his
    defense efforts on arguing that the prosecution did not
    establish beyond a reasonable doubt that he was, in fact, the
    stabber.

    17. In so ruling, we express no opinion as to the district
    court's conclusion that the error here was harmless even
    under the Chapman standard.
    _______

    -20-
    20















    articulates compelling grounds for more narrowly confining

    "harmless error" review of a jury instruction mandating a

    conclusive presumption, I join the majority opinion because I

    am satisfied that the review required by the Court in Brecht
    ______

    encompasses the entire record.

    Dissent follows.
    Dissent follows.









































    -21-
    21















    Stahl, Circuit Judge, dissenting. I agree with the
    _____________

    majority that the instruction challenged here had the effect

    of setting up a conclusive presumption which was not

    explained away by the totality of the charge. I further

    agree with the majority that conclusive presumptions can

    constitute harmless error. However, I cannot agree with the

    method of harmless-error analysis employed by the majority

    and with its conclusion that the presumption-creating

    instruction was harmless. Accordingly, I respectfully

    dissent.

    A.
    A.
    __

    In concluding that it is "extremely unlikely that

    the jury would have relied on [the unconsidered sudden

    combat] evidence and returned a verdict of manslaughter," see
    ___

    ante at 19, the majority significantly expands the contours
    ____

    of harmless-error analysis. For, implicit in this facially

    uncontroversial statement are two radical assumptions: (1)

    that, in the habeas context, reviewing courts now are obliged

    to supply missing factual findings; and (2) that, in the

    habeas context, reviewing courts can and should rely upon

    evidence that the jury did not consider. In my opinion,

    neither assumption can be squared with settled authority

    interpreting the Sixth Amendment jury-trial right and the Due

    Process Clause.





    -21-
    21















    As the Supreme Court has made clear in a series of

    recent decisions, an instruction setting up a mandatory

    presumption engenders an error different in nature than the

    more typical form of constitutional error -- improperly

    admitted evidence and/or improperly allowed argument. A

    mandatory presumption directs the jury to presume an element

    of the crime charged upon finding only certain predicate

    facts. See, e.g., Sandstrom, 442 U.S. at 517. This, of
    ___ ____ _________

    course, directly violates a criminal defendant's due process

    rights to have the prosecution prove all elements of the

    offense charged, see Sullivan v. Louisiana, 113 S. Ct. 2078,
    ___ ________ _________

    2080 (1993) (citing Patterson v. New York, 432 U.S. 197, 210
    _________ ________

    (1977) and Leland v. Oregon, 343 U.S. 790, 795 (1952)), and
    ______ ______

    to have the prosecution persuade the factfinder beyond a

    reasonable doubt of the facts necessary to establish each of

    those elements, id. at 2080-81 (citing In re Winship, 397
    ___ _____________

    U.S. 358, 364 (1970) and Cool v. United States, 409 U.S. 100,
    ____ _____________

    104 (1972) (per curiam)). It also, in my view, tends to

    undermine the Sixth Amendment jury-trial right. See
    ___

    generally Carella, 491 U.S. at 268-69 (Scalia, J.,
    _________ _______

    concurring); cf. Sullivan, 113 S. Ct. at 2080 (discussing
    ___ ________

    Sixth Amendment right to have the jury, and not the judge,

    make the requisite finding of guilt).

    A conclusive mandatory presumption, as
    __________

    distinguished from a rebuttable mandatory presumption, has a



    -22-
    22















    further pernicious effect. By directing, without the

    possibility of rebuttal, the jury to find the elemental fact

    merely upon finding certain predicate facts, it "tend[s] to

    deter a jury from considering any evidence for the presumed

    fact beyond the predicate evidence." Yates, 111 S. Ct. at
    _____

    1894 n.10. Indeed, given the "sound presumption of appellate

    practice[] that jurors are reasonable and generally follow

    the instructions they are given," id. at 1893, a reviewing
    ___

    court must assume that the jury did not consider evidence
    ____

    beyond that relating to the predicate facts, because "to do

    so would be a waste of the jury's time and contrary to its

    instructions," id. at 1894 n.10; see also Carella, 491 U.S.
    ___ ___ ____ _______

    at 269 (Scalia, J., concurring).

    All of this is not to say that a conclusive

    presumption can never be harmless error. What is does mean,

    however, as Justice Scalia convincingly demonstrates in his

    concurrence in Carella, is that "the harmless-error analysis
    _______

    applicable in assessing a mandatory conclusive presumption is

    wholly unlike the typical form of such analysis." Id. at
    ___

    267. Whereas it makes sense in the case of the more typical

    form of constitutional error -- improperly admitted evidence

    and/or improperly allowed argument -- to perform the type of

    whole-record "quantitative assessment" outlined in Brecht
    ______

    (and, incidentally, also outlined in Chapman) in order "to
    _______

    determine whether the fact supported by [the] improperly



    -23-
    23















    admitted evidence [or improperly allowed argument] was in any

    event overwhelmingly established by other evidence," see id.,
    ___ ___

    such an inquiry makes no sense where the error is not that

    the jury may have been swayed by tainted information, but

    rather is that the jury failed to consider relevant evidence

    and failed to make a required finding, id. at 267-69. For,
    ___

    as Justice Scalia explains:

    [Such] problem[s] would not be cured by
    an appellate court's determination that
    the record evidence unmistakably
    established guilt, for that would
    represent a finding of fact by judges,
    not by a jury. As with a directed
    verdict [for the State, which is
    constitutionally impermissible, see
    ___
    United States v. Martin Linen Supply Co.,
    _____________ _______________________
    430 U.S. 564, 572-73 (1977)], "the error
    in such a case is that the wrong entity
    judged the defendant guilty."

    Id. at 269 (quoting Rose v. Clark, 478 U.S 570, 578 (1986)).
    ___ ____ _____

    Thus, the proper question for the reviewing court "`is not

    whether guilt may be spelt out of a record, but whether guilt

    has been found by a jury according to the procedure and

    standards appropriate for criminal trials.'" Id. (quoting
    ___

    Bollenbach v. United States, 326 U.S. 607, 614 (1946)).
    __________ _____________

    With these principles in mind, Justice Scalia has

    proposed a test for determining whether, despite the presence

    of a conclusive presumption, a particular case presents a

    "`rare situation[]'" where "`[a] reviewing court can be

    confident that [such a presumption] did not play any role in

    the jury's verdict.'" Id. at 270 (quoting Connecticut v.
    ___ ___________


    -24-
    24















    Johnson, 460 U.S. 73, 87 (1983) (plurality opinion)).
    _______

    Seeking to avoid the specter of factfinding by reviewing

    courts on the basis of evidence the jury never considered,

    the Carella test does not direct courts to ascertain whether
    _______

    the presumed fact was otherwise established to varying

    degrees by the evidence (as the Brecht and Chapman tests
    ______ _______

    would do). Rather, the test instructs reviewing courts to

    ask (1) whether the instruction established a conclusive

    presumption on a charge which did not affect other charges

    and on which the defendant was acquitted; (2) whether the

    instruction established a conclusive presumption with respect

    to an element of the crime which the defendant admitted; or

    (3) whether

    the predicate facts relied upon in the
    instruction, or other facts necessarily
    found by the jury, are so closely related
    to the ultimate fact to be presumed that
    no rational jury could find those facts
    without also finding that ultimate fact,
    making those findings [the] functional[]
    equivalent to . . . the element required
    to be presumed.

    Id. at 271. If the answer to any of these three questions is
    ___

    "yes," the error is harmless. See id. Because this test
    ___ ___

    faithfully preserves a criminal defendant's Sixth and

    Fourteenth Amendment rights to have an impartial jury make
    ____

    the requisite factual and elemental determinations in his/her

    trial, and because it provides assurance that reviewing

    courts will consider only the evidence that the jury



    -25-
    25















    considered, I would apply this test rather than the ill-

    defined harmless-error test that the majority employs today.

    B.
    B.
    __

    Before applying the Carella test to this case, I
    _______

    feel it appropriate to respond to the arguments against the

    Carella test and in favor of the whole-record approach
    _______

    outlined in Brecht. Obviously, the most potent of these
    ______

    arguments is the one relied upon by the majority: that the

    whole-record Brecht analysis applies to "trial errors," that
    ______

    the Supreme Court, in a string citation in Fulminante,
    __________

    indicated that a conclusive presumption is "trial error," and

    that we therefore are obliged to conduct our harmlessness

    review in light of the whole record.

    I will admit that the Court's characterization of a

    conclusive presumption as "trial error" in Fulminante is
    __________

    troublesome; indeed, I think this case well illustrates

    Justice White's criticism of the "trial error"/"structural

    error" dichotomy. See Fulminante, 499 U.S. at 291 (White,
    ___ __________

    J., dissenting in part) (arguing that, in assessing whether

    harmless-error analysis ought to be applied, courts should

    disregard the trial error/structural error distinction and

    instead "consider[] the nature of the right at issue and the

    effect of [the] error upon the trial"). Despite the

    aforementioned indication to the contrary, the presence of a

    non-harmless (as determined by the Carella test) conclusive
    _______



    -26-
    26















    presumption strikes me as a type of "structural error." See
    ___

    Carella, 491 U.S. at 268 (Scalia, J., concurring) ("The
    _______

    constitutional right to a jury trial embodies a profound

    judgment about the way in which law should be enforced and

    justice administered. It is a structural guarantee that
    __________ _________

    reflects a fundamental decision about the exercise of

    official power -- a reluctance to entrust plenary powers over

    the life and liberty of the citizen to one judge or to a

    group of judges.") (emphasis supplied) (citations and

    internal quotation marks omitted); cf. Sullivan, 113 S. Ct.
    ___ ________

    at 2083 (denial of the right to a jury verdict of guilt

    beyond a reasonable doubt is a structural error).

    In my view, however, whether we label a conclusive

    presumption trial error, structural error, or something in

    between is of no consequence; what matters instead is that we

    apply the appropriate form of harmless-error review in

    assessing the effects of that presumption. Applying a whole-

    record review not only ignores the considerations outlined in

    Part A. of this dissent, but it also ignores two indications

    by Supreme Court majorities, subsequent to Fulminante, that
    __________ __________

    the Carella analysis is properly employed by courts reviewing
    _______

    presumptions. See Sullivan, 113 S. Ct. at 2082 (indicating,
    ___ ________

    in the direct review context, that Carella provides the
    _______

    proper framework for determining whether or not a mandatory

    presumption was harmless); Yates, 111 S. Ct. at 1894 n.10
    _____



    -27-
    27















    (implicitly endorsing, in the habeas context, the Carella
    _______

    test as a means for evaluating whether or not a conclusive

    presumption was harmless). One might argue that Yates has
    _____

    been superseded by Brecht, and that Brecht did not control in
    ______ ______

    Sullivan because Sullivan was a direct review case. In
    ________ ________

    response, I would point out that Chapman, which did control
    _______

    in Yates and would have controlled in Sullivan had the error
    _____ ________

    therein been deemed amenable to harmless-error review,

    contemplates a whole-record review every bit as much as

    Brecht does; nonetheless, the Court has made clear in the
    ______

    Chapman context that, when confronted with presumption error,
    _______

    the typical form of whole-record analysis does not apply.

    Thus, I read the string citation in Fulminante as merely
    __________

    indicating that a conclusive presumption is amenable to

    harmless-error review. I do not read it as stating that such
    ___

    a presumption is subject to the usual whole-record harmless-

    error test applicable to most other forms of trial error.

    It might also be argued that the Carella test
    _______

    derives from Chapman, see Carella, 491 U.S. at 271 (Scalia,
    _______ ___ _______

    J., concurring) (noting that if the Carella test is met,
    _______

    "[t]he error is harmless because it is `beyond a reasonable

    doubt' that the jury found the facts necessary to support the

    conviction") (citing Chapman, 386 U.S. at 24), and that the
    _______

    replacement of Chapman with Brecht on habeas means that the
    _______ ______

    Carella concurrence has no relevance in habeas cases. In
    _______



    -28-
    28















    response, I would concede that the Carella test can be
    _______ ___ __

    theoretically viewed as "deriving from" Chapman. In my view,
    _______

    however, the Carella concurrence can just as easily and
    _______

    fairly be read as (1) explaining that a conclusive

    presumption sets up an error which tends to undermine a

    structural guarantee of the Constitution and which only can

    be harmless in those "rare" circumstances where the

    presumption did not play "any role" in the jury's verdict;

    (2) setting forth the test for determining whether the error

    played any such role; and (3) noting, in conclusion and

    without prior reference to Chapman, that when the Carella
    _______ _______

    test is met, the Chapman test also is met. In light of this,
    _______

    and because abandoning Carella necessarily means that we must
    _______

    welcome factfinding by habeas courts on the basis of evidence

    the jury did not consider, I prefer the latter reading.

    A third argument might be that, in Yates, the
    _____

    Supreme Court has already ratified factfinding by habeas

    courts. My response to such an argument simply would be that

    I agree. As I see it, the Yates test for reviewing the
    _____

    effects of rebuttable mandatory presumptions, which

    impermissibly shift the burden of proof from the prosecution

    to the defendant, does, despite the Supreme Court's

    indications to the contrary, reek of factfinding by reviewing

    courts. Cf. generally Yates, 111 S. Ct. at 1898 (Scalia, J.,
    ___ _________ _____

    concurring in judgment) (explaining that, when a jury has



    -29-
    29















    been directed to apply a rebuttable mandatory presumption, it

    has never found that the prosecution proved the element on

    which the presumption was erected beyond a reasonable doubt).

    However, as Justice Scalia notes in his Carella concurrence:
    _______

    It is one thing to say that the effect of
    th[e] erroneous burden-shifting
    [effectuated by a rebuttable presumption]
    will be disregarded if the record
    developed at trial establishes guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt; it is quite
    another to say that the jury's failure to
    make any factual determination of the
    ___
    elemental fact -- because of a conclusive
    presumption resting upon findings that do
    not establish beyond a reasonable doubt
    the elemental fact -- will be similarly
    disregarded.

    Carella, 491 U.S. at 273 (Scalia, J., concurring) (internal
    _______

    quotation marks omitted) (arguing the particular propriety of

    the Carella test to the conclusive presumption context).
    _______

    Thus, I do not think that the Yates test can and should be
    _____

    read as implicitly endorsing the type of factfinding the

    majority engages in today.

    Finally, one might argue, as does the Brecht
    ______

    majority, that wholesale use of the Brecht test promotes the
    ______

    principles of restraint, often couched in terms of "comity"

    and "federalism," underlying the Supreme Court's more recent

    habeas jurisprudence. In response, I could only agree if

    "restraint" is defined solely in terms of state prisoners not

    being granted very many writs of habeas corpus. For, I think

    it obvious that factfinding on the basis of record evidence



    -30-
    30















    that the jury never considered cannot be cited as evidence of

    judicial restraint. So too do I think it obvious that

    principles of comity and federalism should never require the
    _____

    continued incarceration of a state prisoner who was not

    afforded his/her constitutional rights to have an impartial

    jury make the requisite factual and elemental determinations

    in his/her trial just because a federal judge or a panel of

    federal judges believe that guilt is "likely" spelt out by

    the record. Cf. Bollenbach, 326 U.S. at 614.
    ___ __________

    C.
    C.
    __

    Application of the Carella test to the case at bar
    _______

    easily yields the conclusion that the error here was not

    harmless.18 I start from the premise that the question of

    whether an unlawful killing constitutes murder or

    manslaughter turns on whether or not the killing was

    committed with malice. See ante note 4. "An intention to
    ___ ____

    inflict injury on the victim which is not justified on any

    lawful ground or palliated by the existence of any mitigating
    __ _________ __ ___ _________ __ ___ __________

    circumstances is malicious within the meaning of the law."
    _____________

    Commonwealth v. Colon-Cruz, 562 N.E.2d 797, 808 (Mass. 1990)
    ____________ __________



    ____________________

    18. Obviously, petitioner neither was acquitted of the
    charge on which the presumption was set up nor admitted at
    trial that if he did the stabbing, he did so maliciously.
    Thus, I restrict my inquiry under Carella to whether the
    _______
    predicate facts relied upon in the instruction, or other
    facts necessarily found by the jury, are so closely related
    to malice that no rational jury could have found those facts
    without also finding malice.

    -31-
    31















    (emphasis supplied) (quoting Commonwealth v. McGuirk, 380
    ____________ _______

    N.E.2d 662, 666-67 (Mass. 1978), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 1120
    _____ ______

    (1979)); see also Reddick v. Commonwealth, 409 N.E.2d 764,
    ___ ____ _______ ____________

    769 (Mass. 1980) (malice and the presence of legal mitigation

    are "mutually exclusive"). The presence of "sudden combat"

    constitutes a mitigating circumstance sufficient to negate

    malice and to reduce a verdict of murder to manslaughter

    under Massachusetts law. See Richard, 384 N.E.2d at 638; cf.
    ___ _______ ___

    Commonwealth v. Nardone, 546 N.E.2d 359, 364 (Mass. 1989)
    ____________ _______

    (distinguishing between assault with intent to murder and

    assault with intent to kill). And, when such a mitigating

    circumstance is adequately raised in the evidence (as sudden

    combat was here), the Commonwealth must prove the absence of

    this circumstance beyond a reasonable doubt. See
    ___

    Commonwealth v. Nieves, 476 N.E.2d 179, 182 (Mass. 1985)
    ____________ ______

    (citing Mullaney v. Wilbur, 421 U.S. 684, 697-98 (1975) and
    ________ ______

    Commonwealth v. Stokes, 374 N.E.2d 87, 94 (Mass. 1978)).
    ____________ ______

    As the majority opinion states, it is at least

    reasonably likely that the jurors, on the basis of the

    challenged instruction, found malice solely upon finding that

    petitioner stabbed the victim deliberately and cruelly. The

    foregoing authority, however, makes clear that deliberate and

    cruel behavior is not necessarily tantamount to malicious

    behavior. To be specific, the stabbing here could have been

    both deliberate and cruel, but administered in response to



    -32-
    32















    sudden combat, of which there is evidence in this record.

    Thus, I cannot say that, in this instance, "the predicate

    facts relied upon in the instruction, or other facts

    necessarily found by the jury, are so closely related to the

    ultimate fact to be presumed that no rational jury could find

    those facts without also finding that ultimate fact."

    Carella, 491 U.S. at 271. Accordingly, the error had a
    _______

    "substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining

    the jury's verdict." The petition, therefore, should be

    granted.19




















    ____________________

    19. Even were I to employ the deferential standard of review
    the majority utilizes, I could not join the majority opinion.
    As I have explained, the error committed here had the effect
    of deterring the jury from considering evidence of sudden
    combat. Yet, there was an abundance of such evidence;
    indeed, it is undisputed that the stabbing took place in the
    midst of a drunken melee. In light of this, and in light of
    the further fact that the Commonwealth bore the burden of
    proving an absence of sudden combat beyond a reasonable
    doubt, see Nieves, 476 N.E.2d at 182, I am at a loss to see
    ___ ______
    how the error can be viewed as harmless even under Brecht.
    ______

    -33-
    33