Mullis v. Lumpkin ( 2022 )


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  • Case: 21-70008      Document: 00516449512         Page: 1     Date Filed: 08/26/2022
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit                              United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 21-70008                      August 26, 2022
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Travis James Mullis,
    Petitioner—Appellant,
    versus
    Bobby Lumpkin, Director,
    Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Correctional Institutions Division,
    Respondent—Appellee.
    Application for Certificate of Appealability from
    the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    USDC No. 3:13-CV-121
    Before Smith, Higginson, and Willett, Circuit Judges.
    Jerry E. Smith, Circuit Judge:
    Travis Mullis sexually assaulted and murdered his infant son. A Texas
    jury convicted him of capital murder. The jury found that Mullis likely would
    commit future violent acts and that nothing mitigated his culpability. So the
    trial court sentenced him to death.
    Mullis neither appealed that conviction and sentence nor timely filed
    a state habeas petition. He nevertheless filed a federal habeas petition asking
    the district court to disregard or excuse his procedural default. The district
    Case: 21-70008      Document: 00516449512          Page: 2    Date Filed: 08/26/2022
    No. 21-70008
    court refused, dismissed his petition, and denied him a certificate of appeal-
    ability (“COA”).
    Mullis asks this court for a COA. He presents three reasons for disre-
    garding or excusing his procedural default. Two are foreclosed by precedent.
    One potential excuse is debatable by reasonable jurists, so we grant the COA
    in part.
    I.
    A.
    After Mullis’s conviction, the trial court appointed two attorneys to
    represent him—one for a direct appeal and another for a state habeas petition.
    Mullis’s direct-appeal counsel moved for a new trial. But a month later, Mul-
    lis asked the trial court to let him appear pro se to waive his rights to direct
    review. He told the court that his direct-appeal counsel had advised him not
    to do that but that he was doing so anyway “voluntarily, intelligently[,] and
    knowingly, and with a full appreciation of the direct and collateral conse-
    quences of his actions.”
    The trial court held a hearing on Mullis’s motion to proceed pro se in
    his direct appeal. Mullis’s direct-appeal counsel attended the hearing. He
    explained that although he disagreed with Mullis’s decision, he had “ex-
    plained the consequences” of proceeding pro se and that Mullis had a “ra-
    tional [and] factual understanding” of what he was doing. Mullis also clari-
    fied that he wished to withdraw his motion for a new trial. The trial court
    allowed him to withdraw the motion and appear pro se.
    At that hearing, Mullis also indicated that he would try to waive habeas
    review. He said he was “abandon[ing] any and all challenges to his conviction
    and death sentence.” But there was not yet any procedural mechanism by
    which he could do that. Texas habeas petitioners can waive collateral review
    only by letting the filing deadline pass. Ex parte Reynoso, 
    257 S.W.3d 715
    , 720
    2
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    n.2 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (per curiam). And that deadline was still months
    away.
    Under Texas law, capital cases automatically are directly reviewed by
    the Court of Criminal Appeals (“CCA”). 1 So despite Mullis’s attempted
    waiver, the CCA reviewed his case and summarily affirmed the conviction
    and sentence. 2
    A few months after the trial court had allowed Mullis to represent him-
    self on direct appeal, Mullis persuaded his habeas counsel that he wished to
    waive collateral review. His habeas counsel then moved to do that, contingent
    on a mental health evaluation. A psychiatrist examined Mullis and concluded
    that he “possesse[d] sufficient present ability to knowingly, intelligently, and
    voluntarily waive his rights to post-conviction habeas review.” The trial court
    held a hearing to discuss the motion and the psychiatrist’s report.
    At the hearing, Mullis’s habeas attorney said he had “strenuously ob-
    jected” to Mullis’s attempt to waive his collateral review. He explained that
    his team had spent the last six months thoroughly investigating Mullis’s case,
    which had included interviewing members of his family. But he did not object
    to the content of the psychiatrist’s report.
    Mullis testified that he wanted to waive collateral review because he
    had “accepted” the jury’s punishment. But his habeas counsel told the court
    to account for Mullis’s age, pointing out that “most 25-year-olds probably
    don’t know exactly what they want.” Mullis countered, “I’ve thought about
    this for the three years leading up to trial, already anticipating the sentence
    1
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 37.071 § 2(h) (West, Westlaw through
    2021 3d C. Sess.).
    2
    Mullis v. State, No. AP-76,525, 
    2012 WL 1438685
    , at *1 (Tex. Crim. App. Apr. 25,
    2012) (per curiam).
    3
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    before it came. . . . I’ve had time since then to do legal research.” He said he
    understood that his waiver would stop his lawyers from “trying to find some-
    thing that might change the ultimate outcome” of his case.
    Mullis’s intransigence prompted his attorney to change tack. He
    pointed out that the deadline for Mullis’s habeas petition was still at least two
    months away. So he asked for an extension to let Mullis think things over.
    Mullis grudgingly accepted the delayed waiver decision but insisted that his
    counsel should be released immediately. The court granted the extension and
    said it would take the representation matter under advisement.
    The court released an order the next day. It allowed Mullis to “act pro
    se regarding any decisions concerning waiver [or] filing a post-conviction writ
    of habeas corpus.” But it also permitted his habeas counsel to “continue to
    investigate and prosecute a post-conviction writ.” It admonished him not to
    “file the writ if Mr. Mullis persists in electing to waive filing.”
    The day after that order, Mullis wrote to his habeas counsel. Mullis
    told him “NOT [to] file a writ” but acknowledged that he was permitted to
    continue investigating.
    Mullis’s habeas counsel sometimes purported to continue represent-
    ing Mullis. Four months after the hearing, the attorney asked the court to
    further extend the habeas-petition deadline. He attributed that motion to
    “Mullis, by and through [his office].” But his team never finished investigat-
    ing Mullis’s case. And he never drafted a petition. When the twice-extended
    deadline arrived, he told the state that Mullis stood by his decision to waive
    collateral review.
    A few months after the habeas-petition deadline, Mullis asked the trial
    court to “reinstate [his] appeals.” He asked for the reappointment of both his
    direct-appeal and habeas counsel. He explained, “New evidence has sur-
    faced that was not available at the time I chose to waive my appeal.” He said
    4
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    he would not have waived review had he known of the evidence. He sent a
    similar letter to the CCA.
    About a month later, the CCA noted that Mullis had not timely filed a
    habeas petition. It also observed that Mullis had waived habeas counsel and
    expressed an intent to waive collateral review altogether. Though he could
    have changed his mind before the filing deadline, it said, he did not indicate
    that by filing a petition. So it concluded that he had waived “all grounds for
    relief that were available to him before the [petition was due].”
    Regarding Mullis’s apparent untimely change of heart, the CCA
    pointed out that Texas law provided a possible escape hatch. A capital pris-
    oner may file a habeas petition out of time if he can “show cause as to why
    the application was untimely filed.” 3 If he shows good cause, he gets more
    time to prepare a petition, and the CCA may appoint new counsel. 4
    But the next day, Mullis revolved another 180 degrees. Although the
    CCA very recently had highlighted a way Mullis might proceed, he wrote the
    CCA to announce that he once again was “revok[ing] and withdraw[ing] [his]
    request to renew any [and] all appeals.” That decision, he said, was “final.”
    He also reaffirmed his desire to represent himself and disclaimed any attor-
    neys’ filings. 5
    3
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 11.071 § 4A(a) (West, Westlaw through
    2021 3d C. Sess.) (“Section 4A”).
    4
    See id. § 4A(b)–(c).
    5
    He also wrote a supplement to that letter where he admitted, again, to inten-
    tionally murdering his son. He said,
    There has never been any question of innocence in this case. The only
    arguments made were technicalities [and] some psych issues raised from
    childhood. . . . [T]he psych issues are [and] were based on false self report-
    ing [and] acting of symptoms in an attempt to circumvent the legal system
    . . . . It is in the best interests of justice for the victim [and] the victim’s
    5
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    Mullis’s erratic behavior prompted his former—or, arguably, his then-
    current—habeas counsel to act. 6 That lawyer moved the CCA to allow Mul-
    lis to file an untimely habeas petition for good cause. That cause, he ex-
    plained, was Mullis’s “impaired mental health.” The lawyer retained an-
    other psychiatrist to examine Mullis, and that psychiatrist concluded that
    Mullis was “depressed” and “suicidal” during his earlier psychiatric evalua-
    tion.
    That condition, the lawyer reasoned, made Mullis incompetent “at
    the time he [decided] to refuse his appellate rights.” So the lawyer asked the
    CCA under Section 4A to (1) find good cause to allow Mullis to file an un-
    timely habeas petition, (2) reappoint him formally to represent Mullis, and
    (3) give Mullis 270 days to prepare a petition.
    The CCA refused. It pointed out that the second psychiatrist’s eval-
    uation could prove, at most, that Mullis was incompetent when he first was
    evaluated in October 2011. But the second psychiatrist also had confirmed
    that Mullis was competent by the second evaluation in November 2012. The
    CCA reasoned that the second psychiatrist’s report said little about Mullis’s
    competence concerning (1) the July 2012 habeas-petition deadline, (2) his
    August 2012 letter asking to reinstate his review options, or (3) his September
    2012 letter purporting to re-waive review—all of which were closer in time to
    a date on which Mullis was competent. It described Mullis’s efforts to waive
    review as “persistent.” So it found that Mullis had not established “good
    families for this appeal to stop here and execution of this sentence to be
    carried out in a timely manner.
    6
    Counsel himself was unclear about his conception of his role. He again captioned
    a motion, “Mullis, by and through [his office].” But he said that Mullis was “currently
    acting pro se,” and he requested that he be “appointed” as Mullis’s counsel. He described
    himself as Mullis’s “pro bono counsel.”
    6
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    cause” and denied his Section 4A motion.
    That denial terminated Mullis’s state-review prospects. 7 But it did not
    end his erraticisms.
    B.
    With the help of new attorneys, Mullis filed a federal habeas petition
    about seven months later. His lead federal attorney reports that he was “ea-
    ger” for further representation. He “cooperated” with his lawyers “for more
    than two years” and allowed them to petition for habeas review.
    Mullis’s federal petition explained that his procedural default should
    be excused for two alternative reasons: first, because the state’s procedural
    bar was inadequate, and second, because he could overcome that default by
    showing cause and prejudice. Mullis later clarified that he could show cause
    and prejudice for two reasons: first, because his repeated waivers were invol-
    untary, and second, because his state-habeas counsel had ineffectively repre-
    sented him during post-conviction proceedings. He also raised seventeen
    merits contentions. 8
    The district court agreed to stay federal proceedings to give Mullis an-
    other chance to seek state review. He squandered it. A few months into the
    stay, Mullis asked the district court to “revoke the stay [and abeyance] order
    and immediately dismiss the entire habeas petition. Effectively this will
    7
    See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 11.071 § 5 (West, Westlaw through
    2021 3d C. Sess.) (“If a subsequent application for a writ of habeas corpus is filed after filing
    an initial application, a court may not consider the merits of or grant relief . . . unless the
    application contains sufficient specific facts establishing that . . . the current claims and
    issues . . . could not have been presented previously in a timely initial application . . . . If
    the court of criminal appeals determines that th[is] requirement[ ] ha[s] not been satisfied,
    the court shall issue an order dismissing the application as an abuse of the writ . . . .”).
    8
    Most of those contentions related to the penalty phase.
    7
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    terminate my entire habeas proceeding.” He reported telling his federal-ha-
    beas counsel “in no uncertain terms” that he “did NOT want to appeal under
    any circumstances.” He claimed the lawyers’ appointment was done “behind
    [his] back without [his] knowledge or permission.” But he admitted ulti-
    mately having “cooperate[d]” with his counsel “at least until [he] could pre-
    pare an adequate fight to terminate the writ.”
    Mullis insisted that he was “competent to waive” review. The district
    court partially reopened proceedings to decide whether that was true. But
    before the court decided, Mullis made another about-face. He maintained
    that he was competent, but he explained that he had changed his mind and
    wished to “proceed” with the federal petition. Still, his attorney told the dis-
    trict court that Mullis would not “exhaust remedies in state court.”
    So the district court resumed collateral review. Predictably, Mullis
    soon tried once more to kibosh the petition. He assured the court that his
    request was “final and w[ould] not be withdrawn under any circumstances.”
    Just as predictably, he withdrew that request before it could be adjudicated.
    Finally, the Director moved for summary judgment. After several
    rounds of briefing, the district court dismissed Mullis’s petition. Although it
    did not commit to either of two state-procedural candidates, it concluded that
    “Texas law would not allow Mullis to raise his claims in state court.” It rea-
    soned that, under binding caselaw, both of those candidate procedures were
    adequate and independent grounds to bar federal review. It also rejected both
    of Mullis’s proposals for excusing his default after concluding that our case-
    law foreclosed them. “[I]n light of” that “controlling precedent,” the court
    also denied Mullis a COA.
    Mullis now seeks a COA from this court.
    8
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    II.
    Habeas petitioners cannot appeal denials “[u]nless a circuit justice or
    judge issues a [COA].” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2253
    (c)(1). Because the district court
    denied Mullis’s petition on procedural grounds, a COA may not issue unless
    Mullis shows both “that jurists of reason would find it debatable whether the
    petition states a valid claim of the denial of a constitutional right and that
    jurists of reason would find it debatable whether the district court was correct
    in its procedural ruling.” Slack v. McDaniel, 
    529 U.S. 473
    , 484 (2000).
    Mullis attacks the district court’s procedural ruling from two angles.
    First, he says that he did not procedurally default his state claims after all be-
    cause the state procedural bar is inadequate. Second, and alternatively, he asks
    us to excuse his procedural default.
    Reasonable jurists could not debate the correctness of either the dis-
    trict court’s adequacy ruling or its rejection of Mullis’s involuntariness ex-
    cuse. They could, however, debate whether Mullis’s default is excusable for
    ineffective assistance of postconviction counsel. And Mullis has raised at
    least one debatable constitutional merits claim. So we grant his COA request
    in part.
    A.
    We do not review federal questions presented in a case decided by a
    state court on a “state law ground that is independent of the federal question
    and adequate to support the judgment.” Lee v. Kemna, 
    534 U.S. 362
    , 375
    (2002) (quotation omitted). That rule procedurally bars federal habeas peti-
    tions where “the last state court to review the petitioner’s claims unambigu-
    ously based its denial on a state procedural bar.” Gonzales v. Davis, 
    924 F.3d 236
    , 243 (5th Cir. 2019) (per curiam).
    The last state court to review Mullis’s claims was the CCA. It denied
    his application to file an untimely state habeas petition under Section 4A. It
    9
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    No. 21-70008
    concluded that he had “failed to establish good cause” for the delay and so
    did not reach the merits of his claims. That decision was “unambiguously
    based . . . on a state procedural bar,” Gonzales, 924 F.3d at 243, because the
    CCA stated no other ground for the denial.
    Recognizing that the denial was procedural, Mullis contends that the
    underlying rule is nevertheless inadequate to foreclose review of his claims
    on the merits. He says Section 4A is inadequate to bar review because the
    CCA almost always grants Section 4A applications to file out of time. He
    reports that his was “one of only three capital cases in which the CCA had
    refused to find ʻgood cause.’”
    To bar federal habeas review, a state procedural rule must be “firmly
    established and regularly followed.” James v. Kentucky, 
    466 U.S. 341
    , 348
    (1984). A rule satisfies that standard “even if there is an occasional aberrant
    state court decision.” Balentine v. Thaler, 
    626 F.3d 842
    , 856 (5th Cir. 2010).
    The question is whether the rule is “applied strictly or regularly to the vast
    majority of similar claims.” Emery v. Johnson, 
    139 F.3d 191
    , 195 (5th Cir. 1997)
    (quotation omitted and emphasis partially deleted).
    Mullis does not engage with that standard by observing that the CCA
    regularly finds good cause. A Section 4A applicant’s case must have been
    similar to Mullis’s for it to be a relevant comparator. That is, the applicant
    must have failed to file a timely state habeas petition because he wished “to
    forego habeas review.”
    Mullis provides no examples of the CCA’s finding good cause in such
    cases. He cites, for example, Ex parte Ramirez. 9 There, the state trial court
    9
    No. AP-75,167 (Tex. Crim. App. July 7, 2008) (per curiam), available at
    https://search.txcourts.gov/SearchMedia.aspx?MediaVersionID=b45f8034-393d-44c1-9e
    14-5d79435d0b3b&coa=coscca&DT=OTHER&MediaID=c4ffdc8c-17a6-4335-b943-c18eb
    10
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    had appointed an attorney to represent the prisoner in state habeas proceed-
    ings. 10 After receiving three extensions, that attorney inexplicably blew the
    filing deadline, and the prisoner asked the trial court to remove the attorney
    from his case. 11 The CCA ordered the attorney to “file an affidavit . . . setting
    out good cause for his failure to timely file” a petition. 12 The attorney re-
    fused, so the CCA sanctioned him and appointed a new lawyer, whom it di-
    rected to file “a writ of habeas corpus.” 13
    In doing so, the CCA noted that the attorney had “not even attempted
    to show good cause for his failure to timely file” a petition. 14 But that obser-
    vation did not mean, as Mullis implies, that the CCA elected to disregard
    Section 4A’s “good cause” requirement. Instead, it had no idea what the
    prisoner’s good cause for not filing the petition might be because the prior
    lawyer had refused to explain himself. That case says nothing about the
    CCA’s application of the “good cause” requirement in cases where the pris-
    oner’s reason for not filing a habeas petition is that, at the filing deadline, he
    did not wish to challenge his conviction.
    The same is true of the remaining cases Mullis cites: None involved a
    prisoner who elected not to petition for a writ. In those cases, a prisoner’s
    counsel had filed a defective petition that would have been timely but for a
    trial court’s error; 15 a prisoner’s counsel dubiously claimed to have filed a
    6a2d1b1.
    10
    Slip op. at 1–2.
    11
    Id. at 2.
    12
    Ibid.
    13
    Id. at 2–3.
    14
    Id. at 3.
    15
    Ex parte Medrano, No. WR-78,123-01, slip op. at 2–3 (Tex. Crim. App. Nov. 7,
    2012)                  (per             curiam),                 available             at
    11
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    missing petition and then disregarded a CCA order to refile it; 16 and prison-
    ers’ counsel “misunderstood the law” and so did not timely file petitions. 17
    In other words, the CCA regularly allows untimely petitions following errors
    by counsel or the trial court.
    The CCA does not, however, allow untimely petitions where a pris-
    oner foregoes collateral review and then changes his mind. That’s because a
    petitioner cannot show “good cause” when “the delay in [applying] for [a]
    writ of habeas corpus is attributable to [the] applicant’s own continued insis-
    tence on foregoing [that] remedy.” Ex parte Reynoso, 
    228 S.W.3d 163
    , 166
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (per curiam). 18 The CCA has adhered to that rule in
    https://search.txcourts.gov/SearchMedia.aspx?MediaVersionID=70422585-023b-4713-
    8c23-5145c4d473c6&coa=coscca&DT=OTHER&MediaID=46076a59-366d-417f-9787-
    088155abbec8.
    16
    Ex parte Castillo, No. WR-70,510-01, slip op. at 2–3 (Tex. Crim. App. Apr. 22,
    2009) (per curiam), available at https://search.txcourts.gov/SearchMedia.aspx?Media-
    VersionID=7c71bd6d-abbc-4c09-a3e9-4e0a54d9ecd0&coa=coscca&DT=OTHER&Me-
    diaID=77785f06-f5bf-4283-a43c-3d0d74fefe5f.
    17
    Ex parte Luna, No. WR-70,511-01, slip op. at 2 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 1, 2008)
    (per curiam), available at https://search.txcourts.gov/SearchMedia.aspx?MediaVer-
    sionID=9501b7d4-c14f-4d0b-9045-112d30ae3286&coa=coscca&DT=OTHER&MediaID
    =e57ee1ab-dc66-42bd-98ed-79b1e8f2e3a0; Ex parte Neal, No. WR-70,512-01, slip op. at 2
    (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 1, 2008) (per curiam), available at https://search.txcourts.gov/
    SearchMedia.aspx?MediaVersionID=955f3063-4c4a-4826-bfd7-e0fdd5821ac0&coa=cosc
    ca&DT=OTHER&MediaID=0887d8ea-dc78-4ec5-9699-cf1949f95a5e; Ex parte Young,
    No. WR-70,513-01, slip op. at 2 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 1, 2008) (per curiam), available at
    https://search.txcourts.gov/SearchMedia.aspx?MediaVersionID=4f87c1fa-0f17-4ac2-97b
    f-51e145b388d9&coa=coscca&DT=OTHER&MediaID=3e2f1daa-1f87-4d8e-9c30-e91e79
    0395f0.
    18
    On sua sponte rehearing, the CCA later determined that Reynoso did not meet
    that standard because his failure to file was partially attributable to his counsel’s “mistaken,
    but not totally implausible, interpretation of the law.” Ex parte Reynoso, 
    257 S.W.3d 715
    ,
    723 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (per curiam). But it did not undermine the rule it previously
    had stated.
    12
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    every example we can find. 19
    Mullis has the “burden to demonstrate that the procedural bar is not
    regularly applied.” Wright v. Quarterman, 
    470 F.3d 581
    , 586 (5th Cir. 2006).
    He has not identified one similar case where the CCA allowed an untimely
    application. On the other hand, the CCA has applied the same procedural
    rule to bar untimely applications in at least four similar cases.
    We conclude that the state rule barring untimely petitions where the
    sole reason for the delay was the petitioner’s election not to file is “firmly
    established and regularly followed.” James, 
    466 U.S. at 348
    . So that rule is
    adequate to bar Mullis’s federal petition. Without any contrary evidence,
    that conclusion is not debatable by reasonable jurists.
    B.
    Still, Mullis says we must excuse his procedural default. We may ex-
    cuse a procedural default only if the petitioner shows “cause” for and “prej-
    udice” from the default. Wainwright v. Sykes, 
    433 U.S. 72
    , 87 (1977). To show
    19
    See Ex parte Gonzales, 
    463 S.W.3d 508
    , 509 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015) (per curiam)
    (holding that an untimely writ was barred by the abuse-of-the-writ doctrine after previously
    having held that the applicant’s unequivocal “desire to waive habeas” plus his decision not
    to petition for a writ were sufficient to waive “his right to the review of . . . [a] habeas ap-
    plication” (quotation omitted)); Ex parte Tabler, No. WR-72,350-01, slip op. at 2 (Tex.
    Crim. App. Sept. 16, 2009) (per curiam) (“Good cause has not been shown” where the
    failure to file was due to the applicant’s “continued insistence on foregoing” collateral re-
    view.), available at https://search.txcourts.gov/SearchMedia.aspx?MediaVersionID=
    b370c5b6-d2ea-4d92-be0d-1e129b78bce4&coa=coscca&DT=OTHER&MediaID=50e569
    1b-a3bb-4579-83ab-ca0021a01e71; Ex parte Austin, No WR-59,527-01, slip op. at 2 (Tex.
    Crim. App. July 6, 2004) (per curiam) (denying a motion to file out of time and noting that
    good cause is assessed regarding “the actions or inactions of [the] applicant” and observing
    that Austin had “offered no explanation for his dilatory acts”), available at
    https://search.txcourts.gov/SearchMedia.aspx?MediaVersionID=a0dc5220-2918-4cff-a1
    fc-57bb35291ce7&coa=coscca&DT=OPINION&MediaID=852244e8-e3f3-4d2d-b424-7c
    05a03bb9f3.
    13
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    cause, the petitioner must identify “some objective factor external to the de-
    fense [that] impeded counsel’s efforts to comply with the relevant procedural
    rule.” United States v. Vargas-Soto, 
    35 F.4th 979
    , 993 (5th Cir. 2022) (altera-
    tion adopted and quotation omitted). “A factor is external to the defense if it
    cannot fairly be attributed to the movant.” 
    Ibid.
     (quotation omitted).
    Mullis offers two excuses. First, he claims that his waiver of state ha-
    beas review was involuntary because of his mental condition. Second, he says
    his state habeas counsel’s performance was so poor that it constituted either
    abandonment or ineffective assistance.
    1.
    Mullis’s involuntary-waiver claim is foreclosed by precedent. We held
    in Gonzales, 924 F.3d at 244, that “mental incompetency . . . is not a cause
    external to the petitioner.” 20 Mullis tries to evade that holding by distinguish-
    ing between competency and voluntariness. That distinction matters in some
    contexts, 21 but not here. Mullis does not contend that he failed to appreciate
    the consequences of his decision or that it was coerced, see Moran, 509 U.S.
    at 401 n.12; he says his waiver was the “manifestation of his . . . mental illness
    and history of trauma.” In other words, he says he did not have the ability to
    resist waiving collateral review, a condition associated with competence, not
    voluntariness. Ibid.
    20
    See also Schneider v. McDaniel, 
    674 F.3d 1144
    , 1154 (9th Cir. 2012) (“[A] pro se
    petitioner’s mental condition cannot serve as cause for a procedural default . . . .”).
    21
    See Godinez v. Moran, 
    509 U.S. 389
    , 401 n.12 (1993) (“The focus of a competency
    inquiry is the defendant’s mental capacity; the question is whether he has the ability to
    understand the proceedings. The purpose of the ‘knowing and voluntary’ inquiry, by con-
    trast, is to determine whether the defendant actually does understand the significance and
    consequences of a particular decision and whether the decision is uncoerced.” (citation
    omitted)).
    14
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    No. 21-70008
    Moreover, even if his claim sounds in voluntariness instead of compe-
    tence, Gonzales still forecloses it. We explained that any “mental impair-
    ment[ ]” is internal to the petitioner. Gonzales, 924 F.3d at 244 n.4. So even
    if voluntariness is the right claim, it cannot establish cause here because the
    involuntariness arose, if at all, from Mullis’s mental condition, not from an
    external factor such as coercion.
    Perhaps sensing that problem, Mullis urges us to disregard Gonzales.
    He says it “conflicts with Supreme Court precedent in Martinez” and with
    Rumbaugh v. Procunier, 
    753 F.2d 395
     (5th Cir. 1985), and Fisher v. Johnson,
    
    174 F.3d 710
     (5th Cir. 1999).
    Whether Gonzales conflicts with Martinez is not for us to say. The
    panel that decided Gonzales, 924 F.3d at 244 n.3, expressly considered Mar-
    tinez. When a panel of our court decides the meaning of a Supreme Court
    opinion, it binds later panels to that interpretation. 22
    Gonzales does not conflict with Rumbaugh or Fisher. Neither dealt
    with the cause-and-prejudice standard. Rumbaugh, 
    753 F.2d at 398
    , asked
    whether the petitioner was competent to withdraw his federal habeas petition;
    Fisher, 
    174 F.3d at 714
    , concerned equitable tolling of AEDPA’s statute of lim-
    itations. We do not write off on-point precedent any time our doctrine con-
    tains theoretical tension. We follow a first-in-time panel opinion instead of a
    later decision in the rare event that the two holdings are “irreconcilable.”
    Thompson v. Dallas City Atty’s Office, 
    913 F.3d 464
    , 468 (5th Cir. 2019). The
    different contexts implicated by each of those three decisions allow us to rec-
    oncile their holdings.
    22
    See Gahagan v. U.S. Citizenship & Immigr. Servs., 
    911 F.3d 298
    , 302 (5th Cir. 2018)
    (explaining that the question whether a Supreme Court decision abrogated our precedent
    “is itself a determination subject to the rule of orderliness” (quotation omitted)).
    15
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    No. 21-70008
    Under binding precedent, Mullis cannot show cause for his default.
    For the same reason, that conclusion is not debatable by reasonable jurists.
    2.
    Mullis’s ineffective-assistance-of-postconviction-counsel claim, how-
    ever, presents a closer question.
    As Mullis observes, attorney abandonment, Maples v. Thomas,
    
    565 U.S. 266
    , 288–89 (2012), and constitutionally deficient postconviction
    representation, Martinez v. Ryan, 
    566 U.S. 1
    , 17 (2012), are causes external to
    the defense. Abandonment occurs when an attorney ceases representing his
    client “without notice.” Maples, 
    565 U.S. at 281
    . And states constitutionally
    must provide “reasonably effective assistance” of counsel. Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984); see also Martinez, 
    566 U.S. at 14
    .
    Mullis’s lawyer did not abandon him—far from it. His state habeas
    counsel resisted Mullis’s efforts to have him fired and continued to seek ex-
    tensions of Mullis’s petition-filing deadline, including by asking the CCA to
    find good cause for an untimely application after his efforts to persuade Mul-
    lis to litigate had failed. Mullis’s lawyer also had Mullis evaluated by another
    psychiatrist to try to vitiate Mullis’s waivers of collateral review.
    But Mullis’s lawyer did not go as far as he might have to prevent Mul-
    lis’s waiver. For one thing, he did not object to the first psychiatrist’s conclu-
    sion that Mullis was competent to waive review. In fact, he told the court that
    he “certainly ha[d] no problem[ ] putting [the psychiatrist’s report] into evi-
    dence.” And he focused his remarks during the hearing on his personal ob-
    jections to Mullis’s decision to waive and Mullis’s young age.
    All that’s to say that Mullis’s lawyer effectively conceded that Mullis
    was competent to waive review—and another psychiatrist later disagreed.
    Where an attorney has reason to believe that his client may be
    16
    Case: 21-70008     Document: 00516449512            Page: 17   Date Filed: 08/26/2022
    No. 21-70008
    incompetent, effective representation may require him to inquire beyond a
    clean bill of mental health from a court-appointed psychiatrist. See Profitt v.
    Waldron, 
    831 F.2d 1245
    , 1249 (5th Cir. 1987). And at that point, Mullis’s only
    hope of avoiding execution was to be found incompetent to waive collateral
    review. “To do no investigation at all on an issue that not only implicates the
    accused’s only defense, but also his present competency, is not a tactical de-
    cision.” Bouchillon v. Collins, 
    907 F.2d 589
    , 597 (5th Cir. 1990).
    That’s not to say that Mullis’s lawyer necessarily provided inadequate
    representation by declining to object to the content of the psychiatrist’s re-
    port. If the available facts would not have prompted a reasonable lawyer to
    investigate competency further, doing so is unnecessary to render reasonably
    effective assistance. Theriot v. Whitley, 
    18 F.3d 311
    , 313 (5th Cir. 1994). Or it
    may be that Mullis’s lawyer had already fully investigated his competency by
    that point and reasonably concluded that he was competent to waive his right
    to review. Cf. Green v. Johnson, 
    116 F.3d 1115
    , 1123 (5th Cir. 1997).
    Answering that question requires a fact-intensive application of the all-
    things-considered “reasonably effective assistance” test.            Washington,
    
    466 U.S. at 687
    . Accordingly, the answer is debatable by reasonable jurists.
    Roberts v. Dretke, 
    356 F.3d 632
    , 639–40 (5th Cir. 2004).
    Two highly related legal questions provide additional debatability.
    First, if Mullis’s lawyer inadequately assisted Mullis by not objecting to the
    psychiatrist’s report, was that failure external to Mullis? Second, can this
    court conclude that Mullis’s lawyer rendered inadequate assistance, given the
    evidence it may consider in the wake of Shinn v. Martinez Ramirez, 
    142 S. Ct. 1718
     (2022)?
    Regarding the first question, we held in Gonzales, 924 F.3d at 244, that
    neither a prisoner’s mental incompetency nor his complete rejection of ha-
    beas counsel is an external cause that can excuse a default. For the same
    17
    Case: 21-70008      Document: 00516449512            Page: 18   Date Filed: 08/26/2022
    No. 21-70008
    reason, counsel’s putatively ineffective assistance here might have had a
    cause internal to Mullis because the lawyer breached an obligation that arose
    only because Mullis attempted to waive review.
    But this case is distinguishable from Gonzales because, unlike the pe-
    titioner there, Mullis had habeas counsel. See id. at 241. And it may be that
    where a lawyer inadequately defends against an incompetent petitioner’s at-
    tempts to waive review, the lawyer’s inadequate assistance is a superseding
    cause external to the petitioner. That question is debatable by reasonable ju-
    rists, so the court will consider it further.
    Regarding the second question, the Supreme Court recently held that,
    where a petitioner relies on Martinez v. Ryan to excuse a procedural default,
    “a federal court may not hold an evidentiary hearing—or otherwise consider
    new evidence—to assess cause and prejudice,” Martinez Ramirez, 142 S. Ct.
    at 1739, if the petitioner “failed to develop the factual basis of [his] claim in
    State court proceedings,” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (e)(2).
    In concluding that Mullis debatably received ineffective assistance of
    postconviction counsel, we have relied only on material that was presented to
    the state courts. But Mullis’s application references new evidence that could
    bear on our ultimate analysis. For instance, he contends that the reason Mul-
    lis’s lawyer did not object to the psychiatrist’s report is that he had promised
    Mullis in advance he would not do so, and he supports that assertion with a
    declaration that seems to have been filed for the first time in federal court.
    Martinez Ramirez raises novel questions about the evidence we can
    consider when we answer the ineffective-assistance question. That legal un-
    certainty makes the ineffective-assistance question further debatable, which
    helps Mullis at this stage. But ultimately, Martinez Ramirez very likely will
    reduce the evidence available to Mullis to prove his claim.
    In summary, reasonable jurists could debate whether Mullis’s habeas
    18
    Case: 21-70008     Document: 00516449512            Page: 19    Date Filed: 08/26/2022
    No. 21-70008
    lawyer rendered inadequate assistance by conceding the correctness of the
    psychiatrist’s report. That failure, if it was one, may serve as cause to excuse
    Mullis’s procedural default. Martinez, 
    566 U.S. at 17
    .
    C.
    Because Mullis has shown that, in one respect, “jurists of reason
    would find it debatable whether the district court was correct in its procedural
    ruling,” we must also ask if “jurists of reason would find it debatable whether
    the petition states a valid claim of the denial of a constitutional right.” Slack,
    
    529 U.S. at 484
    . And because the sole debatable cause for excusing Mullis’s
    default is the Martinez exception for ineffective assistance of postconviction
    counsel, we are limited to constitutional claims concerning the ineffective as-
    sistance of trial counsel. Davila v. Davis, 
    137 S. Ct. 2058
    , 2065–66 (2017).
    Mullis claims that his trial counsel was constitutionally inadequate
    during the penalty phase for “fail[ing] to conduct a comprehensive mitigation
    investigation” and presenting the jury with “a fraction of the horrors” that
    Mullis experienced during his life that might have mitigated his responsibility
    for his crimes. Among other things, Mullis says his trial lawyers could have
    presented a much fuller picture of the sexual abuse he endured as a child,
    which was especially relevant because of the sexual nature of his own crimes.
    Rendering adequate assistance requires counsel to investigate possible
    mitigation theories and select one that is reasonable under the circumstances.
    See Sears v. Upton, 
    561 U.S. 945
    , 951–54 (2010) (per curiam). Determining
    whether that standard was met requires a “probing and fact-specific analy-
    sis.” 
    Id. at 955
    . And although Mullis’s crime was horrific, it is not obvious
    that any potential failure to mitigate did not prejudice him because his tales
    of an “excruciating life history” may have caused “one juror [to strike] a dif-
    ferent balance,” Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U.S. 510
    , 537 (2003), in deciding the
    open-ended question whether anything mitigated his culpability. As the state
    19
    Case: 21-70008     Document: 00516449512              Page: 20   Date Filed: 08/26/2022
    No. 21-70008
    trial judge explained to the jury, the mitigation question is, under Texas law,
    a matter of “opinion” on which reasonable minds differ.
    Accordingly, the COA standard is met here for essentially the same
    reason it is satisfied regarding ineffective assistance during postconviction re-
    view: It is plausible that Mullis’s counsel prejudicially fell below that stand-
    ard and a more searching look is required to say for sure.
    *        *         *
    The application for a COA is GRANTED IN PART, limited to the
    following questions: (1) Did Mullis’s state habeas counsel render inadequate
    assistance by conceding that Mullis was competent to waive review? (2) Can
    the court reach that conclusion based on evidence consistent with Shinn v.
    Martinez Ramirez, 
    142 S. Ct. 1718
     (2022)? (3) If Mullis’s state habeas counsel
    rendered inadequate assistance, was the inadequate assistance a cause exter-
    nal to Mullis? In all other respects, the application for a COA is DENIED.
    The Clerk will establish a briefing schedule.
    20