Mark Gerth v. Warden ( 2019 )


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  •                            RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 19a0242p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    MARK GERTH,                                             ┐
    Petitioner-Appellant,   │
    │
    >      No. 17-4091
    v.                                               │
    │
    │
    WARDEN,      ALLEN      OAKWOOD       CORRECTIONAL      │
    INSTITUTION,                                            │
    Respondent-Appellee.    │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
    No. 1:16-cv-00598—Susan J. Dlott, District Judge.
    Decided and Filed: September 16, 2019
    Before: DONALD, LARSEN, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ON BRIEF: Kort W. Gatterdam, CARPENTER, LIPPS & LELAND, LLP, Columbus, Ohio,
    for Appellant. Mary Anne Reese, OFFICE OF THE OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL,
    Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge. An Ohio jury convicted Mark Gerth of a dozen counts
    related to his theft of an SUV and high-speed escape from police, which ended when he plowed
    into a taxicab in downtown Cincinnati and killed its two occupants. Gerth now seeks federal
    habeas relief, alleging that his appellate counsel failed to argue that the trial court improperly
    No. 17-4091              Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                             Page 2
    denied his request to proceed pro se. Because Gerth procedurally defaulted his claim, we
    AFFIRM the district court’s denial of his habeas petition.
    I.
    A.
    In the early morning of March 16, 2011, a Cincinnati police officer on patrol in the city’s
    Over-the-Rhine neighborhood spotted a red Toyota SUV and ran its license plate number, only
    to discover that it had been reported stolen.1 The SUV stopped after the officer activated his
    police cruiser’s emergency lights. But when the officer stepped out of his cruiser to speak with
    the driver, the SUV sped away. Officers pursued the SUV through residential streets while the
    SUV weaved around traffic and blazed through traffic signals.
    The pursuit ended tragically. Speeding over 75 miles-per-hour, the SUV raced through a
    red light in downtown Cincinnati before swiping the front end of a vehicle and then slamming
    into a taxicab. The SUV finally came to rest after hitting a parking meter and catching fire. The
    SUV’s driver took off on foot, leaving his passenger, who sustained fractures to his leg, inside
    the burning vehicle. Rescue workers ultimately freed the passenger from the SUV, and he
    survived, but the taxicab’s occupants fared worse. The driver, Mohamed Sidi, died instantly, and
    his passenger, Tonya Hairston, died on her way to the hospital.
    Officers apprehended the SUV’s driver shortly after he fled on foot and later identified
    the man as Mark Gerth. Although Gerth suffered only minor injuries, police took him to a
    hospital, where a toxicology test revealed that he had alcohol, marijuana, and cocaine in his
    system.     At trial, a forensic toxicologist testified that the amount of cocaine in Gerth’s
    bloodstream would have undermined Gerth’s ability to drive.
    The State charged Gerth with a dozen counts related to the crash: two counts of felony
    murder, four counts of aggravated vehicular homicide, one count each of aggravated vehicular
    assault and of vehicular assault, two counts of leaving the scene of the accident, one count of
    1These facts come from the last reasoned decision on Gerth’s underlying conviction, State v. Gerth, No. C–
    120392, 
    2013 WL 1820817
    at *1-3 (Ohio Ct. App. May 1, 2013).
    No. 17-4091           Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                 Page 3
    failure to comply with the order or signal of a police officer, and one count of receiving stolen
    property.
    B.
    A half-dozen attorneys have represented Gerth throughout his criminal trial, appeals, and
    collateral attacks on his conviction and sentence. In August 2011, months before his April 2012
    trial date, Gerth moved to replace his first court-appointed attorney. The court granted Gerth’s
    motion and appointed new trial counsel, but in October 2011, Gerth moved to replace that
    attorney too. The court denied Gerth’s motion, explaining, “we do have to move this case along.
    It has been delayed and really been delayed by continuances and all that, most of or all of which
    are at the request of the defendant.” (R. 5-4, Tr. at PageID #482.)
    That ruling did not deter Gerth. When the court held a December 2011 evidentiary
    hearing, Gerth interrupted as soon as the proceeding began and stated, “I would like to fire [his
    counsel].” (R. 5-5, Tr. at PageID #490.) Despite the court’s attempts to proceed with the
    hearing, Gerth continued to interrupt until he “voluntarily absented” himself from the courtroom.
    (Id. at PageID #493–94.) Gerth then filed another motion to remove his counsel, and things
    came to a head when the court addressed that motion at a March 12, 2012 hearing. After
    extensive crosstalk between the court and Gerth, the court denied the motion, explaining that
    “[w]e’re not continuing the case.” (R. 5-7, Tr. at PageID #555.) Gerth then responded, “I would
    rather represent myself than allow this man to represent me.” (Id. at PageID #556.) The court
    denied that request.
    After that hearing adjourned, Gerth filed a motion requesting to proceed pro se. The
    court permitted Gerth to read aloud the motion on April 2, the day of jury selection, and then
    denied the motion on two grounds. First, the court described Gerth’s mental illness, for which
    Gerth had been hospitalized. (R. 5–8, Tr. at PageID #582–83.) Second, the court explained that
    Gerth’s pro se request was untimely and “an attempt . . . to further delay this trial.” (Id. at
    PageID #584.) The court noted that Gerth “had been disruptive in the past hearings,” so much so
    that the court “had to eject him . . . because, again, he attempted to interfere with the
    administration of justice.” (Id.) The court found that while Gerth was competent to stand trial,
    No. 17-4091           Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                    Page 4
    he was “not competent to make a knowing[], intelligent[] and voluntary waiver of his counsel.”
    (Id. at PageID #585.) So Gerth’s second court-appointed attorney represented him at trial.
    The jury convicted Gerth on all twelve counts, and the trial court sentenced him to
    582-months to life in prison. A new attorney represented Gerth on appeal and argued that
    insufficient evidence supported Gerth’s convictions for felony murder and receiving stolen
    property.   But the Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed Gerth’s convictions, Gerth, 
    2013 WL 1820817
    , at *3, and the Ohio Supreme Court declined to exercise discretionary review of that
    decision, State v. Gerth, 
    994 N.E.2d 464
    (Ohio 2013) (table). The trial court then denied Gerth’s
    untimely pro se petition for post-conviction relief, and the Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed that
    decision as well.
    Gerth then filed his first application to reopen his appeal under Ohio R. App. P. 26(B).
    Proceeding pro se, Gerth alleged that his appellate counsel was ineffective by not raising three
    arguments: (1) that the trial court failed to conduct an inquiry under Faretta v. California, 
    422 U.S. 806
    (1975), to determine whether Gerth made his pro se request knowingly, intelligently,
    and voluntarily, and then improperly denied Gerth’s request; (2) that trial counsel rendered
    ineffective assistance by failing to adequately investigate the case and oppose his consecutive
    sentences; and (3) that the trial court erred by imposing sentences on both of his two convictions
    for leaving the scene of the accident. The Ohio Court of Appeals, which reviewed Gerth’s
    application, discussed only the third assignment of error and ordered a reopened appeal. The
    court appointed new appellate counsel and instructed counsel to “present in the appellant’s brief
    an assignment of error concerning the matter identified here as a ground for reopening, along
    with any other nonfrivolous assignment of error or argument not previously considered.” (R. 5,
    Ex. 39, Order Grant’g Appl. to Reopen Appeal at PageID #263.)
    As instructed, Gerth filed a timely brief addressing three assignments of error. The first
    two assignments related to the third ground for reopening the appeal: Gerth alleged that his first
    appellate counsel failed to argue that his convictions and sentences for leaving the scene of the
    accident should have merged. And Gerth identified a new assignment of error that he did not
    previously address in his Rule 26(B) application, contending that his first appellate counsel failed
    No. 17-4091             Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                  Page 5
    to make a Confrontation Clause argument. But Gerth’s brief did not mention Faretta or the trial
    court’s denial of his request to proceed pro se.
    Although the Ohio Court of Appeals rejected the Confrontation Clause assignment of
    error, it sustained the first two assignments of error, vacated Gerth’s sentence, and remanded the
    matter to the trial court to resentence Gerth on just one count of leaving the scene of the accident.
    State v. Gerth, No. C-120393, 
    2014 WL 5306631
    , at *3 (Ohio Ct. App. Oct. 17, 2014). The trial
    court then resentenced Gerth to a term of 546-months to life in prison. Gerth appealed his
    resentencing with a different appellate attorney and alleged that the findings in the record did not
    support the sentence. That appeal did not succeed.
    After his resentencing, Gerth filed another application to reopen his appeal under Rule
    26(B), again through new counsel. This time, Gerth argued that his second appellate counsel—
    that is, his appellate counsel on the reopened appeal—rendered ineffective assistance by failing
    to raise six additional arguments on the reopened appeal. Only one is relevant here: his second
    appellate counsel’s failure to argue that the trial court neglected to conduct a Faretta inquiry and
    improperly denied Gerth’s request to proceed pro se.
    The Ohio Court of Appeals denied Gerth’s second application to reopen his appeal,
    noting that Ohio law “makes no provision for a successive application” and holding that res
    judicata barred all of Gerth’s claims. (R. 5, Ex. 50, Order Den. Appl. to Reopen Appeal at
    PageID #393.) Gerth appealed the denial to the Ohio Supreme Court, but that court declined to
    review the appeal. State v. Gerth, 
    36 N.E.3d 190
    (Ohio 2015) (table).
    C.
    With nowhere to turn in state court, Gerth petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus in
    federal court under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, raising three grounds for relief from his state court
    conviction. Relevant to this appeal, Gerth alleges that his appellate counsel rendered ineffective
    assistance by not arguing that the trial court failed to conduct a Faretta inquiry and improperly
    denied his request to proceed pro se.2              The magistrate judge filed an initial report and
    2We   call this claim Gerth’s “Faretta argument.”
    No. 17-4091           Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                    Page 6
    recommendation, which concluded that although Gerth had preserved the Faretta argument for
    review, it should be dismissed with prejudice. Nonetheless, the magistrate judge issued a
    supplemental report recommending that the district court grant a certificate of appealability on
    Gerth’s Faretta argument. The district court adopted the recommendations and denied the
    petition with prejudice while also granting a certificate of appealability on the Faretta argument.
    Gerth appeals the denial of his petition.
    II.
    We review de novo the district court’s denial of a habeas petition. Babick v. Berghuis,
    
    620 F.3d 571
    , 576 (6th Cir. 2010). Because the district court neither conducted an evidentiary
    hearing nor made factual findings of its own, we defer to the state court’s factual findings and
    presume that they are correct, absent a showing of clear and convincing evidence to the contrary.
    Hodgson v. Warren, 
    622 F.3d 591
    , 598 (6th Cir. 2010).
    Before we reach the merits of a habeas petition, however, we review whether the
    petitioner has satisfied the state procedural requirements for litigating his federal claim in state
    court. Bickham v. Winn, 
    888 F.3d 248
    , 250–51 (6th Cir. 2018) (citing Seymour v. Walker, 
    224 F.3d 542
    , 550 (6th Cir. 2000)). If he has not satisfied those requirements—and procedurally
    defaulted his claim—he cannot present the claim in federal court. 
    Id. at 251.
    We review de
    novo whether the petitioner has procedurally defaulted his claim. 
    Id. A. A
    petitioner seeking a writ of habeas corpus must comply with two procedural
    requirements, both grounded in the interests of comity and federalism, before a federal court may
    review the petitioner’s claim. First, the petitioner must exhaust all available opportunities to
    pursue his claim in state court before he may litigate that claim in federal court. 28 U.S.C.
    § 2254(b)(1)(A). This exhaustion requirement “is designed to avoid the ‘unseemly’ result of a
    federal court ‘upset[ting] a state court conviction without’ first according the state courts an
    ‘opportunity to . . . correct a constitutional violation.’” Davila v. Davis, 
    137 S. Ct. 2058
    , 2064
    (2017) (quoting Rose v. Lundy, 
    455 U.S. 509
    , 518 (1982)) (alterations in original). Second, and
    relatedly, the procedural default doctrine bars our review if the petitioner has not followed the
    No. 17-4091           Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                     Page 7
    state’s procedural requirements for presenting his claim in state court. Coleman v. Thompson,
    
    501 U.S. 722
    , 732 (1991). Thus, a federal court will not review a habeas petition if “the last
    state-court judgment denying relief on the claim rests on a procedural state-law ground that is
    ‘independent of the federal question and is adequate to support the judgment.’” Lovins v.
    Parker, 
    712 F.3d 283
    , 295 (6th Cir. 2013) (quoting 
    Coleman, 501 U.S. at 729
    –30).
    The government argues that these doctrines preclude us from reviewing Gerth’s
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim. But Gerth argues that the government itself has forfeited
    these arguments. After Gerth filed his habeas petition alleging several examples of ineffective
    assistance of appellate counsel, the government filed an answer, in which it argued both that
    Gerth had procedurally defaulted his Faretta argument and that the argument was meritless. The
    magistrate judge disagreed with the government’s procedural default argument, finding that the
    claim was “preserved for review under 28 U.S.C. § 2554(d)(1),” but nevertheless recommended
    dismissing the claim on the merits. (R. 14, R. & R. at PageID #1190.) The government did not
    object to the magistrate judge’s rejection of its procedural default argument, either after the
    initial report and recommendation or after the supplemental report and recommendation. So
    Gerth contends that the government cannot raise the argument on appeal.
    A party may forfeit its ability to raise an issue that the magistrate judge has rejected if the
    party did not timely object to the magistrate judge’s findings and recommendations. See Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 72(b)(2); United States v. Walters, 
    638 F.2d 947
    , 949–50 (6th Cir. 1981). But that rule is
    not absolute. For one, we have held that when a party substantially prevails before a magistrate
    judge, it “does not waive the right to appeal secondary issues resolved against him by failing to
    object to the recommendation.” Souter v. Jones, 
    395 F.3d 577
    , 586 (6th Cir. 2005). And in the
    habeas context, we have considered the government’s procedural default argument on appeal—
    even when a magistrate judge recommended denying a habeas petition on the merits and the
    government did not object to the implicit rejection of its procedural default argument. Vanwinkle
    v. United States, 
    645 F.3d 365
    , 371 (6th Cir. 2011). In Vanwinkle, we explained that after the
    magistrate judge had ruled in the government’s favor on the merits, “the government merely
    chose not to object to this finding by raising an alternative ground for finding in its favor.” 
    Id. No. 17-4091
              Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                    Page 8
    We said it would be “illogical” to require the government to raise an objection in that posture.
    
    Id. That same
    reasoning applies here.
    B.
    We turn now to the government’s argument that Gerth procedurally defaulted his habeas
    claim. Gerth’s federal claim is that he received ineffective assistance of counsel because his
    appellate counsel did not raise the Faretta argument to overturn his state court conviction. But
    Gerth, of course, has had several appeals and still more attorneys, so to orient ourselves, we
    review the history of Gerth’s trial and appeals.
    Gerth’s first opportunity to raise the Faretta argument was on the direct appeal of his
    criminal conviction, although his appellate counsel did not do so. After the Ohio Court of
    Appeals affirmed his conviction, Gerth sought to reopen his appeal under Rule 26(B), a post-
    conviction mechanism to challenge the adequacy of appellate counsel.             When a criminal
    defendant applies to reopen his appeal under Rule 26(B), he must present:
    One or more assignments of error or arguments in support of assignments of error
    that previously were not considered on the merits in the case by any appellate
    court or that were considered on an incomplete record because of appellate
    counsel’s deficient representation[.]
    Ohio R. App. P. 26(B)(2)(c).       The Ohio Court of Appeals, which considers Rule 26(B)
    applications, must grant the application “if there is a genuine issue as to whether the applicant
    was deprived of the effective assistance of counsel on appeal.” Ohio R. App. P. 26(B)(5). And
    if the Ohio Court of Appeals grants the application, the case “shall proceed as on an initial appeal
    in accordance with these rules except that the court may limit its review to those assignments of
    error and arguments not previously considered.” Ohio R. App. P. 26(B)(7).
    Gerth filed two applications under Rule 26(B). In his first application, Gerth identified
    three assignments of error, alleging that his appellate counsel: (1) failed to raise the Faretta
    argument; (2) failed to conduct a meaningful investigation into the facts and law of his case; and
    (3) failed to argue that the trial court improperly sentenced him on two counts of leaving the
    scene of an accident. Although the Ohio Court of Appeals granted Gerth’s application and
    reopened the appeal, it never addressed the Faretta argument.          Instead, the court focused
    No. 17-4091           Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                   Page 9
    exclusively on Gerth’s third assignment of error and concluded that Gerth “demonstrated a
    genuine issue as to whether he was denied the effective assistance of counsel.” (R. 5, Ex. 39,
    Order Grant’g Appl. to Reopen Appeal at PageID #263.) And then the court instructed Gerth’s
    new appellate counsel to present in his brief an assignment of error about the sentencing issue, as
    well as “any other nonfrivolous assignment of error or argument not previously considered.”
    (Id.)
    Adopting the magistrate judge’s recommendations, the district court determined that the
    Ohio Court of Appeals silently rejected Gerth’s Faretta argument as a basis for reopening the
    appeal. The government asks us to draw the same conclusion—and Gerth does not argue
    otherwise. Although their instincts are correct, their precise conclusion here is not. True, when a
    party presents a federal claim before a state court and the claim goes unaddressed, we “must
    presume that the federal claim was adjudicated on the merits.” Ross v. Pineda, 549 F. App’x
    444, 455 (6th Cir. 2013) (quoting Johnson v. Williams, 
    568 U.S. 289
    , 301 (2013)). But we do
    not draw that inference here because the Ohio Court of Appeals was not adjudicating the issues
    in Gerth’s Rule 26(B) application on the merits. Instead, the Ohio Court of Appeals had to
    determine whether any of the issues Gerth raised warranted reopening his appeal, and it found
    that Gerth’s third assignment of error did. As soon as the Ohio Court of Appeals identified one
    assignment of error as grounds for reopening the appeal, it could stop its analysis without
    addressing Gerth’s other assignments of error. Thus, we cannot infer that the Ohio Court of
    Appeals rejected Gerth’s Faretta argument.
    When the Ohio Court of Appeals granted Gerth’s 26(B) application, it also appointed
    Gerth new appellate counsel and instructed Gerth to bring any nonfrivolous assignment of error
    that it had not previously considered. That instruction opened the door for Gerth to raise his
    Faretta argument, but he did not do so. Instead, he raised three different assignments of error on
    the reopened appeal; the Ohio Court of Appeals sustained two of the three assignments and
    remanded the case to the trial court for resentencing. Gerth, 
    2014 WL 5306631
    , at *3.
    After the district court resentenced him, Gerth filed his second Rule 26(B) application,
    this time alleging that his second appellate counsel—i.e., his attorney on the reopened appeal—
    rendered ineffective assistance. In that application, Gerth identified six assignments of error,
    No. 17-4091           Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                Page 10
    including that his second appellate counsel failed to raise the Faretta argument on the reopened
    appeal. The Ohio Court of Appeals, however, did not address whether any of those alleged
    errors created a genuine issue of whether Gerth received effective assistance of counsel. Rather,
    the court explained that Rule 26(B) “makes no provision for a successive petition” and that, in
    any case, “the challenges that Gerth advances here to his appellate counsel’s effectiveness in
    prosecuting his appeal either were or could have been raised in his first application.” (R. 5, Ex.
    50, J. at PageID #393–94.) Thus, the court held that the “doctrine of res judicata bars him from
    presenting these challenges in this successive application” and denied Gerth’s 26(B) application.
    (Id. at PageID #394.) Gerth appealed the Ohio Court of Appeals’ decision to the Ohio Supreme
    Court, but that court declined to review the appeal.
    That leaves us with the following question: does Ohio’s res judicata doctrine act as a
    procedural bar to our review of Gerth’s federal claim? To answer that question, we apply the
    four-part test from Maupin v. Smith, 
    785 F.2d 135
    , 138 (6th Cir. 1986) and decline to review
    Gerth’s claim if: (1) Gerth failed to comply with Ohio’s res judicata doctrine; (2) Ohio courts
    enforce that doctrine; (3) res judicata is an adequate and independent state ground for denying
    review of a constitutional claim; and (4) Gerth cannot show cause and prejudice excusing the
    default. See Webb v. Mitchell, 
    586 F.3d 383
    , 397 (6th Cir. 2009) (citing 
    Maupin, 785 F.2d at 138
    ).
    We consider first whether Gerth has complied with Ohio’s res judicata doctrine. The
    Ohio Supreme Court has described res judicata as the rule:
    [T]hat a final judgment rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction on the
    merits is conclusive as to the rights of the parties and their privies, and, as to
    them, constitutes an absolute bar to a subsequent action involving the same claim,
    demand or cause of action.
    State v. Davis, 
    894 N.E.2d 1221
    , 1223 (Ohio 2008) (internal quotation marks omitted). That
    doctrine applies to 26(B) proceedings. Indeed, the Ohio Supreme Court has repeatedly held that
    “[o]nce ineffective assistance of counsel has been raised and adjudicated, res judicata bars its
    relitigation.” State v. Twyford, 
    833 N.E.2d 289
    , 290 (Ohio 2005) (quoting State v. Williams,
    
    790 N.E.2d 299
    , 300–01 (Ohio 2003)). When the Ohio Court of Appeals granted Gerth’s first
    No. 17-4091           Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                     Page 11
    26(B) application, appointed Gerth counsel, and reopened Gerth’s appeal, Gerth could have
    raised all of the alleged deficiencies in his representation on direct appeal, including that his first
    appellate counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not raising the Faretta argument. But
    Gerth’s second appellate counsel never raised the Faretta argument on the reopened appeal, and
    that decision precludes Gerth from raising the argument again in state court. That Gerth’s
    second appellate counsel may have erred by not raising the Faretta argument does not change
    this underlying fact: res judicata bars Gerth from raising the Faretta argument in a second 26(B)
    application when he could have raised that argument on the reopened appeal.
    The second Maupin factor asks us to determine whether Ohio courts enforce res judicata.
    They do. See 
    Twyford, 833 N.E.2d at 290
    ; 
    Williams, 790 N.E.2d at 300
    –01; State v. Cheren, 
    652 N.E.2d 708
    , 708–09 (Ohio 1995). And under the third Maupin factor, we must consider whether
    res judicata is an adequate and independent state ground to foreclose our review of Gerth’s
    federal claim. We have repeatedly said that it is. See, e.g., Landrum v. Mitchell, 
    625 F.3d 905
    ,
    934 (6th Cir. 2010) (“The Ohio Court of Appeals’s reliance on res judicata was an adequate and
    independent state ground to foreclose habeas relief in federal court.”); Fautenberry v. Mitchell,
    
    515 F.3d 614
    , 633 (6th Cir. 2008); Williams v. Bagley, 
    380 F.3d 932
    , 967 (6th Cir. 2004); Martin
    v. Mitchell, 
    280 F.3d 594
    , 604 (6th Cir. 2002).
    Our analysis turns on the fourth Maupin factor: whether Gerth can show cause and
    prejudice to excuse his default. In Murray v. Carrier, the Supreme Court explained that a
    petitioner seeking to show cause must identify “some objective factor external to the defense
    [that] impeded counsel’s efforts to comply with the State’s procedural rule.” 
    477 U.S. 478
    , 488
    (1986). One such example is “attorney error rising to the level of ineffective assistance of
    counsel.” Hargrave-Thomas v. Yukins, 
    374 F.3d 383
    , 388 (6th Cir. 2004); see also Edwards v.
    Carpenter, 
    529 U.S. 446
    , 451 (2000) (citing 
    Murray, 477 U.S. at 488
    –89).
    Gerth argues that his second appellate counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not
    raising the Faretta argument on the reopened appeal—and that the deficient representation
    serves as cause for his procedural default. Gerth’s argument has merit only if his attorney’s
    ineffectiveness amounted to a constitutional violation. 
    Coleman, 501 U.S. at 754
    . And that turns
    on whether Gerth had a constitutional right to counsel on the reopened appeal: there can be no
    No. 17-4091           Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                     Page 12
    constitutional violation if Gerth had no constitutional right to counsel at the stage of the
    proceeding allegedly tainted by ineffective assistance. See Carter v. Mitchell, 
    693 F.3d 555
    , 565
    (6th Cir. 2012). So we must determine whether Gerth had a constitutional right to counsel after
    the Ohio Court of Appeals granted his first Rule 26(B) application and reopened his appeal.
    There is no dispute that Gerth had a constitutional right to counsel on direct appeal. See,
    e.g., Evitts v. Lucey, 
    469 U.S. 387
    , 393–94 (1985); Douglas v. California, 
    372 U.S. 353
    (1963).
    But it is equally well-settled that Gerth did not have a constitutional right to counsel when he
    applied to reopen his appeal before the Ohio Court of Appeals.             The Supreme Court has
    explained that a defendant has “no constitutional right to an attorney in state post-conviction
    proceedings” and therefore “cannot claim constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel in
    such proceedings.” 
    Coleman, 501 U.S. at 752
    . And sitting en banc, we concluded that the 26(B)
    application is “part of the collateral, postconviction process rather than direct review” and held
    that a defendant who applies to reopen his appeal under Rule 26(B) has no constitutional right to
    counsel at the application stage. Lopez v. Wilson, 
    426 F.3d 339
    , 351 (6th Cir. 2005) (en banc).
    But Lopez does not answer our question: whether Gerth had a constitutional right to counsel
    after the Ohio Court of Appeals granted his 26(B) application, appointed Gerth counsel, and
    reopened the appeal.
    We hold that a reopened appeal under Rule 26(B) is also part of the collateral,
    postconviction process—and that Gerth therefore did not have a constitutional right to counsel at
    that stage of the proceeding. Rule 26(B)’s text makes clear that a reopened appeal is not simply
    a do-over of the direct appeal. For one, the rule limits the arguments that the petitioner can raise
    on the reopened appeal. The court itself may “limit its review to those assignments of error and
    arguments not previously considered [on direct appeal].” Ohio R. App. P. 26(B)(7). And
    although the rule states that “[i]f the application is granted, the case shall proceed as on an initial
    appeal,” 
    id., the petitioner
    cannot make just any legal argument on the reopened appeal. Rather,
    the Ohio Court of Appeals “shall vacate its prior judgment and enter the appropriate judgment”
    only if it “finds that the performance of appellate counsel was deficient and the applicant was
    prejudiced by that deficiency.” Ohio R. App. P. 26(B)(9). “If the court does not so find, the
    court shall issue an order confirming its prior judgment.” 
    Id. These rules
    tell us that the
    No. 17-4091               Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                              Page 13
    petitioner must present all arguments on the reopened appeal within the framework of a claim for
    ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. Rather than simply identify trial court errors as he
    would on direct appeal, the petitioner must show that his appellate counsel made an objectively
    unreasonable decision by not raising the trial court error and that he suffered prejudice because
    of that decision. See 
    Webb, 586 F.3d at 399
    .3
    Our conclusion that a reopened appeal is a collateral proceeding matches the Ohio
    Supreme Court’s precedents. In Morgan v. Eads, the Ohio Supreme Court described Rule 26(B)
    as creating a “separate collateral opportunity to raise ineffective-appellate-counsel claims” and
    explained that a successful application “was never intended to constitute part of the original
    appeal.” 
    818 N.E.2d 1157
    , 1158 (Ohio 2004). The Morgan court carefully studied the rule,
    distinguishing the Ohio Court of Appeals’ jurisdiction on the reopened appeal from that court’s
    jurisdiction over direct appeals and providing several reasons why Rule 26(B) proceedings are
    collateral. First, the court explained that the petitioner must submit additional information
    outside the trial court record to support his ineffective assistance of counsel claim; on direct
    appeal, the appellate court may consider only the trial record. 
    Id. at 1159.
    Second, the court
    noted that the Ohio Court of Appeals ordinarily lacks jurisdiction to alter or amend its judgment
    if an appeal is pending before the Ohio Supreme Court. But the Ohio Court of Appeals can
    reopen an appeal under Rule 26(B), even as the direct appeal is pending before the Ohio
    Supreme Court. 
    Id. at 1159–60.
    Third, the court held that when the Ohio Court of Appeals
    grants the 26(B) application and reopens the appeal, the original appellate decision “remains in
    effect until vacated.” 
    Id. at 1160.
    Thus, the 26(B) application “does not start the appeal process
    all over again,” just as a successful postconviction petition under Ohio Rev. Code § 2953.21 “is
    not equivalent to a new trial.” 
    Id. Finally, the
    court clarified that although the Ohio Court of
    Appeals must appoint counsel when it reopens an appeal, the United States Constitution does not
    3Decisions    from the Ohio Court of Appeals also underscore that the petitioner must present his substantive
    arguments on the reopened appeal within the ineffective assistance of counsel framework. That court has declined
    to consider assignments of error that a petitioner presented on the reopened appeal because the assignments failed to
    allege ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. See, e.g., State v. Hamilton, No. 96 CA 15A, 
    2000 WL 1591117
    ,
    at *2 (Ohio Ct. App. Oct. 23, 2000). Indeed, the court explained that those assignments “are not properly before us
    in accordance with [Rule] 26(B).” Id.; see also State v. Jones, No. 96-A-0009, 
    1999 WL 689944
    , at *2 (Ohio Ct.
    App. Aug. 27, 1999) (Rule 26(B) requires petitioner to challenge appellate counsel’s effectiveness rather than
    simply identify trial court errors). Under these decisions, the reopened appeal is procedurally and substantively
    distinct from the direct appeal.
    No. 17-4091            Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.                 Page 14
    compel that outcome. That Ohio appoints counsel in such cases reflects a policy choice rather
    than a constitutional mandate. 
    Id. at 1160–61.
    For those reasons, the Ohio Supreme Court
    described the reopened appeal as “an attack on the outcome of [the direct] appeal, not a part of
    the appeal,” and we find that conclusion persuasive. 
    Id. at 1160.
    Because Gerth had no
    constitutional right to counsel on the reopened appeal, his attorney’s performance cannot excuse
    the procedural default of the Faretta argument.
    As always, there is an exception to the rule. Although the Supreme Court held in
    Coleman that ineffective assistance of counsel in a postconviction proceeding cannot qualify as
    cause to excuse the petitioner’s procedural 
    default, 501 U.S. at 752
    , the Court has since
    identified a “narrow exception” to that general rule. Martinez v. Ryan, 
    566 U.S. 1
    , 9 (2012). In
    Martinez, the Court considered whether a petitioner could show cause to excuse his procedural
    default in a post-conviction proceeding where—critically—that proceeding presented his first
    opportunity to allege ineffective assistance of trial counsel. 
    Id. at 5.
    The Court remarked that
    because Arizona prohibited criminal defendants from raising ineffective assistance of trial
    counsel arguments on direct appeal, the post-conviction proceeding “is in many ways the
    equivalent of a prisoner’s direct appeal as to the ineffective-assistance claim.” 
    Id. at 11.
    Finding
    it “necessary to modify the unqualified statement in Coleman that an attorney’s ignorance or
    inadvertence in a postconviction proceeding does not qualify as a cause to excuse a procedural
    default,” the Court announced a “narrow exception” to Coleman: “Inadequate assistance of
    counsel at initial-review collateral proceedings may establish cause for a prisoner’s procedural
    default of a claim of ineffective assistance at trial.” 
    Id. at 9.
    The Court’s holding in Martinez does not, however, dictate a similar outcome here.
    Indeed, the Court’s recent decision in Davila forecloses any support that Martinez may have
    offered to excuse Gerth’s procedural default. In Davila, the petitioner argued that his state-
    appointed postconviction counsel failed to raise his ineffective assistance of appellate counsel
    claim in his state habeas petition—and that the error provided cause to excuse his procedural
    
    default. 137 S. Ct. at 2063
    . Much like the petitioner in Martinez, the petitioner in Davila could
    not raise his ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim until the postconviction, state
    habeas proceeding.      The Court, however, distinguished Martinez, which “was principally
    No. 17-4091            Gerth v. Warden, Allen Oakwood Correctional Inst.               Page 15
    concerned about trial errors—in particular, claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel”—
    from the “distinct context of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.” 
    Id. at 2066–67.
    So out
    of “respect [for] that judgment,” the Court declined to expand Martinez to procedurally defaulted
    claims of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. 
    Id. Because Gerth
    had no constitutional right to counsel on the reopened appeal, he cannot
    excuse his procedural default. See 
    Coleman, 501 U.S. at 752
    .
    III.
    For these reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Gerth’s petition for habeas
    corpus.