Lee, Theodore v. Davis, Cecil ( 2003 )


Menu:
  •                              In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________
    No. 01-3152
    THEODORE LEE, JR.,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    CECIL DAVIS, SUPERINTENDENT,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    ____________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division.
    No. 01-C-109—Allen Sharp, Judge.
    ____________
    ARGUED OCTOBER 29, 2002—DECIDED APRIL 25, 2003
    ____________
    Before CUDAHY, COFFEY, and EASTERBROOK, Circuit
    Judges.
    CUDAHY, Circuit Judge. Theodore Lee, Jr. appeals the
    denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    . Lee’s failure to raise the issue of pros-
    ecutorial misconduct on direct appeal means that the issue
    was procedurally defaulted. Because Lee cannot demon-
    strate cause for his default, his petition fails. The district
    court’s denial of Lee’s petition was proper and we affirm.
    I.
    Theodore Lee, Jr. and Scott Rainey beat and attempted to
    rob Cleo and Golda Hedges inside the Hedges’ home in Pike
    2                                                     No. 01-3152
    County, Indiana on October 7, 1992. One of the two lay
    in the grass in front of the Hedges’ back door, feigning
    injury, while the other knocked on the door requesting
    help for his “injured” friend. Once Cleo Hedges opened the
    door, the assailant pushed his way inside, beat Cleo and
    Golda and fled (with the “injured” friend) having taken
    nothing. Neither Cleo nor Golda could identify which of
    Lee and Rainey had been the assailant and which the
    person lying in the grass.
    When Lee was arrested, he waived his Miranda rights
    and confessed that he and Rainey had attempted to rob the
    Hedges. Lee claimed that, because of a drug- and alcohol-
    induced blackout, he did not recall who had gone to the door
    and beaten the Hedges, but Lee said that Rainey had told
    him afterwards that he (Lee) had beaten the Hedges.1
    Rainey agreed to testify against Lee, who proceeded to trial.
    1
    The transcript of Lee’s confession reads:
    Q: You do, you do really think, do you really think in your
    own mind that, that probably you were the one that went
    to the door and hit the old people?
    A:   That is what [Rainey] told me, that I done it. So in my
    mind that’s . . .
    Q: But you don’t know (inaudible).
    A:   I don’t know that I didn’t and I don’t know that I did.
    But, that’s what I’d been told by [Rainey] who was with
    me. You know.
    Q: And you really don’t know of any reason he would lie to
    you about it.
    A:   Not really. I can’t think of any reason why he would tell
    me I done it.
    Appendix at 471.
    No. 01-3152                                                     3
    At trial, Lee testified that he did remember the robbery,
    and that he had been the one feigning injury while Rainey
    approached the house. Lee’s earlier confession was admit-
    ted over his objection that he had not intelligently waived
    his Miranda rights. During closing arguments, the pros-
    ecutor made concededly improper comments bolstering the
    credibility of Rainey as a witness:2
    But I submit to you that I believe Scott Rainey was
    sincere. He was telling you the truth.
    ***
    And it’s true that there’s charges against Mr. Lee for
    more serious offenses. Why? Because the State of
    Indiana believes Scott Rainey. We believe Scott Rainey.
    Had the opportunity to sit down with Scott Rainey.
    Talk to Scott Rainey. Listen to him as he testified
    before you here. The State of Indiana believes Scott
    Rainey. That’s why there’s no other charges pending
    against him. He didn’t do it. Ted Lee did. Mr. Rainey
    did not do it. He has to live with it. He has to live with
    his involvement, but he did not do the crime.
    Supp. App. at 12, 24; Tr. at 589, 601.3 Lee was convicted
    by the jury and sentenced to 45 years imprisonment for
    2
    The prosecutor was disciplined by the Disciplinary Commission
    of the Indiana Supreme Court with a Private Administrative
    Admonishment (PAA) for his comments during closing arguments
    at Lee’s trial. The PAA was issued on December 18, 1997, while
    Lee’s state post-conviction relief case was pending in the trial
    court. The Respondent (Davis) conceded in his brief for the
    present case that the prosecutor’s statements constituted im-
    proper vouching, but disputed that the vouching amounted to
    prosecutorial misconduct. Resp. Br. at 9.
    3
    The transcript from Lee’s trial is designated with “Tr.” and the
    appendix and supplemental appendix submitted with the appel-
    lant’s brief with “App.” and “Supp. App.”, respectively.
    4                                                    No. 01-3152
    attempted robbery and six years each for two counts of
    felony battery, to run concurrently.
    On direct appeal, Lee raised seven issues before the
    Indiana Court of Appeals, but did not raise the issue of the
    prosecutor’s improper statements. The court of appeals
    reduced one of the battery convictions to a misdemeanor,
    but otherwise affirmed the jury verdict. The Indiana
    Supreme Court denied transfer in June 1995.
    Subsequently, Lee filed a petition for post-conviction
    relief in state court alleging prosecutorial misconduct
    during closing arguments when the prosecutor vouched
    for Rainey as a witness and ineffective assistance of trial
    counsel when counsel failed to object to the prosecutor’s
    vouching. Lee also alleged that appellate counsel had
    rendered ineffective assistance by failing to raise prosecuto-
    rial misconduct during Lee’s direct appeal. The trial court
    denied Lee’s petition.
    The Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed the denial of post-
    conviction relief on Sept. 11, 2000. On the issue of prosecu-
    torial misconduct, the court ruled that that issue had been
    available on direct appeal, but because it had not been
    raised at that time, it was waived.4 The Court of Appeals
    further explained that it did not believe misconduct had
    occurred.
    [T]he statement following the prosecutor’s words “I
    believe” explain why Rainey is more credible than Lee.
    Even more compelling, the prosecutor’s comments had,
    at most, a minimal effect on the jury given the over-
    whelming evidence against Lee. In light of the mass
    4
    “We first note that [the issue of prosecutorial misconduct] was
    available to Lee on direct appeal, and because he did not raise it,
    it is waived. Waiver notwithstanding, Lee asserts that the
    [vouching] amounts to fundamental error. It does not.” App. at 24.
    No. 01-3152                                                    5
    of inculpating evidence, including Lee’s confession, Lee
    has failed to show that the prosecutor engaged in
    misconduct.
    App. at 24. Because the Court of Appeals found no pros-
    ecutorial misconduct, it also found that Lee’s trial counsel
    had not been ineffective in failing to object to the pros-
    ecutor’s statements, nor had appellate counsel5 been inef-
    fective in failing to raise misconduct on Lee’s direct appeal.
    The Indiana Supreme Court denied transfer.
    Lee then filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus
    in the district court under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    , alleging, inter
    alia, that his due process rights had been violated by the
    prosecutor’s vouching for Rainey’s credibility and that he
    was denied effective assistance of counsel at trial and on
    appeal. The district court denied Lee’s petition and denied
    an application for a certificate of appealability. This court
    granted a certificate of appealability on the issues of (1)
    whether Lee’s due process rights were violated when the
    prosecutor vouched for Rainey’s credibility during clos-
    ing arguments and (2) whether Lee procedurally de-
    faulted this argument.
    II.
    A.
    As a threshold matter, we must determine whether Lee
    has procedurally defaulted his argument that the pros-
    ecutor’s vouching violated Lee’s due process rights. A
    district court’s determination of procedural default is
    reviewed de novo. Braun v. Powell, 
    227 F.3d 908
    , 911-12
    (7th Cir. 2000). When a state court denies a prisoner re-
    5
    Lee was represented by the same attorney at trial and on direct
    appeal.
    6                                                    No. 01-3152
    lief on a question of federal law and bases its decision on a
    state procedural ground that is independent of the fed-
    eral question, the federal question is procedurally de-
    faulted. Coleman v. Thompson, 
    501 U.S. 722
    , 729 (1991);
    Harris v. Reed, 
    489 U.S. 255
    , 263 (1989) (finding proce-
    dural default when the “last state court rendering a judg-
    ment in the case ‘clearly and expressly’ states that its
    judgment rests on a state procedural bar”). This rule would
    appear to govern the issue here. The Indiana Court of
    Appeals was the last state court to consider Lee’s habeas
    claim of prosecutorial misconduct, and it ruled quite clearly
    that “this issue was available to Lee on direct appeal, and
    because [Lee] did not raise it, it is waived.” App. at 24.
    Lee’s contention that the court’s subsequent discussion
    of the merits of his prosecutorial misconduct claim some-
    how undoes the stated procedural ground of the decision
    is meritless. Even when both the merits of a claim and
    a state procedural bar are discussed together, the state
    procedural grounds will be determinative if they are clear-
    ly presented and they constitute an adequate independent
    ground for the denial of the state habeas petition. Gray v.
    Briley, 
    305 F.3d 777
    , 779 (7th Cir. 2002). Moreover, this
    court has had occasion to consider the effect of Indiana’s
    waiver doctrine, and the corresponding “fundamental error”
    exception to the waiver doctrine, in the context of proce-
    dural default as it affects a federal habeas petition.6 Willis
    v. Aiken, 
    8 F.3d 556
     (7th Cir. 1993). In Willis, we ruled that
    the examination required to determine whether there had
    been fundamental error did not undermine reliance on
    6
    An argument of trial court error that has been waived can be
    resuscitated on appeal if the error was “fundamental” under
    Indiana law. Wilson v. State, 
    514 N.E.2d 282
    , 284 (Ind. 1987). This
    determination necessarily requires some examination of the
    merits of the claimed error, thus creating the analytical wrinkle
    smoothed out by this court in Willis.
    No. 01-3152                                                 7
    an independent state procedural ground of waiver; and
    federal habeas review was precluded. 
    Id. at 567
    .
    Lee’s prosecutorial misconduct argument is procedurally
    defaulted.
    B.
    A procedural default can be overcome if a petitioner can
    show cause and prejudice for the default. Todd v. Schomig,
    
    283 F.3d 842
    , 848 (7th Cir. 2002). Lee argues that the
    failure of his appellate counsel to raise the prosecutorial
    misconduct issue on direct appeal was constitutionally
    ineffective assistance and was the cause of his procedural
    default. “Attorney error that constitutes ineffective assis-
    tance of counsel is cause to set aside a procedural default.”
    Franklin v. Gilmore, 
    188 F.3d 877
    , 883 (7th Cir. 1999);
    see also Coleman, 
    501 U.S. at 753-54
    . Whether an attor-
    ney’s ineffectiveness is sufficient to overcome a procedural
    default is evaluated under the familiar constitutional
    test outlined in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    (1984). Coleman, 
    501 U.S. at 752
    . Therefore, to make a
    showing sufficient to establish cause for his procedural
    default, Lee would have to demonstrate: (1) that his coun-
    sel’s performance was so deficient as to fall below an
    objective standard of reasonableness under “prevailing
    professional norms”; and (2) that the deficient performance
    so prejudiced the defense as to deny the defendant a fair
    trial. Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687-88
    ; see also Franklin, 
    188 F.3d at 883-84
    . The failure of appellate counsel to raise
    an issue on appeal requires the court to compare the issue
    not raised in relation to the issues that were raised; if
    the issue that was not raised is “both obvious and clearly
    stronger” than the issues raised, the appellate counsel’s
    failure to raise the neglected issue is objectively deficient.
    Winters v. Miller, 
    274 F.3d 1161
    , 1167 (7th Cir. 2001);
    Williams v. Parke, 
    133 F.3d 971
    , 974 (7th Cir. 1997).
    8                                                No. 01-3152
    Prejudice is established if the issue not raised “may have
    resulted in a reversal of the conviction or an order for a
    new trial.” Winters, 
    274 F.3d at 1167
    . This means there
    must be a reasonable probability that the issue not raised
    would have altered the outcome of the appeal had it been
    raised.
    However, there is one preliminary puzzle we must
    examine before we proceed. The Supreme Court’s decision
    in Edwards v. Carpenter, 
    529 U.S. 446
     (2000), established
    that the assertion of ineffective assistance as a cause to
    excuse a procedural default in a § 2254 petition is, itself, a
    constitutional claim that must have been raised before the
    state court or be procedurally defaulted. Id. at 453. The
    result is a tangled web of defaults excused by causes
    that may themselves be defaulted and require a showing
    of cause and prejudice—a result that has an “attractive
    power for those who like difficult puzzles[,]” but not for
    prisoners seeking federal post-conviction relief. Id. at 458
    (Breyer, J., concurring). Lee does not face that particu-
    lar dilemma since he raised his ineffective assistance of
    counsel claim in his very first state post-conviction petition.
    But let us presume, as is the case here with Lee, that a
    petitioner does pass the Edwards test, and offers up
    ineffective assistance of counsel as cause for his procedural
    default, and that an ineffective assistance of counsel claim
    was presented as an independent claim in state court
    and was ruled upon on the merits. Edwards does not
    instruct us whether we must evaluate the ineffective
    assistance of counsel claim with the same deference for
    the state court’s determination (under § 2254(d)) that we
    would utilize in evaluating the actual habeas petition’s
    claim (here, prosecutorial misconduct), or that we would
    utilize if the ineffective assistance claim had been presented
    as the subject of a habeas petition instead of as cause for
    default. In other words, does the same claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel get reviewed differently when pre-
    No. 01-3152                                               9
    sented merely as cause for a procedural default as opposed
    to being presented in a petition as the basis in the first
    instance for habeas relief? This is a question that has not
    yet been answered in this court, and appears to have
    been clearly addressed by only two district courts that
    we can find, with each one answering differently. Compare
    Orbe v. True, 
    233 F. Supp.2d 749
    , 760 (E.D. Va. 2002) (“In
    the end, then, [petitioner’s] ineffective assistance claims
    asserted as cause to excuse default were decided on the
    merits by the Supreme Court of Virginia, and thus must
    be reviewed deferentially pursuant to § 2254(d).”), with
    Holloway v. Horn, 
    161 F. Supp.2d 452
    , 478 n.12 (E.D. Pa.
    2001), and Holland v. Horn, 
    150 F. Supp.2d 706
    , 747 (E.D.
    Pa. 2001) (both finding that ineffective assistance of coun-
    sel as a cause for procedural default is not reviewed under
    the deferential standard of § 2254(d)). We do not believe
    that this question must be answered in the present case
    because regardless whether we review Lee’s ineffective
    assistance claim de novo or deferentially, our answer is
    still the same: there was no ineffective assistance of ap-
    pellate counsel because Lee cannot show prejudice.
    Even assuming that it was objectively deficient for Lee’s
    appellate counsel to fail to raise prosecutorial misconduct
    on direct appeal, there was no reasonable probability
    that the outcome of the appeal would have been different
    had the misconduct issue been raised. If the misconduct
    issue had been raised on direct appeal, the lack of a con-
    temporaneous objection to the prosecutor’s improper state-
    ments would have meant the issue was waived under
    Indiana law. See Benson v. State, 
    762 N.E.2d 748
    , 755-56
    (Ind. 2002) (“A claim of prosecutorial misconduct is waived
    if there is no contemporaneous objection.”). Waiver can be
    overcome, however, if the claimed error satisfies Indi-
    ana’s fundamental error exception. See Etienne v. State,
    
    716 N.E.2d 457
    , 461-62 (Ind. 1999). The fundamental error
    exception is a narrow one requiring that the error be
    10                                              No. 01-3152
    blatant and result in a great and undeniable harm to the
    defendant. See Benson, 762 N.E.2d at 755 (finding that
    fundamental error “must constitute a blatant violation of
    basic principles, the harm or potential for harm must be
    substantial, and the resulting error must deny the defen-
    dant fundamental due process”) (quotations omitted); Ford
    v. State, 
    704 N.E.2d 457
    , 461 (Ind. 1998) (“This Court
    views the fundamental error exception to the waiver rule
    as an extremely narrow one, available only when the rec-
    ord reveals clearly blatant violations of basic and elemen-
    tary principles of due process, and the harm or potential
    for harm cannot be denied.”) (quotations omitted). The
    “harm” in question is obviously not the resulting convic-
    tion (or all errors made in trials where convictions resulted
    would be “fundamental”), but rather the “denial of proce-
    dural opportunities for the ascertainment of truth to
    which he otherwise would have been entitled.” Townsend
    v. State, 
    632 N.E.2d 727
    , 730 (Ind. 1994). For alleged
    prosecutorial misconduct to be fundamental error, the
    improper statements must have subjected the defendant
    to “grave peril” and “had a probable persuasive effect on
    the jury’s decision.” Carter v. State, 
    686 N.E.2d 1254
    , 1262
    (Ind. 1997).
    We do not believe that, in the final analysis, the improp-
    er statements by the prosecutor subjected Lee to grave
    peril nor did they have a probable persuasive effect on the
    jury’s decision. The first statement by the prosecutor was
    de minimis, and the second statement, while longer, was
    made in the context of rebutting Lee’s assertion in closing
    arguments that Rainey had been given a deal for his
    testimony. The prosecution was explaining that there
    was no deal, but rather that Rainey had been charged
    only with one crime because the prosecutor believed that
    Rainey had committed only that one crime. The statements
    were improper, but they did not subject Lee to grave peril
    nor did they have a probable persuasive effect on the jury.
    No. 01-3152                                              11
    Additionally, the jury did have Lee’s own taped confes-
    sion before it as evidence of his guilt. If Lee’s attorney
    had raised prosecutorial misconduct on direct appeal, the
    Indiana Court of Appeals would likely have found no
    fundamental error and considered the argument waived.
    Therefore, there is no reasonable probability that the
    outcome of Lee’s direct appeal would have been different
    had the issue been raised, and, therefore, the decision not
    to raise the issue on direct appeal was not ineffective
    assistance of counsel. Because there was no ineffective
    assistance of appellate counsel, there is no cause to excuse
    the procedural default of the prosecutorial misconduct
    issue. Lee’s petition was properly denied.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s denial of
    Lee’s § 2254 petition is AFFIRMED.
    A true Copy:
    Teste:
    ________________________________
    Clerk of the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
    USCA-02-C-0072—4-25-03