White, Earnest L. v. United States ( 2004 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________
    No. 04-2126
    EARNEST L. WHITE,
    Applicant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Respondent.
    ____________
    Application for an Order Authorizing the United States
    District Court to Entertain a Successive Motion for
    Collateral Review.
    ____________
    SUBMITTED MAY 3, 2004—DECIDED
    JUNE 2, 2004—OPINION JUNE 15, 20041
    ____________
    Before POSNER, DIANE P. WOOD, and EVANS, Circuit Judges.
    POSNER, Circuit Judge. Earnest White has applied to us
    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3) for leave to file a succes-
    sive motion to vacate, under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, his federal
    criminal judgment. We cannot grant him leave if his claim
    was “presented in a prior application.” § 2244(b)(1). The
    claim (that he is not an armed career criminal) was not
    1
    The decision was rendered on June 2, in order to comply with
    the statutory deadline for such orders, but with a notation that an
    opinion explaining the basis of the order would follow.
    2                                               No. 04-2126
    presented in his previous section 2255 application, but it
    was presented in his direct appeal from his conviction, by
    his lawyer, in an Anders brief. In an unpublished order we
    granted the lawyer’s motion to withdraw and dismissed the
    appeal as frivolous.
    No reported appellate case addresses the question
    whether a direct appeal is a “prior application” within the
    meaning of section 2244(b)(1). The full text of the section
    suggests not: “A claim presented in a second or successive
    habeas corpus application under section 2254 that was pre-
    sented in a prior application shall be dismissed.” It is
    natural to suppose that “prior application” means “prior
    such application.” But this cannot be conclusive, if only
    because we are dealing in this case not with an application
    for habeas corpus under section 2254, but with a motion
    to vacate sentence under section 2255, the habeas corpus
    substitute for federal prisoners. Section 2255 contains no
    provision directly corresponding to section 2244(b)(1),
    though it does require that “a second or successive motion
    must be certified as provided in section 2244 by a panel of
    the appropriate court of appeals to contain” grounds for
    relief similar to those that section 2244 permits to be pre-
    sented in a successive application for habeas corpus even
    when they had not been presented in a previous one. § 2255
    ¶ 8. It would be odd if Congress had intended that a federal
    prisoner could refile the same motion over and over again
    without encountering a bar similar to that of section
    2244(b)(1), and we have therefore held that “prior applica-
    tion” in that section includes a prior motion under section
    2255. Taylor v. Gilkey, 
    314 F.3d 832
    , 836 (7th Cir. 2002);
    Bennett v. United States, 
    119 F.3d 468
    (7th Cir. 1997). So we
    have already moved beyond literalism; and we now take up
    the question whether “prior application” can be interpreted
    to include “direct appeal.”
    No. 04-2126                                                    3
    Invoking the doctrine of the law of the case, the courts,
    including our court, forbid a prisoner to relitigate in a col-
    lateral proceeding an issue that was decided on his direct
    appeal. E.g., Harris v. United States, 
    366 F.3d 593
    , 595 (7th
    Cir. 2004); Olmstead v. United States, 
    55 F.3d 316
    , 319 (7th
    Cir. 1995); Bear Stops v. United States, 
    339 F.3d 777
    , 780 (8th
    Cir. 2003); United States v. Aramony, 
    166 F.3d 655
    , 661 (4th
    Cir. 1999). Relitigation is forbidden (subject to exceptions
    built into the law of the case doctrine, of which more later)
    even if it is the first collateral attack. It wouldn’t make sense
    to let a prisoner get around this rule by his first filing a
    section 2255 motion that omits one of the issues presented
    in his direct appeal and then following it up with a second
    such application that presents the issue. It would make no
    difference to any policy reflected in the statute to treat a
    second collateral attack that repeats a claim made in the first
    collateral attack differently from a second collateral attack
    that repeats a claim that the prisoner had made in the direct
    appeal from his conviction and sentence.
    It is true, turning back to paragraph 8 of section 2255, that
    to permit a second or other successive motion to be filed by
    a federal prisoner we must certify that it contains either “(1)
    newly discovered evidence that . . . would be sufficient to
    establish by clear and convincing evidence that no reason-
    able factfinder would have found the movant guilty of the
    offense,” or “(2) a new rule of constitutional law . . . that
    was previously unavailable.” It is difficult to see how either
    condition could be satisfied by a motion that merely
    repeated a ground that had been presented in the prisoner’s
    direct appeal. The same puzzle, however, attends section
    2244. Subsection (b)(1), as we know, bars the filing of a
    second habeas corpus application that presents the same
    claim as the first. Subsection (b)(2) confines the grounds on
    which a claim omitted in the first application can be pre-
    sented in the second to ones (materially the same as those in
    4                                                   No. 04-2126
    section 2255 ¶ 8) that could not be satisfied if the prisoner
    were merely refiling the same motion. It seems that Con-
    gress was being redundant in order to emphasize its
    growing distaste (on which see Gonzalez v. Secretary for Dep’t
    of Corrections, 
    366 F.3d 1253
    , 1269 (11th Cir. 2004)) for repeat
    filers. But even without reference to the statutory language,
    and recurring again to the doctrine of the law of the case, we
    do not see how a federal prisoner—who must file his
    motion for relief under 2255 in the very court that convicted
    him—can be allowed to do so if all he is doing is rehashing
    a claim that had been rejected on the direct appeal.
    The provisions in sections 2244 and 2255 governing col-
    lateral attacks by prisoners take the place of the normal
    preclusion doctrines—res judicata (claim preclusion) and
    collateral estoppel (issue preclusion)—but, as is apparent
    from our earlier citations, not of the law of the case. And it’s
    not as if the law of the case doctrine were a straitjacket that
    might cause a miscarriage of justice. Here is how the court
    in United States v. 
    Aramony, supra
    , 166 F.3d at 661 (quoting
    earlier opinions), defined the doctrine: once the “decision of
    an appellate court establishes ‘the law of the case,’ it ‘must
    be followed in all subsequent proceedings in the same case
    in the trial court or on a later appeal . . . unless: (1) a subse-
    quent trial produces substantially different evidence, (2)
    controlling authority has since made a contrary decision of
    law applicable to the issue, or (3) the prior decision was
    clearly erroneous and would work manifest injustice.’ ”
    Broad as this set of exceptions is, none applies to White’s
    claim.
    It makes no difference that his claim had been presented
    in his direct appeal in an Anders brief on the basis of which
    we dismissed the appeal as frivolous. Presented is pre-
    sented, whether in an Anders brief or in any other format;
    and if an appeal is dismissed as frivolous, that is a binding
    No. 04-2126                                                   5
    adjudication that the claims presented in it had no merit at
    all, rather than an invitation to refile. Anyway section
    2244(b)(1) bars collateral review so long as the issue was
    presented to the court previously; it needn’t have been
    adjudicated. Felder v. McVicar, 
    113 F.3d 696
    , 698 (7th Cir.
    1997); In re Fowlkes, 
    326 F.3d 542
    (4th Cir. 2003); Vancleave v.
    Norris, 
    150 F.3d 926
    (8th Cir. 1998); contra (but without
    citation to § 2244(b)(1)), In re Lott, 
    366 F.3d 431
    (6th Cir.
    2004). But here it was adjudicated.
    APPLICATION DENIED.
    DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge, concurring in the result.
    No one who has been following the law of habeas corpus in
    the federal courts since 1996 would assume that it is easy for
    a prisoner—federal or state—to raise a potentially successful
    claim, even in an initial application. State prisoners seeking
    to present a petition for habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C.
    § 2254 face a daunting array of procedural requirements that
    often stump even experienced lawyers, ranging from
    exhaustion of remedies, to fair presentment obligations, to
    procedural default rules, and above all, to the strong
    deference to the conclusions of fact and law reached by the
    state courts. While the situation of federal prisoners is
    somewhat different, because they normally must proceed
    using a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 for collateral relief
    analogous to habeas corpus, and because they are operating
    within a unitary system, the differences for the most part are
    6                                               No. 04-2126
    only skin-deep. This is especially true when it comes to
    second or successive applications for relief. In the
    Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, Pub.
    L. 104-132 (AEDPA), Congress made parallel changes to
    §§ 2254 and 2255 to ensure that successive litigation would
    take place only under the most compelling of circumstances.
    For state prisoners who wish to proceed under § 2254 with
    such an application, the rules are contained in 28 U.S.C.
    § 2244; for federal prisoners who are attempting to file a
    successive § 2255 motion, the rules are found in 28 U.S.C.
    § 2255 ¶ 8.
    Applicant Earnest L. White is a federal prisoner, and thus
    is trying to use the system found in § 2255. He has filed
    an application pursuant to § 2255 ¶ 8, which requires those
    who wish to file a second or successive motion for relief
    under § 2255 to use the procedures set forth in § 2244.
    Among the many restrictions on second or successive ap-
    plications found in § 2244 is the following:
    (b)(1) A claim presented in a second or successive
    habeas corpus application under section 2254 that was
    presented in a prior application shall be dismissed.
    Section 2255 ¶ 8 requires second or successive motions
    under that statute to be “certified as provided in section
    2244.”
    It is common ground between the majority and me that
    White has already filed one motion under § 2255. White v.
    United States, No. 97-1622 (7th Cir. July 8, 1997) (denying
    request for a certificate of appealability from the denial of
    the first § 2255 motion). But the remainder of the procedural
    history of White’s case is important for present purposes.
    Initially, White pleaded guilty to the crime of being a felon
    in possession of a firearm. The district court accepted the
    plea and sentenced him as an armed career criminal to 180
    No. 04-2126                                                 7
    months’ incarceration. White appealed, but his lawyer filed
    an Anders brief and sought permission to withdraw from the
    case, on the ground that there were no non-frivolous issues
    to be raised. This court granted that motion. United States v.
    White, No. 96-2406 (7th Cir. Sept. 12, 1996). At that point,
    White filed the first § 2255 motion noted above. Since the
    time it was denied, White has filed a second § 2255 motion,
    a motion to correct sentence under 18 U.S.C. § 3582, and two
    habeas corpus petitions under 28 U.S.C. § 2241. This string
    of filings have all presented claims that properly belong in
    a motion under § 2255, as they concern the correctness of his
    conviction and sentence. Now, in his current application,
    White wants to challenge various aspects of the sentencing
    court’s decision to treat him an armed career criminal.
    The question before us is a narrow one: is White’s current
    effort to file a successive § 2255 motion absolutely barred
    because he has already presented this claim in something
    that qualifies as a prior “application” for purposes of
    § 2244(b)(1) as incorporated in § 2255 ¶ 8, or should White’s
    current application be denied because it fails to meet the
    substantive criteria for a new claim—namely, because it
    relies neither on newly discovered evidence nor a new rule
    of constitutional law that the Supreme Court has made
    retroactive to cases on collateral review. See § 2255 ¶ 8(1),
    (2). The majority concludes that the former reason is the
    correct one on which to rely, by construing the term
    “application” to include not only applications for collateral
    relief, but also claims presented on direct appeal. It con-
    cedes, in doing so, that this reading would be impossible for
    a state prisoner proceeding under §§ 2254 and 2244. Never-
    theless, relying on analogies to the law of the case doctrine,
    it chooses to adopt an entirely different rule for § 2255
    applicants. Worse yet (although I am not taking issue with
    this aspect of its ruling), it does this in a case where there
    was nothing but an Anders brief on direct appeal.
    8                                                   No. 04-2126
    This approach is, in my view, inconsistent with the stat-
    utory scheme Congress has outlined, in which it has care-
    fully set forth exactly what weight must be given to earlier
    findings of fact or conclusions of law that support a claim.
    If the fact that a claim as a whole has already been pre-
    sented on direct appeal were enough to bring the entire
    claim within the bar of § 2244(b)(1), the existence of newly
    discovered evidence would be beside the point. (If the ma-
    jority means to imply that the law of the case will not bar
    the successive claim when exceptions to the normal law of
    the case doctrine apply, my response is that such a rule
    might at times be broader than Congress intended in
    AEDPA, and at times narrower. The only way to respect
    congressional intent is to use the standards Congress itself
    has provided.) The law of the case doctrine, and its close
    cousin issue preclusion, exist so that there will be finality in
    determinations of facts between the same parties. But as
    even the majority acknowledges in its opinion, preclusion
    principles operate differently in habeas proceedings. Taylor
    v. United States, 
    798 F.2d 271
    , 272 (7th Cir. 1986), cert. denied,
    
    479 U.S. 1056
    (1987) (stating that res judicata does not apply
    in § 2255 proceedings (citing Sanders v. United States, 
    373 U.S. 1
    , 8 (1963))).
    Harris v. United States, 
    366 F.3d 593
    (7th Cir. 2004), on
    which the majority relies, does not resolve the question
    before us. In that case, petitioner Harris initially sought re-
    lief under § 2255 because his lawyer failed to file a timely
    appeal. The district court granted his motion, and he then
    appealed his sentence to this court. In that functional
    equivalent to a direct appeal, we considered and rejected a
    claim that counsel had been ineffective for failing to argue
    for a downward adjustment to Harris’s sentence under the
    safety valve. See United States v. Harris, 
    230 F.3d 1054
    (7th
    Cir. 2000). Having lost that round, Harris filed a new
    motion under § 2255, in which he argued again that counsel
    No. 04-2126                                                  9
    had been ineffective for failing to invoke the safety valve. In
    the Alice-in-Wonderland world of habeas corpus, this was
    his “first” § 2255 petition. Thus, it did not implicate any of
    the statutory provisions now before us. This court decided
    that Harris was bound by the earlier resolution of the safety
    valve issue, reiterating our frequent warnings to defendants
    and counsel not to present ineffective assistance of counsel
    claims prematurely, before the record is fully developed.
    
    Harris, 366 F.3d at 595
    . After stating this conclusion, the
    opinion went on to hold that the ineffectiveness claim was
    meritless in any event. 
    Id. at 596.
      Harris says nothing at all about the question whether the
    presentation of the ineffectiveness claim on direct appeal
    had any effect on Harris’s ability to file a second or succes-
    sive § 2255 petition. If Harris had omitted the ineffectiveness
    claim from his first true § 2255 petition and had then tried
    to file a successive petition, under the analysis that I am
    advocating the court would find that he was not barred by
    § 2244(b)(1), but that his claim could not go forward as a
    successive petition under § 2255 ¶ 8 unless he could point
    to either newly discovered evidence or a new retroactive
    rule of constitutional law. Because, in the actual case, Harris
    did present the ineffectiveness claim in his first full § 2255
    motion, he would have been barred from raising it in any
    successive motion by § 2244(b)(1).
    None of the other cases to which the majority refers lead
    to a contrary result. Olmstead v. United States, 
    55 F.3d 316
    (7th Cir. 1995), and Bear Stops v. United States, 
    339 F.3d 777
    (8th Cir. 2003), avoiding the procedural knots in Harris, in-
    volve straightforward applications of the rules governing a
    federal prisoner’s first § 2255 motion. United States v.
    Aramony, 
    166 F.3d 655
    (4th Cir. 1999), which the majority
    quotes at length, did not even involve a collateral proceed-
    ing and thus sheds little light on the issue facing us here.
    10                                                No. 04-2126
    The habeas corpus statutes draw a distinct line between a
    collateral attack on a criminal conviction and a direct
    appeal. Section 2254 speaks of a person who is “in custody
    pursuant to the judgment of a State court,” 28 U.S.C.
    § 2254(a), and section 2255 applies to a “prisoner in custody
    under sentence of a court established by Act of Congress,”
    28 U.S.C. § 2255 ¶ 1. In keeping with that distinction, § 2244
    sets forth the rules for handling applications for a writ
    of habeas corpus filed by state prisoners; these rules, as
    already noted, also apply to motions filed by federal pris-
    oners under § 2255. It strains the plain language of
    § 2244(b)(1) past the breaking point to read the phrase
    habeas corpus “application” to mean, as applied to § 2255
    cases, both motions under § 2255 and direct appeals. This
    reading creates a sharp dichotomy between the regimes
    applicable to § 2254 and § 2255, in the face of the efforts
    Congress made in 1996 to create parallel systems. It dras-
    tically restricts the availability of § 2255 relief for federal
    prisoners, because it means that notwithstanding new
    evidence or new retroactive rules of constitutional laws,
    no claim may be presented at all if it was raised on direct
    appeal. This point is worth stressing: § 2244(b)(1) creates a
    threshold bar that applicants must pass before a court of
    appeals can even consider whether the substantive criteria
    for authorizing a successive petition have been met.
    The rule that the majority is adopting here effectively
    reads § 2255 ¶ 8 out of the statute, except for the small
    number of cases in which the new evidence or the new rule
    might reveal ineffective assistance of counsel, Massaro v.
    United States, 
    538 U.S. 500
    , 504 (2003), or some other fun-
    damental point that was utterly unknown at the time of the
    trial. There may be instances in which a federal prisoner
    raises an issue on direct appeal based on incomplete infor-
    mation, addressing for example an alleged Brady violation
    or an improper ex parte communication, only to discover
    No. 04-2126                                                   11
    after further investigation that her constitutional rights were
    seriously undermined. Under the rule adopted by the
    majority, these claims would be inadmissible in any collat-
    eral attack because they were included in the direct appeal.
    Likewise, a state defendant who raises a Fourth
    Amendment claim but was not provided an opportunity for
    full and fair litigation “at trial or on direct review,” Stone v.
    Powell, 
    428 U.S. 465
    , 495 n.37 (1976), could obtain habeas
    review of that narrow point. A similarly situated federal
    defendant, however, would be out of luck.
    Further, the intersection of the rule proposed by the ma-
    jority with that of procedural default creates an impossible
    situation for defendants. If a federal defendant fails to raise
    a claim on direct appeal and is unable to show cause or
    prejudice for that omission, that claim cannot be raised for
    the first time on collateral review. See, e.g., Mankarious v.
    United States, 
    282 F.3d 940
    , 943 (7th Cir. 2002); Prewitt v.
    United States, 
    83 F.3d 812
    , 816 (7th Cir. 1996). If she does
    present it on direct appeal, however, she is now also barred
    from collateral review.
    In my view, while Congress undoubtedly wanted to make
    it difficult to pursue second or successive petitions, it did
    not mean to prevent the courts of appeals from evaluating
    the requirements of § 2255 ¶ 8, nor did it intend to invite
    them to craft a new federal common-law rule of law of the
    case to replace those stringent statutory critera. And
    stringent they are: the number of successful applications for
    permission to file a second or successive motion under
    § 2255 (or application under § 2254) is vanishingly small.
    Indeed, eight years after the passage of AEDPA, I cannot
    personally remember a single such application that has been
    granted in this circuit, though I have not examined these
    records recently.
    12                                                No. 04-2126
    The claims that White is trying to raise in the present
    repetitive application for permission to file a successive
    motion under § 2255 should not be barred altogether from
    our consideration because of anything that happened in the
    direct appeal from his conviction and sentence. Instead,
    we should ask whether White has presented these particular
    claims in any prior motion under § 2255. If the answer were
    yes, then and only then would dismissal on this ground be
    proper. Since the answer is no, however, we can and must
    turn to the criteria Congress set forth for evaluating whether
    his successive motion is entitled to go forward. Once we
    reach that step, it is easy to see that his application must be
    denied. As noted above, he wants to attack the sentencing
    court’s armed career criminal determination, by arguing
    that he is actually innocent of the enhancement, that his
    attorney should have objected to the enhancement, and that
    the court clearly erred when it imposed the enhancement.
    White has cited neither new facts nor a new rule of constitu-
    tional law made retroactive to cases on collateral review in
    support of his proposed claim. It is on this ground, not on
    the ground that we cannot even look at his claims because
    they appeared in a prior “application,” that we should rule.
    I therefore concur only in the outcome reached by the
    majority.
    No. 04-2126                                            13
    A true Copy:
    Teste:
    _____________________________
    Clerk of the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
    USCA-02-C-0072—6-15-04