Musladin v. Lamarque ( 2005 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    MATHEW MUSLADIN,                          No. 03-16653
    Petitioner-Appellant,             D.C. No.
    v.                           CV-00-01998-JL
    ANTHONY LAMARQUE, WARDEN,                Northern District
    Respondent-Appellee.            of California,
    San Francisco
            ORDER
    Filed October 21, 2005
    Before: Stephen Reinhardt, David R. Thompson, and
    Marsha S. Berzon, Circuit Judges.
    Order;
    Dissent by Judge Kleinfeld;
    Dissent by Judge Bea
    ORDER
    The petition for panel rehearing is DENIED.
    The full court was advised of the suggestion for rehearing
    en banc. A judge of the court requested a vote on whether to
    rehear the matter en banc. The matter failed to receive a
    majority of the votes of the nonrecused active judges in favor
    of en banc reconsideration. Fed. R. App. P. 35. The request
    for rehearing en banc is DENIED.
    14417
    14418                 MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE
    KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge, with whom KOZINSKI,
    O’SCANNLAIN, TALLMAN, BYBEE, CALLAHAN, and
    BEA, Circuit Judges, join, dissenting from denial of rehearing
    en banc:
    I respectfully dissent from the order denying rehearing en
    banc. We have effectively erased a statutory provision
    designed to restrict the power of the lower federal courts to
    overturn fully reviewed state court criminal convictions. And
    we have sharpened a serious circuit split.
    Musladin was convicted of murder, and his conviction was
    upheld through direct and collateral review in the California
    courts. The California Court of Appeal carefully and reason-
    ably applied the relevant precedents of the United States
    Supreme Court, but arguably deviated from the implications
    of a Ninth Circuit precedent.
    In 1996, Congress adopted the Antiterrorism and Effective
    Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), amending the standard that fed-
    eral courts must apply to state criminal convictions in habeas
    cases. The statute as amended says that we may grant a
    habeas petition if and only if the last reasoned state court
    decision “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable appli-
    cation of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by
    the Supreme Court of the United States.”1 Our decision in
    this case has the practical effect of erasing the statutory phrase
    “as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.”
    Our tools for statutory construction are many,2 but they do not
    include an eraser. Yet here we go, erasing the “clearly estab-
    lished” phrase and expanding the “as determined” phrase. The
    statute in nine states now says, as a practical matter, “contrary
    to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly estab-
    lished Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of
    1
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)(1) (emphasis added).
    2
    See 2A Norman J. Singer, Sutherland on Statutes and Statutory Con-
    struction Part V, subpart A (6th ed. 2000).
    MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE                        14419
    the United States, giving ‘persuasive weight’ to Ninth Cir-
    cuit decisions that have applied Supreme Court deci-
    sions.” We do not have that legislative authority.
    The facts of this case and of the controlling precedents
    show just how clear our mistake is. Musladin, embroiled in a
    custody dispute with his estranged wife, murdered her new
    fiancé. At his trial, three members of the fiancé’s family sat
    in the spectator section of the courtroom wearing buttons with
    his picture on them. The buttons were two-to-four inch pic-
    tures of the victim but had no words. Musladin argued in his
    state court appeal and petition for review that the buttons
    denied him due process of law by eroding his presumption of
    innocence.
    The California Court of Appeal concluded that the buttons
    contained no express message and were unlikely to signify
    “anything other than the normal grief occasioned by the loss
    of a family member.”3 The California Court carefully exam-
    ined Estelle v. Williams4 and Holbrook v. Flynn5 (the relevant
    Supreme Court decisions on) and Ninth Circuit cases. Though
    the Court of Appeal noted that button wearing should be “dis-
    couraged,” it held that the buttons did not amount to a denial
    of due process because they did not brand Musladin “with an
    unmistakable mark of guilt.”6
    The statute is quite clear that our task on review of Mus-
    ladin’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is not to examine
    the California Court of Appeal decision as though we were a
    higher California court. Rather, we exercise a much more lim-
    ited and deferential review to determine whether the Califor-
    nia Court of Appeal acted contrary to “clearly established . . .
    3
    People v. Musladin, No. H015159 at 21 (Cal. Ct. App. 1997).
    4
    Estelle v. Williams, 
    425 U.S. 501
     (1976).
    5
    Holbrook v. Flynn, 
    475 U.S. 560
     (1986).
    6
    People v. Musladin, No. H015159 at 22.
    14420                   MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE
    Supreme Court” precedent or “unreasonabl[y]” applied it.7
    The only question for us is whether there is any Supreme
    Court authority that holds that silent signals of affiliation by
    spectators in a courtroom deny a defendant due process by
    eroding his presumption of innocence. The answer is that
    there is no such case. That should be the end of our inquiry.
    The Supreme Court held in Estelle v. Williams that forcing
    a defendant to wear prison clothes at trial is “inherently preju-
    dicial” and denies due process.8 It held in Holbrook v. Flynn
    that the presence of several armed uniformed officers in the
    spectators’ row directly behind the prisoner is not inherently
    prejudicial.9 Neither of these cases holds that a spectator’s
    symbol of affiliation or even opinion denies due process to a
    defendant.
    Dressing the defendant in “prison garb,” the Estelle prob-
    lem,10 is not analogous to spectators wearing buttons. First,
    prison garb is an unambiguous statement that the defendant is
    already a prisoner. Second, it is a communication to the jury
    of the government’s determination—not a non-governmental
    spectator’s—that the defendant belongs in jail. The buttons,
    by contrast, are ambiguous. They may mean “we really want
    this defendant punished because we care a lot about his vic-
    tim,” or they may merely mean “we care a lot about the vic-
    tim,” without an implication that the defendant is the proper
    person to be punished. Even more important, the spectators’
    buttons do not imply any determination by the government.
    Even if the buttons did imply that the spectators wanted the
    defendant punished, that would not be as corrosive of the pre-
    sumption of innocence as the government saying “this defen-
    dant belongs in jail and he is already there because of our
    determination.” Unlike the spectators’ buttons in this case, the
    7
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)(1).
    8
    Estelle, 
    425 U.S. at
    530 n.10.
    9
    Flynn, 
    475 U.S. at 568-69
    .
    10
    Estelle, 
    425 U.S. at 503
    .
    MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE                         14421
    prison garb in Estelle detracted from the presumption of inno-
    cence and from the defendant’s dignity in the courtroom.11
    The presence of the armed officers in the spectator section
    in Flynn more closely resembles the facts in our case than
    does the prison garb in Estelle. Both involve what the jury
    might perceive as communications from the spectators’ sec-
    tion. But the Supreme Court held that the presence of the
    armed officers did not deprive the defendant of due process
    by corroding the presumption of innocence. And the armed
    officers were far more likely to do so than spectators not asso-
    ciated with the government because the officers represented
    the government and might have communicated its judgment
    that the defendant was dangerous. The Supreme Court held
    that the armed officers did not deny due process because of
    the “wider range of inferences that a juror might reasonably
    draw from the officers’ presence.”12 The courtroom cannot be
    totally free of indications that the state thinks the defendant is
    guilty, for “jurors are quite aware that the defendant appearing
    before them did not arrive there by choice or happenstance.”13
    With these two Supreme Court cases as bookends—showing
    what denies due process and what does not—the California
    courts were well within the bounds of reasonable interpreta-
    tion in determining that this case is more like Flynn. The but-
    tons with a picture of the dead fiancé did not say or obviously
    imply that the defendant killed him, just that the spectators
    wearing them cared about him.
    So how did the panel majority manage to reach a different
    result in the face of Supreme Court decisions plainly leaving
    11
    See 
    id. at 518
     (Brennan, J., dissenting) (“Identifiable prison garb robs
    an accused of the respect and dignity accorded other participants in a trial
    and constitutionally due the accused as an element of the presumption of
    innocence, and surely tends to brand him in the eyes of the jurors with an
    unmistakable mark of guilt.”).
    12
    Flynn, 
    475 U.S. at 569
    .
    13
    
    Id. at 567
    .
    14422                  MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE
    room for the California courts’ conclusion and a statute limit-
    ing us to Supreme Court decisions? The panel extended a
    Ninth Circuit case, not a Supreme Court case, Norris v. Risley.14
    But the statute says we cannot do that, with the express
    restriction “as determined by the Supreme Court of the
    United States.”15 The panel evades that restriction by holding
    that we give “persuasive weight” to Ninth Circuit cases when
    determining what is “clearly established Federal law, as deter-
    mined by the Supreme Court.” The panel’s proposition means
    that we will grant writs based on precedents other than those
    of the Supreme Court. Ergo, the statutory restriction on our
    power is erased.
    We held in Norris—before AEDPA—that the writ should
    be granted where several female spectators wore “Women
    Against Rape” buttons in the presence of jurors in “elevators,
    in the courtroom, on their way to and from the courtroom,”
    and while “the women served refreshments outside the court-
    room on behalf of the state.”16 California could properly
    decide the case at bar by distinguishing Norris, disagreeing
    with Norris, or in complete ignorance of Norris. Under
    AEDPA’s restriction to Supreme Court decisions, we are obli-
    gated to deny the writ so long as the California decision was
    not contrary to or an unreasonable application of Estelle and
    Flynn. We cannot legitimately require the California courts to
    follow Ninth Circuit decisions on pain of our letting their pris-
    oners out onto the street.
    At least four of our sister circuits have expressly repudiated
    the error our panel has made. The Sixth Circuit, in Mitzel v.
    Tate, held that “[w]e may not look to the decisions of our cir-
    cuit, or other courts of appeals, when ‘deciding whether the
    state decision is contrary to, or an unreasonable application
    14
    Norris v. Risley, 
    918 F.2d 828
     (9th Cir. 1990).
    15
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)(1) (emphasis added).
    16
    Norris, 
    918 F.2d at 829
    .
    MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE                        14423
    of, clearly established federal law.’ ”17 The Tenth Circuit in
    Welch v. City of Pratt held AEDPA “restricts the source of
    clearly established law to [the Supreme] Court’s jurispru-
    dence” and federal courts are therefore “no longer permitted
    to apply our own jurisprudence.”18 The Seventh Circuit like-
    wise determined that “[f]ederal courts are no longer permitted
    to apply their own jurisprudence, but must look exclusively to
    Supreme Court case-law.”19
    The Fourth Circuit has also held that habeas relief may be
    granted only if “the state court decision is contrary to, or an
    unreasonable application of Supreme Court jurisprudence,
    and not circuit court precedent,” so “any independent opin-
    ions we offer on the merits of the constitutional claims will
    have no determinative effect in the case before us, nor any
    precedential effect for state courts in future cases. At best, it
    constitutes a body of constitutional dicta.”20 The Fourth Cir-
    cuit expressly rejects the notion that the lower federal courts
    need to provide “guidance” to the state courts on how to read
    the Supreme Court opinions. There is
    no reason to presume that state courts are in need of
    our guidance in interpreting and applying the con-
    trolling Supreme Court precedents. Our charge under
    the statute is only to determine whether the state
    court’s adjudication of the claims before it was a rea-
    sonable one in light of the controlling Supreme
    Court law.21
    17
    Mitzel v. Tate, 
    267 F.3d 524
    , 531 (6th Cir. 2001) (quoting Herbert v.
    Billy, 
    160 F.3d 1131
    , 1135 (6th Cir. 1998)).
    18
    Welch v. City of Pratt, Kansas, 
    214 F.3d 1219
    , 1222 (10th Cir. 2000)
    (internal citations and quotations omitted).
    19
    Bocian v. Godinez, 
    101 F.3d 465
    , 471 (7th Cir. 1996).
    20
    Bell v. Jarvis, 
    236 F.3d 149
    , 162 (4th Cir. 2000) (en banc).
    21
    
    Id. at 162
    .
    14424                  MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE
    Arguably our panel did not create the circuit split ex nihilo.
    The panel notes that the Eighth Circuit in Williams v. Bowersox22
    held that the “diversity of opinion” among federal courts on
    a particular issue suggested that the state court did not unrea-
    sonably apply Supreme Court precedent.23 But saying that the
    state court decision is not unreasonable because some federal
    courts have reached similar conclusions is not at all the same
    as saying that the state court decision is unreasonable because
    a circuit court has reached a contrary conclusion. The First
    Circuit in Ouber v. Guarino24 and the Third Circuit in Matteo
    v. Superintendent25 come much closer to supporting the
    panel’s decision, but our panel is unique in how boldly it has
    flown in the face of the statutory restriction to Supreme Court
    decisions.
    Those of us who have actually tried cases to juries have fre-
    quently observed how spectators communicate their feelings.
    This communication is an unavoidable consequence of the
    Constitutional guarantee of “public trial.”26 Sometimes there
    is a wall of brown or blue in the spectators’ section, display-
    ing that state or municipal police care a great deal about the
    case. Sometimes the courtroom is full of Hells Angels colors,
    signifying a concern for their brother in the defendant’s chair.
    The local rape support center volunteers may crowd into the
    seats behind the prosecutor in a rape trial while the victim sits
    silently looking at the jurors through the entire trial. Defense
    lawyers round up family members to show support for the
    defendant by sitting behind the defense table.
    There is nothing wrong with the jury knowing that people
    care about the case and the parties. Typically, the spectators
    22
    Williams v. Bowersox, 
    340 F.3d 667
     (8th Cir. 2003).
    23
    
    Id. at 672
    .
    24
    Ouber v. Guarino, 
    293 F.3d 19
    , 26 (1st Cir. 2002).
    25
    Matteo v. Superintendent, 
    171 F.3d 877
    , 889-90 (3rd Cir. 1999).
    26
    U.S. CONST. amend. VI.
    MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE                         14425
    arrange themselves like wedding guests choosing the bride’s
    side or the groom’s side, with those who favor a party sitting
    behind the lawyer for that side. In a public trial, the jury can
    always see that a lot of people care about one side or the
    other, or that no one cares except the parties and lawyers.
    Good lawyers often use this to their advantage, and good
    judges exercise prudence to avoid situations that might intimi-
    date or prejudice the jury. Perhaps, as the California Court of
    Appeal implied, the trial judge in this case should have told
    the family members to remove their buttons. T-shirts with pic-
    tures of the victim would be difficult, but buttons are easy.
    There is no legitimate way for judges to prevent spectators in
    a public trial from showing that they care about the case and
    support one side or the other, even if only by where they sit
    and who they look at with sympathy or hostility. Public con-
    cern and public sympathy for one side or the other are part of
    what it means for a trial to be “public.”
    The panel’s error is symptomatic of a deeper problem than
    its misapplication of Supreme Court precedent to spectators’
    photo buttons. Few things incumbent on powerful government
    officials are more fundamental than their duty to comply with
    the legal limitations on their power. Our panel has arrogated
    to our court power that we do not legitimately possess.
    State judges take the same oath to uphold the Constitution
    that we do and perform the same work we do, construing
    Constitutional provisions and applying them to the facts
    before them. We do not sit as a state appellate court. One
    problem they sometimes have is deciding what to do about
    lower federal court decisions. Obviously they have to follow
    United States Supreme Court decisions, and they construe
    them as routinely as we do. Obviously they do not have to fol-
    low federal decisions on questions of state law.27 Not quite as
    27
    See generally 20 AM. JUR. 2D Courts § 225 (1965) (noting that state
    courts free to ignore a federal ruling on a state law); see also Erie R.R. Co.
    v. Tompkins, 
    304 U.S. 64
    , 80 (1938) (holding that federal courts are bound
    by state interpretations of state law); Collier v. Bayer, 
    408 F.3d 1279
    ,
    1283 n.4 (9th Cir. 2005) (“Federal courts of appeal[s] may not review state
    courts’ interpretations of state law.”).
    14426                    MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE
    obviously, but just as true, state courts understand that they
    are free to act contrary to circuit court holdings on questions
    of federal law.28 Lower courts must follow the law laid down
    by higher courts. But we are not a higher court than the
    Supreme Court of California or the California Court of
    Appeal, or for that matter, California traffic courts. We are in
    a different judicial hierarchy.
    Our panel’s error creates uncertainty and inconsistency for
    the nine state court systems and nearly 20% of our nation’s
    population within the Ninth Circuit. Must they follow our
    decisions when they think our decisions are contrary to or
    unreasonable applications of Supreme Court precedent? The
    statute tells them one thing, we tell them another, and the
    briefs they get will tell them both. Under the plain statutory
    language, state courts are free to ignore our decisions. But
    under the panel’s decision, they must follow them. We have
    effectively turned ourselves into the supreme court of the nine
    states in our circuit. I therefore dissent.
    BEA, Circuit Judge, with whom Circuit Judges KOZINSKI,
    O’SCANNLAIN, and KLEINFELD join, dissenting from the
    denial of rehearing en banc:
    I join Judge Kleinfeld’s dissent from the denial of rehearing
    en banc. I write separately to underscore that it was not an
    “unreasonable application of clearly established federal law”
    for the California Court of Appeal to deny habeas relief not-
    withstanding its determination that the wearing of victims’
    28
    See Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona, 
    520 U.S. 43
    , 58 n.11
    (1997); see also Lockhart v. Fretwell, 
    506 U.S. 364
    , 375-76 (1993)
    (Thomas, J., concurring) (“In our federal system, a state trial court’s inter-
    pretation of federal law is no less authoritative than that of the federal
    court of appeals in whose circuit the trial court is located.”); People v. Wil-
    liams, 
    16 Cal.4th 153
    , 190 (1997) (recognizing that decisions of lower fed-
    eral courts interpreting federal law are not binding on state courts).
    MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE                  14427
    photographs in a courtroom constitutes an “impermissible fac-
    tor coming into play.”
    The panel opinion suggests that, once the California Court
    of Appeal “specifically found ‘the wearing of photographs of
    victims in a courtroom to be an “impermissible factor coming
    into play,” ’ ” Musladin’s conviction could not stand. See
    Musladin v. LaMarque, ___ F.3d ___, ___ (9th Cir. 2005)
    (panel’s emphasis). The rationale offered in support of this
    conclusion is that, “[u]nder Williams and Flynn,” the finding
    of an impermissible factor coming into play “in itself estab-
    lishes ‘inherent prejudice’ and requires reversal.” 
    Id.
    The panel opinion misconstrues Williams and Flynn. In
    Williams, the Court established that putting a defendant on
    trial in prison garb is constitutional error of the variety amena-
    ble to harmless-error analysis. See Williams, 
    425 U.S. at
    507-
    09 (adopting the position of the Fifth Circuit that “the
    harmless-error doctrine is applicable to this line of cases”);
    Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure
    § 855, at 477 & n.8 (3d ed. 2004). When the Court in Flynn
    “reaffirmed its holding in Williams,” see Musladin, ___ F.3d
    at ___, it did not, of course, transform “courtroom arrange-
    ments challenged as inherently prejudicial” into structural
    errors, Flynn, 
    475 U.S. at 570
    . Rather, Flynn suggested that,
    to obtain a conviction’s reversal, a defendant must show “ac-
    tual prejudice” even after successfully demonstrating that the
    challenged courtroom arrangement was “inherently prejudi-
    cial.” See 
    id. at 572
     (“[I]f the challenged practice is not found
    inherently prejudicial and if the defendant fails to show actual
    prejudice, the inquiry is over.” (emphasis added)). Under
    Flynn, in other words, it is possible to have a situation that is
    “inherently prejudicial” but not “so inherently prejudicial as
    to pose an unacceptable threat to [a] defendant’s right to a fair
    trial.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    Accordingly, it was a reasonable application of Supreme
    Court precedent for the California Court of Appeal to deter-
    14428               MUSLADIN v. LAMARQUE
    mine that, although in its view the wearing of victims’ photo-
    graphs in a courtroom is inherently prejudicial, the button-
    wearing in this case did not actually deprive Musladin of his
    right to a fair trial.
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