Fournier, Curtis ( 2015 )


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  •            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NO. WR-82,102-01
    EX PARTE CURTIS FOURNIER, Applicant
    ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
    FROM CAUSE NO. 1151921-A IN THE 351ST DISTRICT COURT
    HARRIS COUNTY
    NO. WR-82,103-01
    EX PARTE CHRISTOPHER DOWDEN, Applicant
    ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
    FROM CAUSE NO. 1300886-A IN THE 337TH DISTRICT COURT
    HARRIS COUNTY
    Y EARY, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which K ELLER, P.J., joined.
    DISSENTING OPINION
    With respect to the issue upon which we filed and set these post-conviction
    applications for writ of habeas corpus, brought under the auspices of Article 11.07 of the
    Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, I agree with the majority opinion today. For the reasons
    Fournier & Dowden — 2
    stated in that opinion, Applicants are not entitled to relief on the basis of a claim of “actual
    innocence.”
    I nevertheless dissent to the Court’s ultimate disposition of these cases. On the
    strength of Ex parte Chance, 
    439 S.W.3d 918
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2014), the Court grants
    Applicants relief based upon its earlier declaration, in Ex parte Lo, that the statute upon
    which their convictions were based was unconstitutional on its face, as overbroad. 
    424 S.W.3d 10
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). But the Court’s per curiam opinion in Chance did not
    explain why the holding in Lo should apply to nullify convictions that were already final by
    the time Lo was decided. Because I would hesitate to give Lo retroactive effect, I dissent.
    The General Rule
    Ordinarily, to establish that a legislative enactment is unconstitutional on its face, a
    litigant “must establish that no set of circumstances exists under which the [challenged
    statute] would be valid.” United States v. Salerno, 
    481 U.S. 739
    , 745 (1987). With that
    concept as a starting point, Texas has long recognized “the general rule” that an
    unconstitutional statute “is void from its inception[.]” Reyes v. State, 
    753 S.W.2d 382
    , 383
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1988). When an appellate court has ruled a statute facially unconstitutional,
    the court has “not annul[ed] the statute, for it was already lifeless. It had been fatally smitten
    by the Constitution at its birth.” 
    Id. (citing Ex
    parte Bockhorn, 
    138 S.W. 706
    , 707 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 1911), which in turn quoted Boales v. Ferguson, 
    76 N.W. 18
    , 19 (1898)). See
    also 12B Tex.Jur.3d, Const. Law, § 57 (2012), at 97-99; 16A Am.Jur., Const. Law, § 195 (2d
    Fournier & Dowden — 3
    ed. 2009), at 61-64. Stated another way:
    An act that has been declared unconstitutional is, in legal contemplation, as
    inoperative as though it had never been passed or written, and it is regarded as
    invalid, or void, from the date of enactment (not only from the date on which
    it was judicially declared unconstitutional) and at all times thereafter.
    16 Corpus Juris Secundum, Const. Law § 265 (2015), at 333.1
    Given this general rule—that an unconstitutional statute is inoperable “from its
    inception”—it may seem redundant or even pointless to engage in an analysis of retroactivity
    of the judicial decision that declared the statute to be unconstitutional. After all, it was not
    the judicial decision that nullified the statute; the statute was stillborn. Any analysis of
    retroactivity would surely result in a conclusion that the judicial opinion recognizing the
    facial unconstitutionality of a penal statute should be applied retroactively. Thus, any time
    a penal statute is declared facially unconstitutional—at least in the usual sense that it is
    invalid under some constitutional principle in all of its applications—it would make sense
    to hold the opinion declaring the facial unconstitutionality of the penal provision to apply to
    any and every individual ever convicted under that provision, in the future and in the past.
    Ex parte Chance
    In Ex parte Chance, this Court apparently followed the general rule and gave
    1
    “This rule, however, is not without exception.” Lapasnick v. State, 
    784 S.W.2d 366
    , 368
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1990). “[C]ourts may make exceptions to the general rule where, because of the
    nature of the statute and its previous application, unjust results would accrue to those who justifiably
    relied on it.” 16A Am.Jur., Const. Law, § 196 (2d ed. 2009), at 64. See also 12B Tex.Jur.3d, Const.
    Law, § 57 (2012), at 98 (citing Lapasnick); 16 Corpus Juris Secundum, Const. Law, § 265 (2015),
    at 334.
    Fournier & Dowden — 4
    retroactive application to our decision in Ex parte Lo. 
    See 439 S.W.3d at 921
    (Cochran, J.,
    concurring) (“We follow this ‘void ab initio’ concept.”). But in that case, as in this one, this
    Court failed to entertain or examine the question of whether an appellate decision declaring
    a penal statute to be unconstitutional under the First Amendment’s substantial overbreadth
    doctrine ought to be given fully retroactive effect. To be fair, it is true that no litigant has as
    yet attempted to raise that question before us.
    The First Amendment Substantial Overbreadth Doctrine
    I believe it important to recognize that the ordinary rule—requiring that a litigant
    challenging a legislative enactment as unconstitutional on its face “must establish that no set
    of circumstances exists under which the [challenged statute] would be valid[,]” 
    Salerno, 481 U.S. at 745
    —does not apply to First Amendment overbreadth challenges. A penal provision
    does not have to be unconstitutional in all of its applications in order for an appellate court
    to declare it facially unconstitutional under the First Amendment’s overbreadth doctrine.
    Indeed, that criminal defendant’s own First Amendment rights may remain unscathed by the
    indictment and prosecution against him, and yet he may still have standing to obtain a ruling
    that the penal statute under which he is charged is facially unconstitutional “if it prohibits a
    substantial amount of protected speech judged in relation to [its] plainly legitimate sweep.”
    Ex parte 
    Lo, 424 S.W.3d at 18
    (quoting Virginia v. Hicks, 
    539 U.S. 113
    , 118-19 (2003)). As
    Texas Jurisprudence 3d describes this aspect of the so-called “substantial overbreadth
    doctrine”:
    Fournier & Dowden — 5
    Ordinarily, a person may not challenge a statute on the ground that it
    might be applied unconstitutionally in circumstances other than those directly
    before the court. In the area of First Amendment freedoms, however, an overly
    broad statute may serve to chill the exercise of protected rights, and an attack
    on such a statute will be allowed without requiring that the person making the
    attack demonstrate that his or her specific conduct is protected. Thus, as long
    as a case or controversy exists, a litigant whose own activities are unprotected
    may challenge a statute by showing that it substantially abridges the First
    Amendment rights of other parties not before the court. In other words, even
    though a statute or ordinance may be constitutionally applied to the activities
    of a particular defendant, that defendant may challenge the statute on the basis
    of overbreadth if it is so drawn as to sweep within its ambit protected speech
    or expression of others persons not before the court. Litigants are permitted to
    challenge a statute on First Amendment grounds not because their own rights
    of free expression are violated, but because of a judicial prediction or
    assumption that the statute’s existence may cause others not before the court
    to refrain from constitutionally protected speech or expression.
    12B Tex.Jur.3rd, Const. Law, § 40 (2012), at 69-70. See also 16A Am.Jur., Const. Law, §§
    428-30 (2d ed. 2009), at 369-377; 16B Corpus Juris Secundum, Const. Law, § 962 (2015),
    at 90-93.
    Is a Substantially Ovcrbroad Statute “Void Ab Initio”?
    But is an overbroad statute—facially unconstitutional only in the vicarious sense that
    it tends to “chill” the First Amendment rights of others not involved in the litigation—“void
    ab initio” in the same way that a statute that is unconstitutional in all of its applications may
    be said to be “void ab initio”? As already explained, the burden of proof in a First
    Amendment overbreath action is less than in an ordinary facial challenge to the
    constitutionality of a statute. When that burden has been met, a judicial finding of facial
    unconstitutionality for First Amendment overbreadth also constitutes less than a finding that
    Fournier & Dowden — 6
    there is no conceivable application of the law consistent with the requirements of the
    Constitution. Under these circumstances, it is beyond dispute that a particular defendant who
    was convicted for a violation of the statute, and whose conviction became final before the
    penal statute was declared unconstitutional merely for overbreadth, may very well have
    committed conduct that fell within the “plainly legitimate sweep” of the overbroad statute.
    The Court has nevertheless determined, under our existing precedent, that pre-existing, final,
    and presumptively valid convictions under the statute must also be automatically and
    uncritically nullified. But I am not persuaded that we must go that far. In fact, I believe that
    to do so constitutes an unnecessary and unacceptable windfall to those defendants.
    To a certain extent, of course, the First Amendment overbreadth doctrine inevitably
    creates windfalls. Once an appellate court has declared a penal provision unconstitutionally
    overbroad, no individual may be prosecuted under that provision from that point on, even
    if the individual’s conduct falls well within the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep. In fact,
    individuals will be free to commit that constitutionally actionable conduct with impunity until
    such time as the Legislature may proscribe it once again in a constitutionally tolerable
    statute.2 This prospective windfall is justified by the fact that, before it may be declared
    facially unconstitutional, the penal statute must be said to reach protected conduct at a rate
    far exceeding its “plainly legitimate sweep.” The admittedly “strong medicine” of striking
    2
    This, of course, assumes that the same conduct is not also subject to prosecution pursuant
    to some other valid statute.
    Fournier & Dowden — 7
    down a statute that has some constitutional applications, Ex parte Thompson, 
    442 S.W.3d 325
    , 349 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014), is thus necessary to alleviate its substantial “chilling”
    effect on constitutionally protected conduct. The question is, at what point is the medicine
    too strong?
    A defendant finally convicted pursuant to a statute that is found only to be
    constitutionally overbroad is unlike a defendant who was convicted pursuant to a statute that
    has no conceivable constitutional applications. The former defendant may well have
    committed a constitutionally actionable offense under a statute that did not even remotely
    impinge upon his First Amendment rights. Consequently, retroactively declaring his
    conviction void ab initio would seem arguably to be neither necessary nor just. Declaring the
    statute invalid prospectively and enjoining the future enforcement of the law, it seems to me,
    might be more than sufficient to satisfy the interests and goals of the overbreadth
    doctrine—to ensure that the continued enforcement of the overbroad law will not chill the
    constitutionally protected expression of others.
    There seems to be little reason to doubt that the prospective application of a judicial
    decision declaring a penal provision to be overbroad is strong enough.3 The statute has been
    3
    According to the United States Supreme Court, a defendant whose conviction is already
    final at the time of the announcement of a new rule may not ordinarily avail himself of the newly
    announced rule. See Teague v. Lane, 
    489 U.S. 288
    , 310 (1989). This rule might also be appropriately
    applied in cases such as these, when this Court decides that a law is overbroad in violation of the
    First Amendment. Of course, even if we were to apply the new rule doctrine, there may also be some
    number of other cases, also pending at different stages of litigation at the time of the Court’s
    determination, that might need to be given the benefit of the new rule as well. See e.g., Griffith v.
    Fournier & Dowden — 8
    struck down and may not be used in the future to prosecute even those offenders whose
    conduct was not constitutionally protected. This should suffice to enable the courts to alert
    the Legislature of the need to fine-tune the statute without seeming unduly critical of our co-
    equal branch—or, worse, punitive.
    Whatever incremental value retroactive application may have to alleviate the chilling
    effect of the overbroad statute does not seem to me to be worth the societal cost of
    exonerating     any    number      of   offenders     whose     conduct     was     legitimately—if
    inartfully—proscribed. The windfall that inevitably flows from judicially declaring an
    overbroad penal provision to be facially unconstitutional need not extend so far as to apply
    retroactively to grant habeas corpus relief to applicants who have suffered no First
    Amendment infraction themselves.4
    Kentucky, 
    479 U.S. 314
    , 328 (1987) (explaining, “a new rule for the conduct of criminal
    prosecutions is to be applied retroactively to all cases, state or federal, pending on direct review or
    not yet final, with no exception for cases in which the new rule constitutes a ‘clear break’ with the
    past.”). However, the full extent to which the overbreadth decision would need to be extended to
    other cases in varying stages of litigation and not yet final does not need to be decided today.
    4
    I am aware of the various opinions in Massachusetts v. Oakes, 
    491 U.S. 756
    (1989). In that
    case, the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari solely to review whether a particular state
    statute was substantially overbroad. But the Court was ultimately unable to reach agreement on that
    issue. Instead, a plurality of the Court simply announced that it would not address the question after
    all because the Massachusetts Legislature had subsequently amended the statute in such a way as to
    cure any potential overbreadth. The plurality observed:
    Overbreadth is a judicially created doctrine designed to prevent the chilling of
    protected expression. An overbroad statute is not void ab initio, but rather voidable,
    subject to invalidation notwithstanding the defendant’s unprotected conduct out of
    solicitude to the First Amendment rights of parties not before the court. Because the
    Fournier & Dowden — 9
    This is an argument that neither the Court nor Judge Cochran in her concurring
    special concern that animates the overbreadth doctrine is no longer present after the
    amendment or repeal of the challenged statute, we need not extend the benefits of the
    doctrine to a defendant whose conduct is not protected.
    
    Id. at 584.
    Thus, the plurality in Oakes would take the occasion of the amendment of an overbroad
    statute as a justification for failing ever to pass on the question of its facial constitutionality.
    Five justices disagreed with this view, however, joining that part of Justice Scalia’s opinion
    that dissented to the plurality’s failure to reach the merits of the overbreadth question. In fact, that
    was the only facet of the case that garnered a majority. Because Justice Scalia and one other justice
    believed that the pre-amendment statute was not unconstitutionally overbroad, they provided the
    necessary votes to remand the case for determination of Oakes’s as-applied challenge to the pre-
    amendment statute.
    Justice Scalia’s rejection of the plurality’s view that an overbreadth analysis should not be
    undertaken at all once a statute has been amended does not apply with nearly the same force to the
    question presented in this case: whether a decision declaring a statute to be overbroad should be
    applied retroactively. Justice Scalia argues:
    If the promulgation of overbroad laws was cost free, as the plurality’s new doctrine
    would make it—that is, if no conviction of constitutionally proscribable conduct
    would be lost, so long as the offending statute was narrowed before the final
    appeal—then legislatures would have significantly reduced incentive to stay within
    constitutional bounds in the first place. When one takes account of those overbroad
    statutes that are never challenged, and of the time that elapses before the ones that are
    challenged are amended to come within constitutional bounds, a substantial amount
    of legitimate speech would be “chilled” as a consequence of the rule the plurality
    would adopt.
    The same criticism cannot fairly be leveled against the argument that retroactive application of the
    overbreadth doctrine is unnecessary. In Oakes, the plurality regarded the overbreadth question as
    moot and refused to reach it at all. By contrast, this Court has in fact declared the statute at issue in
    Lo to be facially unconstitutional on the basis that it is substantially overbroad. Such a statute can
    have no legitimate prospective application, and the judicial declaration that it is invalid may well be
    retroactively applied to any case still pending on direct appeal. It can no longer operate to chill
    legitimate speech, and its removal from the books for any future purpose should serve as incentive
    enough for the Legislature to take better care not to draft statutes that are insufficiently solicitous of
    First Amendment rights. The incremental value of also applying it retroactively to unravel final
    convictions for constitutionally unprotected conduct seems to me not worth the candle.
    Fournier & Dowden — 10
    opinion addressed before granting relief in Ex parte Chance. The Court seems instead to
    have uncritically applied the general rule that a facially unconstitutional statute is “void ab
    initio” without pausing to ask whether the general rule ought to apply in the context of the
    First Amendment substantial overbreadth doctrine. Indeed, without missing a step, we persist
    in doing so in these cases as well. I believe the Court should take the opportunity now to
    order briefing on the issue. At least then, we could give the matter its due consideration.
    Because we do not, I cannot join the Court’s opinion.
    Conclusion
    Once a statute has been judicially recognized as unconstitutionally overbroad, that
    new rule should be given prospective application. I would not be averse, in cases where it is
    appropriate, to retroactively grant post-conviction habeas corpus relief as well—but we
    should consider whether we should limit post-conviction relief to those applicants who can
    establish that their conduct did not fall within the plainly legitimate sweep of the overbroad
    statute. I would order briefing on this issue. Applicants today have made no showing that the
    statute that we struck down in Lo was unconstitutional as it applied to their conduct. Without
    such a showing, I am reluctant to extend to them the benefit of a retroactive application of
    Ex parte Lo. Because the Court persists in doing so—in these, and many other
    cases—without ever considering or addressing, much less explaining, why it regards
    retroactive application to be necessary, and because the Court has not requested briefing on
    this issue from the parties, I respectfully dissent.
    Fournier & Dowden — 11
    FILED:    October 28, 2015
    PUBLISH