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William R. Jones v. Paul Delo, 02-3800 (2002)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit Number: 02-3800 Visitors: 3
Filed: Nov. 18, 2002
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT _ No. 02-3800WM _ William R. Jones, * * Appellant, * On Appeal from the United * States District Court v. * for the Western District * of Missouri. * Don Roper,1 Superintendent, * [To Be Published] Potosi Correctional Center, * * Appellee. * _ Submitted: November 18, 2002 Filed: November 18, 2002 _ Before BYE, RICHARD S. ARNOLD, and BEAM, Circuit Judges. _ PER CURIAM. 1 The original appellee in this case was Paul Delo, who was at that time Su
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                    United States Court of Appeals
                          FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
                                _____________

                               No. 02-3800WM
                               _____________

William R. Jones,                     *
                                      *
            Appellant,                * On Appeal from the United
                                      * States District Court
      v.                              * for the Western District
                                      * of Missouri.
                                      *
Don Roper,1 Superintendent,           * [To Be Published]
Potosi Correctional Center,           *
                                      *
            Appellee.                 *
                                 ___________

                         Submitted: November 18, 2002
                             Filed: November 18, 2002
                                  ___________

Before BYE, RICHARD S. ARNOLD, and BEAM, Circuit Judges.
                           ___________

PER CURIAM.




      1
       The original appellee in this case was Paul Delo, who was at that time
Superintendent of the Potosi Correctional Center. Mr. Delo was succeeded by Al
Luebbers, who has now been succeeded by Don Roper. Mr. Roper is therefore
substituted as party appellee pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 43(c)(2).
       Petitioner moved under Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) to vacate the previous judgment
of the District Court, adverse to his petition for habeas corpus. The District Court2
has denied this motion, and petitioner has appealed to this Court. Because the
District Court granted a certificate of appealability as to all issues raised in
petitioner’s motion, the appeal is now before us on its merits. We assume for present
purposes that petitioner can surmount any procedural difficulties — for example,
whether his motion ought to be treated as a second or successive petition.

       Petitioner presents no new claims. Instead, he argues that “[s]ubsequent legal
developments,” decisions in two cases that we will shortly discuss, establish that this
Court was in error when, on the initial appeal, we denied relief on petitioner’s
ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim. In these cases, petitioner asserts, legal claims
identical to the one he urged were upheld. It is therefore fundamentally unfair for
petitioner to be executed, we are told, when similarly situated litigants have been
granted relief.

      We respectfully disagree with this argument, for the following reasons:

       1.     The first “subsequent” or “intervening” legal development on which
petitioner relies is the opinion of the Supreme Court in Williams v. Taylor, 
529 U.S. 362
(2000). This opinion is neither “subsequent” nor “intervening.” Williams was
decided on April 18, 2000, more than a year before our opinion on the first appeal,
Jones v. Delo, 
258 F.3d 893
(8th Cir. 2001), cert. denied, 
122 S. Ct. 1936
(2002), was
decided. Williams was on the books at the time of the first Jones decision. Indeed,
petitioner cited Williams in his petition for rehearing and petition for rehearing en
banc in this Court, and in his petition for certiorari in the Supreme Court, both of
which petitions were denied.


      2
      The Hon. Dean Whipple, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the
Western District of Missouri.
                                           -2-
       2.    In any event, we do not read Williams as inconsistent with our previous
opinion in this case. The claim asserted by Williams was “identical” to that asserted
by Jones only in the abstract. That is, both Williams and Jones argued that their trial
counsel were ineffective in the constitutional sense because of the failure to introduce
certain mitigating evidence. Some of the evidence in question in Williams is similar
to some of the evidence in Jones. Williams, for example, argued that his lawyer had
not introduced evidence that he had been abused by his father, and that he suffered
from a mental defect. But there are also important differences in the evidence that
counsel in the two cases failed to adduce. Williams was sentenced to death because
the jury found it probable that he would be dangerous in the future (this being an
aggravating circumstance under Virginia law). Yet, Williams’s lawyer did not
introduce testimony from correctional officers who were willing to testify that the
defendant would not pose a danger while incarcerated. Nor did counsel offer prison
commendations awarded to Williams for his help in breaking up a prison drug ring
and for returning a guard’s missing wallet. See 
Williams, 529 U.S. at 373
n.4. In
addition,

             The habeas hearing also revealed that the same experts
             who had testified on the state’s behalf at trial believed that
             Williams, if kept in a “structured environment,” would not
             pose a future danger to 
society. 529 U.S. at 370-71
. No issue of this kind was present in Jones’s case.

       It is appropriate to observe at this point that a court’s judgment as to whether
counsel has rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance is necessarily a particular
one. The question is, first, whether counsel’s representation fell below an objective
standard of reasonableness, and, second, whether “there is a reasonable probability
that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have
been different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine

                                          -3-
confidence in the outcome.” Strickland v. Washington, 
466 U.S. 668
, 694 (1984).
These are the kinds of judgments that can be made only in the unique context of a
particular record, and only after carefully weighing the entire record, which is what
we did on the prior appeal. As Justice Kennedy has put it, the Strickland test “of
necessity requires a case-by-case examination of the evidence.” Wright v. West, 
505 U.S. 277
, 308 (1992) (opinion concurring in the judgment).

        3.    The second case that petitioner relies on is Simmons v. Luebbers, 
299 F.3d 929
(8th Cir. 2002). Again, petitioner asserts that Mr. Simmons raised a claim
identical to Mr. Jones’s allegation, and that it is fundamentally unfair for Simmons
to have obtained relief, while Jones did not. Simmons does qualify as a subsequent
legal development. It is an opinion of a panel of this Court handed down after our
previous opinion in this case. The Simmons Court itself apparently did not consider
that it was acting inconsistently with our previous opinion. Simmons does not even
cite Jones. Indeed, if Jones had really denied relief on a claim identical to that
asserted by Simmons, it would have been the duty of the Simmons panel to reject the
petition before it on the authority of Jones. One panel is not at liberty to depart from
a prior holding by another.

       As in the case of Williams, we do not find the Simmons opinion to be
inconsistent with our prior action in this case. It is certainly true that Mr. Simmons
claimed ineffective assistance of counsel, and that, with respect to the penalty phase
of his case, he prevailed. It is also true that Simmons successfully relied upon the
failure of his lawyers to present certain evidence at the penalty phase, including abuse
at the hands of his mother, running away from home and possibly being raped,
growing up in an impoverished neighborhood characterized by street violence, and
low intelligence. Simmons’s lawyers’ failure to present this evidence was held to be
ineffective assistance of counsel, and Simmons was held to have met the Strickland
prejudice test. Some of this evidence is similar to the evidence that Jones’s lawyers
failed to introduce. But that does not show that Simmons is inconsistent with Jones.

                                          -4-
On the contrary, as we have observed, a judgment as to Strickland prejudice has to
be made in the context of a particular record. As we attempted to explain in our
previous opinion, the trial strategy that Jones’s present counsel believe his trial
counsel should have pursued faced substantial difficulties. It was inconsistent with
a number of facts of record, facts that were not seriously disputed, and it would
probably have required that Jones testify in the guilt phase of the trial, or at the very
least in the penalty phase, despite very substantial difficulties with Jones’s
performance as a witness. None of these factors was present in Simmons, at least so
far as this Court’s opinion discloses.

       In addition, the course of the Simmons case through the Missouri courts
appears to have played a significant part in the conclusion reached by the
Simmons panel. Simmons’s claim, as we have stated, was that his lawyers had failed
to present certain evidence about his childhood and psychology. The Missouri
Supreme Court, in rejecting the claim that this evidence would have made a
constitutionally significant difference in Simmons’s trial, cited the fact that, in a
previous trial, also ending in conviction, this evidence had been presented, but had
not been persuasive to the jury. As this Court’s Simmons opinion makes clear, the
Missouri Supreme Court’s reference to the previous trial was incorrect. The
psychological evidence in question had not been presented to the jury in the previous
trial. No such factor exists in this case.

       We also have before us a supplement to petitioner’s motion for stay of
execution, with which is enclosed what amounts to a letter motion from the
government of Austria for leave to file a brief amicus curiae in support of petitioner.
We do not find these submissions persuasive. Petitioner’s supplement is based on the
fact that on November 18, 2002, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Wiggins v.
Corcoran, 
288 F.3d 629
(4th Cir. 2002). The Supreme Court, obviously, will be
better able than we to weigh the possibility that the result in Wiggins might help



                                           -5-
petitioner in the present case. What we have to go on is the phrasing of the question
presented in Wiggins, which is as follows:

                    Does defense counsel in a capital case violate
             requirements of Strickland v. Washington by failing to
             investigate available mitigation evidence that could have
             convinced a jury to impose a life sentence, as this Court
             concluded in Williams v. Taylor and as most courts of
             appeal have concluded, or is defense counsel’s decision not
             to investigate such evidence “virtually unchallengeable” so
             long as counsel knows rudimentary facts about defendant’s
             background, as the Fourth Circuit held in this case?



       This question could easily be answered in Wiggins’s favor without affecting
the result in Jones. Our Jones opinion did not hold, and we do not hold today, that
defense counsel’s decision not to investigate available mitigation evidence is
“virtually unchallengeable” so long as counsel knows rudimentary facts about
defendant’s background. The principal basis of our decision in the present case is our
assessment of Strickland prejudice, which is a separate issue.

        As for the request of the government of Austria and its Federal President,
conveyed to the Clerk of this Court by the Ambassador of Austria, we of course
receive such request, coming as it does from a sovereign Nation, with respect. In the
ordinary case, we should grant without hesitation such a motion for leave to file a
brief amicus curiae. This is not the ordinary case, however. The request comes by
letter dated November 18, 2002. The execution of the sentence is set for November
20, 2002. Granting the request for leave to file a brief would, as the letter request
itself states, require staying the execution for approximately 30 days. On the one
hand, this is not a long delay. But on the other, the government of Austria (its interest
is based on the fact that petitioner has married an Austrian citizen) has known as least
since October 10, 2002, about Mr. Jones’s case and the scheduled execution date.

                                           -6-
October 10 is the date of the letter written to the Governor of Missouri by the
Ambassador of Austria, asking for clemency. Additionally, the letters from the
Ambassador summarize the arguments that would be contained in an amicus brief,
and they are no different from the arguments already presented by petitioner himself.

       Accordingly, we conclude that petitioner has not shown our previous opinion
to be in error, and has not shown that it is inconsistent with “subsequent” or
“intervening legal developments.” So, assuming that such an inconsistency would
justify relief under Rule 60(b), petitioner has simply not made his case. The District
Court did not abuse its discretion in denying the Rule 60(b) motion, and its order
denying that motion is affirmed. The emergency application for stay of execution is
denied. The letter motion of the government of Austria for leave to file a brief amicus
is denied. Our mandate shall issue forthwith.

      A true copy.

             Attest:

                     CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT




                                          -7-

Source:  CourtListener

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