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The issue-preclusion component of the Double Jeopardy Clause bars a second contest of an issue of fact or law raised and necessarily resolved by a prior judgment. Ashe v. Swenson,
In this case, a jury convicted petitioners Juan Bravo-Fernandez (Bravo) and Hector Martínez-Maldonado (Martínez) of bribery in violation of 18 U. S. C. §666. Simultaneously, the jury acquitted them of conspiring to violate §666 and traveling in interstate commerce to violate §666. Because the only contested issue at trial was whether Bravo and Martínez had violated §666 (the other elements of the acquitted charges--agreement and travel--were undisputed), the jury's verdicts were irreconcilably inconsistent. Unlike the guilty verdicts in Powell, however, petitioners' convictions were later vacated on appeal because of error in the judge's instructions unrelated to the verdicts' inconsistency. In the First Circuit's view, §666 proscribes only quid pro quo bribery, yet the charge had permitted the jury to find petitioners guilty on a gratuity theory. On remand, Bravo and Martínez moved for judgments of acquittal on the standalone §666 charges. They argued that the issue-preclusion component of the Double Jeopardy Clause barred the Government from retrying them on those charges because the jury necessarily determined that they were not guilty of violating §666 when it acquitted them of the related conspiracy and Travel Act offenses. The District Court denied the motions, and the First Circuit affirmed, holding that the eventual invalidation of petitioners' §666 convictions did not undermine Powell's instruction that issue preclusion does not apply when the same jury returns logically inconsistent verdicts.
Held: The issue-preclusion component of the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar the Government from retrying defendants, like petitioners, after a jury has returned irreconcilably inconsistent verdicts of conviction and acquittal and the convictions are later vacated for legal error unrelated to the inconsistency. Pp. 12-19.
(a) Because petitioners' trial yielded incompatible jury verdicts, petitioners cannot establish that the jury necessarily resolved in their favor the question whether they violated §666. In view of the Government's inability to obtain review of the acquittals, Powell,
Petitioners could not be retried if the Court of Appeals had vacated their §666 bribery convictions because of insufficient evidence, see Burks v. United States,
(b) Petitioners argue that vacated judgments should be excluded from the Ashe inquiry because vacated convictions, like the hung counts in Yeager, are legal nullities that "have never been accorded respect as a matter of law or history." Yeager,
Petitioners further contend that, under Yeager, the §666 convictions are meaningless because the jury was allowed to convict on the basis of conduct not criminal in the First Circuit--payment of a gratuity. But Yeager did not rest on a court's inability to detect the basis for a decision the jury in fact rendered. Rather, when a jury hangs, there is no decision, hence no inconsistency.
790 F. 3d 41, affirmed.
Ginsburg, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court. Thomas, J., filed a concurring opinion.
Opinion of the Court
580 U. S. ____ (2016)
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
No. 15-537
JUAN BRAVO-FERNANDEZ AND HECTOR MARTINEZ-MALDONADO, PETITIONERS v.
UNITED STATES
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the first circuit
[November 29, 2016]
Justice Ginsburg delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case concerns the issue-preclusion component of the Double Jeopardy Clause.1 In criminal prosecutions, as in civil litigation, the issue-preclusion principle means that "when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot again be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit." Ashe v. Swenson,
Does issue preclusion apply when a jury returns inconsistent verdicts, convicting on one count and acquitting on another count, where both counts turn on the very same issue of ultimate fact? In such a case, this Court has held, both verdicts stand. The Government is barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause from challenging the acquittal, see Green v. United States,
Does issue preclusion attend a jury's acquittal verdict if the same jury in the same proceeding fails to reach a verdict on a different count turning on the same critical issue? This Court has answered yes, in those circumstances, the acquittal has preclusive force. Yeager v. United States,
In the case before us, the jury returned irreconcilably inconsistent verdicts of conviction and acquittal. Without more, Powell would control. There could be no retrial of charges that yielded acquittals but, in view of the inconsistent verdicts, the acquittals would have no issue-preclusive effect on charges that yielded convictions. In this case, however, unlike Powell, the guilty verdicts were vacated on appeal because of error in the judge's instructions unrelated to the verdicts' inconsistency. Petitioners urge that, just as a jury's failure to decide has no place in issue-preclusion analysis, so vacated guilty verdicts should not figure in that analysis.
We hold otherwise. One cannot know from the jury's report why it returned no verdict. "A host of reasons" could account for a jury's failure to decide--"sharp dis-agreement, confusion about the issues, exhaustion after a long trial, to name but a few." Yeager,
I
A
The doctrine of claim preclusion instructs that a final judgment on the merits "foreclos[es] successive litigation of the very same claim." New Hampshire v. Maine,
The allied doctrine of issue preclusion ordinarily bars relitigation of an issue of fact or law raised and necessarily resolved by a prior judgment. See Restatement §§17, 27, at 148, 250; Wright & Miller §4416, at 386. It applies in both civil and criminal proceedings, with an important distinction. In civil litigation, where issue preclusion and its ramifications first developed, the availability of appellate review is a key factor. Restatement §28, Comment a, at 274; see id., §28, Reporter's Note, at 284 (noting "the pervasive importance of reviewability in the application of preclusion doctrine"). In significant part, preclusion doctrine is premised on "an underlying confidence that the result achieved in the initial litigation was substantially correct." Standefer v. United States,
In civil suits, inability to obtain review is exceptional; it occurs typically when the controversy has become moot. In criminal cases, however, only one side (the defendant) has recourse to an appeal from an adverse judgment on the merits. The Government "cannot secure appellate review" of an acquittal, id., at 22, even one "based upon an egregiously erroneous foundation," Arizona v. Washington,
B
This case requires us to determine whether an appellate court's vacatur of a conviction alters issue-preclusion analysis under the Double Jeopardy Clause. Three prior decisions guide our disposition.
This Court first interpreted the Double Jeopardy Clause to incorporate the principle of issue preclusion in Ashe v. Swenson,
Our decision in Ashe explained that issue preclusion in criminal cases must be applied with "realism and rationality." Id., at 444. To identify what a jury in a previous trial necessarily decided, we instructed, a court must "examine the record of a prior proceeding, taking into account the pleadings, evidence, charge, and other relevant matter." Ibid. (quoting Mayers & Yarbrough, Bis Vexari: New Trials and Successive Prosecutions, 74 Harv. L. Rev. 1, 38 (1960)). This inquiry, we explained, "must be set in a practical frame and viewed with an eye to all the circumstances of the proceedings."
In United States v. Powell,
At trial, a jury had acquitted Powell of various substantive drug charges but convicted her of using a telephone in "causing and facilitating" those same offenses. Id., at 59-60. She appealed, arguing that "the verdicts were inconsistent, and that she therefore was entitled to reversal of the telephone facilitation convictions." Id., at 60. Issue preclusion, she maintained, barred "acceptance of [the] guilty verdict[s]" on the auxiliary offenses because the same jury had acquitted her of the predicate felonies. Id., at 64.
Rejecting Powell's argument, we noted that issue preclusion is "predicated on the assumption that the jury acted rationally." Id., at 68. When a jury returns irreconcilably inconsistent verdicts, we said, one can glean no more than that "either in the acquittal or the conviction the jury did not speak their real conclusions." Id., at 64 (quoting Dunn,
Finally, in Yeager v. United States,
A jury "speaks only through its verdict," we noted. Id., at 121. Any number of reasons--including confusion about the issues and sheer exhaustion, we observed--could cause a jury to hang. Ibid. Accordingly, we said, only "a jury's decisions, not its failures to decide," identify "what a jury necessarily determined at trial." Id., at 122. Because a hung count reveals nothing more than a jury's failure to reach a decision, we further reasoned, it supplies no evidence of the jury's irrationality. Id., at 124-125. Hung counts, we therefore held, "ha[ve] no place in the issue-preclusion analysis," id., at 122: When a jury acquits on one count while failing to reach a verdict on another count concerning the same issue of ultimate fact, the acquittal, and only the acquittal, counts for preclusion purposes. Given the preclusive effect of the acquittal, the Court concluded, Yeager could not be retried on the hung count. Id., at 122-125.
C
With our controlling precedent in view, we turn to the inconsistent verdicts rendered in this case. The prosecution stemmed from an alleged bribe paid by petitioner Juan Bravo-Fernandez (Bravo), an entrepreneur, to petitioner Hector Martínez-Maldonado (Martínez), then a senator serving the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. The alleged bribe took the form of an all-expenses-paid trip to Las Vegas, including a $1,000 seat at a professional boxing match featuring a popular Puerto Rican contender. United States v. Fernandez, 722 F. 3d 1, 6 (CA1 2013). According to the Government, Bravo intended the bribe to secure Martínez' help in shepherding legislation through the Puerto Rico Senate that, if enacted, would "provid[e] substantial financial benefits" to Bravo's enterprise. Ibid. In the leadup to the Las Vegas trip, Martínez submitted the legislation for the Senate's consideration and issued a committee report supporting it; within a week of returning from Las Vegas, Martínez issued another favorable report and voted to enact the legislation. Id., at 6-7.
Based on these events, a federal grand jury in Puerto Rico indicted petitioners for, inter alia, federal-program bribery, in violation of 18 U. S. C. §666; conspiracy to violate §666, in violation of §371; and traveling in interstate commerce to further violations of §666, in violation of the Travel Act, §1952(a)(3)(A).3 Following a three-week trial, a jury convicted Bravo and Martínez of the standalone §666 bribery offense, but acquitted them of the related conspiracy and Travel Act charges. Fernandez, 722 F. 3d, at 7. Each received a sentence of 48 months in prison. Id., at 8.
The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit vacated the §666 convictions for instructional error. Id., at 27. In the First Circuit's view, the jury had been erroneously charged on what constitutes criminal conduct under that statute. Id., at 22-27. The charge permitted the jury to find Bravo and Martínez "guilty of offering and receiving a gratuity," id., at 16, but, the appeals court held, §666 proscribes only quid pro quo bribes, and not gratuities, id., at 6, 22.4 True, the court acknowledged, the jury was instructed on both theories of bribery, and the evidence at trial sufficed to support a guilty verdict on either theory. Id., at 19-20. But the Court of Appeals could not say with confidence that the erroneous charge was harmless, so it vacated the §666 convictions and remanded for further proceedings. Id., at 27, 39.
On remand, relying on the issue-preclusion component of the Double Jeopardy Clause, Bravo and Martínez moved for judgments of acquittal on the standalone §666 charges. 988 F. Supp. 2d 191 (PR 2013). They could not be retried on the bribery offense, they insisted, because the jury necessarily determined that they were not guilty of violating §666 when it acquitted them of conspiring to violate §666 and traveling in interstate commerce to further violations of §666. Id., at 193. That was so, petitioners maintained, because the only contested issue at trial was whether Bravo had offered, and Martínez had accepted, a bribe within the meaning of §666. Id., at 196; see Tr. of Oral Arg. 4 ("There was no dispute that they agreed to go to a boxing match together"; nor was there any dispute "that to get to Las Vegas from Puerto Rico, you have to travel" across state lines.). The District Court denied the motions for acquittal. 988 F. Supp. 2d, at 196-198. If the sole issue disputed at trial was whether Bravo and Martínez had violated §666, the court explained, then "the jury [had] acted irrationally." Id., at 196. Because the same jury had simultaneously convicted Bravo and Martínez on the standalone §666 charges, "the verdict simply was inconsistent." Ibid.
The First Circuit affirmed the denial of petitioners' motions for acquittal, agreeing that the jury's inconsistent returns were fatal to petitioners' issue-preclusion plea. 790 F. 3d 41. The jury received the same bribery instructions for each count involving §666, the court noted, so the §666-based verdicts--convicting on the standalone bribery charges but acquitting on the related Travel Act and conspiracy counts--could not be reconciled. Id., at 54-55.5
The Court of Appeals rejected petitioners' argument that the eventual invalidation of the bribery convictions rendered Powell's inconsistent-verdicts rule inapplicable. Ashe, the court reminded, calls for a practical appraisal based on the complete record of the prior proceeding; the §666 bribery convictions, like the §666-based acquittals, were part of that record. See 790 F. 3d, at 50. Nor are vacated convictions like hung counts for issue-preclusion purposes, the court continued. Informed by our decision in Yeager, the First Circuit recognized that a hung count reveals only a jury's failure to decide, and therefore cannot evidence actual inconsistency with a jury's decision. 790 F. 3d, at 50-51. In contrast, the court said, vacated convictions "are jury decisions, through which the jury has spoken." Id., at 51. The later upset of a conviction on an unrelated ground, the court reasoned, does not undermine Powell's recognition that "inconsistent verdicts make it impossible to determine what a jury necessarily decided." 790 F. 3d, at 51. The First Circuit therefore concluded that "vacated convictions, unlike hung counts, are relevant to the Ashe [issue-preclusion] inquiry." Ibid.
We granted certiorari to resolve a conflict among courts on this question: Does the issue-preclusion component of the Double Jeopardy Clause bar the Government from retrying defendants, like Bravo and Martínez, after a jury has returned irreconcilably inconsistent verdicts of conviction and acquittal, and the convictions are later vacated for legal error unrelated to the inconsistency?6 557 U. S. ___ (2016). Holding that the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar retrial in these circumstances, we affirm the First Circuit's judgment.
II
When a conviction is overturned on appeal, "[t]he general rule is that the [Double Jeopardy] Clause does not bar reprosecution." Justices of Boston Municipal Court v. Lydon,
Bravo and Martínez ask us to deviate from the general rule that, post vacatur of a conviction, a new trial is in order. When a conviction is vacated on appeal, they maintain, an acquittal verdict simultaneously returned should preclude the Government from retrying the defendant on the vacated count. Our precedent, harmonious with issue-preclusion doctrine, opposes the foreclosure petitioners seek.
A
Bravo and Martínez bear the burden of demonstrating that the jury necessarily resolved in their favor the question whether they violated §666. Schiro,
That petitioners' bribery convictions were later vacated for trial error does not alter our analysis. The critical inquiry is whether the jury actually decided that Bravo and Martínez did not violate §666. Ashe counsels us to approach that task with "realism and rationality,"
Bravo and Martínez could not be retried on the bribery counts, of course, if the Court of Appeals had vacated their §666 convictions because there was insufficient evidence to support those convictions. For double jeopardy purposes, a court's evaluation of the evidence as insufficient to convict is equivalent to an acquittal and therefore bars a second prosecution for the same offense. See Burks v. United States,
Nor, as the Government acknowledges, would retrial be tolerable if the trial error could resolve the apparent inconsistency in the jury's verdicts. See Brief for United States 30 (If, for example, "a jury receives an erroneous instruction on the count of conviction but the correct instruction on the charge on which it acquits, the instructional error may reconcile the verdicts."). But the instructional error here cannot account for the jury's contradictory determinations because the error applied equally to every §666-related count. See supra, at 11.
As in Powell, so in this case, "[t]he problem is that the same jury reached inconsistent results."
B
To support their argument for issue preclusion, Bravo and Martínez highlight our decision in Yeager. In Yeager, they point out, we recognized that hung counts "have never been accorded respect as a matter of law or history."
This argument misapprehends the Ashe inquiry. It is undisputed that petitioners' convictions are invalid judgments that may not be used to establish their guilt. The question is whether issue preclusion stops the Government from prosecuting them anew. On that question, Bravo and Martínez bear the burden of showing that the issue whether they violated §666 has been "determined by a valid and final judgment of acquittal." Yeager,
Further relying on Yeager, Bravo and Martínez contend that their vacated convictions should be ignored because, as with hung counts, "there is no way to decipher" what they represent. Brief for Petitioners 28 (quoting Yeager,
This argument trips on Yeager's reasoning. Yeager did not rest on a court's inability to detect the basis for a jury's decision. Rather, this Court reasoned that, when a jury hangs, there is no decision, hence no evidence of irrationality.
That is the case here. Petitioners do not dispute that the Government's evidence at trial supported a guilty verdict on the quid pro quo theory, or that the gratuity instruction held erroneous by the Court of Appeals applied to every §666-based offense. Because no rational jury could have reached conflicting verdicts on those counts, petitioners' §666 convictions "reveal the jury's inconsis-tency--which is the relevant issue here--even if they do not reveal which theory of liability jurors relied upon in reaching those inconsistent verdicts." Brief for United States 31. In other words, because we do not know what the jury would have concluded had there been no instructional error, Brief for Petitioners 28-29, a new trial on the counts of conviction is in order. Bravo and Martínez have succeeded on appeal to that extent, but they are entitled to no more. The split verdict does not impede the Government from renewing the prosecution.8
The Double Jeopardy Clause, as the First Circuit explained, forever bars the Government from again prosecuting Bravo and Martínez on the §666-based conspiracy and Travel Act offenses; "the acquittals themselves remain inviolate." 790 F. 3d, at 51, n. 6. Bravo and Martínez have also gained "the benefit of their appellate victory," ibid.: a second trial on the standalone bribery charges, in which the Government may not invoke a gratuity theory. But issue preclusion is not a doctrine they can commandeer when inconsistent verdicts shroud in mystery what the jury necessarily decided.
* * *
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit is
Affirmed.
Thomas, J., concurring
580 U. S. ____ (2016)
No. 15-537
JUAN BRAVO-FERNANDEZ AND HECTOR MARTINEZ-MALDONADO, PETITIONERS v. UNITED STATES
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the first circuit
[November 29, 2016]
Justice Thomas, concurring.
The question presented in this case is whether, under Ashe v. Swenson,
As originally understood, the Double Jeopardy Clause does not have an issue-preclusion prong. "The English common-law pleas of auterfoits acquit and auterfoits convict, on which the Clause was based, barred only repeated 'prosecution for the same identical act and crime.' " Id., at 128 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (quoting 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 330 (1769); emphasis added by dissent); see also Grady v. Corbin,
In Yeager, this Court erroneously and illogically extended Ashe. See
In an appropriate case, we should reconsider the holdings of Ashe and Yeager. Because the Court today properly declines to extend those cases, and indeed reaches the correct result under the Clause's original meaning, I join its opinion.
The parties use the expression "collateral estoppel component," but as this Court has observed, "issue preclusion" is the more descriptive term. Yeager v. United States,
Though we earlier recognized that res judicata (which embraces both claim and issue preclusion) applies in criminal as well as civil proceedings, we did not link the issue-preclusion inquiry to the Double Jeopardy Clause. See Sealfon v. United States,
Petitioners were indicted on several other charges not relevant here. See United States v. Fernandez, 722 F. 3d 1, 7 (CA1 2013).
As the First Circuit acknowledged, this holding is contrary to the rulings of "most circuits to have addressed th[e] issue." Id., at 6. Three other Federal Courts of Appeals have considered the question; each has held that §666 prohibits gratuities as well as quid pro quo bribes. See United States v. Bahel, 662 F. 3d 610, 636 (CA2 2011); United States v. Hawkins, 777 F. 3d 880, 881 (CA7 2015); United States v. Zimmerman, 509 F. 3d 920, 927 (CA8 2007).
As just observed, see supra, at 10, petitioners urge that §666 bribery was the sole issue in controversy, and that there was no dispute on other elements of the Travel Act and conspiracy counts. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 4. See also Brief for United States 13 (accepting that the jury "returned irreconcilably inconsistent verdicts"). If another element could explain the acquittals, then there would be no inconsistency and no argument against a new trial on bribery. See infra, at 12-13.
Compare United States v. Citron, 853 F. 2d 1055, 1058-1061 (CA2 1988) (holding that retrial does not violate Double Jeopardy Clause under these circumstances); United States v. Price, 750 F. 2d 363, 366 (CA5 1985) (same); Evans v. United States, 987 A. 2d 1138, 1141-1142 (D. C. 2010) (same); and State v. Kelly, 201 N. J. 471, 493-494, 992 A. 2d 776, 789 (2010) (same), with People v. Wilson, 496 Mich. 91, 105-107, 852 N. W. 2d 134, 141-142 (2014) (holding that Double Jeopardy Clause bars retrial in this situation). As the First Circuit explained, "[a]lthough Citron and Price predate Yeager, both the Second and Fifth Circuits decided that vacated counts are relevant to the Ashe analysis at a time when those circuits had already ruled that hung counts should be disregarded for purposes of the Ashe inquiry." 790 F. 3d 41, 51, n. 7 (2015) (citing United States v. Mespoulede, 597 F. 2d 329, 332, 335-336 (CA2 1979); United States v. Nelson, 599 F. 2d 714, 716-717 (CA5 1979)). The Second Circuit, moreover, has adhered to Citron since Yeager. See United States v. Bruno, 531 Fed. Appx. 47, 49 (2013).
Nor is this the first time we have looked to a vacated conviction to ascertain what a jury decided in a prior proceeding. Our holding in Morris v. Mathews,
A number of lower courts have reached the same conclusion. See Citron, 853 F. 2d, at 1059 (If the defendant "was convicted of the offense that is the subject of the retrial," the case is materially different from one with "an acquittal accompanied by a failure to reach a verdict."); Price, 750 F. 2d, at 366 (a case in which "the jury returned no verdict of conviction" on the compound count, "but only a verdict of acquittal on the substantive count," is not instructive on whether the Government may retry a defendant after an inconsistent verdict has been vacated); Evans, 987 A. 2d, at 1142 ("Yeager does nothing to undermine" the conclusion that a defendant may be retried after an inconsistent verdict is overturned.); Kelly, 201 N. J., at 494, 992 A. 2d, at 789 (explaining in the context of retrial following vacatur that "Yeager has no application to a case . . . involving an inconsistent verdict of acquittals and convictions returned by the same jury").
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No. 15-537
Argued: October 04, 2016
Decided: November 29, 2016
Court: United States Supreme Court
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