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On petition for writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court of Virginia.
The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied.
Justice BRENNAN, dissenting.
Adhering to my view that the death penalty is in all circumstances cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, Gregg v. Georgia,
Justice MARSHALL, dissenting.
I
In state habeas corpus proceedings, petitioner argued that he was denied effective assistance of trial counsel as evidenced by that counsel's failure to object to an instruction that was inconsistent with the decision this Court announced, one year after petitioner's trial, in Sandstrom v. Montana,
The instruction at issue, evidently taken from the Virginia form book of jury instructions, was as follows:
As the State now concedes, there is no doubt that this instruction violates the Constitution, for in Sandstrom we held that a virtually identical instruction violated due process and the principles against burden shifting we had set forth in Mullaney v. Wilbur,
This question presents the Court with an important opportunity to give content to the generalized standards for constitutionally effective counsel announced last Term in Strickland v. Washington,
Mullaney, in particular, should have put petitioner's counsel on notice to make the objection. As petitioner informed the state habeas court, in the wake of Mullaney a spate of Virginia publications, including ones oriented to practitioners, had suggested that the Virginia instruction on implied malice used at petitioner's trial was constitutionally defective. See, e.g., Comment, Has the Burger Court Dealt a Death Blow to the Presumption of Malice in Virginia, 10 U.Rich.L. Rev. 687 (1976); Friend, The Law of Evidence in Virginia 89-93 (1977); see also Note, Reforming the Law of Homicide, 59 Va.L.Rev. 1270 (1973). In addition, a criminal lawyer of long experience in Virginia testified in petitioner's state habeas proceedings that, after Mullaney and as of 1978, every competent attorney in a Virginia case in which premeditation was at issue would have viewed it as mandatory to object to the burden-shifting instruction. As the attorney said: "[I]f the Commonwealth requests an instruction that says presumption, if that word presumption is in there, the red flag goes up and the defendant ought to be prepared to object to it. Mullaney is one of the grounds." Pet. for Cert. 10.
This is therefore not a case in which "defense counsel [failed to] recognize and raise every conceivable constitutional claim." Engle v. Issac,
The way in which the state courts have treated petitioner's ineffectiveness claim suggests that, at the least, this Court ought to vacate the judgment below and remand for reconsideration in light of Strickland. The Virginia Supreme Court denied a petition for appeal on the issue, stating simply in one sentence that there was no reversible error in the judgment of the State Circuit Court that had considered the merits of petitioner's claim. To the extent it is possible to decipher the Circuit Court's judgment, however, it seems primarily based on the conclusion that "[i]nstructions given at Petitioner's trial were both adequate and appropriate, and therefore Petitioner's counsel was not ineffective in failing to ask for instructions which Petitioner now claims should have been requested" and the holding that "[a]s a matter of law, no evidence of prejudice has been shown. . . ." App. to Pet. for Cert. 7, 6. The former is an impermissible conclusion under Sandstrom and indicates that the court simply did not understand the nature of the Sandstrom claim . The latter conclusion, to the extent it is in fact a holding of law, also violates Sandstrom; to the extent the conclusion instead is an evidentiary one based on review of the record as a whole, the decision should still be vacated and remanded once this Court decides Francis, supra, and outlines the standard by which the prejudice prong of Strickland applies to Sandstrom claims. 3
In light of the substantiality of petitioner's claim and the shoddy treatment it and our precedents have received in the Virginia courts, I would grant the petition and address the application of Strickland to this case. 4 At a minimum, however, the petition [469 U.S. 908 , 912] should be granted and the judgment below vacated so that the state courts can start this time from the correct premise that a Sandstrom error was committed and then begin to consider petitioner's ineffectiveness claim in light of that error and against the backdrop of our decision in Strickland.
II
Because I continue to adhere to my view that the death penalty is in all circumstances cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, Gregg v. Georgia,
[ Footnote 1 ] To the extent there is any question as to whether petitioner was prejudiced by the defective instruction, the petition ought at least to be held for our decision in Francis, in which we will address the effect of Sandstrom error.
[ Footnote 2 ] Pet. for Cert. 3 (citing testimony at plenary hearing on state habeas petition).
[ Footnote 3 ] Again, to assure that similarly situated capital defendants are treated similarly, the Court should also consider holding this petition pending decision in Francis.
[
Footnote 4
] I note also that, if petitioner's counsel cannot be considered ineffective for failing to have raised this objection, it can only be because the claim was not sufficiently apparent at the time of trial that all reasonably competent attorneys would have raised it. In that case, under our decision last Term in Reed v. Ross,
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Citation: 469 U.S. 908
No. 84-5303
Decided: October 09, 1984
Court: United States Supreme Court
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