On the night of
August 6, 1982, Raymond Landry confronted the
Prittis family in the parking lot outside a Dairy
Maid store run by the family. Pointing a gun at
Kosmas Prittis, the husband and father, Landry
ordered the family to turn over their money,
including the money left in the store. In the course
of the robbery, Landry shot Prittis in the head and
killed him. The State of Texas convicted Landry of
capital murder and sentenced him to death.
The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and
sentence on direct appeal.
After pursuing post-conviction remedies in the Texas
courts, Landry unsuccessfully applied to federal
district court for a writ of habeas corpus and a
stay of execution. We grant Landry's application for
a certificate of probable cause, but, finding his
claims either without merit or barred by the law of
this circuit, we affirm the district court's
decision and deny relief.
Landry raises
fourteen claims in his habeas petition. Five of
these relate to the State's use of allegedly
improper hypotheticals during the extended voir dire
at his trial. The State concedes that, in an attempt
to illustrate to veniremembers the meaning of the
term "deliberately" under the Texas capital
sentencing statute,
it posed hypothetical situations some of which did
not constitute capital murder. For example, the
prosecutor asked a veniremember to consider a
hypothetical case in which a defendant shoots
someone in the foot who then declines to seek
medical attention and so dies of gangrene.
Landry complains
that the use of this hypothetical and others like it
led the jurors to believe that the only situations
in which they might decide that a defendant acted
without the deliberateness requisite for imposition
of a death sentence were situations not involving
capital murder at all. Landry argues further that
the hypotheticals hopelessly confused the venire
about the distinction between a finding of "intentional"
homicide at the guilt phase of his capital trial and
a finding of "deliberate" conduct at the sentencing
phase.
Landry asserts
that the use of the improper hypotheticals resulted
in a denial of his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment
rights by distracting the jury from the mandatory
consideration of his individual record, character,
and the particular facts of his case; by improperly
expanding the class of persons eligible for the
death penalty; by suggesting that proof of the
elements of the crime of capital murder led
inexorably to a finding of deliberateness at
sentencing; and by lowering the State's burden of
proof.
The State points
out that the defense never objected to the use of
the hypotheticals, challenged a juror for cause on
this basis, or even exhausted its peremptory
challenges. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals held
Landry's challenges to the hypotheticals
procedurally barred. On a federal habeas petition,
we may not reach claims the State courts have held
procedurally barred unless the petitioner offers
good cause for his failure to comply with State
procedure and demonstrates prejudice resulting from
his default.
Landry explains
his counsel's failure to object by asserting that,
at the time of his trial in 1983, the legal
standards establishing that the voir dire was
improper had not yet developed. Under the Supreme
Court's decision in Reed v. Ross,
a habeas petitioner may demonstrate good cause on
the basis of the novelty of a constitutional claim
at the time of the State proceeding in which the
default occurred. If the defense counsel had "no
reasonable basis upon which to formulate a
constitutional question," the default is excusable.
In Reed, the
Court's finding of novelty rested on a determination
that federal constitutional law had changed. The
Court identified three kinds of "clear break[s] with
the past" that might justify a finding of novelty:
the overruling of a precedent, the overturning of a
longstanding practice never before ruled upon by the
Supreme Court but generally accepted by the lower
courts, and the disapproval of a practice sanctioned
by the Court in prior cases.
Landry asserts no
comparable change in federal constitutional law.
Indeed, he relies upon constitutional standards--requiring
death-sentencing juries to exercise narrow and
informed discretion and to give individualized
consideration to the defendant and requiring the
state to narrow the class of persons eligible for
the death penalty--that were already in place at the
time of his trial.
The novelty of Landry's claim lies, instead, in the
proposed application of existing standards to
condemn certain voir dire questioning never before
considered by this court, but recently disapproved
by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.
We do not consider
Landry's claim sufficiently novel to justify the
procedural default. The defense counsel heard the
prosecutor ask the veniremembers arguably misleading
questions. Constitutional standards existing at the
time provided a "reasonable basis" upon which to
formulate an objection, and yet there was no
objection. Landry has not, therefore, shown adequate
cause for the default.
Landry attempts to
save his claims by asserting that his attorney's
failure to object to the improper voir dire
constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. To
make out a claim of ineffective assistance, Landry
must show that his counsel fell below a standard of
reasonable competence and that, but for the error,
the result of the proceeding would probably have
been different.
Even if we held the defense counsel's failure to
object so serious an error as to overcome the "strong
presumption that counsel's conduct falls within the
wide range of reasonable professional assistance,"
we could not grant relief because Landry has failed
to show prejudice.
He has not shown
that, if counsel had objected and prevented the
prosecution from possibly confusing the venire about
the meaning of the term "deliberate," the jury would
probably have reached a different determination
either as to his guilt or as to his punishment. We
remain unconvinced that the jury would probably not
have found "deliberate" Landry's conduct in shooting
his victim in the head in the course of a robbery,
understanding "deliberate" to mean something more
than "intentional."
Landry asserts
also that his trial counsel was ineffective in
failing to object to the admission of a bank bag and
pistol holster. The State found these items during
an allegedly illegal search of Landry's wife's home
and offered them at trial as implements of the crime.
We find no incompetence in the defense counsel's
failure to object to their admission because the
record reveals that the search was legal. Landry's
wife signed a form consenting to the search, and a
state court hearing on the consent, subsequent to
trial, produced no evidence that the police coerced
or tricked her into signing the form.
Landry claims that
the evidence was insufficient to support the jury's
findings at sentencing that the murder was
deliberate and that Landry would pose a continuing
threat to society.
Under Jackson v. Virgina,
we must ask whether, viewing the evidence in the
light most favorable to the jury's findings, any
rational trier of fact could have found these facts
beyond a reasonable doubt.
The prosecution
presented evidence at the guilt and sentencing
phases of trial showing that Landry robbed the
Prittises, shot Kosmas Prittis in the head, struck
his wife Kelly in the face with his gun, and pointed
the gun at the children. The State also presented
evidence of a former felony conviction for burglary
and of Landry's history of violent acts against his
family. Based on this and other evidence, a rational
jury could have found that Landry committed his
crimes deliberately and that he would continue to
endanger others.
Landry charges
that the trial court's failure to define the term "deliberate"
compounded the confusion caused by the improper voir
dire and left the jury without constitutionally
sufficient guidance. Defense counsel, however,
failed to request an instruction on the meaning of
deliberateness and lodged no objection on this
ground to the charge delivered at the punishment
stage. Landry offers no explanation for the default.
Landry challenges
as violative of due process the admission at the
sentencing phase of evidence of a prior felony
conviction for which he was sentenced without
representation by counsel. We note first that the
evidence shows that Landry lacked representation at
sentencing on his 1975 burglary conviction because
he failed to appear, having fled the court's
jurisdiction.
Moreover, his lack
of representation at sentencing in no way undermines
the constitutionality of his conviction on the prior
felony, and it was the conviction, not the sentence,
that the jury considered at the punishment phase of
his capital trial. We discern no due process
violation in the jury's consideration at sentencing
of the defendant's prior valid conviction.
Landry makes a
more serious due process challenge to the admission
at sentencing of evidence of prior unadjudicated
offenses, including wife and child abuse, without
formal notice from the State of its intention to
offer such evidence. Although the admission of
evidence of crimes for which Landry was never
charged, much less convicted, may present due
process problems, and although the admission of such
evidence in capital cases when the State of Texas
excludes it in non-capital cases may raise equal
protection problems,
we are bound by prior decisions of this circuit
holding such evidence admissible at the sentencing
phase of capital trials.
We find no
authority for requiring the state to notify the
defendant before offering this admissible evidence,
and Landry has not shown how the lack of notice
prejudiced his defense.
Landry next argues
that the Texas death penalty statute is
unconstitutional because it fails adequately to
narrow the class of persons eligible for the penalty
and because it permits proof of the elements of the
crime to serve also as proof of the aggravating
factors warranting a death sentence. The Supreme
Court's recent decision in Lowenfield v. Phelps
upholds the Louisiana death penalty statute and, by
express analogy, the Texas statute against
challenges identical to Landry's.
Landry asserts
that the Texas death penalty scheme does not permit
the jury to give full consideration to mitigating
circumstances. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
held this claim procedurally barred because Landry
failed to object to the death penalty statute on
this ground at trial or to request a jury charge on
mitigating evidence. Landry urges that the novelty
of the jurisprudence on mitigating circumstances
excuses his defaults.
In our recent
decision in Selvage v. Lynaugh,
however, this court held that the petitioner could
not establish cause for a procedural default on the
ground that the law on mitigating circumstances was
new. In 1980 the Texas courts faced and rejected the
contention that the death penalty scheme prevented
adequate consideration of mitigating circumstances.
The state court's prior rejection of the claim does
not constitute cause for the default.
Moreover, as far
back as 1976, in Jurek v. Texas,
the Supreme Court intimated that whether the Texas
courts would construe the statute so as to allow
full consideration of mitigating circumstances
remained an open question. At his trial in 1982,
therefore, Landry had a reasonable basis upon which
to formulate an objection.
His argument to this court is barred because of his
failure to do so.
The court in
Selvage went on to state that, in the absence of a
procedural bar, it would have granted a stay on the
basis of the petitioner's claim that the death
penalty scheme unconstitutionally restricted the
jury's consideration of mitigating factors.
As this issue is not now before the court, we
express no opinion about it.
For these reasons,
we DENY habeas corpus and VACATE the stay of
execution granted by this court on January 27, 1988.
*****
W. EUGENE DAVIS,
Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur in the
judgment of the court. I also concur in all of Judge
Rubin's careful opinion except the single sentence
that expresses reservations about the correctness of
our holding in Williams v. Lynaugh, 814 F.2d 205
(5th Cir.1987). For reasons stated in that opinion,
I do not share the concern of my colleagues that the
State of Texas may not constitutionally permit the
State to admit evidence of prior unadjudicated
offenses of the accused in the penalty phase of a
capital case.
*****