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Jose
Angel MORENO
Jose Angel Moreno confessed to
plotting for months to kidnap and ransom someone. He ultimately settled
on John Cruz as his victim because he believed Cruz was a member of a
wealthy family.
After locating Cruz through a high school
directory, Moreno enlisted the aid of two friends in digging a grave.
After the grave was dug, Moreno plotted to capture and kill Cruz. Moreno
first tried to flag Cruz’s car down after Cruz got out of work. When
that did not work, Moreno placed large rocks in the road near Cruz’s
house, in the hopes that Cruz would stop his car and clear the road,
leaving him vulnerable to attack.
On the night of January 21, 1986, his plan
worked. Cruz got out of his car and attempted to move the rocks. Moreno
approached, brandished a gun, blindfolded and handcuffed Cruz, and drove
him to the grave site.
As Cruz stood in front
of the grave, Moreno shot him in the head from a range of three to four
feet. Cruz fell into the grave, and Moreno buried him and concealed the
grave with trash.
Moreno then made two
phone calls to Cruz’s family demanding a $30,000 ransom. In a police-recorded
conversation, the Cruz family informed Moreno that the money was in
trust and that they could not access it immediately, to which Moreno
replied, “You killed him, not us.” After informants identified Moreno’s
voice on the recording, the police obtained a search warrant for his
home where they found the gun used to kill Cruz.
The police arrested Moreno, and he signed
a confession. Police found Cruz’s body in a grave off of Wing Road in
Bexar County. The body had a gunshot wound to the head. A ballistics
examiner stated after examining the bullet recovered from Cruz’s head
that it was his professional opinion that it was probably fired from a
.44 caliber Charter Arms Bulldog revolver.
A tip from a confidential informant told
police that Jose Moreno owned a .44 caliber Charter Arms Bulldog
revolver, that Moreno carried the weapon in his waistband, and that
Moreno lived in a particular house in San Antonio. The same gun had been
seen by the informant in Moreno’s house.
Police testified that they checked the
Master Name File of the Bexar County Criminal Justice Information System
and verified that the informant had no arrest record. The informant had
listened to a tape of the phone call in which Moreno made his ransom
demand on Cruz’s parents and had identified Moreno as the caller.
Jose Angel Moreno
May 8, 2007
For a Texas jury that
convicted Jose Angel Moreno of capital murder, evidence in the case made
it easy to decide if his crime was deliberate, a caveat for a death
sentence.
Moreno had dug the
grave of his victim, 18-year-old University of Texas-San Antonio student
John Cruz, well before Cruz was abducted and fatally shot.
Now, more than 21 years
later, Moreno, 39, is set to die Thursday evening for a kidnapping and
murder authorities said he had plotted for months because he believed
Cruz, who worked in a San Antonio convenience store, was from a wealthy
family who could afford to pay a ransom.
The lethal injection
would be the 14th this year in America's most active capital punishment
state.
The U.S. Supreme Court
refused in January to review Moreno's case.
His lawyers, however,
were in the courts trying to block the execution, arguing Moreno's jury
was unable to consider evidence of a troubled childhood and other
mitigating issues that could have influenced them to give Moreno a life
sentence instead of death. The appeal is based on a Supreme Court
decision two weeks ago in three other Texas cases where justices ruled
instructions to jurors were improper, Moreno's attorney, Scott Sullivan,
said.
"Does he have enough
evidence under these new cases ... and should he get a new punishment
phase?" Sullivan said. "I think we have the sufficient amount of
evidence to pass along to a jury. I think we have a decent complaint
here."
When considering
punishment, jurors only were asked whether the slaying was deliberate
and whether they believed Moreno would be a future danger.
"This guy was a stone
cold killer — the worst," Ed Springer, the former Bexar County assistant
district attorney who prosecuted Moreno, said this week.
A man and his son
stumbled over the empty gravesite and called police. An officer later
checking the site found it filled with dirt and trash covering Cruz's
body.
"If it had not been for
the fortuitous act of a man and son finding that hole, Cruz would never
have been found," said Springer, now the Comal County district attorney.
"This person was methodical. If he had not been caught, he'd have
repeated and just keep getting better."
Evidence showed while
Moreno was awaiting trial weapons were found in his Bexar County Jail
cell, he had repeatedly been violent with jailers and threatened them
and that he had tried to escape and jammed his cell door so it wouldn't
lock properly. He also used paper clips to free himself and other
inmates from handcuffs.
Jurors gave affirmative
answers to the questions of deliberateness and future danger, meaning
Moreno was sentenced to die.
Evidence showed Moreno,
who was just over 18 at the time of the slaying, had made at least 9
attempts to abduct Cruz before he succeeded the night of Jan. 21, 1986,
by blocking the road to Cruz's home with large rocks. When Cruz got out
of his car to move them, Moreno ran up and ordered him back into the car
at gunpoint.
He handcuffed and
blindfolded Cruz, drove him to the gravesite and then shot him in the
head at close range with a .44-caliber pistol. Then Moreno called Cruz's
family and made a $30,000 ransom demand.
Moreno's voice was
identified by informants. Police obtained a search warrant of his home
where they recovered the murder weapon hidden under a mattress in his
bedroom. He subsequently confessed. A shovel used to dig the grave and
handcuffs used on Cruz were recovered from the home of Moreno's father,
court records showed.
Moreno, who refused to
speak with reporters in the weeks preceding his scheduled execution,
made it only through the 8th grade. He had a history of using marijuana,
cocaine, heroin, LSD and alcohol.
His execution is the
1st of 2 set for May and is among at least 14 scheduled in Texas in the
coming months. Next week, Charles Smith, 41, is to die for the slaying
of a Pecos County sheriff's deputy.
Price, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court in which Keller, P.J., and
Womack, Johnson, Keasler, Holcomb, and Cochran, JJ., joined.
Keller, P.J., filed a concurring opinion. Meyers and Hervey, JJ.,
did not participate.
O P I N I O N
In this cause, we
take the unusual step of reconsidering, on our own initiative, a claim
raised in an initial post-conviction application for writ of habeas
corpus in a capital murder case, but rejected by this Court in an order
issued in 2000. Since that time, the United States Supreme Court has
issued a pair of decisions that call into question the correctness (indeed,
the objective reasonableness) of our original disposition of that claim.
In light of those decisions, and considering the applicant's diligence
in raising the claim in his initial state writ application, we will take
another look, and, ultimately, grant relief.
THE
PROCEDURAL POSTURE
The applicant filed this initial state application for writ of habeas
corpus challenging his conviction for capital murder and death sentence
on January 12, 1996.
(1) The applicant had
been convicted in January of 1987, and this Court affirmed his
conviction in 1993.
(2) In ground for
relief number ten of his initial writ application, the applicant argued
that the punishment charge submitted to the jury had been flawed under
the Eighth Amendment because it did not empower the jury to give effect
to certain mitigating evidence he had offered at the punishment phase of
trial. He relied principally upon the United States Supreme Court's
opinion in Penry v. Lynaugh (Penry I).
(3) The convicting
court recommended that we reject this claim on the merits because the
jury could adequately consider the particular mitigating evidence that
the applicant had presented within the ambit of the statutory special
issues,
(4) which in 1987 did
not include the particular mitigation instruction currently found in
Article 37.071, Section 2(e)(1).
(5) In an unpublished
written order dated September 13, 2000, this Court found the convicting
court's findings of fact and conclusions of law, including its
conclusion with respect to ground for relief number ten, to be supported
by the record. On that basis we denied relief.
The applicant filed his initial federal petition for writ of habeas
corpus on June 29, 2001. The federal district court subsequently granted
the applicant's motion to abate his federal petition so that he could
return to state court to exhaust a newly recognized claim that he could
not be executed consistent with the Eighth Amendment because he is
mentally retarded, under Atkins v. Virginia.
(6) This Court
dismissed his first subsequent state writ raising the Atkins
claim because he failed to make out a prima facie claim of mental
retardation. When the applicant returned to federal court, the district
court denied relief on all of the claims raised in his federal habeas
petition in a memorandum opinion and order issued on March 17, 2005.
(7) The applicant did
not carry his initial-writ Penry claim forward into his federal
petition. The Fifth Circuit affirmed the district court's judgment,
(8) and in January of
2007, the Supreme Court denied the applicant's petition for certiorari.
(9)
In April of 2007, the Supreme Court issued opinions in two companion
cases, Abdul-Kabir v. Quarterman,
(10) and Brewer v.
Quarterman.
(11) In those two
opinions, the Supreme Court revisited Penry I and its progeny,
and stated that a jury must be empowered by the trial court's
instructions to give "meaningful effect" to all mitigating evidence that
a capital defendant introduces at the punishment phase of his trial.
(12) In light of these
opinions, the applicant filed a second subsequent application for writ
of habeas corpus in state court, arguing that he satisfied the criteria
for filing a subsequent writ as enumerated in Section 5 of Article
11.071 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Equally divided as to how to
dispose of the applicant's second subsequent writ application (four
votes to allow the applicant to proceed versus four votes to dismiss),
this Court issued an order on May 9, 2007, announcing that we declined
to take any action.
(13)
The next day, May 10, 2007, the date the applicant was scheduled to be
executed, he filed a "suggestion" that the Court reconsider ground ten
of his initial habeas application on its own initiative, pursuant to
Rule 79.2(d) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure.
(14) In an unpublished
order issued that same day, we exercised our authority to reconsider
ground for relief number ten, and stayed his impending execution. We
issued an additional order in the case on August 22, 2007, directing the
parties to brief the following questions:
?What
jurisdiction does this Court have to reconsider, on its own motion, a
previously denied habeas claim when the applicant subsequently filed
his state-exhausted claims concerning the same conviction in federal
courts?
?At the time this Court denied his first
application in 2000, was the applicant's Penry-based claim
based on "clearly established" law? Was his claim available in 2003
when he filed his second, Atkins-based claim?
?What is the
legal significance of the fact that the remedy that the applicant
had requested at trial was a jury-nullification issue?
?Did the
applicant demonstrate, in his original application for habeas corpus
relief, that he was entitled to prevail on the merits of his
Penry-based claim?
After briefing
from the parties, the cause was submitted to the Court on November
7, 2007. We turn our attention to the merits of the applicant's
Penry I claim, essentially addressing first the last of the
four specific questions we asked the parties to brief.
THE
PENRY I CLAIM
Proceeding
to the Merits
The applicant was tried in 1987, more than two years before the Supreme
Court's opinion in Penry I. In Black v. State, this
Court declared that Penry I error may be raised for the first
time on appeal or in a post-conviction proceeding, at least where, as
here, the trial preceded the Supreme Court's opinion.
(15) And in Ex
parte Goodman, the Court held that a Penry I claim could
be raised for the first time in a post-conviction habeas context even
when the applicant failed to raise it on direct appeal.
(16) In the instant
cause, the applicant called the lack of a mitigation instruction to the
trial court's attention and requested what amounts to a crude jury-nullification
instruction as a proffered means of remedying the perceived deficiency;
he did not, however, raise the issue on direct appeal.
(17) In its findings of
fact and conclusions of law disposing of the applicant's initial writ
application, the convicting court proceeded directly to the merits of
the applicant's Penry I claim and made no ruling on the basis
of procedural default. We therefore turn to the particular mitigating
evidence that the applicant adduced at the punishment phase of his trial.
The
Mitigating Evidence
The applicant was
born with a deformity to his left ear. Apparently abandoned by his birth
parents, he was adopted as an infant by Elias and Carmen Moreno through
a Catholic adoption agency. The applicant grew up in a small house that
he shared with his parents and his grandmother. During the first seven
years of his life, the applicant underwent five surgeries to try to
correct his deformity. Neighborhood boys taunted the applicant because
of his deformity, and his mother would console him. When the applicant
was still a small child, both his mother and his grandmother became very
ill. His father was compelled to take a second job in order to support
his family and pay medical expenses of about $84,000. At times the
applicant was apparently sent to live with relatives, necessitating
frequent changes in the schools he attended. When the applicant was
about fifteen years old, his mother died, an event that he took "very
hard." He dropped out of school and worked a number of menial jobs while
living in his father's house, relatively unsupervised. The applicant was
only eighteen years old at the time he committed his capital offense.
Various family
friends testified that the applicant "has been a very good boy," was "polite,"
"respectful towards everyone," "sincere" in his religious devotion, and
capable of being rehabilitated. A chaplain at the Bexar County jail who
had counseled with the applicant testified that he did not impress her
as "a cold-blooded killer," but more like "a frightened child." He
described himself to her as "pretty much a loner for a long time, and
did not have . . . a lot of close connections." She "sensed . . . that
there was a lot of deep hurt for that." He expressed "a general remorse
for the situation" to her. Another chaplain from the jail testified that
the applicant asked him to provide a chess set. When the chaplain
complied in a prompt manner, the applicant "was very surprised that I
had brought it to him, brought it to him so quickly; and that he was
somewhat surprised that someone would carry through with what they said
they would do for him."
In ground for
relief ten of his initial writ application, citing Penry I, the
applicant argued:
The mitigating
evidence presented in the instant case is basically that of remorse,
youth, . . . good character, and troubled childhood. [The applicant]
requested an instruction on the consideration of mitigating evidence
beyond the statutory special issues. These instructions would have given
the jury a vehicle for expressing its "reasoned moral response" to
mitigating evidence, yet they were denied by the trial court.
The convicting
court rejected this argument with the following conclusion of law:
The applicant
contends that the evidence he presented at the punishment phase of the
trial was beyond the scope of the statutory special issue, thereby
necessitating the submission of his specially requested instruction.
See:
Penry v. Lynaugh,
supra. The applicant is
not entitled to relief because the holding of
Penry is inapplicable
under the facts of the instant case. The fact that the applicant was
viewed, by his family and friends, as a good boy who could be
rehabilitated was not beyond the scope of the issue regarding future
dangerousness, [and] the requested charge was properly refused.
Johnson v. Texas, 509
U.S. 350, 113 S.Ct. 2658, 125 L.Ed.2d 290 (1993);
Richardson v. State, 901
S.W.2d 941 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994), cert. den. 515 U.S. 1162, Ct. 2617
[sic], 132 L.Ed.2d 859 (1995);
Satterwhite v. State, 858 S.W.2d 412 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993), cert.
den. 510 U.S. 970, 114 S.Ct. 455, 126 L.Ed.2d 387 (1993);
Gosch v. State, 829 S.W.2d
775 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991) [cert. denied] 509 U.S. 922, 133 S.Ct. 3035,
125 L.Ed.2d 722 (1993).
In thus holding
that the applicant's mitigating evidence was adequately encompassed
within the future dangerousness special issue, the convicting court
apparently took into account only the applicant's evidence of good
character and remorse. It made no mention of the applicant's troubled
childhood and did not ask whether that facet of his mitigation evidence
was adequately covered by the special issues. In the recent opinions in
Abdul-Kabir and Brewer, the United States Supreme
Court has now made it clear that our resolution of the applicant's tenth
ground for relief in his initial writ application, accepting as we did
the convicting court's recommended conclusion of law, was incorrect. At
least with respect to his evidence of a troubled childhood, the
applicant was entitled to such a separate jury instruction.
Abdul-Kabir
and Brewer
After the Supreme Court's opinions in Abdul-Kabir and
Brewer, it cannot be doubted that a jury must be empowered to give
mitigating value to evidence of a disruptive or troubled childhood
beyond whatever probative value it may have with respect to the
statutory special issues. In the past, this Court has rejected the
necessity for a Penry I instruction based upon such evidence,
both because it "is unrelated to any aspect of how or why the death
penalty would be an appropriate or inappropriate response to a
defendant's actions[,]" and because the future dangerousness special
issue "provides a vehicle for the jury to express its reasoned moral
response" to such evidence.
(18) Neither of these
explanations can now be considered to offer a tenable justification for
failing to submit a mitigation instruction after Abdul-Kabir
and Brewer.
The first explanation is a manifestation of either the now-defunct "constitutional
relevance" test, or the equally discredited "nexus" requirement. Over
the past several years the Supreme Court has definitively rejected the
holdings of this Court and the Fifth Circuit with respect to each.
(19) A capital
defendant need not demonstrate that his proffered mitigating
circumstances rise to some particular level of gravity or severity; only
that they have some relevance to a jury's normative evaluation of his
death-worthiness.
(20) Nor need he
demonstrate that his capital offense was in some sense attributable to
his proffered mitigating circumstances before obtaining a Penry I
instruction.
(21) Circumstances of
the offender himself (as opposed to the circumstances of the offense)
can reasonably justify a jury assessment of a life sentence, regardless
of whether they also have a tendency to ameliorate the offense.
(22) If those
circumstances are not already fully or meaningfully encompassed within
one or both of the statutory special issues, then a separate jury
instruction is constitutionally required.
Nor does our second explanation currently hold water. We can no longer
maintain that evidence of a troubled childhood is adequately encompassed
within the statutory special issues. Both Abdul-Kabir and (especially)
Brewer expressly state that Supreme Court precedent has long
rejected the notion that a jury can meaningfully express its reasoned
moral response to evidence of a troubled or disruptive childhood within
the narrow confines of the special issues.
(23) A capital jury
must be given greater leeway to exercise its reasoned moral response
under the Eighth Amendment. In light of the Supreme Court's most recent
pronouncements, it now appears that our rejection of the tenth ground
for relief in the applicant's initial writ application was so plainly
incorrect under then-extant Supreme Court precedents as to have been "objectively
unreasonable," even as of September of 2000, when we denied the
applicant relief.
(24)
It is evident to
us now that in his tenth ground for relief in his initial writ
application, the applicant presented facts which entitled him to a new
punishment hearing. The statutory special issues alone did not provide
the applicant's jury with an adequate mechanism for exercising its
reasoned moral judgment whether his evidence of a troubled childhood
warranted the imposition of a life sentence instead of the ultimate
penalty of death. May we now grant him that relief on reconsideration of
his claim? Turning to the remaining questions we ordered the parties to
brief, we hold that we may.
RECONSIDERATION ON OUR OWN INITIATIVE
Jurisdiction
We adopted the current incarnation of Rule 79.2(d) in 1997, pursuant to
our legislatively endowed authority to promulgate rules of post-trial
procedure in criminal cases.
(25) It provides that a
habeas applicant may not file a motion for rehearing from an order
denying relief, but that "[t]he Court may on its own initiative
reconsider the case."
(26) On its face, the
rule places no temporal limitation on our authority to reconsider a
post-conviction application for writ of habeas corpus on our own
initiative.
In 1995, as part of the legislation by which it first enacted Article
11.071 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the Legislature withdrew this
Court's rulemaking authority "with respect to rules of appellate
procedure relating to an application for a writ of habeas corpus, but
only to the extent the rules conflict with a procedure under Article
11.071, Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by this Act[.]"
(27) The State suggests
that Rule 79.2(d) may conflict with Article 11.071, insofar as this
Court has declared that "Article 11.071 now contains the exclusive
procedures for the exercise of this Court's original habeas corpus
jurisdiction in death penalty cases."
(28) Section 1 of
Article 11.071 provides that: "Notwithstanding any other provision of [Chapter
11 of the Code of Criminal Procedure], this article establishes the
procedures for an application for a writ of habeas corpus in which the
applicant seeks relief from a judgment imposing a penalty of death."
(29) Plainly, this
provision was meant to prescribe a particular procedural mechanism for
the pursuit of habeas corpus relief in death-penalty cases as opposed to
procedures that Chapter 11 prescribes for other post-conviction contexts.
A rule authorizing this Court to reconsider its disposition of a post-conviction
writ in a death-penalty case does not in any way establish a new or
separate procedure for applications for writ of habeas corpus in death-penalty
cases in contravention of Section 1 of Article 11.071. We find no
language in the balance of Article 11.071 that either allows or
prohibits this Court's reconsideration of our initial disposition of a
capital writ on our own motion or expressly or implicitly prescribes
temporal limitations on any such reconsideration.
Although we
obviously would not choose to exercise this authority very often,
especially years after an initial order denying relief, under the most
extraordinary of circumstances we may do so. Once we have
initially denied an applicant relief in his state habeas proceedings and
he then proceeds through the federal habeas corpus process and is denied
relief there, is our authority to revisit the state writ application
under Rule 79.2(d) adversely impacted? We do not think so.
State and federal courts share concurrent habeas corpus jurisdiction to
review the constitutional legitimacy of a conviction or death sentence
obtained in state court.
(30) The respective
courts have fashioned certain doctrines-the abstention doctrine, on our
part, and the exhaustion doctrine, on the part of the federal courts-in
the interest of "comity, efficiency, and expediency,"
(31) "avoidance of
piecemeal litigation or inconsistent results, and judicial economy."
(32) These doctrines
are designed so that, in exercising their concurrent jurisdictions, the
respective courts can (to put it colloquially) stay out of one another's
way. But they are not jurisdictional doctrines.
(33) It does not
encroach upon any federal prerogative for us to entertain rehearing of
an initial writ after federal proceedings have been resolved against the
applicant. After all, the federal courts do not review the "correctness"
of state-court resolutions of federal constitutional issues in the
course of federal habeas corpus proceedings; under the Antiterrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act ("AEDPA"), federal habeas courts are not at
liberty to overturn a state-court decision unless it represents an "objectively
unreasonable" application of Supreme Court precedent.
(34) An individual
state must surely retain the authority, if it should so choose, to
revisit one of its own judgments if there is a compelling reason to
believe that it may not have been "correct" on original submission. Thus,
we find nothing in the fact that the applicant has been denied relief in
his federal habeas proceedings that would somehow inherently deprive
this Court of the authority, under our own state rules of appellate
procedure, to reconsider the applicant's Penry I claim.
That does not mean that we are bound to do so or that we should
ever do so lightly. Even if comity or the possibility of inconsistent
results are not implicated at this juncture, judicial economy and the
avoidance of piecemeal litigation remain legitimate concerns that
counsel against disturbing our initial disposition, absent compelling
circumstances. After all, habeas corpus is an equitable remedy, and, as
the applicant concedes, "[e]quity aids the diligent and not those who
slumber on their rights."
(35) We should and will
be extremely hesitant ever to exercise our authority to reconsider a
decision on an initial post-conviction habeas corpus application,
particularly after the passage of a substantial number of years. In
almost every instance, the State's legitimate interest in the repose and
finality of its convictions-even its interest in punishment as weighty
and irrevocable as the death penalty-will be substantial indeed and
ought not to be disturbed, even in the face of a reasonable and good
faith argument that our disposition on original submission was "incorrect."
That being said, however, we do not hesitate to reconsider and grant
relief in the instant case. Here, the applicant did not "slumber on his
rights." He objected at trial and raised his claim timely in his initial
application for writ of habeas corpus. And as soon as it became clear to
him that our original disposition was not only "incorrect," but indeed,
so plainly incorrect that today it would undoubtedly be considered "objectively
unreasonable" by the Supreme Court, the applicant renewed his claim,
first in an attempted subsequent writ application, and then, when this
Court was unable to muster a majority to take action on that, by way of
his suggestion that we reconsider the issue from his initial writ
application on our own initiative. We find it appropriate under these
extraordinary circumstances to exercise our authority under Rule 79.2(d)
to reconsider our original disposition of the applicant's Penry I
claim.
(36)
"Clearly
Established Law"
Nor do we think it can fairly be said that the applicant "slumbered on
his rights" by failing to raise his Penry I claim in his first
subsequent writ application which he filed in 2003. Of course, the claim
would have been just as "clearly established" in 2003 as it was in 2000,
when we denied his initial writ application. But there was no new case
law in the interim, either from this Court or from the Supreme Court,
that should have alerted the applicant that his Penry I claim
had gained renewed vitality. Not until 2004, with the advent of the
Supreme Court's opinions in Tennard and Smith I, could
it have begun to become apparent that both this Court's and the Fifth
Circuit's applications of Penry I were, in a number of
instances, likely to be declared not just "incorrect," but even "objectively
unreasonable." And not until Abdul-Kabir and Brewer
did the Supreme Court unequivocally declare that our treatment of
evidence of a troubled childhood as both having no practical mitigating
impact, and at the same time, adequately covered by the statutory
special issues, was a plain misconstruction of its precedents. The
applicant should not be denied relief upon our reconsideration of his
initial Penry I claim on the grounds that he failed to exercise
appropriate diligence in reasserting a Penry I claim in 2003,
when he timely and diligently pursued a newly recognized Atkins
claim. We cannot fault the applicant any more than we can fault
ourselves.
(37)
Nullification Instruction
Nor do we think it fatal to the applicant's renewed Penry I
claim that he requested the trial court to remedy the defect in the
punishment charge by submitting to the jury an instruction that the
Supreme Court subsequently declared, in Penry II and in
Smith I, to be inadequate.
(38) The State argues
that, in light of these recent precedents, a nullification instruction
fails to remedy the Eighth Amendment deficiency, but concedes that "[p]erhaps
the trial judge was informed by the requested charge that some sort of
instructions was needed to insure jurors could give effect to mitigating
evidence where the special issues do not."
(39) We agree with the
State's tentative concession that, though flawed, the applicant's
requested instruction was nevertheless sufficient to alert the trial
court to the Eighth Amendment problem, even if the proffered solution
was inadequate. A defendant's requested jury instruction need not be
flawless or even correct in order to call the trial court's attention to
a deficiency in the charge and thereby preserve error.
(40) As the applicant
points out in his brief, it is apparent that the petitioner in Abdul-Kabir
had also alerted the trial court to the deficiency in the jury charge in
his case by requesting what amounted to a series of jury nullification
instructions.
(41) The Supreme Court
was obviously aware of this circumstance, but did not regard it as any
impediment to federal habeas relief.
Moreover, it could not reasonably be said that the applicant in any
respect "invited" Penry I error by requesting a nullification
instruction.
(42) The trial court
did not give the applicant's requested nullification
instruction. Therefore, the kind of independent error that may arise
from an instruction that authorizes jurors to ignore the obligation of
their oaths and render false answers to the special issues, tentatively
recognized in Penry II, Smith I, and Smith II,
(43) did not occur in
the applicant's trial; nor is that the error he complained about in the
tenth ground for relief in his initial writ application. We have already
concluded that the applicant's requested instruction, along with the
State's response, was sufficient to put the trial court on notice of the
particular Eighth Amendment error that the applicant did raise
in his tenth ground for relief, viz: that the court's
punishment charge did not empower the jury to give mitigating effect to,
inter alia, his evidence of a troubled childhood.
(44)
CONCLUSION
Because the evidence that the applicant proffered at the punishment
phase of his capital murder trial with respect to his troubled childhood
could not be given meaningful effect within the context of the statutory
special issues, the trial court erred in failing to give a separate jury
instruction that would empower the jury to assess a life sentence on the
basis of such mitigating evidence, notwithstanding its answers to the
special issues. We therefore sustain the applicant's tenth ground for
relief. The punishment portion of the judgment of the trial court is
vacated, and the applicant is remanded to the trial court for a new
punishment hearing.
(45)
Delivered: February 6, 2008
Publish
*****
1. On its face, the applicant's
initial writ application purported to be filed under the auspices of
Article 11.07 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Tex. Code Crim. Proc.
art. 11.07. However, post-conviction habeas corpus proceedings in
capital cases are governed by Article 11.071 of the Code, which became
effective on September 1, 1995. Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 11.071.
See Acts 1995, 74th Leg., ch. 319, p. 2764, eff. Sept.
1, 1995.
3. 492 U.S. 302 (1989) (hereinafter
"Penry I"). In Penry v. Johnson, 532 U.S. 782 (2001) (hereinafter
"Penry II"), the Supreme Court would revisit Penry's case after
his retrial.
4. At the time of the applicant's
offense, the relevant special issues were:
"(1) Whether the
conduct of the defendant that caused the death of the deceased was
committed deliberately and with the reasonable expectation that the
death of the deceased or another would result;
(2) whether there
is a reasonable probability that the defendant would commit criminal
acts of violence that would constitute a threat to society[.]
See former Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art.
37.071, ? (b)(1) & (2), prior to amendment by Acts 1991, 72nd
Leg., ch. 838, p. 2899, eff. Sept. 1, 1991.
5. See current Tex. Code
Crim. Proc. art. 37.071, ? 2(e)(1) ("The court shall instruct the jury
that if the jury returns an affirmative finding to each issue submitted
under subsection (b), it shall answer the following issue: Whether,
taking into consideration all of the evidence, including the
circumstances of the offense, the defendant's character and background,
and the personal moral culpability of the defendant, there is a
sufficient mitigating circumstance or circumstances to warrant that a
sentence of life imprisonment without parole rather than a death
sentence be imposed.").
12. Abdul-Kabir v. Quarterman,
supra, at 1669 ("The rule that we reaffirm today-a rule that
has been clearly established since our opinion in Penry I-is
this: Special instructions are necessary when the jury could not
otherwise give meaningful effect to a defendant's mitigating
evidence.").
13. Since declining to take any
action on the applicant's second subsequent writ application, this Court
has unanimously declared that another subsequent writ application re-raising
a Penry I claim could be brought under Article 11.071, Section
5(a). See Ex parte Martinez, 233 S.W.3d 319, 322-23 & n.8 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2007).
14. Tex. R. App. P. 79.2(d) ("A
motion for rehearing an order that denies habeas corpus relief under
Code of Criminal Procedure, articles 11.07 or 11.071, may not be filed.
The Court may on its own initiative reconsider the case.").
15. 816 S.W.2d 350, 367-74 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1991) (Campbell, J., concurring, joined by McCormick, P.J.,
and Clinton, Overstreet, Maloney and Benavides, JJ.) The rationale for
recognizing a Penry I claim for the first time on appeal or in
a post-conviction writ when the trial occurred prior to the decision in
Penry I itself was that, at the time of trial, it was a "right
not recognized," such that the defendant could not have been expected to
object and thereby preserve error. We have since called the "right not
recognized" exception to the contemporaneous objection rule into
question, Sanchez v. State, 120 S.W.3d 359, 367 (Tex. Crim. App.
2003), but not until three years after we denied the applicant relief on
the merits of his Penry I claim, in September of 2000. In any
event, the applicant did adequately preserve the error at trial.
See note 17, post.
16. 816 S.W.2d 383, 385 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1991). See also Ex parte Kunkle, 852 S.W.2d 499, 502
n.3 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993).
17. The applicant's trial
attorneys requested the trial court to instruct the jury, "If you
find any evidence in mitigation of the defendant's acts, and it
creates a reasonable doubt in your mind, you will so find by your
answer to the special issues by answering no to the special issues."
The State objected that a mitigation instruction had been deemed
unnecessary in Quinonez v. State, 592 S.W.2d 933, at 947 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1980). Thus alerted to the nature of the applicant's
request (namely, for some kind of jury instruction that would enable
the jurors to give effect to the mitigating impact of his punishment
evidence beyond the scope of the special issues), the trial court
expressly denied it. The applicant did not raise this denial as a
point of error on appeal, but expressly complained about it in claim
number ten of his initial writ application.
19. Smith v. Texas, 543
U.S. 37 (2004) (hereinafter "Smith I"); Tennard v. Dretke,
542 U.S. 274 (2004). The Supreme Court later revisited Smith's case in
Smith v. Texas, 127 S.Ct. 1686 (2007) (hereinafter "Smith
II").
20. Smith I, supra,
at 44 ("the jury must be given an effective vehicle with which to weigh
mitigating evidence so long as the defendant has met a low threshold for
relevance, which is satisfied by evidence which tends logically to prove
or disprove some fact or circumstance which a fact-finder could
reasonably deem to have mitigating value.") (internal quotations omitted);
Tennard v. Dretke, supra, at 285 ("Once this low
threshold for relevance is met, the Eighth Amendment requires that the
jury be able to consider and give effect to a capital defendant's
mitigating evidence.") (internal quotations omitted); see also
Brewer, supra, at 1712 ("It may well be true that Brewer's
mitigating evidence was less compelling than Penry's, but, contrary to
the view of the CCA, that difference does not provide an acceptable
justification for refusing to apply the reasoning of Penry I to
this case. * * * Nowhere in our Penry line of cases have we
suggested that the question whether mitigating evidence could have been
adequately considered by the jury is a matter purely of quantity, degree,
or immutability.").
21. Smith I, supra,
at 45 (nexus requirement is "unequivocally rejected"); Tennard,
supra, at 287 (capital defendant need not demonstrate "nexus"
between mitigating evidence and the offense).
22. Tennard, supra
("the question is simply whether the evidence is of such character that
it 'might serve 'as a basis for a sentence less than death.'"
Skipper [v. South Carolina], [476 U.S. 1,] at 5
[(1986)].").
23. Abdul-Kabir,
supra, at 1673 ("a juror considering [Abdul-Kabir]'s evidence of
childhood neglect and abandonment . . . or Brewer's evidence of . . . a
troubled childhood could feel compelled to provide a 'yes' answer to [the
future dangerousness special issue], finding himself without a means for
giving meaningful effect to the mitigating qualities of such
evidence."); Brewer, supra, at 1713 ("The transient
quality of such mitigating evidence [of 'troubled background'] may make
it more likely to fall in part within the ambit of the special issues;
however, as we explained in Penry I, such evidence may still
have relevance to the defendant's moral culpability beyond the scope of
the special verdict questions. (internal quotations omitted) * * * Like
the 'constitutional relevance' standard that we rejected in Tennard,
a 'sufficient effect' standard [i.e., a standard by which
Penry I may be satisfied so long as 'sufficient,' albeit less than
'full' mitigating effect may be given to proffered mitigating evidence
within the confines of the statutory special issues] has no foundation
in the decisions of this Court.").
24. We now know that clearly
established Supreme Court precedent since Penry I has
emphasized "the importance of allowing juries to give meaningful effect
to any mitigating evidence providing a basis for a sentence of life
rather than death." Abdul-Kabir, supra, at 1672.
Indeed, the Supreme Court declared that the principles governing its
decisions in Abdul-Kabir and Brewer were clearly
established even as of September of 1990, some ten years before we
rejected the applicant's Penry I claim in his initial writ
application. Id. at 1659.
25. See Tex. Const. art.
V, ? 31(c) ("The legislature may delegate to the . . . Court of Criminal
Appeals the power to promulgate such other rules as may be prescribed by
law of this Constitution, subject to such limitations and procedures as
may be provided by law."); Tex. Gov't Code ? 22.108(b) ("The court of
criminal appeals may promulgate a comprehensive body of rules of
posttrial, appellate, and review procedure in criminal cases and from
time to time may promulgate a specific rule or rules of posttrial,
appellate, or review procedure in criminal cases or an amendment or
amendments to a specific rule or rules. * * * The rules and amendments
to rules remain in effect unless and until disapproved, modified, or
changed by the legislature.")
30. See Tex. Code Crim.
Proc. art. 11.071 & 28 U.S.C. ? 2241, respectively.
31. Ex parte Soffar, 120
S.W.3d 344, 346 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003)
32. Ex parte Soffar, 143
S.W.3d 804, 805 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
33. A federal court has the
authority to entertain and deny a claim on the merits that has
not been exhausted in state court, even if not authorized to grant
relief on an unexhausted claim. See 28 U.S.C. ? 2254(b)(1)(A) &
(b)(2).
34. Williams v. Taylor,
529 U.S. 362, 409-12 (2000) ("Stated simply, a federal habeas court
making the 'unreasonable application' inquiry [under 28 U.S.C. ?
2254(d)(1)] should ask whether the state court's application of clearly
established federal law was objectively unreasonable. * * * For purposes
of today's opinion, the most important point is that an unreasonable
application of federal law is different from an incorrect
application of federal law. * * * Under ? 2254(d)(1)'s 'unreasonable
application' clause, then, a federal habeas court may not issue the writ
simply because the court concludes in its independent judgment that the
relevant state-court decision applied clearly established federal law
erroneously or incorrectly. Rather, the application must also be
unreasonable.").
35. Callahan v. Giles,
155 S.W.2d 793, 795 (Tex. 1941). See also Ex parte Carrio, 992
S.W.2d 486, 488 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) ("We agree with the State that
the doctrine of laches is a theory which we may, and should, employ in
our determination of whether to grant relief in any given [Article]
11.07 case."); In re Steptoe, 132 S.W.3d 434, 439-40 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2004) (Cochran, J., dissenting) ("In Texas habeas corpus law, as in
federal law, equity is not intended for those who sleep on their rights.")
(internal quotations and footnote omitted); Ex parte Drake, 883
S.W.2d 213, 215 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994) ("Because of the unique nature of
the remedy, habeas corpus relief is underscored by elements of fairness
and equity.").
36. We reiterate that, since
filing and setting the applicant's tenth ground for relief for
reconsideration on our own initiative, we have granted relief to another
capital habeas applicant on a Penry I claim that he brought in
a subsequent post-conviction writ application brought under the auspices
of Section 5 of Article 11.071. See note 13, ante.
37. If it was the applicant's
second subsequent writ application that we were presently addressing,
the question whether the applicant would be permitted to pursue his
renewed Penry I claim would be governed by Ex parte Hood,
211 S.W.3d 767 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). There we held that once a habeas
applicant has "exhausted" a claim by raising it unsuccessfully in an
initial writ application, he may raise the same claim again in a
subsequent writ application if legal developments occurring after the
disposition of the initial writ breathe new life into the claim. Id.,
at 776, & 778. It was
on the basis of this holding that we permitted the applicant in Ex
parte Martinez, supra, at 322-23, to pursue his renewed
Penry I claim in a subsequent writ application. Here, as in
Martinez, because the applicant filed his first subsequent writ
application in 2003, prior to the Supreme Court's opinions in
Tennard, Smith I, Abdul-Kabir, and Brewer,
he was not barred, consistent with our analysis in Ex parte Hood,
from raising his revitalized Penry I claim in his second
subsequent writ application.
38. Penry II, supra;
Smith I, supra. See note 17, ante.
39. State's Brief, at 9-10. This
is, in fact, the entirety of the State's discussion of the legal
significance of the fact that the applicant asked for a nullification
instruction at trial.
40. E.g., Williams
v. State, 630 S.W.2d 640, 643 (Tex. Crim. App. 1982); Stone v.
State, 703 S.W.2d 652, 655 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986); Chapman v.
State, 921 S.W.2d 694, 695 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996); Francis v.
State, 36 S.W.3d 121, 123 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
41. Applicant's Brief, at 20-23.
See Abdul-Kabir v. Quarterman, supra, at 1662 ("The
trial judge refused to give any of several instructions requested by [Abdul-Kabir]
that would have authorized a negative answer to either of the special
issues on the basis of 'any evidence which, in [the jury's] opinion,
mitigated against the imposition of the Death Penalty, including any
aspect ot the Defendant's character or record.'") (quoting the Joint
Appendix of the parties, at 115) (first brackets supplied; second
brackets in the original).
42. See Prytash v. State,
3 S.W.3d 522, 531 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) ("The doctrine of invited error
is properly thought of, not as a species of waiver, but as estoppel.")
43. Penry II, supra,
at 800; Smith I, supra, at 47-8; Smith II,
supra, 127 S.Ct. at 1691. See also Ex parte Hood,
supra, at 77-78.