Dupuy v. Cain

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

Dupuy v. Cain

Opinion

Revised February 11, 2000

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT ___________________

No. 99-30146 __________________

BUFORD ANTHONY DUPUY,

Petitioner-Appellant,

versus

BURL CAIN, Warden, Louisiana State Penitentiary,

Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana _________________________________________________________________ January 24, 2000

Before JONES, BARKSDALE, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.

RHESA HAWKINS BARKSDALE, Circuit Judge:

For this pro se, successive habeas petition, considered

pursuant to the applicable standards prior to those imposed by the

Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA),

primarily at issue is whether the district court abused its

discretion in determining that the challenged reasonable doubt jury

instruction was not prejudicial for abuse of writ purposes. The

other claims were also treated similarly. We AFFIRM. I.

- 2 - Buford Anthony Dupuy’s 1974 conviction for second-degree

murder and life-sentence were affirmed in December 1975. State v.

Dupuy,

319 So.2d 299

(La. 1975).

Dupuy’s first federal habeas petition, filed in 1977,

contended: (1) that the evidence seized during claimed

unconstitutional searches of his residence should have been

excluded; (2) that he was not allowed to examine certain

prosecution evidence; and (3) that he had received an unfair trial,

based on claimed prejudicial remarks by the prosecutor. The

petition was dismissed, on the merits, in 1979. Our court denied

a certificate of probable cause (CPC) in August 1982.

Dupuy’s second, successive petition was filed on 12 April

1996, approximately two weeks before AEDPA became effective. He

raised seven new claims for relief: (1) that the use of his

confession violated the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments;

(2) that the evidence was insufficient to convict him; (3) that he

received ineffective assistance of counsel; (4) that the reasonable

doubt and specific intent instructions violated the Fourteenth

Amendment; (5) that women were unconstitutionally excluded from the

grand and petit juries; (6) that the State suppressed evidence in

violation of Brady v. Maryland,

373 U.S. 83

(1963); and (7) that

his sentence was illegal.

Pre-AEDPA, raising a new claim in a subsequent habeas petition

constitutes an abuse of the writ, unless the petitioner can

- 3 - demonstrate both cause for not raising the claim in the first

petition and actual prejudice if the claim is not considered; if he

fails to do so, the court may still reach the merits in order to

prevent a “fundamental miscarriage of justice”. McCleskey v. Zant,

499 U.S. 467, 494

(1991).

Pretermitting whether Dupuy had shown cause, the magistrate

judge determined that Dupuy would neither be prejudiced, nor suffer

a fundamental miscarriage of justice, and, therefore, recommended

that the writ be dismissed, pursuant to Rule 9(b) of the Rules

Governing Section 2254 Proceedings in the United States District

Courts.

The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and

recommendation, except for the claim concerning Dupuy’s sentence.

For it, the court concluded that the sentence was illegally lenient

and that, therefore, Dupuy had not been prejudiced. The petition

was dismissed with prejudice, as an abuse of the writ.

II.

As in district court, Dupuy proceeds pro se. Because his

second habeas petition was filed prior to AEDPA, pre-AEDPA habeas

law applies. Lindh v. Murphy,

521 U.S. 320

(1997). Nevertheless,

the district court granted an AEDPA certificate of appealability

(COA) for four of the seven claims. A COA is the substantive

equivalent of a pre-AEDPA CPC, Blankenship v. Johnson,

118 F.3d 312

, 315 & n.2 (5th Cir. 1997); but, when a pre-AEDPA CPC is

- 4 - granted, we consider all of the claims raised in the petition.

Sherman v. Scott,

62 F.3d 136, 138-39

(5th Cir. 1995), cert.

denied,

516 U.S. 1093

(1996). (Accordingly, our court permitted

Dupuy to file a supplemental brief covering the issues for which

the district court had not granted a COA.)

As noted, a federal habeas petitioner is required to raise all

issues in the first petition; a subsequent, pre-AEDPA petition

raising new issues is subject to dismissal for abuse of writ,

pursuant to Rule 9(b). Rodriguez v. Johnson,

104 F.3d 694, 696

(5th Cir.), cert. denied,

520 U.S. 1267

(1997). Once the State has

met its burden of pleading such abuse, the petitioner must show

either cause and prejudice concerning the failure to plead the

issue in the first petition, or a fundamental miscarriage of

justice. Id. at 697.

We review an abuse of writ dismissal for abuse of discretion.

Id. at 696. As did the district court, instead of looking to cause

vel non, we examine Dupuy’s claims to determine either actual

prejudice or a fundamental miscarriage of justice vel non.

To show prejudice, Dupuy must demonstrate, “not merely that

the error at his trial created a possibility of prejudice, but that

they worked to his actual and substantial disadvantage, infecting

his entire trial with error of constitutional dimensions”. United

States v. Frady,

456 U.S. 152, 170

(1982). Similarly, a

- 5 - miscarriage of justice occurs only in those “extraordinary

instances when a constitutional violation probably has caused the

conviction of one innocent of the crime”. McCleskey,

499 U.S. at 494

.

For starters, in reviewing for actual prejudice or a

fundamental miscarriage of justice, we reject Dupuy’s objections

concerning the procedure employed by the district court for this

Rule 9(b) question: (1) that by analyzing Dupuy’s substantive

issues in the Rule 9(b) context, he has been held to a higher

standard of review; (2) that there are unresolved factual issues

regarding the state court suppression hearing which should not have

been resolved without an evidentiary hearing; (3) that the district

court erroneously relied on an uncertified state court record; (4)

that the State’s answer was served on him without copies of the

attached exhibits, and the district court failed to rule on his

motion to have the State provide him those exhibits; (5) that an

unresolved factual dispute remains; and (6) that the district

court’s order, that no further motions would be entertained while

the Rule 9(b) issue was pending, prohibited him from conducting

discovery and prosecuting his habeas petition. In sum, the

procedure employed by the district court for this Rule 9(b) matter

was proper.

A.

- 6 - For Dupuy’s claim that the reasonable doubt and specific

intent instructions were unconstitutional, we review a challenged

instruction to determine whether it so infected the entire trial

that the resulting conviction violated due process, not merely

whether it is undesirable, erroneous, or even universally

condemned. Rodriguez,

104 F.3d at 699

n.8.

1.

The reasonable doubt instruction provided:

A reasonable doubt is a fair doubt based upon reason and common sense and arising from a state of the evidence. It is a doubt that you can give a reason for. It is rarely possible to prove anything to an absolute certainty. Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is such as you would be willing to rely and act upon in the most important of your own affairs. A defendant is never to be convicted on mere suspicions or conjectures. A reasonable doubt may arise not only from the evidence produced but also from a lack of evidence. Since the burden is always on the prosecution to prove the accused guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of every essential element of the crime charged, a defendant has the right to rely upon the failure of the prosecution to establish such proof. A defendant may also rely upon evidence brought out on cross examination of a witness for the prosecution. The law never imposes upon a defendant in a criminal case, the burden or duty of producing any evidence. A reasonable doubt exists in any case when after careful and impartial consideration of all the evidence in the case, the jurors do not feel convinced to make [sic] a moral certainty that the defendant is guilty of the charge against him.

(Emphasis added.)

- 7 - Dupuy contends that the “moral certainty” language suggests a

higher level of doubt than that — reasonable doubt — required for

acquittal, citing Cage v. Louisiana,

498 U.S. 39

(1990). There,

the Court held that the charge

equated a reasonable doubt with a “grave uncertainty” and an “actual and substantial doubt,” and stated that what was required was a “moral certainty” that the defendant was guilty. It is plain to us that the words “substantial” and “grave,” as they are commonly understood, suggest a higher degree of doubt than is required for acquittal under the reasonable-doubt standard.

Id. at 41

.

Victor v. Nebraska,

511 U.S. 1

(1994), modified Cage. The

three phrases were still disapproved; accordingly,

trial courts must avoid defining reasonable doubt so as to lead the jury to convict on a lesser showing than due process requires. [But, for the] cases [under review], we conclude that taken as a whole, the instructions correctly conveyed the concept of reasonable doubt to the jury.

Id. at 22

.

Thereafter, in Schneider v. Day,

73 F.3d 610, 611

(5th Cir.

1996), for example, our court held that the reasonable doubt

instruction at issue there, which employed “an actual and

substantial doubt”, “a serious sensible doubt as such you could

give a good reason for”, and “a moral certainty”, was acceptable.

In so doing, our court applied Victor, and held “that there is no

- 8 - reasonable likelihood that the jury ... applied the instruction in

a way that violated the Constitution”.

Id. at 611

.

Humphrey v. Cain,

138 F.3d 552

(5th Cir.)(en banc), cert.

denied, ___U.S.___,

119 S. Ct. 348

, and cert denied, ___U.S.___,

119 S. Ct. 365

(1998), adopted the panel opinion,

120 F.3d 526

(1997), concerning, inter alia, whether the defendant was

prejudiced by the reasonable doubt instruction. The instruction

provided, at the end, that the jury “could acquit only if it had a

serious doubt, for which you could give good reason”; it earlier

employed the terms “substantial doubt”, “grave uncertainty”, and

“moral certainty”. The requirement that a juror had to have a

“serious doubt, for which [he] could give a good reason”, in

conjunction with the disapproved phrases, was held to violate due

process. See Humphrey,

120 F.3d at 530

(panel opinion). But,

Humphrey expressly did not consider whether the “give good reason”

requirement, alone, was violative of due process.

Id. at 531

.

Dupuy’s reasonable doubt instruction contains favored and

disfavored phrases. Of course, it is not the use of a single

phrase that determines whether a jury instruction is

unconstitutional; instead, the instruction is examined as a whole.

Victor,

511 U.S. at 22

.

Dupuy’s instruction required jurors to be able to articulate

a “good reason” and had one of the disfavored Cage phrases (“moral

certainty”). But, otherwise, the instruction has far less

- 9 - disfavored language than in Humphrey; and, additionally, the

instruction has further clarifying language to assist in

determining reasonable doubt vel non. Humphrey,

120 F.3d at 533

(discussing why Schneider and other cases, faced with “good reason”

phrase held instruction not unconstitutional, because not faced

with all the other disfavored phrases as in the Humphrey

instruction). Moreover, the “good reason” requirement is placed

much earlier in the instruction and given far less emphasis.

Finally, Humphrey was not a successive petition/abuse of writ

situation, as is the case at hand.

We conclude that the district court did not abuse its

discretion in holding that Dupuy has not shown the requisite

prejudice resulting from the instruction. For example, unlike

Humphrey, as discussed infra, this is not a “close case” as to

guilt or innocence. Id.

2.

The specific intent jury instruction provided:

As a general rule it is reasonable to infer that a person ordinarily intends all the natural and probable consequences of acts knowingly done or knowingly omitted by him. So, unless the evidence in this case leads the jury to a different or contrary conclusion, the jury may draw the inference implied and find that the accused intended all the natural and probable consequences which one standing in like circumstances and possessing like knowledge should reasonably have expected to result from any act knowingly done or knowingly omitted by the accused.

- 10 - Dupuy contends that this instruction created a presumption of

intent, prohibited by Sandstrom v. Montana,

442 U.S. 510, 515

(1979). It held that the phrase “the law presumes that a person

intends the ordinary consequences of his voluntary acts” created

such a prohibited presumption.

Id.

Here, the instruction provided for an allowable inference; it

did not create the prohibited presumption. Accordingly, the court

did not abuse its discretion in determining that Dupuy has not

demonstrated prejudice.

B.

Dupuy asserts that his due process rights were violated

because his confession was elicited in violation of the Fifth and

Sixth Amendments.

Dupuy must demonstrate that his confession was not voluntarily

given and that, for this abuse of writ inquiry, the district court

abused its discretion in determining that he was not prejudiced.

“[T]he ultimate question whether, under the totality of the

circumstances, [a] challenged confession was obtained in a manner

compatible with the requirements of the Constitution is a matter

for independent federal determination.” Muniz v. Johnson,

132 F.3d 214, 219

(5th Cir.), cert. denied, ___ U.S.___,

118 S.Ct. 1793

(1998) (citation omitted). “Subsidiary factual questions, however,

are entitled to a presumption of correctness”. Id. at 219.

- 11 - 1.

After Dupuy’s arrest, he was interrogated at the sheriff’s

office, beginning with the Sheriff asking Dupuy whether he knew his

rights. Dupuy responded that he did, and then admitted killing

Normand in a “tussle”. (At trial, Dupuy’s defense was based upon

Normand being accidentally shot during a “tussle”. Dupuy,

319 So.2d at 301

.)

Dupuy’s motion to suppress the confession, because he had not

been advised of his rights, was denied. At the hearing on that

motion, a Deputy Sheriff testified that he could not remember if

Dupuy had been read his rights pre-interrogation. Another Deputy

testified that, when he arrested Dupuy, he read him his rights;

that initially, Dupuy stated that he did not understand; that he

then reread those rights to Dupuy; and that, Dupuy stated that he

understood.

Moreover, at the sheriff’s office, prior to the interrogation,

Dupuy signed a memorandum waiving his rights. Additionally, the

Sheriff testified that he

told [Dupuy], of course, that we were there to talk to him and that we were going to read him his rights or tell him his rights and that’s when he told us we didn’t have to. That they had already been read to him. And, he already knew his rights and that we didn’t have to tell him his rights.

The magistrate judge noted that Dupuy had not offered any

evidence to demonstrate that he had not waived his rights, and,

- 12 - accordingly, determined that Dupuy failed to overcome the

presumption of correctness that attaches to state-court fact

finding. See Mann v. Scott,

41 F.3d 968, 976

(5th Cir. 1994),

cert. denied,

514 U.S. 1117

(1995). In sum, Dupuy has not

demonstrated prejudice. Therefore, there was no abuse of

discretion by the district court.

2.

Citing Edwards v. Arizona,

451 U.S. 477, 487

(1981), Dupuy

maintains that he requested counsel immediately after his arrest,

and should not have been interrogated without counsel being

present. Dupuy’s conviction, however, became final prior to

Edwards. To the extent that Edwards created a new per se rule, it

does not apply retroactively to cases on collateral review. See

Solem v. Stumes,

465 U.S. 638, 650

(1984).

The pre-Edwards rule was that States could not secure

“criminal convictions through the use of involuntary confessions

resulting from coercive police conduct”. Self v. Collins,

973 F.2d 1198, 1205

(5th Cir. 1992), cert. denied,

507 U.S. 996

(1993).

Dupuy has not demonstrated an abuse of discretion by the district

court’s concluding that the admission of the confession did not

work to his “actual and substantial disadvantage, infecting his

entire trial with error of constitutional dimensions”. Murray v.

Carrier,

477 U.S. 478, 493

(1986).

- 13 - C.

Dupuy next raises a sufficiency challenge regarding his intent

to kill Normand. For such a claim, we consider whether, viewing

the evidence “in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any

rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of

the crime beyond a reasonable doubt”. Jackson v. Virginia,

443 U.S. 307, 319

(1979). This standard is applied with “explicit

reference to the substantive elements of the criminal offense as

defined by state law”.

Id.

at 324 n.16. Under Louisiana law, the

elements of second degree murder are (1) the killing of a human

being; and (2) that defendant had the specific intent to kill or

inflict great bodily harm. LA. REV. STAT. ANN. 14:30.1.

Specific criminal intent is “that state of mind which exists

when the circumstances indicate that the offender actively desired

the prescribed criminal consequences to follow his act or failure

to act”. State v. Williams,

714 So.2d 258, 263

(La. App. 5 Cir.

1998) (citation omitted). Specific intent is a question of fact

which may be inferred from the circumstances and actions of the

defendant.

Id. at 263

.

Dupuy admitted killing Normand. He had Jesse Bordelon throw

Normand’s body into a bayou. Dupuy drove to another location and

threw the gun into the bayou. Normand had been hogtied and shot in

the back of the head. Normand left a note saying “If I get killed,

it’s Anthony Dupuy, that did it.”

- 14 - Obviously, the evidence is sufficient for a reasonable juror

to find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Dupuy intended to kill

Normand. The district court did not abuse its discretion.

D.

Relying on Taylor v. Louisiana,

419 U.S. 522

(1975), Dupuy

contends that he was prejudiced because women were systematically

excluded from grand and petit juries. In Daniel v. Louisiana,

420 U.S. 31

(1975), the court held that Taylor would not be applied

retroactively to “convictions obtained by juries empaneled prior to

the date of that decision”.

Id. at 32

. Dupuy’s grand and petit

juries were empaneled prior to Taylor.

E.

Dupuy asserts that police reports were withheld from him in

violation of Brady. To establish such a violation, Dupuy must prove

that the State withheld evidence; that it was favorable; and that

it was material to the defense. E.g., Little v. Johnson,

162 F.3d 855, 861

(5th Cir. 1998), cert. denied, ___U.S.___,

119 S.Ct. 1768

(1999).

Dupuy maintains that the police report would have shown (1)

that Normand’s fingerprints were found in Dupuy’s home; (2) that

Normand was not kidnaped; (3) that a table in Dupuy’s home was

damaged and that blood samples matching Normand’s blood type were

found in Dupuy’s home; and (4) that there was evidence that would

have supported Dupuy’s testimony that Normand had been accidentally

- 15 - killed. During post conviction proceedings in 1992, 17 years after

his conviction, a police report was furnished to Dupuy in response

to a discovery request. Dupuy contends that there are other police

reports that were not provided to him; however, he has not

demonstrated that they are in existence. The State responded that

all such records were delivered to Dupuy.

Dupuy did not demonstrate that the reports were withheld from

him. Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion.

F.

Dupuy claims that he was illegally sentenced by the trial

court, because his sentence failed to specify that he would not be

eligible for parole, probation, or suspension of sentence for 20

years. In a state collateral proceeding, the court ruled that the

sentence was not illegal. Louisiana v. Dupuy, No. 31,391 (12th

J.D.C. 27 Aug. 1993) (motion for resentencing).

The district court determined that his sentence was illegally

lenient and that, therefore, Dupuy had not been prejudiced. Dupuy

has not demonstrated that the wording of the court’s minute entry

will affect his eligibility for release. Accordingly, the requisite

abuse of discretion has not been shown.

G.

For his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, Dupuy must

show that his attorneys’ performance was deficient and that this

prejudiced his defense. Strickland v. Washington,

466 U.S. 668

,

- 16 - 687 (1984). Dupuy must overcome the strong presumption that their

conduct fell within the wide range of reasonable professional

assistance.

Id. at 689

.

1.

Dupuy contends that his attorneys failed to object when the

prosecution moved to amend the indictment after the voir dire

commenced. The indictment was amended on 31 October 1974. But,

the first juror was not called until 4 November 1974.

2.

Claiming that false and perjurious testimony was presented to

the grand jury that he had committed an aggravated kidnaping, Dupuy

contends that his attorney should have moved to quash the original

indictment for first degree murder. Likewise, claiming that, at

the preliminary hearing, no evidence was presented to show that

there was a kidnaping, he asserts that counsel should have moved to

suppress the indictment. But, he was neither tried, nor convicted,

for first degree murder.

3.

Dupuy contends that his attorney rendered ineffective

assistance in prosecuting the motion to suppress the confession.

As discussed, supra, Dupuy has not demonstrated prejudice.

4.

In conjunction with Dupuy’s contention that the evidence was

insufficient to prove that he had the specific intent to kill

- 17 - Normand, Dupuy contends that counsel failed to present motions at

the conclusion of trial to protect his rights. But, he concedes

that counsel moved to arrest the judgment on grounds of

insufficient evidence.

5.

Dupuy asserts that counsel should have objected to the court’s

reasonable doubt and specific intent instructions. Dupuy’s

conviction was final in 1975. Cage was decided in 1990. The

failure to so object, in the light of the state of the law existing

at the time, is not deficient performance. Schneider,

73 F.3d at 612

.

6.

Dupuy cites the failure to object to the exclusion of women

from grand and petit juries. He states, however, that he believes

counsel did object to such exclusion. In fact, counsel moved to

quash the indictment (motion denied), because women were not

impaneled on either the grand or petit jury.

In sum, concerning the ineffective assistance of counsel

claims, the requisite Rule 9(b) prejudice is lacking. The district

court did not abuse its discretion in so concluding.

III.

Dupuy has failed to demonstrate that any of his claims result

in either prejudice or a fundamental miscarriage of justice.

Accordingly, he has not demonstrated that the district court abused

- 18 - its discretion in denying his second habeas petition on the basis

of abuse of writ. Therefore, the dismissal of Dupuy’s second

habeas petition is

AFFIRMED.

- 19 - DENNIS, Circuit Judge, concurring:

I concur in the judgment of the court. I write separately

because, in my view, the majority erroneously concludes that had

Dupuy established a Cage error his habeas petition might

nevertheless have been subject to dismissal for abuse of the writ

because a Cage error is not necessarily sufficiently pervasive and

prejudicial as to so infect the entire trial that the resulting

conviction violated due process.1

Preliminarily, I agree that in this case the reasonable doubt

instructions taken as a whole are not infirm because “[t]here is no

reasonable likelihood that the jurors who determined petitioner’s

guilt applied the instructions in a way that violated the

Constitution.” Victor v. Nebraska,

511 U.S. 1, 6

(1994). This is

especially evident when the instant instructions are compared and

contrasted to those in Cage v. Louisiana,

498 U.S. 39

(1990) and

Humphrey v. Cain,

138 F.3d 552

(5th Cir. 1998)(en banc). Thus I

agree with the majority that Dupuy suffered no Cage error.

Sullivan v. Louisiana,

508 U.S. 275

(1993), as I read it,

precludes the possibility that a Cage error may not be sufficiently

1 As both the district court and the majority pretermitted the issue of cause as required in addition to a showing of actual prejudice in a pre-AEDPA subsequent habeas petition raising a new claim, see McCleskey v. Zant,

499 U.S. 467, 494

(1991), I do not contend that a Cage error in and of itself would be enough for Dupuy to avoid dismissal for abuse of the writ -- only that a Cage error is sufficient to satisfy the requisite showing of prejudice.

- 20 - prejudicial to satisfy the showing required to avoid abuse of the

writ dismissal. In Sullivan, Justice Scalia stated in no uncertain

terms that a Cage error is not subject to harmless error review

because it operates as a complete deprivation of the defendant’s

Sixth Amendment right to jury trial and violates the Fifth

Amendment requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. This

result obtains because, unlike many other jury instruction errors,

an instructional error misdescribing the burden of proof vitiates

all the jury’s findings such that reviewing courts “can only engage

in pure speculation -- its view of what a reasonable jury would

have done. And when it does that, ‘the wrong entity judge[s] the

defendant guilty.’” Sullivan,

508 U.S. at 280

-81 (citing and

quoting Rose v. Clark,

478 U.S. 570, 578

(1986)).

Accordingly, I do not believe that we are free to conclude, as

the majority opinion suggests, that a Cage error may not be

prejudicial. Surely if Dupuy had been convicted and sentenced

without a jury finding of guilt, it could only have “worked to his

actual and substantial disadvantage, infecting his entire trial

withe error of constitutional dimension.” United States v. Frady,

456 U.S. 152, 170

(1982). Thus, Dupuy was required to prove only

that there was a Cage error, as defined by Sullivan and Victor, in

order to show the requisite prejudice to overcome dismissal for

abuse of the writ.

- 21 -

Reference

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