Case: 14-70030 Document: 00513162817 Page: 1 Date Filed: 08/20/2015
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
No. 14-70030 August 20, 2015
Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
DUANE EDWARD BUCK,
Petitioner–Appellant,
versus
WILLIAM STEPHENS, Director,
Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Correctional Institutions Division,
Respondent–Appellee.
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
USDC No. 4:04-CV-3965
Before SMITH, OWEN, and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.
JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:*
Duane Buck seeks a certificate of appealability (“COA”) to challenge the
denial of his motion for reconsideration, in which he sought to raise ineffective
assistance of counsel (“IAC”) in seeking federal habeas corpus relief. Because
he has not shown extraordinary circumstances that would permit relief under
* Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
CIR. R. 47.5.4.
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Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(6), we deny the application for a COA.
I.
This is Buck’s third trip to the Fifth Circuit. More detailed explanations
of the facts and procedural history can be found in Buck v. Thaler, 345 F. App’x
923 (5th Cir. 2009) (per curiam), and Buck v. Thaler, 452 F. App’x 423 (5th Cir.
2011) (per curiam). We recite only what is relevant to this request for a COA.
In July 1995, Buck murdered his ex-girlfriend Debra Gardner and her
friend Kenneth Butler. Buck was arrested at the scene, and police found the
murder weapons in the trunk of his car. Two witnesses identified him as the
shooter. Buck laughed during and after the arrest and stated to one officer
that “[t]he bitch got what she deserved.”
Buck was convicted of capital murder for the deaths. During the penalty
phase, the state presented evidence that Buck would likely remain dangerous.
That evidence included his criminal history, his violent conduct, and his
demeanor during and after the arrest.
Buck called Dr. Walter Quijano, a clinical psychologist, as an expert wit-
ness to testify regarding future dangerousness. Buck’s lawyer asked Quijano
what factors he would look at to determine whether an inmate would engage
in future acts of violence. Quijano explained several, including age, sex, race,
social economics, and substance abuse. For example, he testified that
advanced age and increased wealth correlated with a decline in the likelihood
of committing future violent acts. On race, he gave a one-sentence explanation:
“It’s a sad commentary that minorities, Hispanics and black people, are over
represented in the Criminal Justice System.” That matched a statement
included in Quijano’s expert report, which was introduced as evidence.
During cross-examination, the prosecution elicited one more comment on
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race from Quijano: Question: “You have determined that the sex factor, that
a male is more violent than a female because that’s just the way it is, and that
the race factor, black, increases the future dangerousness for various compli-
cated reasons; is that correct?” Answer: “Yes.” During closing arguments, the
prosecution referenced Quijano’s testimony generally and specifically noted
that he had said that, although Buck was in the low range for a probability of
committing future violent acts, the probability did exist. The prosecution did
not reference Buck’s race or Quijano’s use of race.
The jury unanimously found beyond a reasonable doubt that there was
a probability Buck would commit criminal acts of violence that would be a
continuing threat to society. It further found that there were not sufficient
mitigating circumstances to justify a life sentence. The court sentenced Buck
to death, and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (“TCCA”) affirmed.
Buck filed his first state habeas application in 1997; it contained no IAC
claim or any other challenge based on Quijano’s testimony. In 2000, however,
the Texas Attorney General (“AG”) admitted to the Supreme Court in Saldano
v. Texas, 530 U.S. 1212 (2000), that the state had erred in calling Quijano as a
witness and having him testify that the defendant’s race increased the likeli-
hood of future dangerousness. Shortly after the Court vacated and remanded
Saldano on that confession of error, the AG publicly identified eight other cases
involving racial testimony by Quijano, six of which the AG said were similar to
Saldano’s case; one of those was Buck’s. Buck contends that Texas “promised
to concede constitutional error and waive its procedural defenses” in his case
so that he could get resentenced without the race-related testimony. 1
1It has never been established that the AG’s office promised not to raise procedural
defenses in Buck’s case. The record contains a news release by the AG’s office stating that a
post-Saldano audit had revealed “eight more cases in which testimony was offered by Dr.
Quijano that race should be a factor for the jury to consider in making its determination
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In 2002, while his first state habeas petition was pending, Buck filed a
second petition that challenged Quijano’s testimony on several grounds,
including IAC. The TCCA ultimately denied the first habeas petition and dis-
missed the second as an abuse of the writ.
In 2004, Buck filed a federal habeas petition raising a litany of chal-
lenges to his sentence, including IAC. The court denied relief on that claim
because Buck had not raised IAC on direct appeal or in his original state
habeas petition. He had raised it in his second state habeas petition, but the
TCCA dismissed it as an abuse of the writ, so it was procedurally defaulted.
Buck sought a COA from this court on only one issue: “Was he deprived of due
process or equal protection by the prosecution’s reference to testimony from
Buck’s own penalty-phase expert witness . . . ?” Buck, 345 F. App’x at 924. We
concluded that the claim was procedurally barred and meritless. Id. at 930.
After the state set an execution date of September 15, 2011, Buck moved
for relief from the earlier district-court judgment under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 60(b)(6), claiming that the state’s failure to admit error and waive
defenses was extraordinary and merited relief. The motion also asked for relief
under Rule 60(d)(3), alleging that the AG had committed fraud on the court.
about the sentence in a capital murder trial,” of which six were similar to Saldano. The same
release stated that the AG’s office “sent letters to opposing counsel and to the local prosecu-
tors involved advising them of [the AG’s] investigation.” But we have found no statement by
the AG in the record in which he confessed error relating to Buck’s case and promised not to
raise procedural defenses.
The record contains a Houston Chronicle article from 2000 that paraphrases the AG’s
spokesperson as saying, “If the attorneys amend their appeals currently pending in federal
court to include objections to Quijano’s testimony, the attorney general will not object.” The
spokesperson is quoted as representing that cases still with the district attorney’s offices “will
be handled in a similar manner as the Saldano case.” A New York Times article went further,
stating, “[The AG’s] staff has notified defense lawyers representing the six inmates that his
office will not object if they seek to overturn the death sentences based on Mr. Quijano’s
testimony.” Because it does not change the outcome of this appeal, we need not explore
whether such a promise was made or how explicit it was.
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The district court denied the motion and, three days later, Buck filed a
motion to amend the judgment under Rule 59(e), claiming that the AG had
made material misrepresentations and omissions in opposing the earlier
motion for relief. The court denied that motion as well. We declined to permit
a successive habeas petition or issue a COA. Buck, 452 F. App’x at 433.
The Supreme Court stayed Buck’s execution to consider his petition for
writ of certiorari. It ultimately denied the petition, accompanied by a state-
ment respecting that denial and a dissent. Buck v. Thaler, 132 S. Ct. 32, 32–
35 (2011) (Alito, J., respecting the denial of certiorari); id. at 35–38 (Soto-
mayor, J., dissenting from the denial of certiorari).
In 2013, Buck filed another state habeas petition. The trial court con-
cluded that it was a subsequent petition and referred it to the TCCA. While
that petition was pending, the Supreme Court decided Trevino v. Thaler,
133 S. Ct. 1911 (2013), holding that Texas’s procedural regime rendered it
almost impossible to raise IAC claims on direct appeal, making the scheme
similar to the one in Martinez v. Ryan, 132 S. Ct. 1309 (2012). The Court
therefore held that the Martinez exception applied in Texas: The lack of effec-
tive counsel during initial state collateral-review proceedings could excuse a
procedural default on an IAC claim. Trevino, 133 S. Ct. at 1921.
The TCCA dismissed the petition as an abuse of the writ. Ex parte Buck,
418 S.W.3d 98 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). Three judges dissented, concluding that
Buck had made out a potentially meritorious case of IAC relating to his attor-
ney’s alleged failure adequately to investigate and present mitigating evidence.
Id. at 98–114 (Alcala, J., dissenting).
In January 2014, Buck again filed for Rule 60(b)(6) relief from judgment
in his federal habeas case. He focused solely on his IAC claim, contending that
counsel was ineffective for introducing Quijano and that his case was
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sufficiently extraordinary to justify relief under Rule 60(b)(6). The district
court denied the motion, holding that Buck’s case did not have the extraordin-
ary circumstances required for Rule 60(b)(6). It also held that Buck had failed
to make out an IAC claim, establishing deficient performance but not pre-
judice. Within a month of that denial, Buck again moved for relief under
Rule 60(b)(6), essentially disagreeing with the district court’s disposition of the
issues. On March 11, 2015, the district court denied that motion as well and
declined to issue a COA.
II.
To obtain a COA, Buck must make “a substantial showing of the denial
of a constitutional right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2); Miller-El v. Cockrell, 537 U.S.
322, 336 (2003). On application for a COA, we engage in “an overview of the
claims in the habeas petition and a general assessment of their merits” but do
not engage in “a full consideration of the factual or legal bases adduced in sup-
port of the claims,” asking only whether the district court’s resolution of the
claim “was debatable among jurists of reason.” Miller-El, 537 U.S. at 322.
The district court denied the motion for a procedural reason, namely,
Buck’s failure to show extraordinary circumstances justifying relief under
Rule 60(b)(6). We therefore must deny a COA if Buck fails to establish both
(1) that jurists of reason would find debatable “whether the petition states a
valid claim of the denial of a constitutional right” and (2) that those jurists
“would find it debatable whether the district court was correct in its procedural
ruling.” Slack v. McDaniel, 429 U.S. 473, 484 (2000).
III.
Regarding the procedural bar, for a Rule 60(b)(6) motion in this posture
not to be itself a successive habeas petition, the litigant “must not be
challenging a prior merits-based ruling.” Balentine v. Thaler, 626 F.3d 842,
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846 (5th Cir. 2010). Instead, he must be challenging a previous ruling—such
as procedural default or a statute-of-limitations bar—that precluded a merits
determination. Id. at 846–47. The district court initially denied Buck’s IAC
claim because the TCCA’s abuse-of-the-writ dismissal was an adequate and
independent state ground for denying relief, so Buck’s motion satisfies that
requirement.
To obtain relief under Rule 60(b)(6), Buck must show “extraordinary
circumstances,” Gonzalez v. Crosby, 545 U.S. 524, 536 (2005), which “will
rarely occur in the habeas context,” id. at 535. There is little guidance as to
what constitutes “extraordinary circumstances,” but we have recognized that
a change in a decisional law does not qualify, and we have cited with approval
district-court decisions holding other circumstances not extraordinary as well,
including IAC. See Williams v. Thaler, 602 F.3d 291, 312 (5th Cir. 2010).
Buck contends that eight equitable factors from Seven Elves, Inc. v.
Eskenazi, 635 F.2d 396 (5th Cir. Unit A Jan. 1981), are the proper means for
evaluating a Rule 60(b) motion in a habeas case. 2 We have declined to answer
whether Seven Elves sets the standard for a Rule 60(b)(6) motion in habeas
proceedings. See Diaz v. Stephens, 731 F.3d 370, 376–77 (5th Cir. 2013). We
need not answer it now because Buck has not made out even a minimal
showing that his case is exceptional.
2 Those factors are “(1) [t]hat final judgments should not lightly be disturbed; (2) that
the Rule 60(b) motion is not to be used as a substitute for appeal; (3) that the rule should be
liberally construed in order to achieve substantial justice; (4) whether the motion was made
within a reasonable time; (5) whether if the judgment was a default or a dismissal in which
there was no consideration of the merits the interest in deciding cases on the merits out-
weighs, in the particular case, the interest in the finality of judgments, and there is merit in
the movant's claim or defense; (6) whether if the judgment was rendered after a trial on the
merits the movant had a fair opportunity to present his claim or defense; (7) whether there
are intervening equities that would make it inequitable to grant relief; and (8) any other
factors relevant to the justice of the judgment under attack.” Seven Elves, 635 F.2d at 402.
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The January 2014 motion contains eleven facts, reurged in the COA
application, that Buck says make the case extraordinary:
1. Mr. Buck’s trial attorney knowingly presented expert testimony to
the sentencing jury that Mr. Buck’s race made him more likely to be
a future danger;
2. Although required to act as gate-keeper to prevent unreliable expert
opinions from reaching and influencing a jury, see Tex. R. Evid.
705(c); Kelly v. State, 824 S.W.2d 568 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992), the trial
court qualified Dr. Quijano as an expert on predictions of future dan-
gerousness, allowed him to present race based opinion testimony to
Mr. Buck’s capital sentencing jury, and admitted Dr. Quijano’s
excludable hearsay report linking race to dangerousness;
3. The trial prosecutor intentionally elicited Dr. Quijano’s testimony
that Mr. Buck’s race made him more likely to be a future danger on
cross-examination, vouched for him as an “expert” in closing, and
asked the jury to rely on Dr. Quijano’s testimony to answer the future
dangerousness special issue in the State’s favor;
4. Mr. Buck’s state habeas counsel did not challenge trial counsel’s
introduction of this false and offensive testimony — or Texas’s reli-
ance on it — in Mr. Buck’s initial state habeas application;
5. The Texas Attorney General conceded constitutional error in Mr.
Buck’s case and promised to ensure that he received a new sentenc-
ing, but reneged on that promise after deciding that the introduction
of the offensive testimony was trial counsel’s fault;
6. This Court ruled that federal review of Mr. Buck’s trial counsel
ineffectiveness claim was foreclosed by state habeas counsel’s failure
to raise and litigate the issue in Mr. Buck’s initial state habeas peti-
tion, relying on Coleman, which has subsequently been modified by
Martinez and Trevino;
7. The Fifth Circuit held Mr. Buck’s trial counsel responsible for the
introduction of Dr. Quijano’s testimony linking Mr. Buck’s race to his
likelihood of future dangerousness;
8. Three Supreme Court Justices concluded that trial counsel was at
fault for the introduction of Dr. Quijano’s testimony;
9. Three Judges of the CCA found that “because [Mr. Buck’s] initial
habeas counsel failed to include any claims related to Quijano’s testi-
mony in his original [state habeas] application, no court, state or
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federal, has ever considered the merits of those claims,” Buck, 2013
WL 6081001, at *5;
10. Mr. Buck’s case is the only one in which Texas has broken its prom-
ise to waive procedural defenses and concede error, leaving Mr. Buck
as the only individual in Texas facing execution without having been
afforded a fair and unbiased sentencing hearing; and
11. Martinez and Trevino now allow for federal court review of “sub-
stantial” defaulted claims of trial counsel ineffectiveness.
Initial examination of those facts reveals that they are not extraordinary at all
in the habeas context. Numbers 1–3, 7, and 8 are just variations on the merits
of Buck’s IAC claim, which is at least unremarkable as far as IAC claims go.
Buck’s IAC claim is not so different in kind or degree from other disagreements
over trial strategy between lawyer and client that it counts as an exceptional
case. Nor are IAC claims as a class extraordinary under Rule 60(b)(6). The
Court warned in Gonzalez, 545 U.S. at 536, that extraordinary circumstances
will rarely be present in the habeas context.
The fourth and ninth extraordinary facts merely point out that Buck’s
IAC claim was procedurally defaulted and did not get a merits determination.
That is not an extraordinary circumstance in the habeas context; it is the
nature of procedural defaults that many potentially viable claims will never
advance to a merits determination. No jurists of reason would expand the defi-
nition of “extraordinary” to reach all procedurally defaulted IAC claims.
The sixth and eleventh facts relate to Buck’s notion that Trevino and
Martinez changed the law regarding procedural defaults in IAC claims in a
way that could have excused his procedural default. Martinez, however, “was
simply a change in decisional law” that is not an extraordinary circumstance
under Rule 60(b)(6), and “Trevino’s recent application of Martinez to Texas
cases does not change that conclusion in any way.” Diaz, 731 F.3d at 376
(internal quotation marks omitted).
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Those facts plainly fail to make even a plausible argument that Buck’s
is the extraordinary case that satisfies Rule 60(b)(6). He has repeatedly
asserted, however, that his case is special because of the Saldano-related state-
ments by the AG. Buck contends the AG conceded that Quijano’s testimony
was unconstitutional but reneged on a promise to resentence Buck (fact five),
despite Texas’s following through in other cases involving Quijano (fact ten).
Even if the AG initially indicated to Buck that he would be resen-
tenced―a fact that has never been adequately established, see note 1,
supra―his decision not to follow through is not extraordinary. The broken-
promise element to this case makes it odd and factually unusual, but extraor-
dinary circumstances are not merely found on the spectrum of common circum-
stances to unique circumstances. And they must be extraordinary circum-
stances “justifying relief from the judgment.” Gonzalez, 545 U.S. at 537. Buck
has not shown why the alleged reneging would justify relief from the judgment.
For example, he has not shown that he relied on the alleged promise to his
detriment.
Nor is it extraordinary that the AG confessed error and waived proce-
dural bars in other cases and not in Buck’s. We have previously rejected the
notion that some concept of “intra-court comity” requires the state to waive
procedural defenses in similar cases. See Buck, 345 F. App’x at 929. Even
assuming arguendo that the other cases at issue are materially similar to
Buck’s (which the state disputes), it can hardly be extraordinary that the state
chose different litigation strategies between the two cases. Jurists of reason
would not debate that Buck has failed to show extraordinary circumstances
justifying relief.
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Buck has not demonstrated that jurists of reason would debate whether
his case is exceptional under Rule 60(b)(6). The request for a COA is DENIED.
11