Opinions of the United
2005 Decisions States Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit
7-7-2005
Michael v. Horn
Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
Docket No. 04-9002
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THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
__________
No. 04-9002
__________
HUBERT L. MICHAEL,
Appellant
v.
MARTIN HORN, Commissioner, Pennsylvania Department of
Corrections; *DAVID DIGUGLIELMO, Superintendent of the State
Correctional Institution at Graterford; JOSEPH P. MAZURKIEWICZ,
Superintendent of the State Correctional Institution at Rockview
*(Amended - See Clerk's Order dated 1/6/05)
___________
On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
(Dist. Ct. No. 96-cv-01554)
___________
SUR PETITION FOR REHEARING
__________
BEFORE: SCIRICA, Chief Judge,
SLOVITER, NYGAARD, ALITO, ROTH, MCKEE,
BARRY, AMBRO, SMITH, FUENTES,
VAN ANTWERPEN and GREENBERG, Circuit Judges1
__________
The Petition for rehearing filed by the Appellees in the above-
entitled matter having been submitted to the judges who participated in the
decision of this court and to all other available circuit judges in regular
1
Judge Greenberg’s vote is limited to panel rehearing only.
active service, and no judge who concurred in the decision having asked for
rehearing, and a majority of the circuit judges in regular active service not
having voted for rehearing by this court en banc, the Petition for Rehearing
is hereby DENIED. Judge GREENBERG would have granted panel
rehearing.
It is so ordered.
By the Court,
/s/ Richard L. Nygaard
United States Circuit Judge
DATE: July 7, 2005
ghb/cc: Joseph M. Cosgrove, Esq.
Jonelle H. Eshbach, Esq.
Mr. Hubert L. Michael
GREENBERG, Circuit Judge, dissenting from the denial of the petition for
panel rehearing.
I respectfully dissent from the denial of the petition filed by the
respondents-appellees, Martin Horn, the Commissioner of the Pennsylvania
Department of Corrections, and certain other state officials requesting panel
rehearing of an order denying the petitioner-appellant Hubert L. Michael’s
motions to dismiss an appeal filed in his name in this federal habeas corpus
case and simultaneously vacating the order from which the appeal had been
taken and remanding the case for further proceedings.2 The proceedings in
this case are unusual in that Michael, the theoretical appellant, in whose
name the petition was filed in the district court, prevailed in that court as he
asked that it dismiss his petition and it did so. Thus, as might be expected,
he does not want us to disturb the district court’s order. Indeed, he has
urged that we should dismiss this appeal just as he had urged that the
district court should dismiss the petition even though his attorneys claimed
to have filed it in his interest. Nevertheless, we have denied his motions to
dismiss the appeal, have entered an order vacating the very district court
order that he sought and obtained dismissing the habeas corpus petition, and
have remanded the case to “determine whether habeas corpus relief is
warranted.” Accordingly, we have put Michael in the unusual, though
probably not unique, position of being an involuntary federal litigant. We
now are denying rehearing of that order that remarkably the panel entered
against the wishes of both parties to this appeal.
The district court proceeding under the Antiterrorism and Effective
Death Penalty Act of 1996 followed extensive litigation in the Pennsylvania
state courts arising from the absolutely certain fact that on July 12, 1993,
Michael, using a firearm, murdered 16-year old Trista Eng, a total stranger
2
I write more extensively than is ususal in an opinion dissenting from an order denying
rehearing because the panel disposed of this case by an order without an opinion and,
accordingly, I need to set forth the case history so that my dissent can be understood.
to him, who had been on her way to her summer job at a Hardee’s restaurant
when Michael encountered her. At the time of the murder, Michael, who
was facing rape charges, not involving Trista Eng, that he felt were not
justified, murdered her by reason of his anger over the charges. After
Michael murdered her, he concealed her body in a wooded area. He later
confessed to his brother that he had committed this crime and told him
where he had concealed her body. His brother and other family members
then searched for and found her body, following which they notified the
Pennsylvania state police. In the ensuing Pennsylvania state court
prosecution, Michael pleaded guilty to murder and was sentenced to death.
On the appeals that followed the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania first
affirmed the judgment of the sentence of death, Commonwealth v. Michael,
674 A.2d 1044 (Pa. 1996), and then, after post-conviction relief
proceedings, affirmed the denial of post-conviction relief, Commonwealth
v. Michael, 755 A.2d 1274 (Pa. 2000).3
Following the completion of the state proceedings, the Capital
Habeas Corpus Unit of the Defender Association of Philadelphia activated
3
I do not comment further on the Pennsylvania state proceedings beyond noting that the
respondents in their petition for rehearing observe that while Michael filed an affidavit asking the
Supreme Court quickly to decide the merits of his appeal from the order denying him post-
conviction relief, he indicated in the district court that he had done so to speed the processing of
his case because “regardless if I did that or not they were still going to try to push that through.”
By “they” he meant the attorneys then representing him in the case. Of course, anyone studying
this case should read the opinions of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.
federal habeas corpus proceedings that its predecessor had filed in
Michael’s name in the district court. Ultimately the district court terminated
those proceedings without considering the petition on the merits when it
granted Michael’s motions to dismiss the petition. Michael v. Horn, No.
3:CV-96-1554, 2004 WL 438678 (M.D. Pa. Mar. 10, 2004). The appeal
that we have considered is from that dismissal.
The district court initiated its thorough opinion dated March 10,
2004, filed after difficult and extensive proceedings, by indicating that “[a]t
issue in this matter is whether death-sentenced Hubert Michael is competent
and has knowingly, rationally, and voluntarily chosen to waive pursuant of
a collateral challenge to his state court conviction and sentence.” Id. at *1.
The court concluded its opinion as follows:
To determine whether Mr. Michael is competent to
decide to dismiss counsel and this habeas corpus proceeding,
this Court sought to provide ‘a constitutionally adequate fact-
finding inquiry to make a reliable determination . . . .’ Mata
v. Johnson, 210 F.3d 324, 327 (5th Cir. 2000). That process
included (1) a current examination by a highly qualified
expert, (2) an opportunity for the parties to present pertinent
evidence, and (3) an examination of Mr. Michael in open
court concerning his decision to waive further proceedings.
For purposes of this proceeding, Mr. Michael was also
appointed independent counsel.
Throughout these proceedings, Mr. Michael has
maintained the consistent position that he does not seek
federal court intervention with respect to his conviction and
sentence. Having found, without hesitation, that Mr. Michael
is competent, and has made a knowing, rational and voluntary
decision, this Court has no choice but to honor that decision.
As did the death-sentenced inmate in Comer [v. Stewart, 230
F. Supp. 2d 1016 (D. Ariz. 2002)], Mr. Michael ‘has made a
competent and free choice, which “is merely an example of
doing what you want to do, embodied in the word liberty.”’
230 F. Supp. 2d at 1072. Also worth reiterating here is the
Eleventh Circuit’s admonition in Sanchez-Velasco v. Sec’y of
the Dep’t of Corr., 287 F.3d 1015, 1033 (11th Cir. 2002),
affirming a district court’s finding that a defendant
competently, knowingly and voluntarily waived federal court
collateral review.
[W]e should not forget the values that
motivated the Supreme Court’s Whitmore [v.
Arkansas, 495 U.S. 149, 110 S.Ct. 1717 (1990)]
decision and what is really at stake in this kind
of case. These cases are about the right of self-
determination and freedom to make
fundamental choices affecting one’s life . . . .
[A] death row inmate . . . does not have many
choices left. One choice the law does give him
is whether to fight the death sentence he is
under or accede to it. Sanchez-Velasco, who is
mentally competent to make that choice, has
decided not to contest his death sentence any
further. He has the right to make that choice . . .
. He has never asked [his attorneys] to represent
him or consented to have them do so. He has
directed them to leave his case alone, and the
law will enforce that directive.
Likewise, this Court has no choice but to enforce Mr.
Michael’s knowing, rational and voluntary directive that legal
challenges to his conviction and sentence cease.
Id. at *23.
The district court entered the following order accompanying its March 10,
2004 opinion:
1. The Defender Association of Philadelphia Capital Habeas
Corpus Unit, its successors or assigns, David Wycoff, Esq.,
Michael Wiseman, Esq., and any other attorneys of the
Capital Habeas Corpus Unit are dismissed as counsel for
Hubert L. Michael.
2. Joseph M. Cosgrove, Esq. is directed to send a copy of this
Memorandum and Order to Mr. Michael, and is dismissed as
counsel for Hubert L. Michael.
3. Hubert L. Michael’s motion to dismiss the habeas corpus
petition filed in this matter is GRANTED.
4. The stay of execution previously imposed by this Court’s
Order of August 22, 1996, is VACATED.
5. The Clerk of Court is directed to mark this matter
CLOSED.
Id. at *24.
Following the entry of the district court’s March 10, 2004 order, the
Capital Habeas Corpus Unit, without authority from Michael, filed a notice
of appeal from that order to this court. Michael reacted to this filing by
sending the following letter to Chief Judge Scirica which was received in
this court on April 14, 2004:
My name is Hubert L. Michael, Jr. I recently had my
death warrant signed by the governor of Pennsylvania. I am
not appealing my sentence.
I was recently able to get the attorneys, with the
Defender Association of Philadelphia, dismissed from trying
to represent me in any capacity. This was ordered by Judge
Thomas Vanaskie of the U.S. District Court.
I am now writing you because I know that the courts
have not heard the last of these attorneys with the Capital
Habeas Corpus Unit.
These attorneys are not authorized by me, or the courts,
to file any petitions, etc., on my behalf. I ask this court to not
recognize any petitions filed by these attorneys or any other
individual.
I would also like to state for the record that I am one-
hundred percent mentally competent. As I pled guilty to
homicide, in the Courts of Common Pleas, my mental state is
the only avenue for these attorneys to pursue.
Let’s stop this legal merry-go-round by these attorneys.
Subsequently, however, Michael indicated that he wanted his appeal
to go ahead and wanted counsel to represent him. Accordingly, we
appointed Joseph M. Cosgrove, who, in addition to the Capital Habeas
Corpus Unit, had represented him in the district court, to represent him in
this court and, after oral argument, we issued a certificate of appealability
on June 30, 2004, solely on the question of “whether the District Court
violated 21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(4)(B) by dismissing counsel for Hubert
Michael and, if the District Court so erred, whether this error was
harmless.” Cosgrove and the respondents capably have briefed this issue.
The question of whether this appeal should go ahead, was, however,
by no means settled when we granted the certificate of appealability for
Michael addressed a letter to the court that we received on November 30,
2004, which, in effect, was a motion to withdraw the appeal and dismiss
Cosgrove as his attorney. In response to Michael’s letter, after first asking
the attorneys to comment on Michael’s motion, we entered an order on
January 5, 2005, indicating that Michael again should state his position and
warning him that if we dismissed his appeal “any further judicial review of
your conviction and sentence” may be terminated. On February 22, 2005,
we received a letter dated February 17, 2005, that Michael sent to this court
indicating that “I have read the Court of Appeals order, dated January 5,
2005, and fully understand the consequences of my waiver. I have
consulted with my attorney, Joseph Cosgrove, about the Order. I wish to
dismiss this appeal.” Then, however, Michael sent us a pleading that we
received on February 23, 2005, requesting that we defer acting for two
weeks so he could consult further with Cosgrove. Significantly, however,
he did not ask us in that pleading to determine the appeal on the merits. We
complied with Michael’s request and thus did not act during the two-week
period.
After that point, however, it appears that Cosgrove and Michael were
not working in sync, though they did continue to confer. First, on March
18, 2005, Cosgrove submitted a “Report of Counsel” indicating that a
litigation plan was being developed in the case and asking us to decide the
question we had set forth in the certificate of appealability. Yet ten days
after we received the “Report of Counsel,” Michael personally filed with us
a statement again asking us to dismiss the appeal, using the same language
he had used on February 17, 2005. Michael adhered to his position in his
final letter to this court in this matter on May 23, 2005, which he indicated
was “regarding: sentence of death” reciting as follows: “I ask this court to
dismiss any appeal(s) presently being argued before this court. I have had
ample time to discuss all the possibilities, and probabilities, with my
attorney, Joseph Cosgrove. I am satisfied with the sentence imposed upon
me.”
One might have supposed that after we received Michael’s letter of
May 23, 2005, that we would have dismissed the appeal. Yet the panel
entered the following order on June 2, 2005:
Inasmuch as the petitioner is represented by counsel,
the pro se letters to withdraw the appeal are denied. The
District Court’s order entered March 10, 2004, is vacated to
the extent that it dismissed Joseph M. Cosgrove, Esq., as
counsel, granted Michael’s motion to dismiss his habeas
corpus petition and vacated the stay of execution. The matter
is remanded for further proceedings to determine whether
habeas corpus relief is warranted. We express no opinion on
such questions as whether Michael’s claims are exhausted,
procedurally barred or meritorious. In the event that Michael
files any further pro se motions to dismiss his petition, we
urge the District Court to deny them summarily. See Smith v.
Armontrout, 865 F.2d 1515 (8th Cir. 1988); St. Pierre v.
Cowan, 217 F.3d 939, 949-950 (7th Cir. 2000).
I dissented, explaining as follows:
Judge Greenberg would dismiss this appeal. He points
out that the district court found appellant competent and that
the appellant has made his position with respect to dismissing
his appeal absolutely clear. On May 25, 2005, appellant filed
a statement with this court dated May 23, 2005, that he
indicated was ‘regarding: sentence of death’ in which he
stated his position as follows: ‘I ask this court to dismiss any
appeal(s) presently being argued before this court. I have had
ample time to discuss all the possibilities, and probabilities,
with my attorney, Joseph Cosgrove. I am satisfied with the
sentence imposed upon me.’ In Judge Greenberg’s view, the
court should honor appellant’s position. See United States v.
Hammer, 226 F.3d 229 (3d Cir. 2000).
Following the entry of the June 2, 2005 order the respondents
petitioned for rehearing before the panel and en banc. The panel and court
are denying both prongs of the petition for rehearing. I now dissent again,
this time from the order denying panel rehearing.4
The June 2, 2005 order denied Michael’s motions to dismiss his
appeal because he “is represented by counsel.” But this basis for denying
his motion is legally insufficient. Cosgrove and Michael are working at
cross-purposes as it is clear that Cosgrove does not want us to dismiss
Michael’s appeal but Michael does. While I can understand Cosgrove’s
conduct and will not criticize him for it, still Michael, and not Cosgrove,
has the right to determine whether Michael should appeal. As the Supreme
Court plainly set forth in Jones v. Barnes, 463 U.S. 745, 751, 103 S.Ct.
3308, 3312 (1983), the “accused has the ultimate authority to make [the]
decision[ ] . . . whether to . . . take an appeal.” See also Faretta v.
California, 422 U.S. 806, 834-36, 95 S.Ct. 2525, 2540-41 (1975). I cannot
imagine how the law could be otherwise. After all if, as he does, a
defendant has a Sixth Amendment right to represent himself at a capital
4
I do not vote to grant rehearing en banc because, inasmuch as I am a senior judge, my
vote is limited to the petition insofar as it seeks panel rehearing.
punishment trial, then how can it be held that he does not have the right to
determine whether to appeal from an order dismissing a habeas corpus
petition, particularly when he sought the dismissal? 5 Moreover, it is
inconceivable that by appointing Cosgrove to represent Michael we
deprived Michael of the right to dismiss this appeal.6 I recognize that
Michael had hesitated before reaching his final position with respect to this
appeal but that hesitation is not surprising inasmuch as his life is at stake in
these proceedings. Indeed, his hesitation surely was desirable given the
gravity of the situation. Nevertheless, there is no escape from the fact that
for many months he steadfastly has taken the position that he took at the
time that the Capital Habeas Corpus Unit filed this unauthorized appeal,
i.e., the appeal should be dismissed.7 In any event it is critical to recognize
that the panel did not deny Michael’s motions to dismiss the appeal because
of his previous hesitation. Rather, as set forth with absolute clarity in the
June 2, 2005 order, it did so because he was represented by counsel. But
5
I am not suggesting that the Sixth Amendment is involved directly on the question of
whether Michael’s attorney can override his decision to dismiss the appeal. I do think, however,
that the principles the amendment implicates are relevant here.
6
Of course, I do not suggest that when an appellant is represented by counsel that both
may file ordinary motions in an ongoing appeal. I am addressing my comments only to the
fundamental question of whether an appellant can cause his appeal to be dismissed. See Jones v.
Barnes, 463 U.S. at 751, 103 S.Ct. at 3312.
7
In addition, inasmuch as Michael sought the order of March 10, 2004, dismissing his
habeas corpus proceeding, he should not be allowed to appeal from it even if he wants to do so,
which he does not. See In re Cendant Corp. Prides Litig., 243 F.3d 722, 727 (3d Cir. 2001).
there is no escape from the settled law, as the Supreme Court has
announced it, that the panel was required to honor Michael’s requests that
we dismiss this appeal even though his counsel did not file a motion to
dismiss the appeal. As an inferior court we are bound to apply the law as
the Supreme Court announces it. Yet the panel has not done so.
There is an irony in what the panel has done in denying Michael’s
requests to dismiss this appeal. As I have indicated, we granted a certificate
of appealability to determine whether the district court erred in dismissing
Michael’s attorneys when it dismissed the petition for habeas corpus. It is
difficult to understand how this possible error could not have been harmless
inasmuch as Michael obtained what he wanted from the district court, a
dismissal of his habeas corpus proceedings, and also given that Michael
wants this appeal dismissed. Still, 21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(8) provides that in
capital cases an appointed attorney “shall represent the defendant
throughout every subsequent stage of available judicial proceedings,
including . . . appeals.” If that section is applicable even in the face of a
petitioner’s efforts to discharge his attorneys, Michael was required to be
represented by counsel on this appeal. Therefore if the reasoning
underlying the panel’s order denying Michael’s motions to withdraw his
appeal, that he is represented by counsel is legally sound, Michael could
never dismiss this appeal. In short, the representation requirement of 21
U.S.C. § 848(q)(8), in combination with the panel’s determination reflected
in the June 2, 2005 order that the representation alone is a sufficient reason
for the panel to deny his motions to dismiss his appeal, creates a framework
under which Michael never had control over his own appeal. Jones v.
Barnes makes such an outcome untenable.
Moreover, even if 21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(8) is not applicable in this
case, it was entirely appropriate for us to appoint an attorney to represent
Michael on this appeal. In fact, Michael’s direct communications with this
court demonstrate that he has consulted with that attorney, Joseph
Cosgrove, regarding dismissing this appeal. Though Cosgrove and Michael
have been at odds that consultation was desirable. Accordingly, by
dismissing this appeal because Michael is represented by counsel, whether
or not 21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(8) requires that he be so represented, the panel
has held that Michael cannot make the fundamental decision of whether he
should appeal. I respectfully state that such a ruling is simply not
acceptable. The litigant, and not his attorney, must have the power to
determine if he should appeal regardless of whether he has retained the
attorney, the attorney serves to fulfill a statutory requirement, or the court
has appointed the attorney to represent him even though not required by
statute to do so.
I dissent for a second reason as well. We granted a certificate of
appealability only on the single issue of whether the district court violated
21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(4)(B) when it dismissed Michael’s attorneys and, if so,
was this error harmless. Thus, our jurisdiction is limited to considering that
two-part question. See Miller v. Dragovich, 311 F.3d 574, 577 (3d Cir.
2002), cert. denied, 540 U.S. 859, 124 S.Ct. 164 (2003). Yet, without
addressing that question, and, indeed, without even expanding the scope of
the certificate of appealability, the panel has brushed away everything the
district court did over more than four years of difficult litigation and has
sent the case back to that court to start over. Moreover, in the process of
remanding the matter the panel has gone so far as to urge the district court
to deny summarily any future motions Michael may make to dismiss his
petition. Thus, the panel has ensured that whether Michael likes it or not,
this litigation must go on, a process that I do not doubt will take many
years.
Even if the panel will not dismiss Michael’s appeal, the scope of its
order is not justified. First of all, the panel does not even hint that the
district court erred on the point on which we granted the certificate of
appealability, though I acknowledge that there is a substantial basis to argue
that it did err in that respect. But even if it did err, and the error was not
harmless, the remedy surely would not be to start the habeas corpus
proceedings over. Rather, to give Michael full relief (which I again
emphasize he does not want), we would remand the case to the district court
with instructions to vacate its March 10, 2004 order and then reenter it
without the paragraphs dismissing Michael’s attorneys. At that point any
further proceedings such as filing a motion in the district court for
reconsideration of the March 10, 2004 order as reentered, see Gonzales v.
Crosby, 73 U.S.L.W. 4568 (U.S. June 23, 2005), would be as timely as if
made within a time measured from the March 10, 2004 order, had it not
been vacated. Thus, if it is necessary to correct a section 848(q)(4)(B)
error, the court should do so without undermining the basic integrity of the
otherwise unassailable district court proceedings. After all, inasmuch as the
district court made its error, if any, after it reached its conclusion that it
should dismiss the petition the error could not have contributed to that
decision.8
In any event, there is no suggestion in the June 2, 2005 order
requiring the habeas proceedings to start over that the possible section
848(q)(4)(B) violation in any way was a factor leading the panel to enter its
order. Rather, the panel’s citation in the order to Smith v. Armontrout, 865
8
The remedy that I set forth is consistent with the practice of federal courts in habeas
cases challenging state confinements to grant relief requiring “the least intervention into the state
criminal process.” Henderson v. Frank, 155 F.3d 159, 168 (3d Cir. 1998). It also parallels what
district courts do in proceedings under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 when they find that an attorney was
incompetent by reason of not having filed a timely notice of appeal from a judgment of
conviction and sentence. In such circumstances, the district courts vacate the original judgment
of conviction and sentence and then reenter the judgment. Thereafter the defendant can file a
timely notice of appeal.
F.2d 1515 (8th Cir. 1988), and St. Pierre v. Cowan, 217 F.3d 939, 949-50
(7th Cir. 2000), suggests that it was remanding the case because it believed
that Michael had been uncertain whether he wanted to prosecute his habeas
petition in the district court. But the problem with this reason is that it is
incorrect. The district court in its opinion clearly set forth what Michael’s
position was in that court and what the district court therefore was required
to do:
Throughout these proceedings, Mr. Michael has maintained
the consistent position that he does not seek federal court
intervention with respect to his conviction and sentence.
Having found, without hesitation, that Mr. Michael is
competent, and has made a knowing, rational and voluntary
decision, the Court has no choice but to honor that decision.
Michael, 2004 WL 438678, at *23.
The panel does not explain why the district court erred in reaching
this conclusion. Of course, clearly the district court did not err in this
regard, as we surely recognized when we would not grant a certificate of
appealability allowing Michael’s attorney on this appeal to challenge the
district court’s order dismissing the petition. Rather, I reiterate that we
limited the appeal to the question of whether the court went too far when it
dismissed Michael’s attorneys. Accordingly, while I can comprehend why
the panel will not honor Michael’s requests to dismiss his appeal, though I
disagree with the panel’s decision in that regard, I am at a total loss to
understand how, for the reasons I have set forth above, the panel can vacate
the unassailable order of the district court to the extent that it dismissed the
habeas corpus proceedings. Indeed, even if Michael without hesitation
wanted us to adjudicate the appeal on the merits and even if our certificate
of appealability included a question relating to the district court’s dismissal
of the petition, it would have been inappropriate for the panel to enter an
order such as it did on June 2, 2005, vacating the district court’s order and
remanding the case for further proceedings without a demonstration that the
district court erred in dismissing the habeas corpus proceedings. There, of
course, has been no such demonstration.
I make one final point. The panel decided this case by the order I set
forth above in full rather than by an opinion. In these circumstances I can
understand why the panel’s action in vacating the March 10, 2004 order and
remanding the case might not seem as significant as it would have if the
panel had filed a precedential opinion in the case. But the order is just as
significant to the family of Trista Eng as a full opinion reaching the same
result would have been. Moreover, even though the order is not
precedential still it will not go unnoticed for I have observed that the
attorneys prosecuting appeals in capital cases regularly seem to have access
to not precedential dispositions. In fact, I am quite certain that the court’s
disposition here will be cited in other cases in which attorneys seek to force
petitioners to pursue involuntary appeals. Furthermore, I believe that our
disposition of this case will have even broader ramifications for surely
district courts will reason that if a petitioner represented by counsel cannot
dismiss his appeal, a petitioner in the district court represented by counsel
should not be able to dismiss his unwanted petition for habeas corpus.
For the foregoing reasons I dissent. I believe that the panel should
grant rehearing, vacate the June 2, 2005 order, and dismiss the appeal.
Alternatively, at a bare minimum the panel should grant rehearing, vacate
the June 2, 2005 order, and determine the case by adjudicating the issue on
which it granted the certificate of appealability.