Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

August 1, 1972 Hon. Clyde Whiteside Chairman Board of Pardons and Paroles Opinion No. M-1187 Room 501 John H. Reagan Bldg. Austin, Texas 78701 Re: Effect of Furman v. Georgia holding death penalty unconstitutional, Dear Sirs: and related questions. This is in response to your recent inquiry concerning appli- cation of the recent U. S. Supreme Court decisions in Furman v. Jackson v. Georgia (69-5030) and Branch v. 40 W 4923, to procedures b efore theexas Board rP&%nxAd Pa:&. We quote your entire letter (less formal parts): "The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles respectfully requests your opinion concerning matters of commutation of sentence, as provided in Article 4, Section 11 of the Texas Constitution and other Texas laws. In view of the recent United States Supreme court opinions concerning the death penalty in William Henry Furman VS. State of Georgia, et. al., and being cases numbers 69-5003, 69-5030 and 69-5031. "It is the established policy of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles when considering commutation of sentences from death to life imprisonment that the sentencing trial court officials instigate application for such commutation by written request to the Board setting out its reason for seeking such commutation and requesting the Board to make such recommendation to the Governor for his action. This Board does not solicit commutation application nor has it to my know- ledge ever initiated commutation without the request of the trial officials or the convicted defendant. This is the established procedure followed by this and prior Boards in such cases. In view of the ruling of -5789.. Hon. Clyde Whiteside, Page 2 (M-1187) the Supreme Court in the Furman case, and other cases numbered above, we would like to have a leqal opinion upon the following questionsn "1. Did the ruling in Furman vsO Georgia, 869-5003, 69-5030, and 69-3031 et. al., declare the death penalty unconstitutional, per se? "2. What is the present posture of death penalties assessed in Texas District Courts in the following catagories: (a) Awaiting,motion for new trial in Texas District Courts, (b) Awaiting appeal to Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. (cl Affirmed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and awaiting certiorari to the Supreme Court of the United States. (d) Penalties provided declared unconstitu- tional by the Supreme Court of the United States. (e) Habeas Corpus proceedings pending under Article 11,07 Texas Code of Criminal Pro- cedure, (f) Habeas Corpus pending in various federal courts, "3. In view of the Board's policy outlined above, may this Board now act with regard to the above catagories of cases to recommend commutation to the Governor? "4. In the event of commutation of the death penalty to life imprisonment, does this Board have any responsibility for causing the individual to be re-sentenced? "5, What effect upon the action of this Board will result when a condemned person informs the Board in writing that he does not wish to receive commutation from death to life?" The decision of the UC S, Supreme Court in the three cited cases (combined) :s a short per curiam decision which, with formal parts omitted, holds: -5790- ,,’ . I Hon o Clyde Whiteside, Page 3 (M-1187) "Certiorari was granted limited to the following question: 'Does the imposition and carrying out . .. of the death penalty in [these casesj constitute cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments?' 403 U.S. 952 (1971). The Court holds that the imposition and carrying out of the death penalty in these cases constitutes cruel and unusuarpunishment molation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amend- ments. The judgment in each case is therefore reversed insofar as it leaves undisturbed the death sentence imposed, and the cases are remanded for further proceedings."E-asis added) D - Then there follow nine opinions (five separate concurrences and four joint and separate dissents). We must point out the fact that at the time of the issu- ante of this opinion the -mandate _ of the United . States ..~. . Supreme . Court has not been issued and petitions for rehearing have been filed in all three of the cases (as well as all other Texas death penalty cases acted upon by that Court). We do not pre- dict what the action of the Court upon these motions will be. We can only provide you with our current understanding of these decisions, The following discussion must be accepted in this light, After careful study of the order and the nine opinions, we conclude that the death penalty, pe+ se, has not been declared constitutionally impermissible, T e entire thrust of the com- bined cases is to declare Texas (and other) procedures are violative of "procedural due process" only as to the imposition of death as a punishment for crime in the manner and under the circumstances submitted. In our opinion, these decisions make all current Texas death sentences subject to successful attack in proper proceedings in appropriate courts and prohibits the assessment of death in current cases under present Texas statutes. II, You have advised this office that your inquiry with regard to "posture" includes not only presently but also with regard to posture in the event the death penalty should be commuted to life imprisonment, -5791- Hon. Clyde Whiteside, Page 4 (M-1187) In Attorney General's Opinion M-981 (1971), this office ad- vised that your board "generally can recommend and the Governor, based on such recommendation, can commute a death sentence to life imprisonment even though the conviction is on appeal and has not been finally determined by the Texas Courts. The Board and Governor may do the same even though the United States Supreme Court may reverse a judgment insofar as it imposes the death penalty and remands the case to the Texas Court for further pro- ceedings in conformity with its judgment, so long as the Texas Court has taken no final action in the case," We further advised you that your board "can recommend to the Governor that a death sentence be commuted to life imprisonment, and the Governorp pursuant to such recommendation, can commute the sentence without consent of the convict, Neither do we find in our laws any requirement that the Board of Pardons and Paroles conduct a hearing before it recommends commutation nor before commutation is given," This conclusion is supported by the recent decision of the Court of Criminal Appeals in the case of Whan v. Texas, S.W. 2d (not yet reported but being Cause No. 41 789 on tKdocket of nt court) delivered June 28, 1972. That oiinion holds that the Governor may commute a death sentence to life even after the U, S, Supreme Court has declared the death penalty invalid or at any time after a verdict of guilty has been returned and the jury has fixed the penalty (but of course before a new trial has been granted by a court of competent authority) (I The opinion also noted that commutation does not affect the judgment but merely mitigates the punishment, With such introductory statements, we will now analyze the categories submitted, (a) Where a death penalty conviction is pending motion for new trial in the District Court, the penalty may be commuted and the motion for new trial will be heard and disposed of on the merits asserted as if life imprisonment had been the original penalty imposed, (b) Where appellate review is pending in the Court of Criminal Appeals, the penalty may be commuted and the appeal may proceed. .-_ ‘l; -5792~ . I Hon. Clyde Whiteside, Page 5 (M-1187) We express no opinion on whether or not the Court of Criminal Appeals might return the cause to the District Court for further proceedings (such as sentencing, supplementary~briefs, etc.) or treat death penalty questions as surplusage, etc,, as that Court has not yet had an opportunity to act to provide guidelines in such matters and the Code of Criminal Procedure appears not to contemplate such a possibility. (c) Where certiorari is pending, the penalty may be commuted, thereby rendering death penalty questions moot (although other issues would remain unchanged). (d) Where the U. S, Supreme Court has granted death penalty re- lief and remanded the cause to the Court of Criminal Appeals (but where the Court of Criminal Appeals has not yet acted to grant a new trial), the penalty may be commuted and the Court of Criminal Appeals will re-affirm its judgment (this is the precise posture found in Whan v. State, supra). (4 Where habeas corpus proceedings are pending in Texas courts under Article 11,07, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, commuta- tion may be granted, thereby rendering moot any death penalty questions. Where Federal habeas corpus proceedings are pending, commu- tation may be granted and it would then be incumbent upon counsel for the State to call this to the attention of the Federal Court for its consideration upon the issue of mootness. It is our opinion that in all of the above categories, ab- sent commutation, the court concerned must either grant a new trial (or in habeas corpus, order the release of the prisoner if a new trial is not granted) 0 III, In view of the decision in Whan v. State, supra, it is our -5793- ‘ . Hon. Clyde Whiteside, Page 6 (M-1187) opinion that the Board of Pardons and Paroles may now act with regard to recommending commutations in all cases in all cate- gories o And since we find no prohibition to prevent the Board from acting sua fponte, we certainly find no prohibition against the Board requiring some initiative from either the State or the condemned person before consideration will be given to a recom- mendation. It is obviously within the inherent rule making power of the Board to establish orderly procedures for the disposition of matters within its jurisdiction. We find no statutory burden upon the Board to concern itself with the sentencing or resentencing of persons com- muted. This would be a matter entirely for the judiciary. V. In regard to the effect of notice from the condemned man that he opposes commutation, we quote again (as in A. G. Opinion #M-981) from the Court of Criminal Appeals decision in Ex Parte LeFors, 303 S,W,Zd 394 (Tex.Crim. 1957) at p* 397: "Commutation of sentence means the change of the punishment assessed to a less severe one. It differs from a pardon in that it may be imposed without consent of the convict or against his will." (Emphasis added,) Since the people of Texas have an interest in conserving judicial time and the immense cost of retrials, counsel for the State may properly petition for commutation to avoid such wasteful duplicity. It is our opinion that such a request from a con- demned man should be considered by the Board along with all other factors but such request in no way prevents the Board from exer- cising its lawful discretion in making or withholding a recom- mendation to the Governor, This question was disposed in Biddle v0 Perovich, 274 U,S, 480 (U.S,S.Ct,s 1927) p wherein Mr. Justice Holmes stated for a unanimous court: -Both s,ides agree that the act of the President was properly styled a commutation of sentence, but the counsel of Perovich -5794- Hon. Clyde Whiteside, Page 7 (M-1187) urge that when the attempt is to commute a punishment to one of a different sort it za:nzt be done without the convict's consent." *We will not go into history, but we will say a word about the principles of pardons in the law of the United States. A pardon in our days is not a private act of grace from an individual happening to possess power. It is a part of the Constitutional scheme. When granted it is the determination of the ulti- mate authority that the public welfare will be better served by inflicting less than what ' .the judgment fixed." l l l "When we come to the commutation of death to imprisonment for life it is hard to see how consent has any more to do with it than it has in the cases first put. Supposing that Perovich did not accept the change, he could not have got himself hanged against the Execu- tive order, Supposing that he did accept, he could not affect the judgment to be carried out, The considerations that led to the modification had nothing to do with his will. The only question is whether the substituted punishment was authorized by law--. O On * l l "We cannot doubt that the power extends to this case, By common understanding impris- onment for life is a less penalty than death. It is treated so in the statute under which Perovich was tried,"* l * SUMMARY 1, The U, SO Supreme Court has not held the death penalty unconstitutional, E se, but has declared Texas procedure in the assessment of%eath unconstitutional. 2, Present death penalties at any stage between jury verdict and granting of a new trial may be commuted to life, 3, The Board of Pardons and Paroles may now act to -5795- Hon. Clyde Whiteside, Page 8 (M-1187) recommend commutation upon application from officials of the convicting court. 4. The Board has no obligation to go forward in causing convicting courts to re-sentence (under nunc pro tune) those commuted, 5. The Board may recommend (and the Governor may grant) commutation over a protest from the condemned person. Res&tfully submitted, General of Texas Prepared by Howard M. Fender Assistant Attorney General APPROVEDr OPINION COMMITTEE Kerns Taylor, Chairman W. E. Allen, Co-Chairman Max P. Flusche Lang A. Baker Robert L. Lattimore Gordon Cass SAMUEL D. MCDANIEL Staff Legal Assistant ALFRED WALKER Executive Assistant NOLA WwI'E First Assistant -5796-