NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 19a0418n.06
Case No. 18-3806
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
FILED
TARAN HELMS, ) Aug 12, 2019
) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
Petitioner-Appellant, )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
) THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
SEAN BOWERMAN, Warden, ) OHIO
)
Respondent-Appellee. ) OPINION
)
BEFORE: ROGERS, GRIFFIN, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.
NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge. Following two rounds of direct appeals and remand, an
Ohio appellate court held that Taran Helms’s jury convictions for felonious assault and attempted
murder, stemming from his shooting a fast-food manager who was driving the day’s deposits to
the bank, did not merge for sentencing purposes. In a motion for reconsideration under Ohio R.
App. P. 26(A), Helms argued that the government violated his due-process right to a fair trial by
changing its factual theory on appeal.
Specifically, he contended that at trial the prosecution argued that both Helms’s assault and
attempted-murder charges were established by Helms’s shooting the victim, which merged the two
offenses (an argument that initially proved successful on appeal). But later on appeal, in light of
a change in the law of merger and following a remand of his case from the Ohio Supreme Court
back to the court of appeals, the government changed its tune. The government instead contended
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
that the convictions did not merge because Helms’s assault charge was supported by verbal threats,
not the shooting, and therefore the convictions did not merge. That argument proved successful
and Helms petitioned for habeas relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court held that the
state-court decision did not unreasonably apply Supreme Court precedent and denied his petition
for relief but granted a certificate of appealability on “the question of whether the prosecution’s
post-conviction embrace of a theory that is inconsistent with the theory pursued during trial and
through sentencing violates a defendant’s due process rights.” We affirm.
I.
Helms’s petition stems from his Mahoning County, Ohio, convictions for attempted
murder, felonious assault, aggravated robbery, kidnapping, and four firearm specifications relating
to his intercepting, shooting, and robbing a fast-food manager who was driving the day’s deposits
to the bank. At trial, state prosecutors linked both the attempted-murder and felonious-assault
charges to Helms’s firing his weapon. Despite Helms’s argument that the attempted murder and
felonious assault counts should have merged, the court sentenced Helms to separate, consecutive
sentences for each conviction, leading to an aggregate sentence of fifty years’ imprisonment.
Helms appealed. He argued that “[t]he trial court committed reversible error when it
sentenced [him] to multiple sentences for allied offenses of similar import committed with a single
animus, in violation of Helm[s]’s rights under the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth[] Amendments.”
State v. Helms, 2010 WL 3904121, at *4 (Ohio Ct. App. Sept. 29, 2010) (“Helms I”). Finding that
Helms’s attempted murder and felonious assault were linked by one animus, one gunshot, and one
victim, the Ohio Court of Appeals held that “the trial court erroneously failed to merge Helms’s
convictions for attempted murder and felonious assault for sentencing purposes.” Id. at *12. It
therefore remanded the matter for resentencing.
2
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
The State appealed and the Ohio Supreme Court remanded, instructing the court of appeals
to apply its recent decision in State v. Johnson, 942 N.E.2d 1061 (Ohio 2010) (analyzing when
two offenses are allied offenses of similar import subject to merger). State v. Helms, 944 N.E.2d
233, 234 (Ohio 2011). On remand, the State presented a new argument for why the attempted
murder and felonious assault convictions were not subject to merger: while the attempted murder
conviction was supported by Helms’s shooting the victim, the felonious assault conviction was
supported by Helms’s later threat that he would shoot the victim again. Thus, the State argued,
the acts had separate animuses and were not allied offenses.
Applying Johnson to the State’s new theory, the Ohio Court of Appeals reversed course
and held that the offenses did not merge. In its opinion, the court of appeals also addressed and
refuted the potential due-process problem allegedly caused by the prosecution’s using a new theory
of the case that depended on a set of facts that did “not correspond to the prosecutor’s theory of
the case set forth in the opening and closing arguments.” State v. Helms, 2012 WL 966810, at *7
(Ohio Ct. App. Mar. 20, 2012) (“Helms II”). The dissent disagreed, arguing that “[t]he State’s
abandonment of its theory of the case and introduction of a distinct, unexpected and inconsistent
theory violates a defendant’s due process rights.” Helms II, at *13 (DeGenaro, J., dissenting).
Helms filed a motion for reconsideration under Ohio R. App. P. 26(A).1 He argued that
the Helms II decision violated: “(1) the right to due process of law; (2) the right to trial by jury,
(3) the right not to be put twice in jeopardy; and (4) the right to confront the witnesses against
him.” DE 5-1, Mot. for Recons., Page ID 383. To support his argument, Helms asserted that since
the State did not argue at trial that the threat he made after shooting the victim, rather than the
1
Helms appended documents from the Ohio state court record to his return of writ in the district
court. Citations to this entry in the district court record will reflect the specific state court
document being cited.
3
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
shooting itself, was the factual basis for the felonious assault conviction, the State’s changed theory
on appeal violated the Sixth Amendment.2 He argued, therefore, based on the State’s original
theory, that because both convictions were supported by the shooting, the crimes were allied
offenses and should have merged for sentencing.
The state appellate court denied his motion. The Helms III majority—authored by the same
judge as the Helms II majority—declined to comment on the due-process issue, while a concurring
judge noted that since the panel already addressed that issue in Helms II, it would not do so again.
The dissent, however, elaborated on why the majority erred in not finding a due-process violation.
It concluded that “[i]n raising this new theory well after the trial had ended,” the State violated
Helms’s “ability to effectively defend himself,” and that the “use of a novel theory on appeal
offends principles of due process[.]” State v. Helms, 2013 WL 6670810, at *9–10 (Ohio Ct. App.
Dec. 12, 2013) (“Helms III”) (DeGenaro, J., dissenting).
Helms petitioned the Ohio Supreme Court. He argued that “a criminal defendant’s
constitutional guarantees of due process, a fair trial, the right to confront witnesses against him,
and protection from double jeopardy are violated when the State asserts one argument against
merger of allied offenses at trial and then asserts a different, inconsistent argument against merger
2
Helms’s motion for reconsideration situates the alleged violation in the Sixth Amendment, rather
than the Fourteenth. But the Supreme Court has noted that “[w]hether rooted directly in the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, or in the Compulsory Process or Confrontation
clauses of the Sixth Amendment, the Constitution guarantees criminal defendants ‘a meaningful
opportunity to present a complete defense.’” Crane v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683, 690 (1986) (internal
citations omitted) (quoting California v. Trombetta, 467 U.S. 479, 485 (1984)). See also Strickland
v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 684–85 (1984) (“The Constitution guarantees a fair trial through the
Due Process Clauses, but it defines the basic elements of a fair trial largely through the several
provisions of the Sixth Amendment[.]”).
4
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
on appeal.” DE 5-1, Mem. in Supp. of Appeal, Page ID 419. The Ohio Supreme Court declined
to consider the case.
Under the Helms II order, the Court of Common Pleas held a sentencing hearing in July
2014. It merged the firearm specifications but did not merge the attempted-murder and felonious-
assault convictions. The court imposed an aggregate sentence of forty-one years’ imprisonment.
Helms petitioned for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the Northern District of
Ohio in May 2015. He argued that “[b]y asserting a new argument against merger on appeal that
is inconsistent with arguments made against merger at trial, the prosecution deprives a criminal
defendant of his or her constitutionally guaranteed rights to due process, a fair trial, confront
witnesses, and be protected from double jeopardy.” DE 1, Pet. for Habeas, Page ID 19 (citing
Crane v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683 (1986)). The government filed a return of writ, arguing that the
state court decision was not clearly contrary to or an unreasonable application of Supreme Court
precedent. The government, however, did not challenge Helms’s petition on any procedural
grounds. Instead, it acknowledged that “in Helms III, the court of appeals addressed his issues
presented in his . . . motion for reconsideration, and he went on to present them to the Ohio
Supreme Court in discretionary review of the appellate court’s decision. Thus, they are
exhausted.” DE 5, Return of Writ, Page ID 48 (internal record citations omitted).
In its reply to Helms’s traverse, however, the government contended that Helms
procedurally defaulted his claim because he raised the due-process issue for the first time in his
motion for reconsideration. In his surreply, Helms argued that the government waived the
procedural-default defense because it failed to raise the argument in its initial return of writ.
The magistrate judge issued a report recommending denial of Helms’s petition. The
magistrate judge held that the government did not waive its procedural-default defense because
5
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
“[t]he exact contours of Helms’s sole ground for relief were not altogether clear in the cursory
petition Helms filed” and “any potential prejudice stemming from [the prosecution’s] belated
assertion of procedural default was negated by the Court permitting Helms to file a surreply
wherein Helms attempts to refute the contention that his claim is defaulted.” DE 17, R. & R., Page
ID 4199–200. But the judge rejected that defense because “Helms sufficiently raised his claim
before both the state appellate court, which had an opportunity to consider it [on his motion for
reconsideration], and also before the Supreme Court of Ohio.” Id. at 4202. The magistrate then
considered Helms’s petition on the merits and recommended that the district court deny it because
the state-court decision did not violate clearly established Supreme Court precedent.
The district court adopted the magistrate’s report and recommendation in full. Applying
the standard of review from the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), the
district court concluded that “Helms cannot establish he is entitled to a writ of habeas corpus
because he does not identify the ‘clearly established Federal law’ underlying the specific question
he presents.” DE 22, Mem. Op., Page ID 4229. The court, however, granted Helms’s request for
a certificate of appealability on “whether the prosecution’s post-conviction embrace of a theory
that is inconsistent with the theory pursued during trial and through sentencing violates a
defendant’s due process rights.” Id. at 4230. Helms timely appealed.
II.
When a district court denies a habeas petition, this court reviews its legal conclusions de
novo and its factual findings for clear error. White v. Mitchell, 431 F.3d 517, 524 (6th Cir. 2005).
When the district court makes no independent findings of fact, however, we review the factual
findings de novo. Id. On the other hand, when the state court makes factual findings, we accord
them a “presumption of correctness” and disturb them “only upon a petitioner’s showing by clear
6
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
and convincing evidence that the factual findings were incorrect.” Id. (citing Warren v. Smith, 161
F.3d 358, 360–61 (6th Cir. 1998)).
When the underlying state-court adjudication rests on the merits of a federal claim, the
standard set forth in the AEDPA cabins our review. Under that standard, a state-court petitioner
may obtain federal habeas relief if the state-court decision “resulted in a decision that was contrary
to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established” Supreme Court precedent. 28
U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). A state-court decision is contrary to federal law when it “arrives at a
conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Supreme] Court on a question of law” or “decides a
case differently than [the Supreme] Court has on a set of materially indistinguishable facts.”
Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 413 (2000) (O’Connor, J., concurring). A state court’s
application of federal law is unreasonable when it “identifies the correct governing legal principle
from [Supreme Court] decisions but unreasonably applies that principle to the facts” of the case.
Id. The statute’s deferential standard “reflects the view that § 2254 is only to be used to guard
against extreme malfunctions in the state criminal justice systems.” Gumm v. Mitchell, 775 F.3d
345, 360 (6th Cir. 2014) (internal quotation marks omitted).
If, however, the state court did not adjudicate the federal issue on the merits, the reviewing
federal court applies pre-AEDPA standards and reviews any legal issues de novo. Id.
III.
Helms appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254. He contends that the state court unreasonably applied Supreme Court precedent when it
determined that the government’s altered factual theory on direct appeal did not violate his due
process right to a meaningful opportunity to defend himself. In response, the government argues
that Helms procedurally defaulted his due-process claim because he did not raise it until his state-
7
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
court motion for reconsideration, and in the alternative, that the state-court decision did not
unreasonably apply Supreme Court precedent. Helms contends that the government waived its
procedural-default defense, that our review of the state-court decision is de novo because the court
did not fully adjudicate the issue on the merits, and that we should find a due-process violation on
de novo review, and, alternatively, that the state-court decision unreasonably applied Supreme
Court precedent.
We affirm the district court’s denial of Helms’s § 2254 petition. As a threshold matter, we
assume, without deciding, that Helms did not procedurally default his due-process claim. In
reviewing the state-court decision, we apply AEDPA deference because the state court fully
adjudicated the due-process issue on the merits. Under this standard, the state court did not
unreasonably apply Supreme Court precedent. We therefore affirm the denial of Helms’s petition
for habeas relief.
A.
In federal habeas cases, the doctrine of procedural default bars federal review when the
state court has declined to address the federal claim due to the petitioner’s noncompliance with a
state procedural requirement. Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. 72, 87 (1977). When the procedural-
default issue is “complicated” and “unnecessary to [the] disposition of the case,” however, we “are
not required to address a procedural-default issue before deciding against the petitioner on the
merits.” Mahdi v. Bagley, 522 F.3d 631, 635 (6th Cir. 2008) (quoting Hudson v. Jones, 351 F.3d
212, 216 (6th Cir. 2003)); see Lambrix v. Singletary, 520 U.S. 518, 525 (1997) (“Judicial economy
might counsel giving the [merits] question priority . . . , if it were easily resolvable against the
habeas petitioner, whereas the procedural-bar issue involved complicated issues of state law.”).
Thus, because the procedural-default issue here is complicated and unnecessary to the disposition
8
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
of this case and the merits issue is straightforward, we proceed to the merits of Helms’s claim
without deciding the procedural-default issue.
B.
In reviewing the state-court decision, we must first determine what standard controls our
analysis. Helms argues that we should review the state-court decision de novo instead of with
AEDPA deference because “the state court made only passing mention of the due process
dimension of Mr. Helms’s claim and did not make a ruling on the merits of the question.” CA6
R. 18, Appellant Br., at 15. In response, the government contends that “a decision concluding that
there are no due process concerns” in Helms’s case does not equate to a decision that fails to
analyze those due-process concerns. CA6 R. 21, Appellee Br., at 32. We agree with the
government that the state court adjudicated Helms’s due-process claim on the merits and therefore
apply AEDPA deference to the state-court decision.
For AEDPA deference to apply, the state-court adjudication must have been “on the
merits.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). A judgment is typically on the merits if it is “delivered after the
court . . . heard and evaluated the evidence and the parties’ substantive arguments.” Johnson v.
Williams, 568 U.S. 289, 302 (2013) (emphasis omitted). Thus, a decision that is “on the merits”
is one based on “substance, not form.” English v. Berghuis, 900 F.3d 804, 812 (6th Cir. 2018)
(citing Williams, 568 U.S. at 302). In making this determination, the reviewing court applies a
“strong but rebuttable presumption that a federal claim was adjudicated on the merits by the state
court,” id. at 811 (internal quotation marks omitted), because the statute “does not require a state
court to give reasons before its decision can be deemed to have been adjudicated on the merits.”
Williams, 568 U.S. at 298 (quoting Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 100 (2011)) (internal
quotation marks omitted). Thus, “[w]hen a federal claim has been presented to a state court and
9
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
the state court has denied relief, it may be presumed that the state court adjudicated the claim on
the merits in the absence of any indication or state-law procedural principles to the contrary.”
Richter, 562 U.S. at 99. Even if a state court denies a motion without explicitly addressing a claim
within, the on-the-merits presumption still applies. Williams, 568 U.S. at 301.
A petitioner may overcome the presumption by showing that “there is reason to think some
other explanation for the state court’s decision is more likely.” Richter, 562 U.S. at 99–100. For
example, a petitioner may overcome the presumption when the federal issue “was simply
mentioned in passing in a footnote,” Williams, 568 U.S. at 301, was “buried in a string cite,” id.,
or when the state court decided the case on separate grounds and explicitly declined to address the
particular claim at issue, Benge v. Johnson, 474 F.3d 236, 246 (6th Cir. 2007).
Helms contends that “the Helms II majority simply stated the issue was allied offenses, not
due process, and therefore failed to analyze the due process dimension of Mr. Helms’s claim[,]”
CA6 R. 18, Appellant Br., at 16, and that when he “subsequently raised the due process argument
as a reason the state court of appeals should reconsider its decision[,] . . . the majority again failed
to consider the due process claim.” Id. (citing Helms III, at *4). He contends that this court should
therefore review his due process claim de novo. Id.
In making this argument, Helms understates the state court’s actual consideration of the
due-process issue. Helms II and III (which we presume incorporated the Helms II rationale under
the “look-through” doctrine) show that the state court fully adjudicated the federal issue on the
merits. First, in Helms II, the majority and dissent sparred over the issue: the majority refuted the
alleged “due process problem in relying on the evidence of [Helms’s] threat to kill [the victim] as
proof of felonious assault because that set of facts does not correspond to the prosecutor’s theory
of the case set forth in the opening and closing arguments.” Helms II, at *7. In contrast, the dissent
10
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
argued that “[t]he State’s abandonment of its theory of the case and introduction of a distinct,
unexpected and inconsistent theory violates a defendant’s due process rights.” Id. at *13
(DeGenaro, J., dissenting).
In response to Helms’s motion for reconsideration, the majority and dissent stuck to their
original conclusions. While the Helms III majority declined to address the due-process issue
explicitly, a concurring judge noted that since they had addressed the due-process issue in Helms
II, they would not do so again. Helms III, at *4 (Vukovich, J., concurring). The dissent, on the
other hand, found that “[i]n raising this new theory well after the trial had ended,” the State violated
Helms’s “ability to effectively defend himself,” and that the “use of a novel theory on appeal
offends principles of due process[.]” Id. at *9–10 (DeGenaro, J., dissenting).
This back-and-forth between the majority and dissent in Helms II and majority,
concurrence, and dissent in Helms III shows that the state court “heard and evaluated the evidence
and the parties’ substantive arguments” related to the potential due-process violation. Williams,
568 U.S. at 302 (emphasis omitted). The discussion between the state court judges demonstrates
that the court denied Helms’s due process claim based on “substance, not form.” English, 900
F.3d at 812. Moreover, that the Helms III majority declined to comment on the due-process issue
does not change the calculation. When the last state-court decision does not lay out all of its
reasons, we “‘look through’ the unexplained decision to the last related state-court decision that
does provide a relevant rationale” and “presume that the unexplained decision adopted the same
reasoning.” Wilson v. Sellers, 138 S. Ct. 1188, 1192 (2018). Here, if there is any uncertainty on
why the Helms III majority rejected his motion for reconsideration, we “look through” the Helm
III majority’s denial and adopt the Helms II majority’s rationale regarding due process. Given that
the Helms II majority explicitly assessed and rejected the due process argument, Helms has not
11
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
presented evidence sufficient to overcome the “strong but rebuttable presumption that a federal
claim was adjudicated on the merits by the state court,” English, 900 F.3d at 811 (internal quotation
marks omitted), as he has not provided “reason to think some other explanation for the state court’s
decision is more likely,” Richter, 562 U.S. at 99–100. Thus, because the state-court adjudication
was “on the merits,” we apply AEDPA deference. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
C.
Applying AEDPA deference, Helms argues that “the state court’s decision was an
unreasonable application of Supreme Court jurisprudence articulating the principles tethered to the
Due Process Clause.” CA6 R. 18, Appellant Br., at 25. Specifically, Helms contends that the
government violated his due process right to present a meaningful defense when it offered one
factual theory at trial—that the attempted-murder and felonious-assault convictions were both
supported by the gunshot—and a different factual theory on appeal—that the attempted-murder
conviction was supported by the gunshot, but the assault conviction was supported by a verbal
threat. The Helms II majority found that there was no due-process violation, and the Helms III
majority—authored by the same judge—declined to comment any more on the issue in its denial
of Helms’s motion for reconsideration. Thus, in analyzing whether the state court unreasonably
applied Supreme Court precedent in its denial of Helms’s due-process claim, we “look through”
Helms III to the “last state-related court decision that does provide a relevant rationale”—Helms
II—and presume the later case adopted the same reasoning. Sellers, 138 S. Ct. at 1192.
Under AEDPA, a federal court may grant habeas relief when a state court’s decision on the
merits of a federal claim “involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established” Supreme
Court precedent. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). “This standard,” the Supreme Court has counseled, “is
‘difficult to meet.’” White v. Woodall, 572 U.S. 415, 419 (2014) (quoting Metrish v. Lancaster,
12
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
569 U.S. 351, 357–58 (2013)). “[C]learly established Federal law for purposes of § 2254(d)(1)
includes only the holdings, as opposed to the dicta of [the Supreme] Court’s decisions.” Id. (first
alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). A court’s application of that law is
unreasonable only if the habeas petitioner can show that it is “objectively unreasonable, not merely
wrong[.]” Woods v. Donald, 135 S. Ct. 1372, 1376 (2015) (per curiam). Thus, this court can only
grant relief if the petitioner shows that the state court’s ruling on the federal claim was “so lacking
in justification that there was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law beyond
any possibility for fairminded disagreement.” Richter, 562 U.S. at 103. Our “review thus exists
as ‘a guard against extreme malfunctions in the state criminal justice systems, not a substitute for
ordinary error correction through appeal.’” Woods, 135 S. Ct. at 1376 (quoting Richter, 562 U.S.
at 102–03).
Helms contends that the state court unreasonably applied Supreme Court precedent on “the
principles tethered to the Due Process Clause.” CA6 R. 18, Appellant Br., at 25. To support his
argument, he cites the Court’s acknowledgement in Crane v. Kentucky that “a criminal defendant
is constitutionally guaranteed a meaningful opportunity to present a complete defense as a
component of due process” and Medina v. California’s proclamation that “due process is also
implicated when state action deprives a defendant of a fundamentally fair trial.” Id. at 25–26
(citing Medina v. California, 505 U.S. 437, 443 (1992) and Crane, 476 U.S. at 690).
The government’s novel post-trial argument supporting why the attempted murder and
felonious assault convictions should not merge does raise questions about whether Helms had a
chance to meaningfully defend himself. See Helms II, at * 20 (DeGenaro, J., dissenting) (“This
abrupt and belated modification of the State’s theory of the case, co-opted from the dissent in
Helms I, raises serious due process concerns.”). The problem for Helms, however, is that he has
13
No. 18-3806, Helms v. Bowerman
identified no Supreme Court precedent that shows that the state court’s decision was such an
“extreme malfunction,” Woods, 135 S. Ct. at 1378, or that there could be no “possibility for
fairminded disagreement.” Richter, 562 U.S. at 103.
Neither Supreme Court case that Helms cites is on point. In Crane, the Supreme Court
held that the state court violated a defendant’s due-process rights when it prohibited the defendant
from testifying about circumstances concerning a confession. 476 U.S. at 691. In Medina, the
Supreme Court considered whether a state can require a defendant who alleges incompetence to
stand trial to bear the burden of proving so by a preponderance of the evidence. 505 U.S. at 439.
Because neither case concerns whether the government can alter its factual theory on appeal
without violating due process, neither supports Helms’s claim that the state court unreasonably
applied Supreme Court precedent. Thus, without Supreme Court precedent on point, we cannot
conclude that the state court’s denial of Helms’s due-process claim was “objectively
unreasonable.” Woods, 135 S. Ct. at 1376. The state-court decision therefore did not unreasonably
apply Supreme Court law.
***
We affirm the district court’s denial of Helms’s petition for habeas corpus under § 2254.
14