Robbins v. State

Tom Glaze, Justice.

Appellant Robert Robbins was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in 1998 for the murder of his ex-girlfriend, Bethany White. At trial, Robbins represented himself, with the assistance of court-appointed standby counsel, and he sought the death penalty for himself. Initially, Robbins was convicted and sentenced to death; he waived his right to appeal, and we held his waiver was proper. See State v. Robbins, 335 Ark. 380, 985 S.W.2d 293 (1998) (per curiam) (Robbins I). In State v. Robbins, 336 Ark. 377, 985 S.W.2d 296 (1999) (per curiam) (Robbins II), we clarified that Robbins had also waived his right to seek post-conviction relief under Ark. R. Crim. P. 37.5. Following a request by Robbins’s mother to re-examine the case, this court subsequently recalled the mandate, stayed Robbins’s execution, and ordered briefing in order to determine whether Franz v. State, 296 Ark. 181, 754 S.W.2d 839 (1988), should be overruled and whether the court should impose a mandatory review for trial error in all death penalty cases, regardless of whether the defendant desires such a review. State v. Robbins, 337 Ark. 227, 987 S.W.2d 709 (1999) (per curiam) (Robbins III).

Upon rebriefing, this court overruled the Franz case in part, and held that this court has an affirmative duty to automatically review the record in all death-penalty cases for egregious and prejudicial errors. State v. Robbins, 339 Ark. 379, 5 S.W.3d 51 (1999) (Robbins IV). We remanded the case for preparation of the record, and appointed counsel to assist in our review. Id.1 Robbins’s appointed counsel filed a brief in compliance with this court’s direction, and in State v. Robbins, 342 Ark. 262, 27 S.W.3d 419 (2000) (Robbins V), we held that no prejudicial or plain error had occurred, and all fundamental safeguards had been followed. We affirmed Robbins’s conviction and sentence of death.

Robbins subsequently pursued federal habeas corpus relief. In his habeas proceedings, Robbins argued that he was entitled to relief because the jury rendered inconsistent findings regarding mitigating circumstances; the State responded that the claim was procedurally barred from habeas review because the issue was never raised in Robbins’s state court proceedings. The federal court ruled that Robbins’s claim that the jury returned inconsistent findings on its penalty-phase verdict had not yet been exhausted in state court. Because Robbins had not exhausted his state remedies, the federal court dismissed his petition for writ of habeas corpus.

Following the federal court’s dismissal of his petition, Robbins filed a motion to re-open his case in this court. In that motion, he argued that the case involved a violation of his rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments based on the jury’s inconsistent and irreconcilable findings regarding mitigating circumstances. Specifically, he claimed, on Form 2A of the verdict forms, the jury unanimously found that one mitigating’ circumstance existed; however, on Form 2C, the jury also unanimously found that this same nfitigator did not exist. In his motion, Robbins suggested that, despite this court’s stated intent to review the entire record of his trial and sentencing proceedings for prejudicial error, such a review had not occurred because neither the court nor his appointed counsel noticed this alleged error. We granted the motion to reopen the case and issued a writ of certiorari, ordering that the record be supplemented with the original verdict forms. Robbins v. State, 353 Ark. 556, 114 S.W.3d 217 (2003) (Robbins VI). The original verdict forms and the briefs of the parties are now before us, and we are now able, to determine whether error occurred with respect to Robbin’s sentencing.

Following the sentencing phase of Robbins’s capital-murder trial, the jury completed the sentencing verdict forms that caused Robbins to be sentenced to death. The jury first completed Form 1, pertaining to aggravating circumstances, by checking off as an aggravator the fact that the “capital murder was committed in an especially cruel or depraved manner.”2 With respect to mitigating circumstances, the jury also filled in Form 2. The original verdict forms clearly indicate that the jury checked Form 2A, whereby the jurors “unanimously find that the following mitigating circumstance^) probably existed: (/) Robert A. Robbins has no significant history of prior criminal activity (at the time of the murder).” Form 2B was left blank. Form 2C then provides as follows:

There was some evidence presented to support the following circumstance(s). However, having considered this evidence, the jury unanimously agreed that it was insufficient to establish that the mitigating circumstance(s) probably existed.
( ) Robert A. Robbins has no significant history of prior criminal activity (at the time of the murder).

The space between the parentheses appears as though the jury either used “white-out” or an eraser to obliterate the check mark that was once there. This Form 2 instruction is appended to this opinion.

After Form 2, the jury then completed Form 3, which contains the following conclusions of the jury:

(a) (/) The State has proved beyond a reasonable doubt one or more aggravating circumstances.
(If you do not unanimously agree to check paragraph (a), then skip (b) and (c) and sentence Robert A. Robbins to life imprisonment without parole on Form 4.)
(b) (/) The aggravating circumstances outweigh beyond a reasonable doubt any mitigating circumstances found by any juror to exist.
(If you do not unanimously agree to check paragraph (b), then skip (c) and sentence Robert A. Robbins to life imprisonment without parole on Form 4.)
(c)(/) The aggravating circumstances justify beyond a reasonable doubt a sentence of death.
(If you do not unanimously agree to check paragraph (c), then sentence Robert A. Robbins to life imprisonment without parole on Form 4.)

The jury clearly checked each of the above three boxes.

For relief, Robbins relies heavily on Willet v. State, 322 Ark. 613, 911 S.W.2d 937 (1995). In Willett, the jurors unanimously found and checked three mitigating circumstances probably existed at the time of the murder. Fiowever, on Form 2C, the jurors found and checked the same three circumstances, but then unanimously agreed that they were not mitigating circumstances. In response to the State’s argument that such error was harmless, “because the jurors appeared in open court and orally confirmed their death-sentence verdicts,” this court first agreed with Willett that subsections A and C of Form 2 are mutually exclusive. Willett, 322 Ark. at 628. The court then held as follows:

We are somewhat inclined to conclude that the jury’s error in completing Form 2 was harmless for three reasons. First, in “Form 3 — Conclusions,” the verdict form pertaining to the weighing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances, the jurors concluded that the aggravating circumstance outweighed beyond a reasonable doubt any mitigating circumstance found by any juror to exist. Second, also in Form 3, the jury concluded the aggravating circumstance justified beyond a reasonable doubt the death sentence. Third, as the state contends, the jurors confirmed in open court that the two verdicts of death by lethal injection were indeed their verdicts.Therefore, even if we assume the jury concluded in Form 2 that the three mitigating circumstances probably existed, we could conclude, on the basis of Form 3, that they did not outweigh the aggravating circumstance. However, we are not aware of any authority that permits the application of a harmless error analysis to mitigating circumstances. See Skipper v. South Carolina, 476 U.S. 1 (1986) (indicating that errors relating to mitigating circumstances are prejudicial under any standard). Moreover, this court can perform the harmless error analysis in Ark. Code Ann. § 5-4-603(d) (Repl. 1993)3 only if the jury found no mitigating circumstances. Greene, 317 Ark. 350, 878 S.W.2d 384. On this record, it is impossible to discern whether the jury found any mitigating circumstances. Therefore, we reverse the ... sentence [of\ death and remand for resentencing.

Id. at 628 (emphasis added).

This court, in Jones v. State, 329 Ark. 62, 947 S.W.2d 339 (1997), subsequently retreated from Willett’s interpretation of Skipper. This court in Jones clarified its holding in Willett, stating that the parenthetical explanation of Skipper “went beyond the actual holding of the case.” In Jones, the jury also submitted conflicting verdict forms, but there the confusion was between Form 2B and Form 2C. On Form 2B, the jury had indicated that one or more of the jurors believed that five mitigating circumstances probably existed, but they did not unanimously agree that those mitigating circumstances probably existed. On Form 2C, the jury checked off three of the same factors, indicating that there was some evidence presented to support' the mitigating circumstances offered, but the jury unanimously agreed that the evidence was insufficient to establish that the mitigating circumstances probably existed. The Jones court held that, unlike Willett, it was not impossible to determine whether the jury found any mitigating circumstances; the jurors had found three, as indicated on Form 2A, and these did not conflict in any way with the confusing circumstances checked off on Forms 2B and 2C. Jones, 329 Ark. at 69-70.

The Jones court further took the opportunity to “clarify our previous interpretations of Ark. Code Ann. § 5-4-603(d) [(Repl. 1997)],” which provides as follows:

(d) On appellate review of a death sentence, if the Arkansas Supreme Court finds that the jury erred in finding the existence of any aggravating circumstance or circumstances for any reason and if the jury found no mitigating circumstances, the Arkansas Supreme Court shall conduct a harmless error review of the defendant’s death sentence. The Arkansas Supreme Court shall conduct this harmless error review by:
(1) Determining that the remaining aggravating circumstance or circumstances exist beyond a reasonable doubt; and
(2) Determining that the remaining aggravating circumstance or circumstances justify a sentence of death beyond a reasonable doubt.

(Emphasis added.) In readdressing § 5-4-603 (d), the Jones court wrote the following:

We have previously interpreted this provision to allow us to conduct a harmless-error analysis only if the jury found no mitigating circumstances. Greene v. State, 317 Ark. 350, 878 S.W.2d 384 (1994); Kemp v. State, [324 Ark. 178, 919 S.W.2d 943 (1996)]. However, a plain reading of this provision reveals that it applies when the jury makes an error in finding that an aggravating circumstance exists. There was no such error in this case. The statute simply prescribes a set of parameters where this court must engage in a harmless-error analysis. It does not preclude us from conducting harmless-error analysis in other situations.

Jones, 329 Ark. at 71 (emphasis added).

With respect to Willetts citation to Skipper, the Jones court also explained that, “[w]hile we agree that the rule in Skipper provides that the exclusion of relevant mitigating evidence from the jury’s consideration can never be harmless, we do not read Skipper to preclude the application of a harmless-error analysis to errors relating to the jury’s consideration of that evidence.” Jones, 329 Ark. at 70.

We further note our opinion in Wainwright v. State, 302 Ark. 371, 790 S.W.2d 420 (1990), which the Jones court found to be controlling. In Wainwright, this court was presented with a situation in which the jury, on one verdict form, had unanimously found a mitigating factor existed in the fact that Wainwright did not resist when arrested; on another form, it found that this same mitigating factor did not exist. In resolving the question, this court wrote the following:

Although the jury may have been inconsistent on this factor, it was clear in unanimously finding that three aggravating circumstances existed at the time appellant committed the murder. On the other hand, even giving the appellant the benefit of the mitigating circumstance discussed above, the jury only determined that two mitigating circumstances existed. Upon individual polling, each juror stated that he or she had voted for the death penalty. Obviously, the jury found the aggravating circumstances outweighed those mitigating factors, and the trial court was correct in so holding.

Wainwright, 302 Ark. at 387. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals ultimately affirmed this decision, holding that the jury’s inconsistent findings were not arbitrary or capricious, and therefore did not rise to an Eighth or Fourteenth Amendment violation, where the jury specifically found that three aggravators outweighed beyond a reasonable doubt all mitigating circumstances. See Wainwright v. Lockhart, 80 F.3d 1226 (8th Or.), cert. denied, 519 U.S. 968 (1996).

We conclude that both Jones and Wainwright are controlling here. Although there was apparently an unexplained partial “white-out” in one verdict form, even if we resolve the “white-out” in Robbins’s favor and conclude that the jury found one mitigating factor to exist, the jury nevertheless unanimously concluded that one aggravating circumstance existed, that the aggravating circumstance outweighed beyond a reasonable doubt the mitigating factor found to have existed, and that the aggravating circumstance justified beyond a reasonable doubt a sentence of death. To impose the death penalty, this court has held that a jury need only unanimously agree that one aggravating circumstance exists. Reams v. State, 322 Ark. 336, 909 S.W.2d 324 (1995); Dansby v. State, 319 Ark. 506, 893 S.W.2d 331 (1995); see also Fudge v. State, 341 Ark. 759, 20 S.W.3d 315 (2000) (affirming death sentence where jury found one aggravating factor and one mitigating circumstance, and concluded that the aggravator justified beyond a reasonable doubt a sentence of death). Whether the jurors found the mitigating circumstance to exist or not, they nevertheless unanimously concluded that a death sentence was appropriate.

We also hasten to point out that, following the reading of the verdict, the trial court polled the jurors, reading the verdict form aloud as follows:

Court: And form two on mitigating circumstance or circumstances, [the] findings are:
We unanimously find that the following mitigating circumstance or circumstances probably existed: That Robert A. Robbins has no significant history of prior criminal activity at the time of the murder, again signed by the foreman.
Are each of these findings in form one and two unanimous, that is all twelve of you agree?
Jurors: (Nodding heads up and down.)

After reading the verdict, the court again asked the jurors if “each of you individually, of your own free will, execute and sign — place your signature on form four?” The jurors said “Yes.” If there was any doubt as to what the jurors intended to mark on Form 2, that doubt was resolved by the jury’s answers' to the trial court. Because the jurors agreed that they had unanimously found o'ne mitigating circumstance to exist, but that the aggravating circumstance outweighed the mitigator beyond a reasonable doubt, we must conclude that any purported inconsistencies by the jury in the completing of Form 2 amounted to harmless error, and we affirm Robbins’s death sentence.

Thornton, J., dissents.

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In an intervening per curiam, we relieved Jeff Rosenzweig as counsel and appointed Lea Ellen Fowler to perform the duties outlined in Robbins IV, directing her to abstract the record and assist the court in its determination as to 1) whether any errors raised in the trial court were prejudicial to Robbins,in accordance with Ark. Code Ann. § 16-91-113(a) (1987); 2) whether any plain errors covered by the exceptions outlined in Wicks v. State, 270 Ark. 781, 606 S.W.2d 366 (1980), had occurred; and 3) whether other fundamental safeguards were Mowed. State v. Robbins, 340 Ark. 255, 9 S.W.3d 500 (2000).

The facts of the case clearly supported the jury’s finding of this aggravator. For a discussion of those facts, see Robbins V, 342 Ark. at 265-67.

Section 5-4-603(d) is now found in the 1997 Replacement volume.