Burks, Jr. v. Duboise

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                             

No. 94-2197

                       OSCAR N. BURKS, JR.,
                      Petitioner, Appellant,

                               v. 

                         LARRY E. DUBOIS,
                      Respondent, Appellee.

                                             

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

            [Hon. Nancy Gertner, U.S. District Judge]
                                                              

                                             

                              Before

                      Selya, Cyr and Boudin,

                         Circuit Judges.
                                                 

                                             

     Neil F. Colleran for appellant.
                               
     Gregory I.  Massing, Assistant  Attorney General,  with whom
                                  
Scott Harshbarger, Attorney General, was on brief, for appellee.
                           

                                             

                           June 8, 1995

                                             

          SELYA, Circuit Judge.   Petitioner-appellant, Oscar  N.
                    SELYA, Circuit Judge.
                                        

Burks, Jr., asked the federal district court to invoke its habeas

corpus powers, 28 U.S.C.     2241-2254 (1988), and set  aside his

state conviction on charges of trafficking in cocaine, exploiting

a  minor   for  illegal  drug-related   purposes,  and  illicitly

conveying  articles to a state penal institution.  See Mass. Gen.
                                                                

L.  ch. 94C,    32E,  32K  (1989); Mass.  Gen. L.  ch. 268,    31

(1989).     The  district  court  declined  to  issue  the  writ.

Petitioner appeals.  We affirm.

                                I
                                          I
                                           

                            Background
                                      Background
                                                

          The stage can be set for consideration of  this single-

issue appeal without lengthy  elaboration.  In doing so,  we take

the  facts   in  the   conventional  manner  prescribed   by  the

jurisprudence  of  habeas  corpus.    See  28  U.S.C.     2254(d)
                                                   

(stipulating presumption  of correctness  that attaches  to state

court findings of  fact in federal habeas proceedings);  see also
                                                                           

Miller v. Fenton, 474 U.S. 104, 112-15 (1985).
                          

          Petitioner,   a   correctional  officer   at   a  state

penitentiary in Gardner,  Massachusetts, agreed to  facilitate an

inmate's  scheme to smuggle contraband into the prison.  The plan

called  for  petitioner to  pick  up  an ounce  of  cocaine  at a

predetermined spot outside the institution and deliver  it to the

inmate  in  return  for  a  $200  fee  plus  a  jot  of  cocaine.

Petitioner  did not know that his newfound crony was fronting for

the state police.

                                2


          After  one  unsuccessful   attempt,  the  inmate   told

petitioner  that the drugs and the money  would be deposited in a

residential mailbox in Worcester.  On August 15, 1991, petitioner

sojourned to that  city, located the house (which, unbeknownst to

him,  was under intensive  police surveillance), and  drove by it

several  times.  He then visited  a nearby doughnut shop where he

invented a cock-and-bull  story, the  gist of which  was that  he

wished to  retrieve a  letter from his  girlfriend's mailbox  but

could not do  so himself.  On this basis  he recruited a 14-year-

old boy as an unwitting accomplice,  agreeing to pay the lad  $30

to fetch the prize from the mailbox.

          The pair reconnoitered the drop site.   Petitioner then

watched  as the boy approached  the mailbox and  withdrew a paper

bag.   Instead  of waiting  for his  courier to  return, however,

petitioner  drove  away.   We think  a  jury could  properly have

inferred either that petitioner's  nerve failed or that  he spied

the  stakeout.  At any rate,  he never obtained possession of the

bag. 

          In  due  course, the  authorities  arrested petitioner,

charged  him, and  proceeded to  trial.   After the  Commonwealth

presented its case, the petitioner testified in his  own defense.

He admitted colloguing with the inmate.  He further admitted that

he  knew the  mailbox  contained both  drugs  and money,  but  he

assumed that they would  be in separate envelopes.  He swore that

he only intended to pocket the cash, not  to deliver the cocaine.

When  he saw the paper bag, he thought that it probably contained

                                3


drugs.  At that point, he panicked and fled. 

          On cross-examination the  prosecutor asked  petitioner:

"And, sir, you knew that that package contained drugs, and still,

sir, you sent that  fourteen year old kid to  retrieve it, didn't

you,  sir?"   The  superior court  judge,  sua sponte,  ruled the
                                                               

question  improper, interjecting:   "That's argumentative."   The

prosecutor immediately shifted gears.1

          During   closing   argument,   the  prosecutor,   using

rhetorical questions to flay her prey, took unwarranted liberties

with this portion of her cross-examination.  She argued:

               And what  does  the defendant  do?    He
          leaves the  fourteen year  old high  and dry,
          knowing   I asked  him.  I said to  him, "You
          knew  that  package  contained  cocaine,  but
          still   you  sent  a  fourteen  year  old  to
          retrieve it?"

               And what did the defendant say?  "Yes."

Petitioner's  trial counsel  did not  object to  the prosecutor's

flagrant misstatement.   In the  end, the  jury found  petitioner

guilty.

          Following  the  imposition   of  sentence,   petitioner

secured the services  of successor  counsel and moved  for a  new

trial,  arguing  that  the  prosecutor's  distortion  had  caused

justice to miscarry.   The  trial judge rejected  the motion  and

petitioner appealed.   The Massachusetts  Appeals Court summarily

                    
                              

     1At first, it was thought that petitioner did not answer the
question.  In  considering petitioner's motion  for a new  trial,
however, the judge queried the court reporter, who  consulted her
tape  recording of the testimony and reported that petitioner had
in fact responded audibly, stating:  "No. I did not."

                                4


affirmed  the denial  of relief, see  Commonwealth v.  Burks, 608
                                                                      

N.E.2d 1066 (Mass. App. Ct. 1993) (table) (unpublished rescript),

and the Supreme Judicial Court declined further appellate review,

see Commonwealth v. Burks, 617 N.E.2d 639 (Mass. 1993) (table).
                                   

          Little daunted, petitioner sought habeas corpus in  the

federal district  court.  He  advanced a single claim:   that the

prosecutor's  misstatement  of  the  evidence  in  her  summation

deprived him  of due  process and  thwarted his  right to  a fair

trial.  The  respondent, a state correctional  official, moved to

dismiss, asserting  that because  petitioner had not  objected to

the  misstatement  when  it  was  uttered  in  state  court,  his

constitutional claim could not be entertained in a federal habeas

proceeding.  Petitioner  acknowledged the procedural  default but

nonetheless  opposed dismissal  on two  bases.   He said  that he

could demonstrate  cause for, and prejudice  from, the procedural

default; and, moreover, that  absent habeas relief, a miscarriage

of justice  would go  uncorrected.  Judge  Gertner, adopting  the

report and  recommendation of a magistrate  judge, overrode these

objections and dismissed the petition.  This appeal followed.

                                II
                                          II
                                            

                             Analysis
                                       Analysis
                                               

                                A.
                                          A
                                           

                   Applicable Legal Principles
                             Applicable Legal Principles
                                                        

          The  habeas  corpus  anodyne  is  designed  neither  to

provide an additional layer  of conventional appellate review nor

to  correct garden-variety errors,  whether of fact  or law, that

                                5


may stain  the record  of a state  criminal trial.   Rather,  the

remedy is limited to  the consideration of federal constitutional

claims.   See  Herrera v.  Collins, 113  S. Ct.  853, 860  (1993)
                                            

(affirming that the purpose of federal habeas corpus review is to

ensure  that individuals are  not imprisoned in  violation of the

Constitution); see  also Barefoot v.  Estelle, 463 U.S.  880, 887
                                                       

(1983) ("Federal courts  are not  forums in  which to  relitigate

state  trials.").  Thus, federal habeas review is precluded, as a

general proposition, when a state  court has reached its decision

on  the basis  of an adequate  and independent  state-law ground.

See  Coleman v.  Thompson, 501  U.S. 722,  729 (1991);  Harris v.
                                                                        

Reed, 489 U.S. 255, 262 (1989); Ortiz v. Dubois, 19 F.3d 708, 714
                                                         

(1st Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 739 (1995).
                                       

          A defendant's failure to object  in a timely manner  at

his  state   criminal  trial  may  constitute   an  adequate  and

independent state ground  sufficient to trigger  the bar rule  so

long  as the  state  has a  consistently applied  contemporaneous

objection  requirement and the state  court has not  waived it in

the particular case by resting its decision on some other ground.

See Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. 72, 87 (1977); Puleio  v. Vose,
                                                                          

830 F.2d 1197, 1199 (1st Cir.  1987), cert. denied, 485 U.S.  990
                                                            

(1988).  Hence, a state court decision  resting upon a finding of

procedural default   such  as a decision rooted in  a defendant's

noncompliance   with   an   unwaived  contemporaneous   objection

requirement     forecloses  federal  habeas  review   unless  the

petitioner can  demonstrate cause  for the default  and prejudice

                                6


stemming therefrom, or, alternatively,  unless the petitioner can

show  that a refusal to consider the merits of the constitutional

claim will work a miscarriage of justice.   See Coleman, 501 U.S.
                                                                 

at 750; Harris, 489 U.S. at 262.
                        

          This  framework is  directly pertinent  to petitioner's

appeal.   Massachusetts has  a  routinely enforced,  consistently

applied contemporaneous  objection rule.  See,  e.g., Puleio, 830
                                                                      

F.2d  at 1199; Commonwealth v. Fluker, 385 N.E.2d 256, 261 (Mass.
                                               

1979); see also  Mass. R. Crim.  P. 22.  Petitioner  honored this
                         

rule  only  in  the breach;  after  all,  his  petition is  based

exclusively on  his claim that the  prosecutor misrepresented the

evidence   when  summing   up,   yet  he   failed   to  lodge   a

contemporaneous  objection at the time the misrepresentation took

wing.  Moreover, the state  courts relied on, and did not  waive,

the contemporaneous objection requirement; the appeals court, for

instance, rested its rejection of petitioner's belated complaints

about the prosecutor's misstatement squarely on this adequate and

independent state  ground.2   Consequently, we  have before  us a

classic  example  of a  procedural  default,  and petitioner  can

succeed  in his habeas case only by showing cognizable cause for,

                    
                              

     2To be sure, the  appeals court also reviewed the  merits of
petitioner's contentions to see  whether a miscarriage of justice
lurked in the record.   But, given the contours  of Massachusetts
practice, see,  e.g., Mass. Gen. L.  ch. 211A,    10 (1989), that
                              
sort of limited review, clearly labelled, does not work a waiver.
See  Tart v.  Massachusetts, 949  F.2d 490,  496 (1st  Cir. 1991)
                                     
(explaining  that state appellate  review under the Massachusetts
miscarriage  of justice standard does not  amount to state waiver
of  the contemporaneous objection rule); Puleio, 830 F.2d at 1200
                                                         
(same).

                                7


and  cognizable  prejudice  from,   his  procedural  default  or,

alternatively, by demonstrating that  the federal court's failure

to address the claim on habeas review will occasion a miscarriage

of justice.

                                B.
                                          B.
                                           

                       Cause and Prejudice
                                 Cause and Prejudice
                                                    

          Faced  by a  state-court  judgment that  rests upon  an

adequate and  independent state  ground, a habeas  petitioner has

the burden of proving both cause and prejudice.  See Coleman, 501
                                                                      

U.S.  at 750;  Wainwright, 433  U.S. at  87; Puleio, 830  F.2d at
                                                             

1202.  Here, we start   and end   with cause.3

          In the  habeas context,  cause is a  term of  art.   To

excuse a procedural  default, a petitioner's cause must relate to

an objective factor, external to  the defense, that thwarted  (or

at least  substantially obstructed) the efforts  of the defendant

or his counsel  to obey the state's procedural rule.   See Murray
                                                                           

v.  Carrier, 477 U.S. 478,  488 (1986); Magee  v. Harshbarger, 16
                                                                       

F.3d  469, 471  (1st  Cir.  1994).    Mere  attorney  error,  not

amounting  to  ineffective   assistance  in  a   constitutionally

significant  sense, see, e.g., Scarpa  v. Dubois, 38  F.3d 1 (1st
                                                          

Cir.  1994), cert. denied, 115  S. Ct. 940  (1995) and additional
                                                                           
                    
                              

     3Because we descry no  cognizable cause sufficient to excuse
petitioner's procedural  default, see infra, we  have no occasion
                                                     
to discuss the  prejudice prong  of the two-part  inquiry in  any
great  detail.  We add in passing, however, that, having reviewed
the  full  record, the  state's case  appears  to have  been very
muscular.   Viewed in light of all the evidence, the prosecutor's
incorrect  statement does  not seem  to us  to have  actually and
substantially prejudiced  petitioner.  See, e.g.,  Ortiz, 19 F.3d
                                                                  
at 714 (discussing prejudice standard).

                                8


petition for cert. filed  (U.S. Oct. 27, 1994) (No.  94-9157), is
                                  

insufficient  to constitute  cause.4   See Coleman,  501 U.S.  at
                                                            

753; Murray,  477 U.S.  at 488;  Puleio, 830 F.2d  at 1201.   The
                                                 

principle  hardly could be to  the contrary.   If inadvertence of

counsel,  without  more,  were  deemed  to  constitute sufficient

cause, the cause requirement would be reduced to little more than

a speed bump on the road to a federal forum.

          In  an effort to  show that his  procedural default was

caused by an external, objective impediment, Burks avers that his

trial  counsel  did  not  hear  the  answer  to  the prosecutor's

improper question  (quoted supra  p. 4).   This  fact, petitioner
                                          

contends,  caused counsel's  later  silence when  the  prosecutor

incorrectly recounted the  testimony.  Petitioner's  thesis melts

under the hot glare of scrutiny.

          Assuming  for  the  sake  of  argument  that  counsel's

failure to hear a  witness' response may constitute  an external,

objective impediment under  some circumstances,  cf. Puleio,  830
                                                                     

F.2d  at 1201  (discussing,  but sidestepping  as unexhausted,  a

claim  that trial  counsel's  hearing impairment  operated as  an

external,   objective   impediment   to   compliance   with   the

Massachusetts contemporaneous  objection rule),  it cannot do  so

here.  To  provide cause, a factor  not only must be  objectively

ascertainable  and external to  the defense,  but also  must have

brought  about  the event  of default.    See generally  James S.
                                                                 
                    
                              

     4We  note   that  petitioner  did  not   assert  ineffective
assistance  of counsel as a basis for relief in his habeas corpus
application, nor has he tendered such a claim on appeal.

                                9


Liebman, Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Procedure   24.3,  at
                                                               

381-83 (Supp. 1993).  In other words, cause, as the name implies,

must  bear   a  causal  relationship  to   noncompliance.    That

relationshipis utterlylacking inthis instance. Weexplain briefly.

          There  is no  foundation in  the record  for suggesting

that  counsel did not hear the  trial judge brand the question as

being ultracrepidarian.  And  because the question itself  was an

improper  subject  for  closing  argument,  defense  counsel  had

precisely  the  same  incentive  to pounce  on  the  prosecutor's

subsequent reference to it whether Burks answered "no" or did not

answer at all.  In addition, even if defense counsel did not hear

Burks respond in the  negative, the prosecutor's misquotation was
                                        

still a potentially harmful distortion, and defense counsel could

and  should  have  objected  when the  prosecutor  asserted  that

petitioner had answered in the affirmative.  On this basis, then,
                                                    

the  lower court  correctly concluded  that petitioner  failed to

show  any  legally  cognizable  cause sufficient  to  excuse  his

procedural default.

                                C.
                                          C.
                                           

                      Miscarriage of Justice
                                Miscarriage of Justice
                                                      

          Even absent a showing of cause and prejudice, a federal

court exercising its habeas  powers should nonetheless overlook a

procedural default and hear a barred constitutional  claim on the

merits if  its failure  to do  so would  result in a  fundamental

miscarriage of justice.  See Murray, 477 U.S. at 495-96.  This is
                                             

a narrow exception to the cause-and-prejudice imperative,  seldom

                                10


to be used, and explicitly tied to a showing of actual innocence.

See Schlup v. Delo, 115 S. Ct. 851, 864 (1995); Ortiz, 19 F.3d at
                                                               

714; see also  Watkins v. Ponte, 987 F.2d 27,  31 (1st Cir. 1993)
                                         

(explaining  that,  in  a   habeas  case,  the  "petitioner  must

supplement the constitutional violation with a `colorable showing

of factual innocence'") (quoting McCleskey v. Zant, 499 U.S. 467,
                                                            

495 (1991)).

          To  be sure,  a habeas  petitioner  need not  prove his

innocence beyond all  doubt in order  to reach the safe  haven of

the  miscarriage exception:   it suffices  if the  petitioner can

show  a  probability  that  a  reasonable  jury  would  not  have

convicted  but for  the constitutional  violation.5   See Murray,
                                                                          

477 U.S. at 496.

          Here, petitioner has not made a satisfactory showing of

actual innocence.  His  argument on this point alludes  to no new

information  suggesting  innocence,   but  merely  rehashes   the

testimony  adduced at  his  trial  in  an  attempt  to  foster  a

suspicion that  the prosecutor's  overreaching may have  been the

straw that broke the dromedary's back  and, thus, led the jury to

convict.   However, the miscarriage of  justice standard requires
                    
                              

     5Respondent  asserts that Sawyer v. Whitley, 112 S. Ct. 2514
                                                          
(1992), has placed  a gloss  on Murray,  and now  requires, in  a
                                                
noncapital  case,  that  petitioner  make  a  showing  of  actual
innocence  by "clear and  convincing" evidence, rather  than on a
probability standard.  Id. at  2523.  For two reasons,  we cannot
                                    
embrace  this thesis,  at  least at  the  present time.    First,
respondent may be reading Sawyer too broadly, especially in light
                                          
of  Schlup.  Second,  we note that, in  all events, the appellant
                    
cannot satisfy  even the  probability standard limned  in Murray.
                                                                          
Consequently,  we leave to  another day the  question of Sawyer's
                                                                         
(and Schlup's) effect, if any, on the lessons of Murray.
                                                                 

                                11


more than a  possibility of prejudice, see Schlup,  115 S. Ct. at
                                                           

867  & n.45;  Sawyer v.  Whitley, 112  S. Ct.  2514, 2522  & n.13
                                          

(1992), and petitioner's excursion through the record does not by

any  stretch  of the  imagination  show a  probability  of actual

innocence.   Accordingly, his  speculation about what  might   or

might not    have been the  outcome of an error-free  trial is an

exercise in futility.    Put another way, petitioner's recreation

of what transpired in the state  trial court shows, at most, that

there was a  legitimate jury question  as to his guilt,  and that

the prosecutor placed her thumb on  the scales of justice at  one

point.   This is not  enough to qualify  for extraordinary relief

under  Schlup and  its  precursors.   As  Justice Stevens  wrote,
                       

"[w]ithout any new evidence of innocence, even the existence of a

concededly meritorious  constitutional violation is not in itself

sufficient to establish a miscarriage of justice that would allow

a  habeas court to reach the merits  of a barred claim."  Schlup,
                                                                          

115 S. Ct. at 861.

          We  need go  no further.   Because  petitioner has  not

shown that the failure to entertain his constitutional claim more

likely  than not  will  result in  a  fundamental miscarriage  of

justice, his habeas petition remains a casualty of his procedural

default.

Affirmed.
          Affirmed
                  

                                12