Legal Research AI

Ortiz v. Dubois

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1994-03-28
Citations: 19 F.3d 708
Copy Citations
35 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
March 28, 1994
                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                         

No. 93-1656

                        JUAN R. ORTIZ,

                    Petitioner, Appellant,

                              v.

                        LARRY DUBOIS,

                    Respondent, Appellee.

                                         

                         ERRATA SHEET

The opinion of this court issued on March 24, 1994, is amended  as
follows:

On page  17, lines 4-6, change  "we do not  believe that appellant
could meet  the burden  recently placed on  him by the  Supreme Court:
that the instructional error"  to "we believe that the  government has
met its burden of demonstrating that the error did not".

On page 17, line 6, change "had" to "ha[ve]".

On page 24, line 14:  Change "February" to "March".

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEAL
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                         

No. 93-1656

                        JUAN R. ORTIZ,

                    Petitioner, Appellant,

                              v.

                        LARRY DUBOIS,

                    Respondent, Appellee.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
                                                    

                                         

                            Before

                      Cyr, Circuit Judge,
                                        
                Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                            
                  and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                          

                                         

John  M. Thompson,  with whom Linda  J. Thompson was  on brief for
                                                
appellant.
Nancy  W.  Geary, Assistant  Attorney  General,  with  whom  Scott
                                                                  
Harshbarger, Attorney General, was on brief for appellee.
       

                                         

                        March 24, 1994
                                         

          BOWNES, Senior  Circuit Judge.   This is  an appeal
          BOWNES, Senior  Circuit Judge.
                                       

from  the denial  of a  habeas petition  filed by  Juan Ortiz

challenging   his  Massachusetts   felony-murder  conviction.

Appellant argues that his  right to due process of  law under

the Fourteenth  Amendment was violated because:  (1) the jury

was not instructed to  find all of the essential  elements of

felony-murder    beyond   a   reasonable   doubt;   (2)   the

Massachusetts  Supreme  Judicial  Court  (SJC)  affirmed  his

felony-murder   conviction  applying   a  legal   theory  not

presented  to  the  jury;  and  (3)  there  was  insufficient

evidence  to support  his felony-murder conviction  under the

Commonwealth's theory  of guilt.   The district  court denied

the  petition.   We  affirm,  but  for reasons  substantially

different than those expressed by the court below.

                              I.

                          BACKGROUND
                                    

          We  commence with  a  recitation of  the  pertinent

facts.   Appellant's convictions are  based on the  events of

November 12, 1985.  That evening,  appellant and his brother,

Eduardo "Crazy Eddie" Ortiz, left their father's apartment at

8 Stebbins Street in Springfield, Massachusetts to search for

Jose  Rodriguez.   Apparently  there was  an ongoing  dispute

between Eddie  and various  members of the  Rodriguez family.

In addition, there was evidence that several members  of that

family, one who was believed to be Jose, paid a  visit to the

                             -2-
                              2

Stebbins Street apartment on the day  in question looking for

Eddie.  One of the visitors allegedly carried a gun.

          Prior to departing with appellant, Eddie procured a

.357 Magnum and ammunition  from his brother-in-law, which he

placed in his pants pocket.  There was evidence to the effect

that appellant agreed to accompany Eddie in order  to provide

"back up."   On the other hand, appellant introduced evidence

that he  vehemently opposed  his brother's mission,  and went

along in order to serve as a voice of reason.

          With Eddie  behind the  wheel and appellant  at his

side, the two drove off  in search of their prey.   En route,

Eddie pulled over to the curb, removed the gun and ammunition

from  his pocket,  loaded  the  gun,  and placed  it  between

himself  and  his  brother.    After  circling  the  intended

victim's  block several  times, the  brothers were  unable to

locate  him, and returned to  their father's apartment.  Upon

their arrival in front of 8 Stebbins Street, a police cruiser

manned by two officers pulled up behind them.  The driver  of

the cruiser got out  and approached the driver's side  of the

Ortiz vehicle.  As the officer attempted to open the driver's

side door, he was shot  in the face and killed by Eddie.   By

that time the second officer was trying to pull appellant out

of the  passenger side door.   Eddie shot  and killed  him as

well.

                             -3-
                              3

          There was evidence that, as the officers approached

the vehicle, both  appellant and his brother reached  for the

gun, but  Eddie got to  it first.   After the  shooting, both

fled  the   scene.     Appellant   was  apprehended   shortly

thereafter.  Eddie committed suicide before he could be taken

into custody.

          On November  22, 1985  a five count  indictment was

returned against appellant.  He  was charged with two  counts

of second degree murder,  one for the death of  each officer,

unlawful carrying of a  firearm under his control in  a motor

vehicle, and  attempted assault and battery  with a dangerous

weapon, all felonies.1   The Commonwealth informed  appellant

that, with  respect to  the  murder indictment,  it would  be

proceeding on a  theory of felony-murder.   It designated the

latter  two  felonies  as  predicates for  the  felony-murder

charge.

          Appellant's trial  commenced in January  1987.   At

the close of the  Commonwealth's case and again at  the close

of  all  the  evidence  appellant  unsuccessfully  moved  for

findings  of  not  guilty on  all  counts.    The jury  found

appellant guilty  on all  counts.   On attempted  assault and

battery by means  of a dangerous  weapon, the jury  convicted

                    

     1Appellant was also charged with unlawful  possession of
ammunition, a misdemeanor.  Although appellant was ultimately
convicted on  this count, by agreement  with the Commonwealth
he was never sentenced on it.

                             -4-
                              4

appellant of being a "joint venturer" with his brother.  With

regard to the  unlawful carrying charge, the jury  found that

appellant "jointly possessed"  the gun with his  brother.  By

special verdict, the jury  found the unlawful carrying charge

to be the sole  predicate felony underlying the felony-murder

convictions.

          Subsequent to the close  of the evidence but before

the judge instructed the  jury, the Commonwealth informed the

court that, in connection  with the unlawful carrying charge,

it would not  be proceeding  on a joint  venture theory,  but

rather  on a basis that appellant "jointly possessed" the gun

with his  brother.  As  a result, the judge  did not instruct

the  jury  on joint  venture  principles as  to  the unlawful

carrying charge.2

                    

     2At  a  pre-charge conference  after  the  close of  the
evidence  and  just  prior   to  the  charge,  the  following
discussion took place:
               The  Court:    As  I  understand the
          Commonwealth's  case,  the joint  venture
          theory applies to the attempted A&B.
               Commonwealth:  Yes.
               The Court:  You understand that?
               Defendant:  I understand that.
               The Court:  It doesn't apply  to the
          carrying of  the gun other than  its your
          contention there is  joint possession  of
          the gun.
               Commonwealth:     Right,  and  joint
          carrying,  in  that   sense,  when   they
          stopped  the car,  there's only  one gun.
          He took out the cartridges and loaded the
          gun.   In essence, at that  stage, we are
          saying  that both  of them  were carrying
          the gun.

                             -5-
                              5

          After  the jury  rendered  its  verdict,  appellant

renewed  his motion for findings  of not guilty.   The motion

was denied in its  entirety, and appellant appealed.   On its

own  initiative, the  SJC removed the  case from  the Appeals

Court.   The SJC  affirmed the convictions  for felony-murder

and unlawfully carrying a  firearm in a vehicle.   Finding no

overt act, however, it  reversed the conviction for attempted

assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon.

          On  direct appeal,  appellant alleged,  inter alia,
                                                            

that  the evidence  was insufficient  to support  his felony-

murder  conviction, and  that the  jury instructions  on this

charge  were  defective.     The  SJC  rejected   appellant's

sufficiency claim but  indicated that the  jury had not  been

correctly instructed.  Commonwealth v. Ortiz, 560 N.E.2d 698,
                                            

701-02 (Mass. 1990).  Because appellant had not made a timely

objection to the jury charge, however, the SJC did not review

the error for constitutional infirmity, but instead looked to

see whether the error  created a substantial likelihood of  a

miscarriage of justice.  Id. at 701.  The court  held that it
                            

did not.  Id. at 702.
             

          Appellant  then  filed a  petition  for  a writ  of

habeas  corpus in  the United States  District Court  for the

                    

               The Court:  When I talk  about joint
          enterprise  and  joint  possession, I  am
          talking  about two  different things.   I
          will give it to the jury that way.

                             -6-
                              6

District of Massachusetts.  The district court ruled that the

jury instructions on felony-murder  were correct and that the

evidence   supporting   this   charge  was   constitutionally

sufficient.  This appeal ensued.

                             -7-
                              7

                             II.

                          DISCUSSION
                                    

          Appellant's first argument is that his right to due

process  was  violated  because  the jury  was  not  properly

instructed   on   the   elements   of   felony-murder   under

Massachusetts law,  and therefore did not  find every element

of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.  See In re Winship,
                                                            

397 U.S. 358 (1970).   The Commonwealth steadfastly maintains

that there was no error in the jury instructions.

          On  the charge  of  felony-murder the  trial  court

instructed the jury as follows: 

               The   felony-murder    rule,   where
          applicable,  is based on  the theory that
          the  intent  to  commit  the  underlying,
          independent felony is  equivalent to  the
          malice   aforethought  necessary   for  a
          murder conviction.
               In  order  to  find   the  Defendant
          guilty of second degree murder  under the
          felony murder rule, the Commonwealth must
          prove the following three elements beyond
          a reasonable doubt.
               First,  that  there was  an unlawful
          killing.
               Second,   that   the  homicide   was
          committed in  the course  of a felony  or
          attempted   felony   which   felony   was
          independent of the homicide.
               Third, that  under the circumstances
          of this case  the Defendant committed the
          felony   or   attempted  felony   with  a
          conscious disregard for human life.

Although  the  judge  elaborated  more fully  on  the  second

element,   he   incorporated   by  reference   his   previous

definitions   of   the  two   possible   predicate  felonies:

                             -8-
                              8

attempted assault and battery by means  of a dangerous weapon

and unlawful carrying of a firearm in a motor vehicle.3

          On   the  unlawful   carrying   charge  the   judge

instructed  the jury  that  the prosecution  needed to  prove

three elements beyond a reasonable doubt:

               First,  that   the  Defendant,  Juan
          Ortiz, carried a firearm on his person or
          under his control in a motor vehicle.
               Second,  that  what  was carried  or
          that  which  was  under  the  Defendant's
          control  met  the  definition of  firearm
          under our law ....
               And third, that  the Defendant  knew
          that he was carrying the firearm or  that
          he had the firearm under his control in a
          vehicle.
          ...
               Carrying  occurs when  the Defendant
          knowingly   has   more   than   momentary
          possession  or  control   of  a   working
          firearm and  moves it from  one place  to
          another.
          ...
               The   control   exercised   by   the
          Defendant over the area where  the weapon
          is found need not have been exclusive.  A
          Defendant  may have  control of  a weapon
          jointly  with  another  if  he  is  in  a
          position to exercise dominion  or control
          over the weapon and that [sic] he intends
          to do so.
               With  regard  to   the  element   of
          control,  the   Commonwealth  must  prove
          beyond a reasonable doubt that Juan Ortiz
          knew of the presence and the location  of
          the  weapon in  the  motor vehicle,  that
          Juan Ortiz  was in a position  to be able
          to exercise dominion and control over the
          weapon   together   with  an   intent  to
          exercise such dominion and control.

                    

     3The  jury was  also instructed  on the  lesser included
offense of attempted assault by means of a dangerous weapon.

                             -9-
                              9

          The  judge  then  explained  what  the  prosecution

needed to  prove in  order to convict  appellant of  unlawful

carrying, with  specific reference to  the evidence presented

at trial:

               [O]ne,  that   the  Defendant,  Juan
          Ortiz, was a passenger in the  AMC Hornet
          driven  by  Eduardo   when  they  left  8
          Stebbins Street and at the time they were
          apprehended by the two police officers on
          their return.
               And,  two, that  the firearm  was in
          the AMC Hornet and  that Juan Ortiz  knew
          that it was there.
               And,  three,  that  Juan  Ortiz  had
          joint dominion and control of the firearm
          with  Eduardo  and  intended to  exercise
          dominion and control.

          Under the felony-murder  rule in Massachusetts, "`a

homicide  committed  during   the  commission  or   attempted

commission of  a felony is  murder.'"  Commonwealth  v. Pope,
                                                            

549 N.E.2d  1120, 1123 (Mass. 1990)  (quoting Commonwealth v.
                                                          

Silva, 447 N.E.2d  646, 652  (Mass. 1983)).   The common  law
     

doctrine  of felony-murder  is  one of  constructive  malice,

which  allows  the prosecution  to  substitute  the mens  rea

required  for  the underlying  felony for  the state  of mind

required for murder.  See Commonwealth v. Balliro, 209 N.E.2d
                                                 

308, 312 (Mass. 1965).   It thus relieves the  prosecution of

its  burden  of  proving  the  essential  element  of  malice

aforethought.   Id.  Nonetheless,  "`[n]o person can  be held
                   

guilty  of homicide  unless  the act  is  either actually  or

constructively  his, and it cannot be his act in either sense

                             -10-
                              10

unless  committed by  his own  hand or  by someone  acting in

concert  with him  or in  furtherance of  a common  object or

purpose.'"  Balliro, 209  N.E.2d at 312 (quoting Commonwealth
                                                             

v.  Campbell, 7  Allen  541,  544  (1863)).   "`Without  such
            

limitation, a person might be held responsible for acts which

were  not  the  natural   or  necessary  consequence  of  the

enterprise . . . in which he was engaged, and  which he could

not  either in fact or law be  deemed to have contemplated or

intended.'"   Commonwealth  v. Burrell,  452 N.E.2d  504, 506
                                      

(Mass. 1983) (quoting Campbell, 7 Allen at 544).
                              

          This "limitation" gives  rise to the  joint venture

or joint  enterprise requirement.   Under Massachusetts  law,

"one who  aids, commands, counsels, or  encourages commission

of  a crime while sharing with the principal the mental state

required for the crime is [a joint venturer and is therefore]

guilty as a principal  . . . ."   Burrell, 452 N.E.2d at  505
                                         

(quoting Commonwealth  v. Soares, 387 N.E.2d  499, 506, cert.
                                                             

denied, 444 U.S. 881 (1979)).
      

          For the  purposes of  this case, the  joint venture

requirement  operates  in  the  following  manner.    When  a

defendant  is accused  of personally  killing another  in the

course  of committing a felony, then his intent to commit the

underlying felony may be substituted for the malice necessary

for a  murder conviction.    If, on  the  other hand,  it  is

unclear  which one  of several  co-felons killed  the victim,

                             -11-
                              11

then the Commonwealth  must prove  the existence  of a  joint

venture  to commit the underlying felony in order to obtain a

felony-murder conviction  against any of the  co-felons.  See
                                                             

Burrell,  452   N.E.2d  at   505-06.    Similarly,   where  a
       

defendant's  co-felon  was the  actual  killer,  in order  to

convict the defendant of felony-murder, the state is required

to  prove  the existence  of a  joint  venture to  commit the

underlying felony.    See Ortiz,  560 N.E.2d  at 700  (citing
                               

cases).

          The  Commonwealth was  required  to prove  beyond a

reasonable doubt that appellant intentionally  assisted Eddie

in the commission  of the  felony of unlawful  carrying of  a

firearm in  a motor  vehicle,  sharing with  his brother  the

mental state required for  that crime.  See Pope,  549 N.E.2d
                                                

at 1123.  On appellant's direct appeal the SJC held:

               In order to invoke the felony-murder
          rule in  this case, the  Commonwealth was
          required to prove in that regard that the
          defendant  intentionally  encouraged   or
          assisted Eddie Ortiz in the commission of
          a felony and that he did so while sharing
          with   Eddie   Ortiz  the   mental  state
          required for that crime.

Ortiz, 560 N.E.2d  at 700.   The SJC then  defined the  other
     

elements necessary to prove felony-murder.

          Appellant maintains that the  failure to include  a

joint  venture instruction  in connection  with the  unlawful

carrying  charge rendered the  felony-murder instruction with

the carrying charge as the predicate felony defective because

                             -12-
                              12

it  did not  render him  responsible for  Eddie's acts.   The

Commonwealth argues, consistent with its  position throughout

appellant's  case, that  "Massachusetts  state law  does  not

require  a  joint venture  instruction  where,  as here,  the

predicate felony is a possessory crime . . . ."4

          Faced with the SJC's clear statement on the matter,

we have no choice but to agree with appellant.  The SJC ruled

that  Ortiz could  not be  found guilty  of felony  murder on

these facts unless the  Commonwealth proved that Ortiz shared

with  Eddie  the  mental  state required  for  the  predicate

felony.  Id.  But joint possession, the only theory presented
            

by  the Commonwealth,  does  not require  proof of  concerted

action or  shared state of mind,  and thus, does  not offer a

basis  for  vicarious  liability  for the  criminal  acts  of

others.   We  find  it incredible  that the  Commonwealth has

steadfastly  refused to  recognize  the defects  in the  jury

instruction,  especially  in  light  of  the  SJC's   careful

explanation of what the  Commonwealth was required to prove.5

                    

     4In  its brief to  the SJC on  appellant's direct appeal
the  Commonwealth argued  that, "joint  enterprise and  joint
possession may not necessarily  be one and the same,  but, as
these theories apply  to the facts of this  case, there is no
distinction."  Commonwealth's  Brief to the  Supreme Judicial
Court at 18.

     5Of course, the  law of  Massachusetts is  what the  SJC
says it is.   See Cola v. Reardon, 787 F.2d 681, 688 n.5 (1st
                                 
Cir.), cert. denied,  479 U.S. 930 (1986); Tarrant  v. Ponte,
                                                            
751 F.2d 459, 464 (1st Cir. 1985).

                             -13-
                              13

In  fact, even  the SJC  acknowledged that  the jury  was not

properly instructed.  See Ortiz, 560 N.E.2d at 702.
                               

          On  direct  appeal, appellant  argued instructional

error.  But, because he failed to timely object to the charge

as required by the Massachusetts contemporary objection rule,

see Mass. R. Crim.  P. 24(b), the SJC declined to  review his
   

claim on  the  merits  and instead  limited  its  inquiry  to

whether  the error gave rise to a substantial likelihood of a

miscarriage  of   justice.    Ortiz,  560  N.E.2d  at  702.  
                                   

Accordingly, before  we can decide  whether the instructional

error rises to the level of prejudicial constitutional error,

we  must   determine,  as   a  preliminary  matter,   whether

appellant's claim is barred  from federal habeas review under

the procedural default rule of  Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S.
                                                   

72 (1977).

          Wainwright  held that the  failure to timely object
                    

at  trial  to  an  alleged  error  as  required  by  a  state

contemporaneous  objection  rule constitutes  an "independent

and adequate  state ground"  sufficient to foreclose  federal

habeas corpus review of the  alleged error.   Id. at 84.6  In
                                                 

                    

     6A waiver  of the adequate and  independent state ground
arises where the state's highest court declines  to affirm on
the basis  of state law and conducts  a "detailed examination
of federal law and federal cases  . . . necessary to decide a
specific question of  federal law."  McCown  v. Callahan, 726
                                                        
F.2d 1, 3 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 469  U.S. 839 (1984); see
                                                             
Doucette  v.  Vose, 842  F.2d 538,  540  (1st Cir.  1988) (no
                  
waiver unless state court makes it "reasonably clear that its
reasons  for affirming  a conviction  rest upon  its  view of

                             -14-
                              14

order to escape from the preclusive  effect of his procedural

default, appellant is obligated to show both "cause" for, and

"prejudice" from,  his noncompliance with  the Commonwealth's

contemporaneous  objection rule.    Id. at  86-87; Murray  v.
                                                         

Carrier, 477  U.S. 478, 485  (1986).  After  scrutinizing the
       

record, we  can find no  indication of cause  for appellant's

failure   to   comply  with   Massachusetts'  contemporaneous

objection rule.  Even assuming cause, however,  our review of

the record reveals that appellant cannot meet the high burden

of  showing  actual  prejudice.    To   scale  this  wall,  a

petitioner  must demonstrate "not merely that the errors at .

. . trial created  a possibility of prejudice, but  that they

worked to his actual  and substantial disadvantage, infecting

his entire  trial with  error of  constitutional dimensions."

United States v. Frady, 456 U.S. 152, 170 (1982).
                      

          Absent a  showing  of "cause"  and  "prejudice,"  a

procedural default may still be excused where failure to hear

the  claim  would result  in  a  "fundamental miscarriage  of

justice."  Murray, 477 U.S. at 495-96.  This exception may be
                 

                    

federal law").  Since the SJC affirmed solely on the basis of
Massachusetts   law,   and   did  not   reach   the   federal
constitutional question raised  in appellant's direct appeal,
it  did  not  waive his  procedural  default.    See Tart  v.
                                                         
Commonwealth of Mass., 949 F.2d 490, 496 (1st Cir. 1991) (SJC
                     
review for substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice
is a  state law review  and does  not constitute a  waiver of
procedural default); Puleo v. Vose, 830  F.2d 1197, 1200 (1st
                                  
Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 485 U.S. 990 (1988) (same); Gardner
                                                             
v. Ponte, 817  F.2d 183,  185 (1st Cir.),  cert. denied,  484
                                                       
U.S. 863 (1987) (same).

                             -15-
                              15

invoked   where  "a  constitutional  violation  has  probably

resulted  in the conviction of one who is actually innocent .

. . ."  Id. at 496.  In order to satisfy the actual innocence
           

requirement  and  enable an  otherwise  barred constitutional

claim to be considered on the merits, a petitioner "must show

by   clear   and  convincing   evidence   that   but  for   a

constitutional error,  no reasonable  juror would  have found

the petitioner [guilty]."  Sawyer v. Whitley,    U.S.   ,   ,
                                            

112   S.  Ct.  2514,   2517  (1992)  (involving  petitioner's

eligibility for the death penalty).

          Given the evidence  presented at trial,  we believe

that  a  reasonable  jury  could have  found  that  appellant
                                

engaged  in a  joint venture with  his brother  to unlawfully

carry a firearm  in a  motor vehicle.   Therefore, there  has

been  no  fundamental miscarriage  of  justice.   Because  of

appellant's  state  procedural  default,  the  trial  court's

charge  cannot be  challenged for  prejudicial constitutional

error in this proceeding.

          But,  as appellant  points  out in  its brief,  the

Commonwealth has not argued procedural default.  Nonetheless,

this court has the  authority to raise the issue  sua sponte.
                                                            

See  Washington v. James, 996 F.2d 1442 (2d Cir. 1993) ("[w]e
                        

believe that  we may raise  the procedural default  issue sua
                                                             

sponte"); Hardiman  v. Reynolds, 971  F.2d 500, 502-04  & n.4
                               

(10th  Cir. 1992)  (district court  may raise  procedural bar

                             -16-
                              16

defense sua sponte); Hull v. Freeman, 932 F.2d 159, 164 & n.4
                                    

(3d Cir.  1991) ("because a state-law  procedural default can

effect a  bar to federal habeas  review, we think that  it is

appropriate for  us to consider that issue  sua sponte"); cf.
                                                             

Mansfield v.  Champion, 992  F.2d 1098,  1099 n.2  (10th Cir.
                      

1993)  (court  not required  to  raise  state procedural  bar

defense sua sponte); Fagan v. Washington, 942 F.2d 1155, 1157
                                        

(7th Cir. 1991) (by  failing to catch petitioner's procedural

default, state has waived the defense).

          We  have been  unable to  find any  circuit holding

that the  issue cannot be  raised sua  sponte.  In  fact, the
                                             

Second Circuit has held,

          that   the   principles  of   comity  and
          federalism  dictate  that  we  raise  the
          defense  [sua  sponte]  except   in  four
                               
          circumstances:    (1)  where  comity  and
          federalism  are  not implicated  or where
          they  are better  served by  reaching the
          merits; (2) where the state is  itself at
          fault  for  the  procedural default;  (3)
          where   the  alleged   federal  violation
          challenges  the  validity  of  the  state
          trial  itself; or  (4) where  the alleged
          federal   violation   was  motivated   by
          malice.

Washington  v. James, 996  F.2d at 1451.   Although we do not
                    

embrace Washington, we do note that appellant's case does not
                  

fall into any of the four categories.

          The rule of Wainwright is grounded upon concerns of
                                

comity,  and  was  designed  in  large  part  to protect  the

integrity of state procedural rules. See Wainwright, 433 U.S.
                                                   

                             -17-
                              17

at 83;  Engle v. Isaac,  456 U.S. 107,  129 (1982).   Because
                      

these concerns implicate "values that transcend  the concerns

of the  parties to  an action,  . . .  it is  not exclusively

within the parties' control to decide whether such a  defense

should  be raised  or waived."   Hardiman,  971 F.2d  at 503.
                                         

Where, as is the  case here, the state procedural  default is

clear  on the  face of  the  record, it  would be  a needless

expenditure of  scarce judicial resources were  we to address

the merits of appellant's claim.

          Moreover,  even if  we reached  the merits  of this

claim, we believe that  the government has met its  burden of

demonstrating that  the error did not  "`ha[ve] a substantial

and injurious  effect or influence in  determining the jury's

verdict.'"  Brecht v. Abrahamson,     U.S.   ,   , 113 S. Ct.
                                

1710, 1714  (1993) (quoting  Kotteakos v. United  States, 328
                                                        

U.S. 750, 776 (1946)). It follows that we would not issue the

writ on the basis of this error.

          Next, appellant argues  that his writ  should issue

because the SJC  affirmed his  conviction on  a legal  theory

that  was  not  presented  to  the  jury.    More  precisely,

appellant contends that, because  the Commonwealth asked that

the  jury be  charged as  to joint  possession and  not joint

venture  principles in connection  with the unlawful carrying

charge,  it necessarily  proceeded  on the  theory that  Juan
                       

Ortiz personally killed the victims.  According to appellant,

                             -18-
                              18

it  follows  that   "the  jury   instructions  required   the

government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Juan Ortiz

was  personally responsible  for  the acts  that killed  each

victim."7    Therefore,  appellant  concludes  that  the  SJC

assessed  the facts  of his  case against  a legal  theory --

joint venture -- that did not reflect  the theory on which he

was  tried.   In support  of his  position,  appellant relies

primarily on Cole v. Arkansas, 333 U.S. 196 (1948).
                             

          In Cole, an information charged the defendants with
                 

violation  of   2 of an Arkansas criminal statute.  They were

subsequently  tried and convicted  of   2  violations.  Cole,
                                                            

333  U.S.  at   198.    The  state   supreme  court  affirmed

defendants' convictions on the ground that they violated    1

of the same statute, which  describes an offense separate and

distinct from the offense described in   2.  Id.  The Supreme
                                                

Court  found  that the  defendants  "were  clearly tried  and

convicted by  the jury  for promoting an  unlawful assemblage

made an offense by   2, and were not tried for the offense of

using  force and violence as described in    1."  Id. at 199.
                                                     

The  Court  added  that,  "without  completely  ignoring  the

judge's charge, the jury could not have convicted petitioners

for    having   committed   the   separate,   distinct,   and

                    

     7In effect, on this claim appellant argues that the jury
instructions were not defective, but rather, embodied a valid
theory  of felony-murder  which did  not  require proof  of a
joint venture.

                             -19-
                              19

substantially different offense defined in   1."  Id. at 200.
                                                     

We   have  recognized,  consistent   with  Cole,  that  "[a]n
                                               

appellate court  may not lawfully  sustain a conviction  on a

theory entirely different from the theory upon which the jury

was  charged."  United States  v. Gomes, 969  F.2d 1290, 1295
                                       

(1st Cir. 1992); see United States v. Anguilo, 897 F.2d 1169,
                                             

1197 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 845 (1990).
                             

          An  appellate  court  may  not go  outside  of  the

prosecution's trial  theory to affirm a  conviction because a

criminal defendant  must have  notice of the  charges against

him and an opportunity to  be heard in a trial on  the issues

raised by those charges.  Cole,  333 U.S. at 201.  Further, a
                              

criminal defendant also  has the  right to trial  by jury  as

opposed to trial by  an appellate tribunal.  See,  e.g., Dunn
                                                             

v. United States, 442 U.S. 100 (1979) (appeals court affirmed
                

conviction based upon specific acts, the  alleged criminality

of  which the defendant  was never afforded  notice); Cola v.
                                                          

Reardon, 787  F.2d 681 (1st  Cir.) (same), cert.  denied, 479
                                                        

U.S. 930 (1986).

          According  to appellant, Cole  is controlling here.
                                       

We  disagree.  In general, the concerns expressed in Cole are
                                                         

implicated  where an  appellate court  in effect  "charges" a

defendant  with a  new  crime, and  then  concludes that  the

evidence  was sufficient  to  support a  conviction for  that

previously uncharged  offense.    Thus,  if  the  prosecution

                             -20-
                              20

decides to  submit a case to  the jury on one  of two equally

valid   legal  theories,  and   the  jury   convicts  despite

insufficient evidence,  on appeal the  court cannot resurrect

the conviction  by ruling that there  was sufficient evidence

to  convict  on  the  alternative  theory.    See  Saylor  v.
                                                         

Cornelius,  845 F.2d  1401, 1403-04  (6th Cir.  1988); United
                                                             

States v. Hill, 835 F.2d 759, 764 (10th Cir. 1987).   This is
              

not what happened here.

          In  the   first  place,  contrary   to  appellant's

contention,  the  jury  instructions  did  not  require   the
                                              

Commonwealth  to prove  that appellant  shot the  officers in

order  to convict him of felony-murder.  Rather, the jury was

instructed that, although the Commonwealth did not claim that
                                                  

appellant killed the officers, it  could still convict him of

felony-murder  if, inter  alia,  he committed  the felony  of
                              

unlawful carrying  while jointly possessing the  gun with his

brother.8

          Furthermore,  after  scanning  the record,  we  are

unable  to  see  how  the  concerns  expressed  in  Cole  are
                                                        

implicated in this case.  From the outset  of this action the

Commonwealth  and   the  defense  proceeded  on   the  shared

                    

     8In   fact,   appellant  has   acknowledged   that  "the
government's  `joint possession'  theory  as a  felony-murder
theory  of joint  accountability  is a  fiction  in terms  of
Massachusetts law."   This comports  with the  view that  the
jury  instructions did  not require  the jurors  to determine
whether appellant  personally shot the  victims, but  rather,
were defective under state law.

                             -21-
                              21

understanding that  Eddie killed the officers,  and that Juan

could  be convicted  of felony-murder  only  on the  basis of

Eddie's  actions.    This  is consistent  with  the  bill  of

particulars, this was  how the case  was presented at  trial,

and this is  how the jury was instructed.  The record clearly

demonstrates  that  the  Commonwealth sought  to  prove  that

appellant  did not want to  restrain his brother, but rather,

shared  his evil  intentions, and  appellant sought  to prove

just the opposite.  Appellant knew the specific acts that the

Commonwealth endeavored to prove  at trial, he knew precisely

with what  crime he was charged,  and he knew the  basis upon

which  the   alleged  acts  constituted  the  crime  charged.

Moreover,  appellant  is unable  to  point  to any  prejudice

resulting from the SJC's  alleged due process violation, such

as the inability  to prepare a  proper defense.   And, as  we

have  already held, any  constitutional prejudice  that might

have  been  engendered  by  the  variance  between  the  jury

instructions and Massachusetts law cannot be reviewed in this

proceeding.

          This is  an instructional  error case.   This court

has recognized that

          [i]n   the   traditional  contemporaneous
          objection situation, the error inheres in
          the   judge's   charge;   thus,   it   is
          reasonable  to  require objection  at the
          time  of   the  error.     In  the   Dunn
                                                   
          situation, however, the error  inheres in
          the appellate court affirmance; thus, the

                             -22-
                              22

          error has not yet occurred at the time of
          the judge's charge.

Cola,  787  F.2d at  694.   In  the present  case,  the error
    

complained  of "inheres in  the judge's charge,"  and not "in

the  appellate court  affirmance."   The SJC did  not violate

appellant's due  process rights by recognizing  that the jury

was improperly  instructed on felony-murder,  and then ruling

that the evidence adduced at  trial was sufficient to warrant

a conviction under Massachusetts  law.  That the Commonwealth

misunderstood the legal principles underlying its "theory" of

guilt,  and  therefore  asked   for  and  received,  with  no

objection,  a  legally deficient  jury instruction,  does not

place this case under  the shadow cast  by Cole.  In  effect,
                                               

appellant asks  us to review his claim of instructional error

through the back door.  We decline to do so.

          Appellant's final  argument is  little more than  a

repetition of his previous argument.  According to appellant,

because the  jury instructions necessarily required  proof of

the fact that  he personally killed the  officers, this court

should look to whether the evidence was sufficient to support

a  conviction  under that  theory.    Because  there  was  no

evidence to that effect, appellant argues that the SJC should

have  found, and  we must  find, that there  was insufficient

evidence to support his felony-murder conviction.

          For the reasons that we have already explained, the

Commonwealth did  not proceed upon the  theory that appellant

                             -23-
                              23

personally killed the officer,  and the jury instructions did

not  require proof  of that  fact.   Therefore,  neither this

court  nor the SJC is  required to review  the sufficiency of

the evidence against  that theory.   When a  petitioner in  a

habeas action challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, the

court's  task  is to  determine  whether  "after viewing  the

evidence in the  light most favorable to the prosecution, any

rational  trier  of  fact  could  have  found  the  essential

elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt."  Jackson v.
                                                          

Virginia,  443 U.S. 307, 324  (1979).  This  standard must be
        

applied  "with  specific reference  to  the  elements of  the

offense as defined by state law."  Campbell v. Fair, 838 F.2d
                                                   

1, 4 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 488 U.S. 847 (1988).   The SJC
                             

did just this, and concluded that the evidence was sufficient

to uphold appellant's conviction.  Appellant does not contest

the accuracy of that ruling.

          Because  one of appellant's  claims is procedurally

defaulted, and the other  two lack merit, his petition  for a

writ of habeas corpus is denied.

          Affirmed.
                  

          Dissent follows.

                             -24-
                              24

               STAHL,  Circuit Judge, dissenting.  Although I
                                    

agree  with the majority that a procedural default could have

been argued  in this case, and  although I can see  the logic

behind   raising  such   a   default  sua   sponte  in   many
                                                  

circumstances, I find myself  persuaded by Judge Oakes's view

that  "the  strength of  petitioner's  case"  also should  be

considered by  courts deciding  whether or  not to raise  the

default sua sponte.  See Washington, 996 F.2d at 1454 (Oakes,
                                   

J., dissenting).   And, because,  in my view,  a non-harmless

error undermining the structural guarantee that the jury will

make  the  requisite  elemental  determinations  clearly  was
                                                        

committed  here, I  would  reach the  merits of  petitioner's

claim and grant the writ.

               In my  dissenting opinion  in Libby  v. Duval,
                                                            

No. 93-1588, slip op. at     (1st Cir. Mar.   , 1994) (Stahl,

J., dissenting), I explain  in detail why I believe  that the

whole-record  harmless-error review  prescribed by  Brecht v.
                                                          

Abrahamson, 113  S. Ct. 1710,  1722 (1993) cannot  and should
          

not  be  utilized  by courts  reviewing  instructional errors

which  have the effect  of precluding juries  from making the

requisite factual findings in  criminal trials.9  Instead, as

I  argue in  Libby, habeas courts  reviewing such  errors for
                  

                    

9.  I therefore regard as misleading the  majority's citation
to  Brecht while indicating in dictum that it would not grant
          
the writ even  were it  to reach the  merits of  petitioner's
claim.  See ante at 17.
                

                             -24-
                              24

harmlessness  should employ  the  test set  forth in  Justice

Scalia's concurring  opinion  in Carella  v. California,  491
                                                       

U.S. 263 (1989).  Because the error here -- failure to charge

the  jury that  it must  find a  joint venture  to unlawfully

carry  a firearm  in a  motor  vehicle in  order  to use  the

unlawful carrying  charge as  a predicate offense  for felony

murder  --  had exactly  such an  effect,  see id.  at 268-71
                                                  

(explaining how  instructions  misdescribing (or  failing  to

describe) elements  of  crimes and  instructions  setting  up

mandatory presumptions on elements of crimes tend to preclude

juries  from  making   requisite  elemental   determinations)

(Scalia,  J.,  concurring), I  would  review  the error  here

according to  the dictates of the Carella  concurrence.  That
                                         

is to  say, I would  ask (1)  whether the omitted  charge was

relevant  only to an element  of a crime  of which petitioner

was acquitted;  (2) whether  the omitted charge  was relevant

only to an element which petitioner admitted;  or (3) whether

no rational jury could  have found what it actually  did find
                                                             

and  not also  find the  charged element.   See  id.  at 271.
                                                    

Because prongs one and two of the Carella test clearly do not
                                         

apply, I will focus on prong three in conducting my analysis.

               While it is clear that the jury did find  both

a  joint venture to commit the crime of attempted assault and

battery  with  a dangerous  weapon  and  that petitioner  was

unlawfully carrying a  firearm in a  motor vehicle (under  an

                             -25-
                              25

instruction  that  required it  to  find  intent to  exercise

dominion and control over the firearm), it seems to me that a

rational  jury,   having  made  these   findings,  would  not
                                                             

necessarily also have found that there was a joint venture to
           

commit  the crime of unlawfully carrying a firearm in a motor

vehicle.  With regard to the impact of the finding that there

was a joint  venture to commit attempted assault and battery,

the  record  reveals  that  petitioner and  his  brother  had

abandoned  the attempted  assault  and battery  prior to  the
                                                        

killings.   Thus,  the intent  underlying that  charged crime

must  necessarily have vanished  prior to the  murders.  (The

jury's  special   verdict  form,  which  indicates  that  the

attempted  assault and  battery  felony was  not a  predicate
                                                

offense for purposes of the felony murder conviction, implies

as much.).   This  means,  of course,  that even  if the  two

intents  were somehow  viewed as  "functional equivalent[s],"

see  id., in nature (and  I do not think that  they can be so
        

viewed), the  shared intent  underlying the joint  venture to

commit the  attempted assault  and battery finding  cannot be
                                                          

the very same as  the shared intent which would  underlie any

(unmade) finding that there was a joint venture to unlawfully

carry a firearm.

               The  fact  that,  in  finding  the  petitioner

guilty  of unlawfully  carrying the  firearm, the  jury found

that  petitioner  "had  joint  dominion and  control  of  the

                             -26-
                              26

firearm with  Eduardo and  intended to exercise  dominion and

control" presents,  for  me,  a  closer  question.    As  the

majority opinion  notes (and  as the  SJC observed  on direct

appeal),  the  missing joint  venture  finding encompasses  a

determination that petitioner  "`intentionally encouraged  or

assisted Eddie Ortiz in  the commission of a felony  and that

he did so  while sharing  with Eddie Ortiz  the mental  state

required  for that crime.'"  Ante at  11 (quoting  Ortiz, 560
                                                        

N.E.2d at 700.)  In  my view, the jury's "joint dominion  and

control" finding is the  functional equivalent of "the shared
                   

mental state" necessary for  a joint venture finding.   It is

not,  however, the  functional equivalent  of a  finding that

petitioner  "intentionally encouraged  or assisted"  Eddie in
                                                  

the commission of the unlawful carrying of the weapon.  Thus,

the record  is  devoid  of  factual findings  which  are  "so

closely  related to the ultimate  fact [to be  found] that no

rational  jury could  find those  facts without  also finding

the[e] ultimate fact.'"  Id.  Accordingly, the error here was
                            

not harmless.   See id.;  see also Libby,  slip op. at    -  
                                        

(Stahl, J., dissenting).

               I therefore would grant the writ.

                             -27-
                              27