David Mathias v. Superintendent Frackville SCI

869 F.3d 175, 2017 WL 3687781, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 16394
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 2017
Docket14-4694 & 15-2694
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 869 F.3d 175 (David Mathias v. Superintendent Frackville SCI) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Mathias v. Superintendent Frackville SCI, 869 F.3d 175, 2017 WL 3687781, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 16394 (3d Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

KRAUSE, Circuit Judge.

Undergirding federal habeas law is an extensive procedural framework that limits when and how a petitioner may raise post-conviction claims for relief and which claims are reviewable in federal court. Concerns of federalism, comity, and finality shape this complex framework and have required us to generate specific rules for when a petitioner’s claim may be adjudicated on the merits. In this appeal brought by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania from the District Court’s grant of habeas relief on petitioner’s first-degree murder conviction, we must interpret and apply a number of these rules to determine whether we have jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(3) over petitioner’s untimely cross-appeal from the District Court’s denial of habeas relief on his conspiracy conviction; if so, whether Rule 4(a)(3)’s timeliness requirement should be waived in the interests of justice; and whether a certificate of appealability (COA) is required on cross-appeal. In addition, on the Commonwealth’s appeal, we must consider whether the District Court was correct to conclude that petitioner’s due process claim and related ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim based on purportedly unconstitutional jury instructions were properly exhausted in state court, are meritorious, and withstand harmless error review. For the reasons set forth below, we will dismiss petitioner’s cross-appeal and, on the Commonwealth’s appeal, we will reverse the District Court’s grant of habeas relief.

I. Factual Background and Procedural History

Petitioner David Mathias was charged with, inter alia, first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder based on a violent incident that left one person dead and another severely injured, though capable of testifying at Mathias’s state court trial. As relevant to his defenses and the issues he would later raise on appeal, the record from that 2006 trial in *179 the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas reflects that in the early hours of May 23, 2005, Mathias and future co-defendant, Richard Jarmon, traveled to a boarding house where an acquaintance named Eric Richardson — later the victim-witness at Mathias’s trial — rented a small efficiency room.

According to Richardson’s trial testimony, Mathias knocked on Richardson’s door, while Jarmon entered an adjacent room where a friend of Richardson’s, Joseph Drew El, was lying on his stomach on the floor watching television. Richardson cautiously answered Mathias’s knock, and Mathias asked if he had change for a five-dollar bill. Although he felt “disturbed” and thought this a peculiar request, Richardson retreated back into his room, closing the door behind him, and retrieved five singles. App. 304. Richardson then exited the room, taking care again to shut the door, and handed five one-dollar bills to Mathias, who was waiting nearby with Jar-mon and Drew El. Mathias’s fictitious mission accomplished, he asked Jarmon, “Are you ready?” and Jarmon stood up as if to leave. App. 304.

Suddenly, Mathias drew a gun from his waistband and pointed it directly at Richardson’s stomach. Richardson reacted quickly by grabbing Mathias’s wrist, but Mathias began to shoot at Richardson as the two struggled. At the same moment, Jarmon drew a gun of his own and fired a fatal shot at Drew El, who still lay in a helpless and vulnerable position on the floor. Jarmon then turned his gun on Richardson — joining Mathias’s ongoing assault — while Richardson made a desperate attempt to flee the building, bleeding profusely from gunshot wounds in his legs as he narrowly escaped. Richardson, “shot, seared, ... frightened, [and] just running for [his] life,” App. 307, was fortunate to encounter police a few blocks away who rushed him to the trauma unit of a nearby hospital. Back at the boarding house, Drew El died from the gunshot wounds inflicted by Jarmon.

Mathias’s testimony at trial painted a different picture. He testified that he and Jarmon traveled to Richardson’s residence to buy marijuana, where, once that transaction was complete, Richardson and Jar-mon exchanged heated words, drew their guns, and began shooting at one another. Mathias portrayed himself as an innocent bystander and claimed that he was unaware Drew El was injured in the crossfire.

At the conclusion of the trial, the trial judge instructed the jury, among other things, on the charges of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and on accomplice liability. In the course of these instructions, however, the judge made inconsistent statements about the specific intent requirement for accomplice liability, at some points properly instructing the jurors they must find the accomplice himself had the specific intent to kill, and at other points, over defense counsel’s objection and contrary to Pennsylvania law, indicating that ■ the jurors could convict an accomplice based on the specific intent of the principal.

Specifically, before giving the “formal charge,” the trial judge offered “plain English” commentary intended to give a “common sense view” of the relevant theories of liability and the crimes charged. App. 610. During this portion of the instructions, the judge spoke accurately and at length about accomplice liability. For example, the judge explained that “a defendant is an accomplice of another for a particular crime if ... [it is] proved beyond a reasonable doubt .,. [t]hat the defendant had the intent of promoting or facilitating the commission of that crime.” App. 611. Applying this rule to the instant *180 case, the judge further explained that the jury would have to “find beyond a reasonable- doubt that there ha[d] been proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant shared that specific intent to kill Joseph Drew El.” App. 614.

Next, transitioning to the “formal instruction,” App. 621, the trial judge covered first-, second-, and third-degree murder, conspiracy, aggravated assault, and weapons violations. 1 During this portion of the colloquy, the judge erroneously indicated no less than six times that Mathias could be convicted of first-degree murder through accomplice liability if the jury found Jarmon possessed the specific intent to kill Drew El. These instructions were misleadingly stated in the disjunctive, with the judge announcing the jury was required to find that either Mathias “or his alleged accomplice, Richard Jarmon, .had the specific intent to kill ...” App. 615.

Finally, addressing the charge of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, the trial judge declined to “repeat” the definition of first-degree murder, noting that it was “the exact same requirement”- and that it comprised the “same elements” that had been introduced earlier in the colloquy, but explaining that first-degree murder was the “object of the conspiracy.” App. 628. From there, the judge correctly laid out the elements of conspiracy, explaining that the alleged co-conspirators must have “shared the intent to commit the crime of first degree murder,” which “would include the defendant having ... shared the specific intent to kill.” App. 630.

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869 F.3d 175, 2017 WL 3687781, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 16394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-mathias-v-superintendent-frackville-sci-ca3-2017.