Deedy v. Suzuki
This text of 326 F. Supp. 3d 1022 (Deedy v. Suzuki) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Derrick K. Watson, United States District Judge
INTRODUCTION
In 2013, the State tried Deedy on second-degree murder and related firearms charges arising out of the November 2011 death of Kollin Elderts. The trial resulted in a hung jury. In Deedy's second trial in 2014, a jury acquitted him of second-degree murder, but deadlocked on lesser included reckless manslaughter and assault offenses. In October 2018, Deedy is scheduled to be retried in state circuit court for reckless manslaughter and assault following the Hawaii Supreme Court's December 2017 determination that the retrial will not violate his double jeopardy rights.
Deedy now seeks a writ of habeas corpus under
After careful review of the record, arguments of counsel, and consideration of the relevant authorities, including the Supreme Court's decision in Evans v. Michigan ,
BACKGROUND
On November 5, 2011, Deedy fatally shot Kollin Elderts during an altercation at a fast food restaurant. He was indicted by a grand jury on November 16, 2011, and charged in a two-count Indictment: Count 1 charged second-degree murder, in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes ("HRS") § 707-701.5, while Count 2 charged him with using a firearm to commit the offense charged in Count 1, in violation of HRS § 134-21. Ex. C, Dkt. No. 1-4. The Indictment also subjected Deedy to conviction on lesser included offenses, such as reckless manslaughter and assault.1
I. Deedy's First Trial
Deedy's first trial spanned July and August 2013. Because the Indictment expressly charged lesser included offenses under Count 1, the State was permitted to adduce evidence of such offenses, or argue them as alternative theories of guilt. The State, however, did neither. Instead, the State advanced a theory that Deedy was guilty of second-degree murder, but not of any lesser included offenses.2
*1027During its opening statement, the State argued that the evidence would support the charged offense of second-degree murder by use of a firearm. The parties did not propose lesser included offense instructions and, in fact, specifically objected to instructing the jury on reckless manslaughter. Ex. D (8/13/13 Tr. at 46); Dkt. No. 1-5; Respondents' Excerpts of Record ("ER") at 64-140; Dkt. No. 21-3 (Proposed Jury Instructions).
The circuit court saw it precisely the same way:
THE COURT: Both of you asked that a manslaughter instruction not be given. And from what I can recall of the evidence as to that final shot, I don't think there's any evidence to support manslaughter, anyway.
MR. FUDO: Support reckless manslaughter.
THE COURT: Yeah.
MR. FUDO: Okay.
THE COURT: I don't think so, not as to that final shot.
MR. FUDO: Not as to the lethal shot, right?
THE COURT: I'm sorry. The lethal shot. Exactly.
8/13/13 Tr. at 46. As a result, the circuit court ruled that it would not instruct the jury on reckless manslaughter or on any other included offense.3
During closing argument, the prosecution reiterated its sole theory of guilt, urging the jury to convict Deedy of second-degree murder and the related firearms charge. Correspondingly, the circuit court *1028instructed the jury only on the same two offenses. The jury deadlocked after five days of deliberation, and unable to reach a verdict, the circuit court declared a mistrial.
II. Deedy's Second Trial
The second trial, held a year later in 2014, covered sixteen days. Although the prosecution's evidence generally mirrored the evidence that it presented at the first trial, the circuit court, over the parties' objections, instructed the second jury not only on second-degree murder under Count 1, but on reckless manslaughter ( HRS § 707-702(1)(a) ), first-degree assault ( HRS § 707-710 ), and second-degree assault ( HRS § 707-711 ), which it declined to do during the first trial.
Prior to the commencement of the second trial, Deedy filed a "Motion to Exclude Reckless Manslaughter Jury Instruction." See Ex. K (6/24/14 Motion), Dkt. No. 24-1. Deedy's motion argued, in part, that even if the circuit court determined that there was a rational basis in the evidence that supported instructing the jury on reckless manslaughter, double jeopardy barred it from doing so. More specifically, Deedy asserted that by declining to instruct the jury on reckless manslaughter during the first trial due to the absence of evidence, the circuit court had acquitted Deedy of that offense for double jeopardy purposes. Ex. K at 10-12.4
At the close of the evidence, just as they had done during the first trial, the parties objected to submitting instructions on the included offenses because there was no evidentiary basis to do so under applicable state law.
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Derrick K. Watson, United States District Judge
INTRODUCTION
In 2013, the State tried Deedy on second-degree murder and related firearms charges arising out of the November 2011 death of Kollin Elderts. The trial resulted in a hung jury. In Deedy's second trial in 2014, a jury acquitted him of second-degree murder, but deadlocked on lesser included reckless manslaughter and assault offenses. In October 2018, Deedy is scheduled to be retried in state circuit court for reckless manslaughter and assault following the Hawaii Supreme Court's December 2017 determination that the retrial will not violate his double jeopardy rights.
Deedy now seeks a writ of habeas corpus under
After careful review of the record, arguments of counsel, and consideration of the relevant authorities, including the Supreme Court's decision in Evans v. Michigan ,
BACKGROUND
On November 5, 2011, Deedy fatally shot Kollin Elderts during an altercation at a fast food restaurant. He was indicted by a grand jury on November 16, 2011, and charged in a two-count Indictment: Count 1 charged second-degree murder, in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes ("HRS") § 707-701.5, while Count 2 charged him with using a firearm to commit the offense charged in Count 1, in violation of HRS § 134-21. Ex. C, Dkt. No. 1-4. The Indictment also subjected Deedy to conviction on lesser included offenses, such as reckless manslaughter and assault.1
I. Deedy's First Trial
Deedy's first trial spanned July and August 2013. Because the Indictment expressly charged lesser included offenses under Count 1, the State was permitted to adduce evidence of such offenses, or argue them as alternative theories of guilt. The State, however, did neither. Instead, the State advanced a theory that Deedy was guilty of second-degree murder, but not of any lesser included offenses.2
*1027During its opening statement, the State argued that the evidence would support the charged offense of second-degree murder by use of a firearm. The parties did not propose lesser included offense instructions and, in fact, specifically objected to instructing the jury on reckless manslaughter. Ex. D (8/13/13 Tr. at 46); Dkt. No. 1-5; Respondents' Excerpts of Record ("ER") at 64-140; Dkt. No. 21-3 (Proposed Jury Instructions).
The circuit court saw it precisely the same way:
THE COURT: Both of you asked that a manslaughter instruction not be given. And from what I can recall of the evidence as to that final shot, I don't think there's any evidence to support manslaughter, anyway.
MR. FUDO: Support reckless manslaughter.
THE COURT: Yeah.
MR. FUDO: Okay.
THE COURT: I don't think so, not as to that final shot.
MR. FUDO: Not as to the lethal shot, right?
THE COURT: I'm sorry. The lethal shot. Exactly.
8/13/13 Tr. at 46. As a result, the circuit court ruled that it would not instruct the jury on reckless manslaughter or on any other included offense.3
During closing argument, the prosecution reiterated its sole theory of guilt, urging the jury to convict Deedy of second-degree murder and the related firearms charge. Correspondingly, the circuit court *1028instructed the jury only on the same two offenses. The jury deadlocked after five days of deliberation, and unable to reach a verdict, the circuit court declared a mistrial.
II. Deedy's Second Trial
The second trial, held a year later in 2014, covered sixteen days. Although the prosecution's evidence generally mirrored the evidence that it presented at the first trial, the circuit court, over the parties' objections, instructed the second jury not only on second-degree murder under Count 1, but on reckless manslaughter ( HRS § 707-702(1)(a) ), first-degree assault ( HRS § 707-710 ), and second-degree assault ( HRS § 707-711 ), which it declined to do during the first trial.
Prior to the commencement of the second trial, Deedy filed a "Motion to Exclude Reckless Manslaughter Jury Instruction." See Ex. K (6/24/14 Motion), Dkt. No. 24-1. Deedy's motion argued, in part, that even if the circuit court determined that there was a rational basis in the evidence that supported instructing the jury on reckless manslaughter, double jeopardy barred it from doing so. More specifically, Deedy asserted that by declining to instruct the jury on reckless manslaughter during the first trial due to the absence of evidence, the circuit court had acquitted Deedy of that offense for double jeopardy purposes. Ex. K at 10-12.4
At the close of the evidence, just as they had done during the first trial, the parties objected to submitting instructions on the included offenses because there was no evidentiary basis to do so under applicable state law. At the August 1, 2014 settlement of jury instructions and hearing on Deedy's motion, the defense argued that the circuit court's prior instructional ruling-regardless of the label or correctness of the decision-was a resolution of some or all of the elements of the lesser offense, which under federal law, constituted an acquittal:
MR. OTAKE: ... the ruling of a judge, whatever its label, actually represents a resolution, correct or not, of some or all of the factual elements of the offense at issue[,] [and] the category of acquittals include judgments by the court that the evidence is insufficient to convict. And it doesn't matter if the ruling was infected with error, misunderstanding, or whatnot.
THE COURT: Is this a judgment?
MR. OTAKE: When you look at Exhibit A [the 8/13/13 Tr.] -- the point of those cases is it doesn't matter what it is. It --
THE COURT: It's not a legal judgment, I mean, in the sense of a piece of paper saying this is the judgment.
MR. OTAKE: It's not. And -- but it does -- the point is it's a finding.
* * * *
So following a lengthy first trial the Court found that there wasn't any evidence to support reckless manslaughter, and that finding was, in essence, saying that there was not evidence to support a conviction for reckless manslaughter. And as the United States Supreme Court says, it doesn't matter *1029what you call it. If there's a finding like that, for double jeopardy purposes it's an acquittal. And so -- and it doesn't matter if the Court -- you know, it doesn't matter. What matters is that for double jeopardy purposes the State doesn't get another try to do that.
8/1/14 Tr. at 10-12. While the State disagreed with Deedy's double jeopardy conclusions, it concurred with the defense that the evidence again did not support giving the lesser included instruction: "just as in last year, we maintain that same position that there's not a rational basis in the evidence to support the giving of the manslaughter instruction." 8/1/14 Tr. at 23. Demonstrating that conviction, the State, in its closing argument, urged the second jury to convict Deedy of murder in the second degree, and not on any of the included offenses, because the evidence did not support those offenses under Count I. Ex. I (8/5/14 Tr. at 49-79), Dkt. No. 1-10; Ex. J (8/5/14 Tr. at 150-81), Ex. 1-11.5
The circuit court nonetheless denied Deedy's motion, concluding that its decision during the first trial was not tantamount to an acquittal because the court did not determine Deedy's "guilt or innocence." 8/1/14 Tr. at 27. The circuit court attempted to explain its reasoning in the following manner-
After the first trial, the Court apparently said that it didn't think there was evidence to support a manslaughter instruction, in other words, that there was insufficient evidence to clearly require a lesser instruction, under this Court's interpretation of what a rational basis may require. Hence, this represented an evaluation based upon the rational basis test not a resolution or determination of guilt or innocence or the existence of any given element.
8/1/14 Tr. at 26-27. The circuit court also overruled the parties' objections, and concluded that, this time around, there was a rational basis in the evidence to give jury instructions on reckless manslaughter and the assault offenses, and it did so. 8/1/14 Tr. at 29; 39-45.
After deliberating for six days, the jury acquitted Deedy of second-degree murder, but was deadlocked on all of the lesser included offenses. The circuit court thereafter entered a not guilty verdict on the second-degree murder charge and concluded that Deedy could be retried on the lesser included offenses on which the second jury hung.
Deedy filed several motions to dismiss on November 26, 2014, specifically raising the federal constitutional claims at issue in this Petition, along with several additional state law claims. Following a hearing, the circuit court denied his motions in an April 24, 2015 minute order, Ex. G (4/24/15 Cir. Ct. Minute Order), Dkt. No. 1-8, and in a May 19, 2015 order that addressed Deedy's federal claims. Ex. H (5/19/15 Cir. Ct. Order), Dkt. No. 1-9.
III. Deedy's Interlocutory Appeal to the Hawaii Supreme Court
Deedy filed an interlocutory appeal from the circuit court's orders denying his motions to dismiss, which was transferred to the Hawaii Supreme Court. Ex. O, Dkt. No. 24-5. In that appeal, Deedy raised federal double jeopardy claims along with *1030other claims he does not pursue in his Petition, including those based on state constitutional and statutory provisions. The Hawaii Supreme Court, in a 4-1 decision, affirmed the circuit court's rulings and held that the State was not barred from further retrial on reckless manslaughter and the included assault offenses. State v. Deedy ,
In doing so, the majority rejected Deedy's acquittal argument based, in part, upon its characterization of the circuit court's ruling as "procedural in nature," and ultimately determined that "a trial court's ruling on whether to issue jury instructions on lesser included offenses does not constitute an acquittal for double jeopardy purposes."
In rejecting Deedy's claim of acquittal on the lesser included offenses, the Hawaii Supreme Court was particularly concerned with a perceived lack of circuit court authority, in view of Hawaii Rule of Penal Procedure ("HRPP") 29, to pronounce an acquittal under the situation presented here.6 It declared that:
the 'acquittal' rule does not apply to lesser included offenses where the greater charge has not been resolved by the factfinder, as was the case in Deedy's first trial. Cases decided by this court and the Supreme Court did not involve the situation postulated by Deedy-where the defendant is deemed to have been acquitted of included offenses for double jeopardy purposes even though resolution of a greater charge is pending.
The Hawaii Supreme Court remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings.
IV. Deedy's Section 2241 Petition
Deedy's Section 2241 Petition seeks to bar further retrial on the counts in the Indictment. It asserts three grounds, each seeking to vindicate his right against double jeopardy under the Fifth Amendment *1031to the United States Constitution: (1) the circuit court's ruling at the first trial that there was no evidence of recklessness as to the fatal shot was an acquittal that bars further prosecution under Count 1 for reckless manslaughter or any included offense; (2) that same finding collaterally estops the State from re-litigating recklessness or any included offense under Count 1; and (3) the State abandoned second-degree murder's lesser included offenses, including reckless manslaughter, as theories of prosecution. Pet. ¶ 2.
The Petition seeks a ruling from this Court that would not only preclude Deedy's further prosecution in the state courts for the death of Elderts, but would direct Respondents to dismiss Cr. No. 11-1-1647 with prejudice and order Respondents to discharge him from bail and pretrial release. Pet. ¶ 12. Respondents Russell Suzuki, Attorney General, State of Hawai'i; Keith M. Kaneshiro, Prosecuting Attorney for the City and County of Honolulu; and Nolan Espinda, Director, Department of Public Safety, State of Hawai'i (collectively, "Respondents"), filed a response in opposition to the Petition on May 21, 2018. Dkt. No. 21. Deedy filed his reply on June 20, 2018. Dkt. No. 24.
On April 20, 2018, Respondent Kaneshiro filed a Motion to Strike Deedy's Petition and Deedy's Memorandum in Support, Dkt. No. 14, raising procedural defects in the filings. Deedy filed an opposition to the Motion to Strike on May 20, 2018, Dkt. No. 19, and there was no reply.
Following briefing from the parties and a hearing on April 25, 2018, the Court denied without prejudice Deedy's Motion to Stay State Court Proceedings, Dkt. No. 5, and Motion to Expand the Record and for an Evidentiary Hearing, Dkt. No. 6. See Dkt. No. 16 (4/25/18 EP).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Habeas relief is proper under Section 2241 when the petitioner shows that a retrial would violate his or her Fifth Amendment right against double jeopardy. See Wilson v. Belleque ,
DISCUSSION
I. The Motion to Strike Is Denied
Respondent Kaneshiro moves to strike the Petition and Memorandum in Support for alleged non-compliance with procedural and substantive requirements of Sections 2241 and 2242. The Motion to Strike is DENIED.8
Although not signed by Deedy, the Petition is signed by his counsel of record, and is therefore "verified by the person for whose relief it is intended or by someone acting in his behalf," as required by Section 2242.9 See also Habeas Rule 2(c)(5) of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts ("Habeas Rules") (petition must be signed under penalty of perjury by the petitioner or by a person authorized to sign it for the petitioner under Section 2242 ). Indeed, the law of this Circuit permits "a habeas petitioner's attorney [to] sign and verify the petition for the petitioner." Lucky v. Calderon ,
Respondent Kaneshiro also moves to strike the Petition because it allegedly names the wrong defendant: "Deedy is not in the physical custody of the Acting Attorney General, Director of Dept. of Public Safety, and/or Respondent Kaneshiro," none of whom can afford him the habeas relief he seeks. Motion to Strike at 4, Dkt. No. 14. As discussed more fully below, the Court's federal habeas jurisdiction over Deedy's double jeopardy claims lies under Section 2241, rather than Section 2254. Harrison v. Gillespie ,
*1033Stow v. Murashige ,
Although Deedy does not name the specific "Oahu Intake Service Center Officer" who has direct supervision responsibilities over him, he is permitted to name "as respondent the entity or person who exercises legal control with respect to the challenged 'custody.' " Rumsfeld v. Padilla ,
II. No Jurisdictional or Procedural Defect Precludes the Court's Review
Before consideration of the merits, the Court addresses the jurisdictional and procedural arguments that compose the greater part of Respondents' opposition to Deedy's Petition. As explained below, each of Respondents' arguments challenging the Court's habeas jurisdiction under Section 2241, advocating the application of the Rooker - Feldman doctrine, and asserting Deedy's purported waiver and/or forfeiture of his federal double jeopardy claims is without merit.
A. The Court Has Jurisdiction Under Section 2241
Respondents first contend that "Congress has not conferred jurisdiction to federal district courts to review judgments rendered by a State's highest court being *1034attacked in a petition brought under § 2241." Mem. in Opp'n at 7, Dkt. No. 21-1. This assertion is inconsistent with federal law.
"[I]t is § 2241 that provides generally for the granting of writs of habeas corpus by federal courts, implementing 'the general grant of habeas authority provided by the Constitution.' " Frantz v. Hazey ,
Accordingly, as recognized by the Ninth Circuit, this Court's habeas jurisdiction lies properly under Section 2241.
B. The Rooker-Feldman Doctrine Is No Bar to this Court's Federal Habeas Jurisdiction
Despite the evident jurisdictional basis for this Court to consider Deedy's Section 2241 Petition, Respondents interestingly allocate a significant portion of their brief to the flawed assertion that federal courts lack habeas jurisdiction over a double jeopardy claim challenging a pending prosecution in state court. Respondents do so on account of their muddled application of the Rooker - Feldman doctrine.13 See Mem. in Opp'n at 3-19. The primary source of their confusion, as best the Court can discern, is the conflation of direct appellate review and collateral review, and their associated discussion of Supreme Court certiorari jurisdiction under
Ninth Circuit law explicitly recognizes federal district court habeas jurisdiction in cases such as this one. Ninth Circuit law is equally clear that the Rooker - Feldman doctrine has no place in habeas jurisprudence *1035and does not serve to limit federal district court habeas jurisdiction, as it does in other contexts. Respondents refuse to recognize the import of these cases. Instead, they insist that because the "Supreme Court [itself] did not render the decisions in any of the cases, the [Ninth Circuit] holdings therein cannot overrule or modify the holdings in Rooker or Feldman. " Mem. in Opp'n at 15 (emphasis added). Respondents further argue that only the United States Supreme Court, under
First, Section 1257 has no present application to Deedy's Section 2241 Petition.14 As noted above, Section 2241 is the proper vehicle for his double jeopardy claim in federal district court. Deedy is not limited to taking a direct appeal of the Hawaii Supreme Court's decision, by writ of certiorari, to the United States Supreme Court under Section 1257. See Cty. Court of Ulster Cty., N.Y. v. Allen ,
Second, it is well-established that the Rooker - Feldman doctrine does not touch the writ of habeas corpus. This Court is bound by Ninth Circuit precedent, which is unequivocal: habeas jurisdiction is a "statutory exception" to Rooker - Feldman .
Under the modern statutory structure, the principle that there should be no appellate review of state court judgments by federal trial courts has two particularly notable statutory exceptions: First, a federal district court has original jurisdiction to entertain petitions for habeas corpus brought by state prisoners who claim that the state court has made an error of federal law.
*103628 U.S.C. § 2254 . Second, a federal bankruptcy court has original jurisdiction under which it is "empowered to avoid state judgments, see, e.g. ,11 U.S.C. §§ 544 , 547, 548, 549 ; to modify them, see, e.g. ,11 U.S.C. §§ 1129 , 1325 ; and to discharge them, see, e.g. ,11 U.S.C. §§ 727 , 1141, 1328." In re Gruntz , 202 F.3d [1074] at 1079 [ (9th Cir. 2000) ].
Noel v. Hall ,
The reasons for this exception are clear, and its existence, in practice, is beyond serious dispute. Respondents, however, remain silent with respect to the authoritative case law (including several cases cited in Deedy's Petition), which illustrates the well-established rule that state court defendants are entitled to seek habeas relief in lower federal courts before retrial in light of "the unique nature of the double jeopardy right." Lydon ,
Even if Respondents were correct, they offer no plausible or practical explanation for what would remain of a state defendant's double jeopardy rights in the absence of federal district court habeas review. If limited to seeking certiorari from the United States Supreme Court, it is unlikely that meaningful review would be timely available to most state court defendants seeking pretrial redress for double jeopardy claims. This runs afoul of long-standing precedent, and if followed to its logical end, "the rights conferred on a criminal accused by the Double Jeopardy *1037Clause would be significantly undermined if appellate review of double jeopardy claims were postponed until after conviction and sentence." Abney ,
Because this Court has habeas jurisdiction under Section 2241, unimpeded by the Rooker - Feldman doctrine, it rejects Respondents' arguments to the contrary.
C. Deedy Neither Waived Nor Forfeited His Double Jeopardy Claims
Respondents assert the factually and legally deficient argument that "Deedy's decision not to file his motion asserting his federal double jeopardy claims until months after the retrial concluded reveals a failure to pursue the claims in a timely and diligent manner that supports the conclusion he waived/forfeited the same." Mem. in Opp'n at 21. They are mistaken.
The record reflects that Deedy raised all of the grounds asserted in his Petition before the second trial commenced, during the course of the second trial, and then again when he moved to dismiss the charges after the second trial concluded. Exs. H, K & L. How one can even begin to claim waiver on this record is a mystery.
Nor would Respondents achieve any greater success by framing their contentions as a failure to exhaust. "As a prudential matter, courts require that habeas petitioners exhaust all available judicial and administrative remedies before seeking relief under § 2241." Ward v. Chavez ,
The state court record set forth above clearly demonstrates that Deedy raised his double jeopardy concern before the second trial commenced, when he asked the circuit court to preclude instructing the jury on reckless manslaughter, arguing that the court's prior instructional ruling during the first trial acted as an acquittal of that offense under Evans v. Michigan. Ex. K. He argued those claims again during the second trial in the context of settling the jury instructions. Ex. L. And he then filed a motion to dismiss on state and federal double jeopardy grounds, presenting those claims once again to the circuit court after the second trial had ended. When the circuit court denied that motion, Ex. H, Deedy appealed the denial to the state appellate courts, contending that his state and federal rights to be free of double jeopardy had been violated. See Deedy ,
*1038The Court next turns to the merits of Deedy's Petition.
III. Deedy's Section 2241 Petition Is Granted
Deedy raises three grounds for relief, each seeking to vindicate his right against double jeopardy under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. For the reasons that follow, the Court determines that double jeopardy bars further prosecution in the state courts because the circuit court acquitted Deedy of reckless manslaughter. The circuit court did so by ruling, at Deedy's first trial, that there was no "evidence to support manslaughter" because the State had not shown that the "lethal shot" was "reckless." Because the Court finds in Deedy's favor on the first ground asserted in his Petition, it does not reach his alternative claims of collateral estoppel and abandonment.
A. Legal Framework: Acquittal Standard Under Evans
The Fifth Amendment's Double Jeopardy Clause protects a person from being "twice put in jeopardy of life or limb" for the same offense. "This guarantee recognizes the vast power of the sovereign, the ordeal of a criminal trial, and the injustice our criminal justice system would invite if prosecutors could treat trials as dress rehearsals until they secure the convictions they seek." Currier v. Virginia , --- U.S. ----,
Deedy's primary claim invokes Evans v. Michigan ,
[1] "a ruling by the court that the evidence is insufficient to convict," [2] a "factual finding [that] necessarily establish[es] the criminal defendant's lack of criminal culpability," and [3] any other "rulin[g] which relate[s] to the ultimate question of guilt or innocence." These sorts of substantive rulings stand apart from procedural rulings that may also terminate a case midtrial, which we generally refer to as dismissals or mistrials. Procedural dismissals include rulings on questions that "are unrelated to factual guilt or innocence," but "which serve other purposes," including "a legal judgment that a defendant, although criminally culpable, may not be punished" because of some problem like an error with the indictment.
Id. at 318-19,
In Evans , the Supreme Court concluded that the state defendant's midtrial acquittal barred retrial under double jeopardy *1039principles, even though the acquittal was based on the trial court's "clear misunderstanding of what facts the State needed to prove" to sustain a conviction for arson. Id. at 316,
Utilizing this framework, the Court turns to the facts at hand.
B. The Circuit Court's Instructional Ruling During the First Trial Is, For Double Jeopardy Purposes, an Acquittal
As detailed below, Deedy may not be retried for reckless manslaughter because the circuit court's ruling at the first trial-that there was no rational basis in the evidence to support a reckless manslaughter jury instruction-constituted an acquittal for purposes of double jeopardy. Here, as was the case in Evans , " 'it is plain that the [circuit court] ... evaluated the [State's] evidence and determined that it was legally insufficient to sustain a conviction." Evans ,
Under applicable state law, the circuit court was required to give the jury an instruction "as to any included offenses when 'there is a rational basis in the evidence for a verdict acquitting the defendant of the offense charged and convicting the defendant of the included offense.' " State v. Haanio ,
*1040The circuit court's instructional ruling demonstrably falls within the parameters of each of the three categories of "substantive rulings" described in Evans and is therefore, an acquittal. First, it was "a ruling by the [circuit] court that the evidence is insufficient to convict." Evans ,
*1041Respondents do little to challenge the application of Evans to the facts of this case. Instead, they quarrel with the weight to be given to the circuit court's instructional ruling. In Respondents' estimation, because the circuit court's ruling came during what they characterize as an "informal" proceeding to discuss the verdict form, it could not possibly constitute an acquittal of any offense. Mem. in Opp'n at 23, 28.
Respondents place far too much weight on the environment in which the ruling was issued, and far too little weight on what the ruling actually said and did. As an initial matter, the circuit court's ruling occurred on the record in open court, not in some unrecorded, unmemorialized back room proceeding. Moreover, neither the label of the ruling, nor the perceived formality of the proceeding matters.
In Martin Linen , the Court was presented with the question of whether the government could appeal the trial court's dismissal of an indictment, or whether the appeal was barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause. The answer turned on whether the judge's dismissal of the case constituted an "acquittal." The Court stated that "we must determine whether the ruling of the judge, whatever its label, actually represents a resolution, correct or not, of some or all of the factual elements of the offense charged. " In examining the judge's order dismissing the case, the Court explained that "[t]here can be no question that the judgments of acquittal entered here by the District Court were 'acquittals in substance as well as form" because the judge found the prosecution had failed to present sufficient evidence to meet its burden.
The State's reliance on the "form" versus "substance" distinction takes out of context Martin Linen 's discussion of the relevant appellate court inquiry into a judge's order terminating a case in favor of the defendant. We have found no case, other than the Hawaii Supreme Court decision in Stow , that has applied this test to a jury's "not guilty" verdict. To do so would divorce the test from its rationale-i.e. , to determine if the trial court terminated the case for insufficiency of the evidence or for a matter unrelated to the merits, like pre-indictment delay.
Stow v. Murashige ,
Here, the circuit court's decision was based upon its substantive view of the sufficiency of the evidence. It was not a procedural decision, such as a dismissal for pre-indictment delay that was unrelated to factual guilt or innocence. See United States v. Blanton ,
Further, the circuit court's characterization of its own action cannot control the classification. See Delap v. Dugger ,
The Court's holding comports with the principles animating federal double jeopardy jurisprudence. See Yeager v. United States ,
*1043CONCLUSION
The Court grants Deedy's Section 2241 Petition and enjoins the State of Hawaii and/or Respondents from reprosecuting, reindicting, or retrying him for reckless manslaughter and any lesser included offenses, including in Cr. No. 11-1-1647.
Further, the State of Hawaii and/or Respondents are directed to dismiss the pending criminal case, Cr. No. 11-1-1647, with prejudice. The Court stays this dismissal requirement until such time as this case becomes final, meaning that any and all appeals of this Court's orders and judgment have been completely adjudicated.
The State of Hawaii and/or Respondents are also directed to release Deedy from the conditions of bail and of his supervised pretrial release. Unless the State of Hawaii and/or Respondents obtain a stay of this part of the Court's order from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, the State of Hawaii and/or Respondents must release Deedy from the terms of his supervised pretrial release forthwith. This Court declines to stay this portion of its order.
Finally, to ensure that each party's rights are safeguarded, the Court grants certificates of appealability to the parties, to the extent required.23 See Slack v. McDaniel ,
Respondents' Motion to Strike Deedy's Petition, Dkt. No. 14, is DENIED. Deedy's Section 2241 Petition, Dkt. No. 1, is GRANTED. The Clerk of Court is directed to enter judgment in favor of Deedy and to close this case.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
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