Demarest v. Price

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 1997
Docket95-1535
StatusPublished

This text of Demarest v. Price (Demarest v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Demarest v. Price, (10th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

F I L E D United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit PUBLISH DEC 3 1997 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS PATRICK FISHER Clerk TENTH CIRCUIT

RICHARD S. DEMAREST,

Petitioner-Appellee,

v. No. 95-1535

WILLIAM PRICE; GALE NORTON, Attorney General of the State of Colorado,

Respondents-Appellants.

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO (D.C. No. 91-N-827)

Robert Mark Russel, First Assistant Attorney General, Chief, Criminal Enforcement Section, Gale A. Norton, Colorado Attorney General, with him on the brief, Denver, Colorado, for Respondents-Appellants

Vicki Mandell-King; Assistant Public Defender, Chief, Appellate Division; Michael G. Katz, Federal Public Defender, with her on the brief, Denver, Colorado, for Petitioner- Appellee

Before HENRY, MURPHY, and RONEY*, Circuit Judges.

HENRY, Circuit Judge.

* The Honorable Paul H. Roney, Senior Circuit Judge for the Eleventh Circuit sitting by designation. Respondents William Price and Gale Norton1 appeal the district court’s order

granting Richard Demarest’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §

2254 and vacating his conviction for first degree murder in Jefferson County, Colorado.

See Demarest v. Price, 905 F. Supp. 1432 (D. Colo. 1995). The district court concluded

that by failing to adequately investigate the case, interview witnesses, and present medical

evidence, Mr. Demarest’s attorney in the Jefferson County murder trial deprived him of

his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. See id. at 1446-54.

Respondents argue on appeal that Mr. Demarest may not seek redress in federal court

because he did not exhaust his state court remedies in that he did not fairly present

important evidence regarding his trial counsel’s performance to the Colorado state courts.

Initially, we conclude that the provisions of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death

Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996), that amend

the habeas corpus statutes should not be applied to this case because Mr. Demarest’s

petition was filed before the AEDPA’s effective date. See Lindh v. Murphy, 117 S. Ct.

2059, 2068 (1997). Then, applying the pre-AEDPA habeas corpus provisions, we hold

that Mr. Demarest did not exhaust his state remedies. We therefore vacate the district

court’s order granting Mr. Demarest’s petition and remand the case to the district court

for several determinations.

1 We refer to respondents collectively as “the state.”

2 On remand, we direct the district court to first determine whether Mr. Demarest’s

ineffective assistance of counsel claim, based on the new evidence presented at the

federal evidentiary hearing, would now be procedurally barred under Colorado law. In

the event that the district court concludes that Mr. Demarest’s claim would not now be

procedurally barred, we hold, it should dismiss the claim without prejudice so that it may

now be adjudicated in the Colorado courts. Alternatively, if the district court concludes

that Mr. Demarest’s claim would now be procedurally barred in the Colorado courts, it

should then determine whether Mr. Demarest can establish either that there was cause for

the default and prejudice resulting from the violation of federal law, or that failure to

consider his claim on the merits would result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice. In

the event that Mr. Demarest establishes either cause and prejudice or a fundamental

miscarriage of justice, the court should proceed to the merits.

I. BACKGROUND

Early in the afternoon of February 9, 1981, petitioner Demarest called the

Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department from a neighbor’s home and reported that he had

just discovered the body of his friend Ronald Hyams in the house that the two shared in

Evergreen, Colorado. “In a panicked, sobbing voice,” Demarest, 905 F. Supp at 1436,

Mr. Demarest told the emergency operator that it appeared that Mr. Hyams had been

murdered. After placing the call, Mr. Demarest ran back to his house and sat down under

3 a tree in the front yard next to a gravel driveway, where a neighbor waited with him for

law enforcement officials to arrive.

Approximately ten minutes after Mr. Demarest’s call, Jefferson County deputy

sheriffs discovered Mr. Hyams’s body in a downstairs bedroom. Mr. Hyams’s head was

wrapped in a bathrobe and there were puncture wounds around his neck and collarbone.

The pathologist who conducted the autopsy testified that Mr. Hyams died from “the

combined effects of trauma to the head[,] . . . blood loss from the stab wound in the left

neck[,] and from the complication of strangulation of the neck.” Id. (quoting Rec. vol.

V, Trial Tr. of State v. Demarest, No. 81 CR 259, Jefferson County District Court, at

638).

During the period immediately after Mr. Hyams’s murder, Mr. Demarest

experienced substantial emotional trauma and required psychiatric treatment. On the day

of the murder, a neighbor testified, Mr. Demarest was distraught and in shock. As a

result, medical personnel took him to a local emergency room. Carol Lee Held, Mr.

Demarest’s other housemate, took him home later that day, but she observed that Mr.

Demarest soon grew unresponsive and appeared to fall into a trance. Ms. Held called the

sheriff’s office for assistance, and when the deputies arrived, they found Mr. Demarest

“lying on the floor in a fetal position, tightening his muscles, and clenching his fists.” Id.

at 1436 (citing Trial Tr. of State v. Demarest, No. 81 CR 259, Jefferson County District

Court, at 289-90). The deputies took Mr. Demarest back to the local medical center, and

4 he was then transferred to the psychiatric ward of another hospital. A psychiatrist

diagnosed him as suffering from adult situational reaction caused by acute stress and

treated him with a variety of drugs. Mr. Demarest was released from the psychiatric ward

on February 11, 1981.

During an interrogation at the sheriff’s office on February 12, 1981, Mr. Demarest

suffered another breakdown. When shown a picture of Mr. Hyams, he began shaking, fell

on the floor, and curled into a fetal position. Mr. Demarest was taken back to the

hospital’s psychiatric ward, where he remained until February 23, 1981. Another

psychiatrist concluded that he suffered from an “adult situational disorder with

withdrawal[,]”see id. at 1437, and treated him with prescription drugs.

On the three separate occasions shortly after the murder when deputies questioned

him, Mr. Demarest denied any involvement in Mr. Hyams’s murder. He reported that on

the morning of the murder, he had borrowed Mr. Hyams’s car, stopped at a McDonald’s

restaurant to drink coffee, and had then driven to Mr. Hyams’s dentist’s office to pick him

up after an appointment. When he arrived at the dentist’s office, he learned that Mr.

Hyams had missed the appointment. According to Mr. Demarest, he then returned home

and discovered the body.

During the questioning, deputies observed that Mr. Demarest had scratches on the

back of his hands and face. When asked about the scratches, Mr. Demarest said that he

had pounded his fists into the gravel driveway while waiting for emergency personnel

5 after discovering Mr. Hyams’s body. As to his face, Mr. Demarest said that he had

scratched it at the medical center on the afternoon of the murder.

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