George Johnson v. Steven Pinchak Attorney General of the State of New Jersey

392 F.3d 551, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 26741, 2004 WL 2952813
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 2004
Docket04-1307
StatusPublished
Cited by133 cases

This text of 392 F.3d 551 (George Johnson v. Steven Pinchak Attorney General of the State of New Jersey) 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
George Johnson v. Steven Pinchak Attorney General of the State of New Jersey, 392 F.3d 551, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 26741, 2004 WL 2952813 (3d Cir. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

BECKER, Circuit Judge.

When petitioner, George Johnson, pled guilty to felony murder under the misapprehension that he was eligible for the death penalty for that crime, felony murder in New Jersey was not in fact a capital offense." However, after receiving a sentence of life imprisonment with thirty years parole ineligibility and after exhausting his state remedies, Johnson sought federal habeas corpus relief alleging ineffective assistance of counsel and involuntariness of his guilty plea. The District Court ultimately granted relief on grounds that the state court’s mistake about Johnson’s death eligibility for felony murder was structural error, and thus, per se reversible.

The threshold question on this appeal is whether Johnson’s claim is proeedurally *554 defaulted. Johnson did not raise the death penalty eligibility claim in his direct appeal to the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division, nor did he address it in his first Post Conviction Relief (PCR) petition to the New Jersey courts. He first raised the claim in his petition for certification to the New Jersey Supreme Court; however, this petition was summarily denied. Over a year later, Johnson raised the death penalty eligibility claim in a second PCR petition, but that petition was filed more than five years after his sentence was handed down, and thus was time-barred under New Jersey Rule of Court 3:22-12. Rather than barring Johnson’s claim on procedural grounds, however, the District Court invoked the “actual innocence” exception to the procedural default rules, which allows consideration of the merits of a claim, notwithstanding procedural default, to avoid a miscarriage of justice.

We conclude that, in so doing, the District Court misconstrued the scope of the actual innocence exception by applying it where the petitioner wrongly was led to believe he was death eligible, but where the death penalty was not actually imposed. Rather, we hold that the touchstone of the actual innocence inquiry is innocence of the sentence actually imposed, not innocence of a sentence for which the petitioner was merely eligible. We also conclude that Johnson’s death-eligibility claim was procedurally defaulted because of his failure to bring the claim before the New Jersey state courts in accordance with their procedural rules. Supporting the procedural default conclusion are the facts that: (1) the New Jersey courts considering Johnson’s application clearly relied on such procedural default as a separate and independent basis for their denial of relief, and (2) the five-year time bar under N.J.R. 3:22-12 is an adequate state ground, as it is strictly and consistently enforced in all but the most exceptional cases.

Accordingly, we will reverse the order of the District Court and remand with directions to dismiss Johnson’s habeas petition as procedurally defaulted.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 1983, Johnson pled guilty to felony murder for the smothering death of a 76-year old man during the course of a robbery. The relevant facts of the crime are not in dispute. Johnson and his co-conspirator Mary Susan Karnish, entered Gerald Clayton’s hotel room at the Pough-keepsie Hotel in Asbury Park, New Jersey, with the intent to steal his wallet. As Clayton slept, they searched the room, but initially found nothing and left. Shortly thereafter, Johnson and Karnish returned to Clayton’s room to search under the bed. Clayton awoke and screamed. Johnson then grabbed a pillow and placed it over Clayton’s face, holding it there until Clayton suffocated to death. Johnson then saw the wallet on the bed, took it, and fled.

The next day, Karnish gave a statement to the police, detailing her involvement in the crime and naming Johnson as an accomplice. Later that day, Johnson gave a confession to the authorities in which he admitted suffocating Clayton. In May 1983, the grand jury charged Johnson with five crimes: murder in the first degree for purposely or knowingly causing the death of or serious bodily injury resulting in death of Gerald Clayton; felony murder; robbery; conspiracy; and burglary. JA 15-18. Pursuant to a plea agreement, the state agreed to dismiss the first degree murder charge in exchange for a guilty plea to felony murder. Johnson entered a guilty plea to the second count of the indictment for felony murder.

This case hinges around a mistake, made during the course of the plea negotiations and at the plea and sentencing hear *555 ing, by the New Jersey trial court, Johnson’s defense counsel, and the prosecution, all of whom erroneously believed that felony murder could be a capital offense under New Jersey law. New Jersey had only reinstated the death penalty one year before Johnson entered his guilty plea, N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:11-3C, effective August 6, 1982, and confusion about the applicability of the death penalty apparently abounded in New Jersey courts. Johnson pled to felony murder, with the understanding that the prosecution would not in fact seek the death penalty, and that to this end, it would stipulate to several mitigating factors and only one aggravating factor at sentencing. At the sentencing hearing, on August 19, 1983, the trial court did consider the death penalty as a possibility for felony murder. Nevertheless, the court did not sentence Johnson to death, but rather, based on a balance of the mitigating and aggravating factors, sentenced him to life in prison with thirty years parole ineligibility.

Johnson pursued a timely direct appeal which challenged the voluntariness of his plea and the effectiveness of trial counsel, but which did not raise the claim that he was misinformed about his death eligibility. Instead, he contended that his trial counsel did not inform him of the thirty-year parole ineligibility. On November 29, 1984, the New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division affirmed Johnson’s conviction and sentence. He did not seek discretionary review by the New Jersey Supreme Court.

In 1987, Johnson filed a pro se petition for post conviction relief (PCR), which raised issues of the effectiveness of counsel and the voluntariness of his plea, and asserted that the sentencing proceedings were improperly conducted. This (first) PCR petition also failed to raise the death-eligibility mistake as a basis for relief. The petition was denied by the trial court and the Appellate Division affirmed. Johnson then sought certification from the New Jersey Supreme Court, where for the first time, he claimed that it had been error for the trial court to accept his plea because he had been misinformed about his death penalty eligibility for the felony murder count. The New Jersey Supreme Court denied certification in September 1989.

Johnson then filed a pro se petition for a writ of habeas- corpus in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, which was dismissed without prejudice in February 1991 because it was a “mixed” petition, containing both exhausted and unexhausted claims. Returning to state court, Johnson filed a second PCR application in August 1991, in which he explicitly raised the death-eligibility issue as well as the unexhausted issue that he was suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder at the time of the crime and his plea.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Flemister v. McGinley
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2025
Rippey v. Gourley
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2025
Davenport v. Emig
D. Delaware, 2025
Kuperschmidt v. Angradi
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2025
Lenny Ross v. Administrator East Jersey State Prison
118 F.4th 553 (Third Circuit, 2024)
Watson v. State of Pennsylvania
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
MOJICA-MENDOZA v. UNDERWOOD
W.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
ELLIOTT v. WETZEL
W.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
Maze v. Oliver
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
CUFF v. SCOTT
D. New Jersey, 2024
Gelsinger v. Capozza
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
Hendrickes v. Warden of SCI-Muncy
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
DEYOUNG v. BUSH
E.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
Miller v. Zaken
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
Wegmann v. Spaulding
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2023
GREENE v. CHETIRKIN
D. New Jersey, 2023

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
392 F.3d 551, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 26741, 2004 WL 2952813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-johnson-v-steven-pinchak-attorney-general-of-the-state-of-new-ca3-2004.