Grant v. Trammell

727 F.3d 1006, 2013 WL 4105939, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 16937
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 2013
Docket11-5001
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 727 F.3d 1006 (Grant v. Trammell) 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
Grant v. Trammell, 727 F.3d 1006, 2013 WL 4105939, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 16937 (10th Cir. 2013).

Opinions

GORSUCH, Circuit Judge.

While serving a long sentence in state prison for a series of armed robberies, John Grant won a job as a kitchen worker. The job brought him under the supervision of Gay Carter, a civilian prison employee, but it wasn’t one that lasted very long. Mr. Grant was soon fired after he was caught fighting with another inmate — and Mr. Grant didn’t take getting fired very well. He came to bear a grudge against Ms. Carter, a woman he used to get along with and even considered a friend.

Seeing Ms. Carter one day during a morning breakfast service, he told her, “I’ll get you, bitch.” The next morning he followed up, “You’re mine.” Mr. Grant then proceeded to make good on his threats. After breakfast, he lingered in the dining hall with no obvious purpose, but not altogether out of place either because he used to work there. After about ten .or fifteen minutes, Ms. Carter passed near him and he grabbed her, put a hand over her mouth, and dragged her into a small closet. With a shank he had secreted into the dining hall, Mr. Grant stabbed Ms. Carter, sixteen times in all.

The State of Oklahoma charged Mr. Grant with first degree murder and sought the death penalty. At trial, the government had little trouble proving that it was Mr. Grant who stabbed Ms. Carter to death. In his defense, Mr. Grant testified that he had no recollection of killing or wanting to kill Ms. Carter. A defense expert also testified that Mr. Grant suffered from borderline personality disorder, though the expert added that Mr. Grant was of average intelligence and didn’t show any signs of an organic brain disorder. The expert also refused to offer any view on whether Mr. Grant did or didn’t understand the consequences of his acts at the time of the murder. In the end, the jury found Mr. Grant guilty as charged.

At the penalty phase, the government argued that Mr. Grant deserved the death penalty on the basis of three aggravating factors surrounding the murder: (1) he had been convicted previously of violent felony offenses, (2) he murdered Ms. Carter while serving a felony prison sentence, and (3) he posed a threat of future violent criminal acts. By this point in the proceedings, the first two factors weren’t in much dispute. For its case on the third, the government pointed to other prison fights Mr. Grant had been involved in, including a fight with a prison guard; pointed to the fact that Mr. Grant killed a civilian kitchen worker while in prison; and argued that the evidence suggested he [1011]*1011might well strike at prison workers or inmates again.

The defense responded that any threat Mr. Grant posed could be mitigated with adequate care. A psychiatrist explained that Mr. Grant had not received mental health counseling or anti-psychotic medications in prison, though he then refused to speculate whether and to what extent Mr. Grant would benefit from either. Mr. Grant also briefly recounted for the jury his troubled childhood.

In the end, the jury found in the government’s favor on all the aggravating factors, found no mitigating factors outweighing those aggravating factors, and voted to impose the death penalty. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals (OCCA) denied relief on appeal. See Grant v. State (Grant I), 58 P.3d 783 (Okla.Crim.App.2002); Grant v. State (Grant II), 95 P.3d 178 (Okla.Crim.App.2004). Neither did the OCCA find relief warranted in two separate post-conviction proceedings Mr. Grant attempted. See Grant v. State, No. PCD-2002-347, slip op. (Okla.Crim.App. Apr. 14, 2003); Grant v. State, No. PCD-2006-690, slip op. (Okla.Crim.App. Nov. 6, 2006).

Mr. Grant then filed a habeas petition in federal court but the district court denied relief, too. See Grant v. Workman (Grant II), No. 05-cv-0167-TCK-TLW, 2010 WL 5069853 (N.D.Okla. Dec. 2, 2010). The district court did, however, issue Mr. Grant a certificate of appealability that allowed him to bring his case to this court. Mr. Grant’s certificate allows us to review the district court’s decision on the five grounds we discuss below. Ultimately, we agree with all the courts that have come before us and hold none warrants relief.

I

We begin with the question whether the guilt phase jury instructions satisfy the demands of federal due process doctrine. In Beck v. Alabama, the Supreme Court held that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment sometimes requires a state charging a defendant with a capital offense to permit the jury to consider alternative, lesser included offenses that do not carry with them the prospect of a death sentence. 447 U.S. 625, 627, 100 S.Ct. 2382, 65 L.Ed.2d 392 (1980); see also Schad v. Arizona, 501 U.S. 624, 647, 111 S.Ct. 2491, 115 L.Ed.2d 555 (1991). In this case, Mr. Grant was charged with and convicted of first degree murder. He argues that the state court trying him violated Beck by failing to give the jury the option of finding him guilty instead of the lesser included — and noncapital — offenses of first degree manslaughter and second degree murder. But we soon encounter two difficulties with this submission.

The first is that Mr. Grant never asked for a lesser included jury instruction at trial. This is a problem because in Hooks v. Ward, 184 F.3d 1206 (10th Cir.1999), “we h[e]ld that a state prisoner seeking federal habeas relief may not prevail on a Beck claim as to a lesser included instruction that he or she failed to request at trial.” Id. at 1234. The requirement of a contemporary request isn’t one with roots, as one might imagine, in state procedural law. The Hooks rule is federal in nature, an explanation of what’s required as a matter of federal due process doctrine to invoke Beck. As Hooks explained, “a proper request for a lesser included instruction [is] an essential requirement under the federal rules,” and “[g]iven principles of comity, ... this rule applies with even greater force when [a federal court] sit[s] in review of a state conviction in a § 2254 action.” Id. at 1235, 1234 (internal quotation marks omitted). Simply put, this court won’t impose a requirement on sovereign states that we don’t impose on the [1012]*1012federal courts under our direct supervision. So a state generally won’t be said to offend a defendant’s due process right to particular jury instructions when it has no occasion to refuse a request for them. See id. at 1234 (“In such cases, ... it is the defendant him or herself that precludes the jury from considering a non-capital option.... ”).

Mr. Grant replies that .the portion of Hooks claiming to hold this much — section III.C of the opinion — doesn’t really contain a holding at all. He points out that two judges concurred separately, indicating they joined all but section III.C of the main opinion in Hooks. Id. at 1241 (Anderson, J., concurring). For its part, Oklahoma rejoins that the separate concurrence took issue with other aspects of section III.C,,not this' one — and that, properly viewed, the panel was unanimous on the need for a defendant to request a lesser included offense instruction to trigger Beck.

At the end of the day, who’s right about the optimal reading of Hooks doesn’t much matter. It doesn’t because since Hooks

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Bluebook (online)
727 F.3d 1006, 2013 WL 4105939, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 16937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-trammell-ca10-2013.