In Re: Eric Cathey

857 F.3d 221, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 8430
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 2017
Docket16-20312 CONSOLIDATED WITH 16-70015
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 857 F.3d 221 (In Re: Eric Cathey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Eric Cathey, 857 F.3d 221, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 8430 (5th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Eric Dewayne Cathey filed a habeas petition raising an Atkins claim in the Southern District of Texas. 1 The district court concluded that Cathey’s petition was successive and transferred it to this Court. Cathey appeals the district court’s transfer order. Alternatively, he asks this Court for authorization to file a successive habeas application. We AFFIRM the district court’s transfer order and GRANT the motion for authorization.

I.

Eric Dewayne Cathey was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in Texas state court. On direct appeal, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (“CCA”) affirmed Cathey’s conviction and sentence, 2 and the United States Supreme Court denied his petition for a writ of certiorari. 3 Cathey then filed a state habe-as petition, which the CCA also denied. On April 2, 2004, Cathey filed a federal habeas petition in the Southern District of Texas. Relevant here, this petition did not include an Atkins claim. The district court denied Cathey’s petition, and this Court declined to grant a Certificate of Appealability (“COA”). 4

In November 2008, on the eve of his scheduled execution, Cathey filed a second state habeas petition raising an Atkins claim. The CCA granted a stay and remanded to the state trial court for a hearing on the petition. 5 Following a five-day hearing, the state trial court signed Cath-ey’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law and recommended that the CCA grant relief. On November 5, 2014, the CCA rejected this recommendation and denied Cathey’s second state habeas petition. 6 Thereafter, Cathey filed in this Court a motion for authorization to file a successive habeas petition raising an Atkins claim. Less than two months later, Cathey asked for permission to withdraw this motion because he no longer believed that his planned habeas petition qualified as successive. We granted Cathey’s request.

Soon after, Cathey filed a petition for habeas corpus raising an Atkins claim in the Southern District of Texas. The State *224 moved to dismiss Cathey’s petition, urging that it was successive. The district court agreed and transferred Cathey’s petition to this Court. 7 Cathey now appeals the district court’s transfer order. Alternatively, he again moves this Court for authorization to file a successive habeas petition. Consistent with our recent guidance, 8 the clerk’s office consolidated Cathey’s two appeals.

II.

Cathey first challenges the district court’s conclusion that his habeas petition is “second or successive.” Under 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2), “[a] claim presented in a second or successive habeas corpus application ... that was not presented in a prior application shall be dismissed unless” the petitioner can satisfy one of two narrow exceptions. 9 “In the usual ease, a petition filed second in time”—such as Cathey’s petition—“and not otherwise permitted by the terms of § 2244 will not survive AED-PA’s ‘second or successive’ bar.” 10 But “AEDPA uses the phrase ‘second or successive’ as a ‘term of art.’ ” 11 That is, “[t]he phrase does not encompass all ‘applications filed second or successively in time.’ ” 12 Rather, “AEDPA’s bar on second or successive petitions only applies to a later-in-time petition that challenges the same state-court judgment as an earlier-in-time petition.” 13

In Magwood v. Patterson, the Supreme Court applied this rule to a second-in-time habeas petition challenging a death sentence. The petitioner, Magwood, had been sentenced to death in Alabama state court. Following an unsuccessful direct appeal, Magwood filed a federal habeas petition. The district court upheld Magwood’s conviction, but vacated his death sentence and remanded for a new sentencing hearing. After the hearing was conducted in state court, Magwood was again sentenced to . death. Magwood then filed a second federal habeas petition challenging his death sentence. 14 Although this petition was filed second in time, the Court held that it was not “second or successive” because it was the “first application” to challenge the “intervening judgment” entered after the second sentencing hearing. 15 That is, it was the first petition to challenge Magwood’s new death sentence. 16

Cathey argues that the same analysis applies here. As he recounts the facts, the state trial court found that Cathey was intellectually disabled “and that his sentence should be commuted to life.” In rejecting'these findings and conclusions, so the argument goes, the CCA effectively resentenced him to death and entered a new judgment. Consequently, Cathey *225 claims that his current petition challenges this new judgment entered by the CCA— not the judgment entered when he was originally convicted. And just as in Mag-wood, he urges that this second-in-time habeas petition is the “first application” to challenge the “intervening judgment” and death sentence entered by the CCA.

The State disagrees, arguing that “Cath-ey’s 1997 death sentence has never been disturbed.” It asserts that in Texas, only the CCA has the authority to grant habeas relief, and it did not do so here. Because Cathey was denied relief, the State contends, he was never resentenced. The State thus concludes that “no new or intervening judgment has been entered in Cathey’s case since the time he filed his first federal habeas petition in 2004.”

The determinative question is whether the 2014 CCA decision constitutes a new judgment under Magwood such that Cath-ey’s present habeas petition is not “second or successive” under § 2244. “While Mag-wood establishes that a habeas application challenging a ‘new judgment’ is not second or successive, it does not define the term ‘new judgment.’ ” 17 This Court has explained, “[wjhether a new judgment has intervened between two habeas petitions, such that the second petition can be filed without this Court’s permission, depends on whether a new sentence has been imposed.” 18

There was no formal resentencing here.

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

Related

Johnson v. Guerrero
Fifth Circuit, 2025
In Re: Garcia White
Fifth Circuit, 2024
White v. Lumpkin
Fifth Circuit, 2024
Cesar Gonzalez v. United States
28 F.4th 973 (Ninth Circuit, 2022)
In re: Blaine Milam
Fifth Circuit, 2020
In re: Timothy Richardson
Fourth Circuit, 2020
In Re: Robert Sparks
944 F.3d 572 (Fifth Circuit, 2019)
BASKERVILLE v. ROBINSON
D. New Jersey, 2019
In Re: Randy Halprin
Fifth Circuit, 2019
In Re: Mark Soliz
938 F.3d 200 (Fifth Circuit, 2019)
In re: Gary Ray Bowles
935 F.3d 1210 (Eleventh Circuit, 2019)
In Re: Dexter Johnson
Fifth Circuit, 2019
Johnson v. Davis (In Re Johnson)
935 F.3d 284 (Fifth Circuit, 2019)
Thomas, Kenneth Wayne
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2019
United States v. Michael St. Hubert
918 F.3d 1174 (Eleventh Circuit, 2019)
Cathey, Eric Dewayne
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2018
In Re: Erick Davila
Fifth Circuit, 2018
Petetan, US Carnell Jr. A/K/A Carnell Petetan, Jr.
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2017

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
857 F.3d 221, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 8430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-eric-cathey-ca5-2017.