In re Gibbs

223 F.3d 308, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 19991, 2000 WL 1154011
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 2000
DocketNo. 00-20540
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 223 F.3d 308 (In re Gibbs) 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 Gibbs, 223 F.3d 308, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 19991, 2000 WL 1154011 (5th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

David Earl Gibbs seeks authorization to file a successive petition for a writ of habe-as corpus in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, contending that his right to file a successive federal writ of habeas corpus should be measured by the cause and prejudice standard in place until April 26, 1996, the effective date of the AEDPA. We reject this argument, refuse permission to file the petition, and refuse to stay his execution now scheduled for August 23, 2000.

I

In 1986 a jury in Montgomery County, Texas, convicted Gibbs and sentenced him to death for the rape and murder of Marietta Bryant in the course of a burglary of a habitation. The conviction and sentence have been affirmed both on direct appeal and collateral review by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.1 After this review Gibbs sought federal habeas relief. The federal district court denied relief, and we affirmed that decision.2

Gibbs seeks to file a second petition for federal habeas to raise a single claim, not raised in his first federal petition:

A juror’s false statement, during voir dire, that she had never been the victim of a violent crime, when in fact she had been brutally kidnaped, assaulted, raped, and robbed, deprived Mr. Gibbs of his right to a fair trial and impartial jury in violation of the Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.

II

Our question is whether Gibbs can escape the strictures of 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2), which provides that:

(2) A claim presented in a second or successive habeas corpus application under section 2254 that was not presented in a prior application shall be dismissed unless' — ■
(A) the applicant shows that the claim relies on a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously unavailable; or
(B)(i) the factual predicate for the claim could not have been discovered previously through the exercise of due diligence; and
(ii) the facts underlying the claim, if proven and viewed in light of the evidence as a whole, would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing evidence that, but for con[310]*310stitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have found the applicant guilty of the underlying offense.

Gibbs concededly cannot meet (2)(B)(ii). He urges that because application of AED-PA’s substantive standards “would have an impermissibly retroactive effect on him,” the pre-act standards for successive writs of McCleskey v. Zant, 499 U.S. 467, 111 S.Ct. 1454, 113 L.Ed.2d 517 (1991), should control. He argues that he could not reasonably have anticipated when filing his first federal habeas petition that his claim of juror bias would be barred by the later-enacted AEDPA standard of innocence.3 His argument continues that he could make a prima facie showing of cause and prejudice under the McCleskey standard.4

The cause requirement assertedly is met by a combination of three factors: the practice then prevalent of setting an execution date to provide incentive to a prisoner to proceed with efforts to obtain ha-beas relief,5 the federal requirement that a petitioner cannot bring a petition with both exhausted and unexhausted claims, and the refusal of Texas courts to entertain a petition if a request for federal relief is then pending.

Texas responds that we rejected essentially the same effort to escape the AED-PA in Graham v. Johnson, 168 F.3d 762 (5th Cir.1999), cert. denied, - U.S. -, 120 S.Ct. 1830, 146 L.Ed.2d 774 (2000); that Gibbs cannot demonstrate that he has been whipsawed from a timely assertion of the claim of juror bias in his effort to escape the innocence requirement; that he cannot meet the cause and prejudice standard of McCleskey in any event. Finally, Texas urges that the claim is procedurally defaulted and has been decided against Gibbs on its merits.

Ill

We turn to the factual setting of Gibbs’s claim, starting with the circumstances surrounding the filing of the first federal ha-beas petition.

First, the dates of filing, keeping in mind that Gibbs was tried and convicted in 1986. With execution scheduled for July 18, 1995, Gibbs filed his second state habe-as petition on July 5, 1995. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied the application on July 15, 1995. Gibbs filed his first federal petition on July 17, 1995, and execution was stayed on that day. Gibbs urges that on July 13, 1995, with Gibbs facing the execution date of July 18, 1995, and approximately a week after filing a second state habeas application, juror Lois Webster told Gibbs’s counsel that she had [311]*311been raped while a teenager. Counsel was then preparing Gibbs’s federal petition in anticipation of a state denial and only four days remained before the execution date, including a Saturday and Sunday.

Texas replies that the claim could have been made in this second state petition. The contention is that the state courts found that counsel knew the factual basis for the juror bias claim as early as June 8, 1995 (when habeas counsel interviewed the juror and her husband) and at the latest on June 29, 1995, when the juror signed an affidavit, but counsel filed a state habeas claim on July 5 without including it. The state continues that Gibbs could also have amended his state petition, pointing out that the state trial judge did not enter its findings on the habeas petition until July 14. Moreover, the state says, Gibbs did not return to state court for three years and eight months, days before a then scheduled execution — with the juror claim in his pocket all the while.

Gibbs rejoins that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals implicitly rejected the factual finding by the state habeas trial court that petitioner’s counsel had knowledge as early as June 8 of the factual basis of the claim of juror bias. Gibbs points to the conclusion of the Court of Criminal Appeals that the state rules for filing a successive writ were met. The contention is that under state law the successive petition could not have been filed if the factual predicate of its claims were discoverable at the time the first petition was filed, July 5, 1995.

Whether counsel had the factual predicate on June 8 or June 29 aside, the state habeas court concluded that counsel “made no attempt to investigate the matter further until February 26, 1999 ... and presented no reasonable justification for the three year and eight month delay between his discovery of the underlying basis for this [claim] and his first attempt to investigate.” This finding is not challenged. The lapse of time it finds spans the April 25, 1996, effective date of the AEDPA. It led to the holding by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals that Gibbs’s third state writ was defaulted under the common law abuse of writ doctrine.

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Related

Baston v. Bagley
282 F. Supp. 2d 655 (N.D. Ohio, 2003)
In Re Gibbs
223 F.3d 312 (Fifth Circuit, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 F.3d 308, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 19991, 2000 WL 1154011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gibbs-ca5-2000.