Jeffrey K. Ragland v. Thomas E. Hundley

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 1996
Docket95-1260
StatusPublished

This text of Jeffrey K. Ragland v. Thomas E. Hundley (Jeffrey K. Ragland v. Thomas E. Hundley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffrey K. Ragland v. Thomas E. Hundley, (8th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

___________

No. 95-1260 ___________

Jeffrey K. Ragland, * * Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * Southern District of Iowa. Thomas E. Hundley, Warden, * Fort Madison Penitentiary, * * Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: November 13, 1995

Filed: March 20, 1996 ___________

Before BEAM, HEANEY, and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judges. ___________

BEAM, Circuit Judge.

Jeffrey K. Ragland (Ragland) appeals the district court's1 denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Ragland objects to Iowa's felony-murder law as interpreted and applied by the Iowa Supreme Court. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

After attending a concert, a group of five friends decided to swing by a grocery store to get some beer. They chatted with some mutual acquaintances in the grocery store parking lot. While they talked, a car sped into the parking lot and the occupants shouted at them. That car then stopped. The occupants exited and approached the group of friends. One of the newcomers carried an

1 The Honorable Ronald E. Longstaff, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa. iron pipe and one carried an empty beer bottle in each hand. The leader of the new group, Ragland, demanded that the two groups fight, even though they had had no previous contact, amicable or otherwise. The friends demurred, and as one, Timothy Sieff, backed away with his hands up, the iron pipe wielder, Matthew Gill, swung the pipe like a baseball bat, felling Sieff with one blow. Although an ambulance was summoned during the ensuing melee, Sieff died before help arrived.

After Sieff fell, the fight moved across the parking lot and into the store with Ragland, now carrying the iron pipe, in pursuit of two of the victim's companions. A store employee tried to record the license plate number of the aggressor group's car when it subsequently left the premises. The car stopped. Ragland then got out and spat upon the employee.

Ragland was tried and convicted of first-degree felony murder. Despite his youth, Ragland's extensive record of unprovoked serious assaults and evident pleasure in hurting people convinced the trial court that life imprisonment, without possibility of parole, was the appropriate sentence.2 Ragland appealed both his conviction and his sentence. The Iowa Supreme Court affirmed. State v. Ragland, 420 N.W.2d 791 (Iowa 1988). Ragland's state

2 The trial court sentenced Ragland, who was 17 at the time of the crime, as an adult. Jt. App. at 76. The trial court found Ragland's record to be "probably one of the worst records that [it had] ever seen . . . as far as assaults." Id. at 81. That court had rarely encountered someone who "apparently gets so much satisfaction . . . out of causing injury, pain, and suffering to someone else." Id. at 82. The court noted that Ragland's record of assaults stretched from when he was nine years old, that Ragland had injured many people over the years, that within the year before his trial "at least once a month [Ragland had] inflicted an injury on someone that required medical treatment, hospitalization, or caused permanent injury," and that the victim of Ragland's most recent assault, which occurred just two days before the trial in issue, was still hospitalized at the time of Ragland's sentencing. Id.

-2- postconviction actions were also unsuccessful. Ragland v. State, No. 90- 920 (Iowa Ct. App. May 29, 1991). Ragland subsequently filed a petition for federal habeas relief, which the district court denied after de novo review of the magistrate's report and recommendation. Ragland v. Hundley, No. 4-93-CV-10719, order (S.D. Iowa Nov. 15, 1994). Ragland appeals.

On appeal, Ragland argues that his felony-murder conviction violates his constitutional right to due process and his right against double jeopardy because the underlying felony (willful injury) and the murder (killing with malice aforethought) resulted from the same act. Ragland also contends that inadequacy in the jury instructions as to the element of malice aforethought deprived him of due process.3 He further asserts that the Iowa Supreme Court's limitation of the statutory merger doctrine in felony-murder cases violates his right to equal protection.

II. DISCUSSION

Ragland's argument that he cannot be convicted of felony murder because the underlying felony, willful injury, was an integral part of the homicide is without merit. There is no double jeopardy issue because Ragland was convicted of one crime only, felony murder, and sentenced for that crime only. See Heaton v. Nix, 924 F.2d 130, 134 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 500 U.S. 956 (1991). In fact, double jeopardy is not implicated even when a state pursues convictions and punishment for both the underlying felony and the felony murder, so long as the defendant is prosecuted for both offenses in one trial and the state legislature has authorized cumulative punishments. Id. That a lesser crime is

3 We note that Ragland apparently did not raise the alleged inadequacy of the jury instructions until after his conviction, despite having ample opportunity and invitation to do so.

-3- an element of a greater crime simply does not render conviction of the greater crime a double jeopardy violation. Id.

The companion argument--that in this case there can be no felony murder because the murder was accomplished by one blow not only lacks merit but is, at bottom, a question of state law over which we have no jurisdiction. See Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U.S. 62, 67-68 (1991) (federal habeas courts may not reexamine state court determinations of state law questions). Ragland argues that a felonious assault which results in a murder cannot be the basis for a felony-murder charge under Iowa's statutory merger doctrine. Instead, it must be charged as a second-degree murder. The State of Iowa and the Iowa Supreme Court disagree.

Iowa's statutory merger doctrine forbids separate convictions on both a lesser included offense and the greater offense. Iowa Code Ann. § 701.9 (West 1993). In State v. Ragland, 420 N.W.2d at 793, and State v. Beeman, 315 N.W.2d 770, 776-77 (Iowa 1982), the Iowa Supreme Court decided that the Iowa legislature has declined to extend the "merger doctrine" to felony murder.4 E.g., Iowa v. Anderson, 517 N.W.2d 208, 214 (Iowa 1994); see also Iowa Code Ann. §§ 702.11; 707.2 (West 1993). Since Ragland was convicted of one crime only, felony murder, there is no statutory merger issue.

4 Some states have extended a form of the merger doctrine to felony murder, in that they do not allow felonious assault to be the underlying felony on which a felony-murder charge is based. This is to avoid the prosecution's bootstrapping a simple homicide to a higher degree of murder without showing the requisite intent. Iowa's legislative scheme, however, explicitly includes felonious assault in the listed felonies which will support a felony-murder charge. Iowa Code Ann.

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