Lee v. Corsini

777 F.3d 46, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 1147, 2015 WL 310443
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 2015
Docket14-1070
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 777 F.3d 46 (Lee v. Corsini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Corsini, 777 F.3d 46, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 1147, 2015 WL 310443 (1st Cir. 2015).

Opinion

*51 STAHL, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted Petitioner-Appellant Robert M. Lee of murder in the first degree for the 1976 death of Angel Santos Davila. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (“SJC”) affirmed Lee’s conviction on direct appeal. See Commonwealth v. Lee, 383 Mass. 507, 419 N.E.2d 1378 (1981). After several unsuccessful motions for a new trial in state court, Lee filed a petition for habeas corpus relief in federal district court, arguing that his attorneys at both trial and postconviction proceedings were constitutionally ineffective and that prosecutorial misconduct tainted his case. The district court denied habeas relief as well as Lee’s motion for discovery, holding that all of Lee’s claims had been procedurally defaulted. After careful consideration, we hold that the claim of ineffective assistance of postconviction counsel has not been procedurally defaulted, but that 28 U.S.C. § 2254(i) constitutes an independent bar to habeas relief on this ground. We accordingly affirm.

I. Facts & Background

A. Underlying crime

We set forth the facts as recounted by the SJC in affirming Lee’s conviction on direct appeal, supplemented by other consistent facts in the record. Yeboah-Sefah v. Ficco, 556 F.3d 53, 62 (1st Cir.2009).

Janet Brady hired Lee to kill her boyfriend Angel Santos Davila, with whom she lived. 1 Brady testified at trial that her relationship with Davila began deteriorating in the spring of 1976, and that, by the summer, she had resolved to “find someone to pay to do him harm.” She contacted Robert DeCot, the manager of a local bar, who put her in touch with Lee. Lee was known to DeCot as a patron of his bar; Brady, too, was already acquainted with Lee, as he was a customer at the Fort Devens credit union where she worked as a loan officer. Over the days leading up to Davila’s shooting, Brady and Lee met several times at local bars and in the back office of the credit union. During these meetings, they made plans to “take care of’ Davila and discussed payment. Lee demanded $500 upfront, plus an additional $2000; Brady complied.

Davila was shot at approximately 8:45 p.m. on Thursday, August 26, 1976. People attending a pool party at the house next door to Brady and Davila’s heard shots ring out, as well as the sound of a car with a noisy muffler driving away. An “old car, making a lot of noise” and “reddish” in color was seen driving away very fast. Lee’s wife, who was out of town at the time of the shooting, owned a red Toyota, which Lee had been seen driving that week.

Police recovered one yellow Sears shotgun shell, determined to have come from a 20-gauge shotgun, outside Davila’s house, as well as No. 8 shot lead fragments from the stairway inside the house; similar lead fragments also were extracted from Davila’s body during the autopsy. There was testimony at trial that although Lee had loaned his shotgun to a friend, he picked it up sometime between August 23 and 26. When police arrested Lee on August 29, they found in his closet a 20-gauge Remington shotgun and five yellow Sears 20-gauge shotgun shells filled with No. 8 shot.

Lee presented an alibi defense:

Lee offered his own and corroborating testimony that he was at a bar some distance away from the victim’s home *52 from eight o’clock until well after nine on the evening in question. He sought to show that he was not driving his wife’s red Toyota but a jeep that night, that the Toyota was not old or noisy, and that he did not recover his shotgun until Friday, August 27, the day after the shooting. Lee’s version of his contact with Janet Brady was that she asked him to collect money from a Mr. “Warner.” He claimed Brady concocted the story of the conspiracy with Lee in order to protect her son or someone else who actually shot Davilla [sic].

Lee, 383 Mass, at 509, 419 N.E.2d 1378. After a six-day trial in May 1977, the jury rejected this defense and found Lee guilty of murder in the first degree.

B. Direct appeal

On appeal, Lee challenged the denial of his motion to suppress and motion for a directed verdict, as well as the jury instructions on malice and the trial judge’s failure to instruct on manslaughter. The SJC affirmed Lee’s conviction in 1981, finding no merit to any of his arguments.

C. Postconviction proceedings

Postconviction proceedings have extended over four decades since Lee’s conviction was affirmed on direct appeal. Lee filed his first motion for a new trial, through counsel, in July 1983. After that attorney was disbarred, another lawyer took over his case and filed a substitute motion for a new trial in August 1989. That motion raised claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, based on a failure to investigate Lee’s purported lack of criminal responsibility as a result of mental impairment sustained in the Vietnam War; ineffectiveness of counsel in cross-examining witnesses and failing to request a jury instruction on misidentification; and error in the jury instructions on reasonable doubt and malice. The motion was denied without a hearing in February 1990.

Lee subsequently filed a pro se motion to reconsider that decision, which also added several claims centering on his lack of criminal responsibility and incompetence to stand trial, and ineffective assistance of counsel for failure to raise those claims. This motion, too, was denied without a hearing. Lee sought leave to appeal, and a hearing was held before a single justice of the SJC in November 1992. The single justice, acting as gatekeeper, declined to let the appeal proceed to the full court. 2

Lee filed another pro se motion for a new trial in September 1995, also requesting that counsel be assigned to him. Although his motion for the appointment of counsel was allowed, none was assigned and, for reasons that are unclear from the record, no further action was taken on Lee’s case for over seven years. Mary Rogers, Lee’s current attorney, was appointed as new counsel in February 2003; in September 2004, she filed a new motion for a new trial to substitute for Lee’s pro se filing.

The 2004 motion for a new trial took a new tack. Instead of focusing on Lee’s alleged lack of criminal responsibility and claimed error in jury instructions, this motion asserted numerous instances of ineffective assistance of counsel — at both trial *53 and posteonvietion stages — as well as prosecutorial misconduct as grounds for a new trial. 3 In connection with this motion, Lee also filed motions for discovery, in attempt to obtain documents such as police reports, ballistics records, grand jury minutes, and the victim’s statements. to police, which state prosecutors and law enforcement officers purportedly had not provided.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
777 F.3d 46, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 1147, 2015 WL 310443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-corsini-ca1-2015.