Lockett v. Arn

728 F.2d 266
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 3, 1984
DocketNo. 83-3142
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 728 F.2d 266 (Lockett v. Arn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lockett v. Arn, 728 F.2d 266 (6th Cir. 1984).

Opinions

BAILEY BROWN, Senior Circuit Judge.

Following this court’s decision granting habeas relief to appellant Sandra Lockett, appellee moved for rehearing. The appel-lee’s motion is granted and the opinion and order of this court filed in this case on February 14, 1984 are vacated.

On appeal, Lockett contends that the district court improperly denied her petition for habeas corpus. Lockett makes three constitutional challenges to her Ohio conviction for aggravated murder and aggravated robbery on the grounds of (1) improper jury instructions, (2) ineffective assistance of counsel, and (3) an improper refusal to grant a continuance. We conclude that the appellant’s failure to raise her constitutional objection to the jury instructions at trial precludes our review of those instructions on petition for collateral relief. We also find appellant’s other claims without merit. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

BACKGROUND

Sandra Lockett was charged with the aggravated murder and aggravated rob[268]*268bery of a pawnshop operator in Akron, Ohio. The State’s ease rested primarily on the testimony of a coparticipant, A1 Parker, who agreed to cooperate in return for a lesser charge.

According to Parker’s testimony, he, Lockett, Lockett’s brother, James Lockett, and Parker’s friend, Nathan Earl Dew, agreed to a common plan to rob the victim. The scheme called for Dew and James Lockett to enter the pawnshop and pretend to pawn a ring. After they had engaged the pawnbroker in this transaction, Parker would enter the shop and ask to examine a gun. Parker, who would be concealing bullets, would load the gun and proceed to rob the shop. Sandra Lockett, who knew the operator, would remain outside the shop in an automobile.

The robbery proceeded according to plan until the pawnshop operator grabbed the gun held by Parker. With Parker’s finger on the trigger, the gun went off and the victim was killed. Parker fled the shop to the car where Sandra Lockett waited with the engine running. After Parker told Lockett what had happened, she placed the gun in her purse and drove to a relative’s house where she called a taxi. Shortly after leaving the house in the taxi, Parker and Lockett were stopped by the police and questioned. Later, Lockett hid Dew and Parker in the attic of her parents’ home.

Parker was subsequently apprehended and charged with aggravated robbery and aggravated murder with specifications, the latter offense punishable by death. Prior to trial, Parker pled guilty to the murder charge and agreed to testify against Lock-ett. In return for his testimony, the prosecutor dropped the aggravated robbery charge and the specifications to the murder charge, thereby removing the possibility of the death penalty. Lockett’s brother and Dew were convicted of aggravated murder with specifications.

At Sandra Lockett’s separate trial, her counsel, in the opening statement to the jury, explained her account of the circumstances surrounding the robbery. Lockett thought that Dew and her brother merely intended to pawn the ring. The defense called Lockett’s brother and Dew to the stand; both invoked their fifth amendment privilege and refused to testify. Lockett chose not to testify in spite of her counsel’s warning that if she did not testify, her defense would consist solely of cross-examination of the prosecution’s witnesses.

Lockett was charged with aggravated robbery and aggravated murder. The aggravating specifications as to murder were (1) that the murder was “committed for the purpose of escaping detection, apprehension, trial or punishment” for aggravated robbery, and (2) that the murder was “committed while ... committing, attempting to commit, or fleeing immediately after committing or attempting to commit ... aggravated robbery.” The jury was instructed that, in order to find Lockett guilty of aggravated murder, it had to find that she purposely had killed the pawnbroker while committing or attempting to commit aggravated robbery. The jury was charged that one who

purposely aids, helps, associates himself or herself with another for the purpose of committing a crime is regarded as if he or she were the principal offender and is just as guilty as if the person performed every act constituting the offense. ..

The trial court also instructed the jury regarding the intent requirement:

A person engaged in a common design with others to rob by force and violence an individual or individuals of their property is presumed to acquiesce in whatever may reasonably be necessary to accomplish the object of their enterprise...
If the conspired robbery and the manner of its accomplishment would be reasonably likely to produce death, each plotter is equally guilty with the principal offender ...

[269]*269The jury returned a verdict of guilty and the court, following Ohio’s statutory procedure, sentenced Lockett to death.

Lockett’s convictions were affirmed on appeal by the Ohio Court of Appeals and the Ohio Supreme Court. State v. Lockett, 49 Ohio St.2d 48, 358 N.E.2d 1062 (1976). The United States Supreme Court struck down her death sentence but rejected her challenges to the convictions. Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S. 586, 98 S.Ct. 2954, 57 L.Ed.2d 973 (1978).

Lockett’s initial petition for writ of habe-as corpus was dismissed by the district court for failure to exhaust her remedies available under Ohio’s post-conviction statute, Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 2953.21. Thereafter, Lockett amended her petition and deleted the unexhausted claims. The district court then found Lockett’s claims to be without merit and her petition was dismissed. This appeal followed.

I.

The Jury Instructions

Lockett claims that the trial court’s instructions unconstitutionally shifted the burden of proving intent or purpose for the crime of aggravated murder under Ohio Rev.Ann. § 2903.01. In particular, Lockett objects to the instruction that a “person engaged in a common design with others to rob by force and violence an individual or individuals of their property is presumed to acquiesce in whatever may reasonably be necessary to accomplish the object of their enterprise.” Lockett, relying on Sand-strom v. Montana, 442 U.S. 510, 512, 99 S.Ct. 2450, 2453, 61 L.Ed.2d 39 (1979), contends that this instruction violated due process because it forced her to assume the burden of disproving intent or purpose, a necessary element of the crime.

Lockett concedes that she failed to object to the jury instructions at trial as required by Rule 30, Ohio R.Crim.P. Such a failure to comply with the state’s contemporaneous objection rule would ordinarily preclude a federal court from reviewing the instructions on a collateral attack. Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. 72, 97 S.Ct. 2497, 53 L.Ed.2d 594 (1977). Lockett maintains, however, that the Ohio courts waived her procedural default when they reviewed the merits of her claims on direct appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
728 F.2d 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockett-v-arn-ca6-1984.