Michael J. Padgett v. William O'Sullivan

65 F.3d 72
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 1995
Docket94-2957
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 65 F.3d 72 (Michael J. Padgett v. William O'Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael J. Padgett v. William O'Sullivan, 65 F.3d 72 (7th Cir. 1995).

Opinions

BAUER, Circuit Judge.

Michael Padgett was tried and convicted for the murder of his wife. The court sentenced him to serve a prison term of twenty-eight years. He petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus declaring that his trial was rendered fundamentally unfair by the trial court’s denial of his request for a continuance. The district court denied the petition. We agree with the district court’s conclusion albeit for different reasons.

The facts of this case are set forth at length in the Illinois Appellate Court’s opinion affirming Padgett’s conviction. People v. Padgett, 248 Ill.App.3d 1018, 188 Ill.Dec. 412, 618 N.E.2d 982 (1993). We therefore discuss only the facts which bear on the disposition of this petition.

Illinois authorities indicted and tried Pad-gett for killing his wife, Renee. That Pad-gett shot his estranged wife on February 22, 1990, was never in dispute. The issue at trial was whether Padgett’s actions were justified as self-defense. Padgett related the following story in his defense.

Though they had been separated for about a week, Padgett and Renee had dinner on the night of the shooting. At about 8:00 p.m., Renee announced that she was going out to purchase detergent. Padgett heard her car pull into the garage at about 11:30 p.m., but when she failed to enter the house, Padgett went to the garage armed with his .357 caliber magnum revolver.

In the garage, Padgett observed Renee in her car drinking some kind of liquor straight out of the bottle. When Padgett asked her to come inside, she became belligerent, and Padgett determined that she was intoxicated. Padgett decided to ignore her and turned to go back inside the house. Just then, Renee started the car’s ignition and began backing the ear out of the garage. Concerned about her driving in an inebriated condition, Pad-gett went to confront her in the alley outside of the garage. As he came to within ten feet of the ear, he observed Renee pointing a .25 caliber gun at him. Still in possession of his revolver, Padgett fired off six rounds in Renee’s direction. As he fired the weapon, Padgett was moving from right to left towards the passenger side of the car. Fatally wounded, Renee lost control of the car which came to rest against a fence.

Padgett returned to his house and called the 911 emergency number. After his call, he did not return to Renee’s car to help her but waited instead inside his house. When the police arrived shortly thereafter, Padgett was placed under arrest. Renee Padgett died at the hospital approximately seven hours after the shooting.

Testimony from the prosecution’s experts supplied ample reason to doubt Padgett’s explanation. Detective Edmond Leracz of the Chicago Police Department testified that both the driver’s side and passenger’s side windows had been shattered; bullet holes were found in the front and rear windows and in the area between the rear and side windows; and more bullet holes were found inside the driver’s door and just above the arm rest. A crime lab technician testified that no fingerprints were found on Renee’s .25 caliber handgun.

[74]*74Further evidence was presented by Dr. Mary Jumbelic, the medical examiner who performed the autopsy on Renee. Her examination revealed two gunshot wounds: one to the chest and one to the back left side of Renee’s head. Jumbelic originally reported that neither of the shots was a close range firing i.e., within four feet. Believing, however, that evidence of the gunshot’s proximity might have been washed away during Renee’s medical treatment, Jumbelic performed a microscopic examination of the skin in the area of the head wound. This examination established that the head wound was indeed the result of a close range firing. Jumbelic subsequently amended her report to reflect this conclusion.

The amendment of Jumbelic’s report lies at the heart of Padgett’s petition. The first report was dated May 18,1990. The amended report was dated June 15, 1990. The amended report was not delivered to the prosecutor, however, until the day Jumbelic was scheduled to testify at trial, several months after its preparation. At that time, the prosecutor immediately tendered it to defense counsel.

Padgett’s attorney argued for exclusion of the amended report based on the prejudice created by the delay. The trial court rejected Padgett’s objection. Padgett’s attorney then stated, “If the court allows it, we are stating for the record that we are taken by surprise. We are not prepared to move forward at this time.” Padgett’s attorney then asked for a brief recess so he could discuss the report with Padgett. After he had done so, counsel stated that he was ready for trial.

The Illinois Appellate Court affirmed the conviction. In addressing the amended report, the court concluded that the exchange described above did not amount to a request for a continuance but that even if it did, in disclosing the amended report to Padgett immediately, the state had complied with its obligations under Illinois law. The court also held that Padgett’s claim that if he had known about the amendment, he could have changed his story, did not constitute cognizable prejudice.

Padgett then filed this habeas corpus petition. In it, he clarified that he was prejudiced not because he had been precluded from changing his story, but because he had been prevented from presenting an expert to rebut Jumbelie’s testimony. The district court did not reach the prejudice issue because it found that Padgett’s claim had been adjudicated on independent and adequate state grounds. Since the Illinois Appellate Court had disposed of Padgett’s claim based on Illinois Supreme Court Rule 412, Pad-gett’s petition failed to implicate any cognizable federal right.

On appeal, Padgett contends that the district court erred in finding his claim precluded by the independent and adequate state grounds doctrine. He maintains that irrespective of the prosecutor’s state law obligations to disclose evidence, Padgett still had a due process right to a continuance in order to obtain an expert witness to rebut the new evidence. By failing to grant a continuance, the trial court supposedly deprived him of this right. The state concedes that the independent and adequate state grounds doctrine is not dispositive of Padgett’s argument. At issue then is whether the state court’s denial of the continuance deprived Padgett of a fair trial.

The state maintains that the remarks of Padgett’s defense counsel did not constitute a request for a continuance. This is an unduly harsh and literal reading of the exchange. In the context of what had just transpired, we believe that it is eminently fair to read the statement, “[w]e are not prepared to move forward at this time,” as a request for a delay in the proceedings. Having said that, we cannot read into counsel’s remarks as much as Padgett would like. That is, nothing in counsel’s statement could possibly be construed to inform the court that he sought to call a rebuttal expert. Rather, the only sensible interpretation of the statement would be that Padgett’s attorney needed some time to revise his cross-examination of Jumbelic. In denying the continuance, the trial court implicitly concluded that Padgett did not need additional time to formulate a responsive cross-examination. We therefore review this decision to determine whether it robbed the trial of due process.

[75]

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Bluebook (online)
65 F.3d 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-j-padgett-v-william-osullivan-ca7-1995.