Mitchell Alfred Patterson v. James H. Gomez, Director

223 F.3d 959, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 9097, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6848, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 20175, 2000 WL 1154254
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 16, 2000
Docket99-15530
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 223 F.3d 959 (Mitchell Alfred Patterson v. James H. Gomez, Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell Alfred Patterson v. James H. Gomez, Director, 223 F.3d 959, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 9097, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6848, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 20175, 2000 WL 1154254 (9th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:

Petitioner Mitchell Alfred Patterson appeals the denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Petitioner asserts that an instruction requiring the jury to presume him sane at the guilt phase of his murder trial violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We hold in the circumstances of this case that the instruction was constitutional error, and that the error was not harmless. We therefore reverse the decision of the district court.

I

Petitioner had a history of depression leading up to the events in this case. In 1989, he was hospitalized after an attempted suicide. On March 30, 1993, he was experiencing serious marital and financial difficulties, had not slept for three days, and had stopped taking his prescribed psychotropic medications. 'On that day, petitioner drove his wife and three children several hours from their home in Lincoln, California, a town about an hour east of Sacramento, to his wife’s parents’ home in Willits, about 140 miles north of San Francisco. Later that day, he left with his 10-year-old daughter, Adrianna, ostensibly to buy ice cream. As they left the house, he told his mother-in-law that his “wife will be happy here. This is where she’s always wanted to be.”

Petitioner drove south to San Francisco, drove back and forth across the Golden Gate bridge at least twice, and then drove about 200 miles east to the Sierra Nevada mountains. Witnesses saw his pickup truck the next morning on the shoulder of Interstate 80 about ten- miles east of Truckee, near the Nevada border, where he had run out of gas. At about 11:30 a.m., he used the car phone of a passing motorist to call his wife and ask her to send her sister to pick them up. Several motorists testified that they saw petitioner and Adrianna walking along Interstate 80 between 11:30 a.m. and sometime after 1:00 p.m.

Between 1:20 and 1:25 p.m., petitioner and Adrianna were sitting beside the road, eating a sandwich they had been given by a passing motorist. A large semi truck approached. Petitioner grabbed Adrianna in his arms, ran onto the freeway, and lunged in front of the truck. The driver swerved into another lane but was unable to avoid them. Adrianna was killed. Petitioner survived with compound fractures in his hands. Petitioner offered various explanations for running in front of the truck: he asserted that it was an “accident”; that he was mentally ill; that he was hallucinating, seeing smoke and people being burned on crosses; that he believed that people were after them who would inflict a “slow and arduous death”; and that he ran onto the freeway to kill himself and Adrianna in order to avoid a worse form of death.

Petitioner was charged with first degree murder in California state court. He pled not guilty and, alternatively, not guilty by reason of insanity. The state court trial was bifurcated into a guilt phase and a sanity phase in accordance with California’s standard practice. At the conclusion of the guilt phase trial, the jury was instructed to presume that petitioner was *962 sane. The jury found petitioner guilty of first degree murder. The same jury then hung on the question of whether petitioner was sane. A second jury, empaneled to try only the sanity question, found petitioner sane.

After exhausting his direct appeals in state court, petitioner brought a petition in federal district court for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. He asserted violations of due process because of an alleged insufficiency of the evidence and because of an improper presumption contained in the jury instruction. Affirming the findings and recommendation of the magistrate judge, the district court denied the petition. It then issued a certificate of appealability on petitioner’s jury instruction claim.

II

We review de novo a district court’s decision to deny a habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. See Houston v. Roe, 177 F.3d 901, 905 (9th Cir.1999). Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), we can reverse a state court decision denying relief only if that decision is “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). The “Supreme Court need not have addressed a factually identical ease[;] § 2254(d) only requires that the Supreme Court clearly determine the law.” Houston, 177 F.3d at 906. “[0]ur independent review of the legal question ... [must] leave[ ] us with a ‘firm conviction’ that one answer, the one rejected by the [state] court, was correct and the other, the application of the federal law that the court adopted, was erroneous — in other words that clear error occurred.” Van Tran v. Lindsey, 212 F.3d 1143, 1153-54 (9th Cir.2000).

Ill

We first address whether the jury instruction violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

A

A jury instruction cannot relieve the state of the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt a crucial element of the criminal offense. In Sandstrom v. Montana, 442 U.S. 510, 521, 99 S.Ct. 2450, 61 L.Ed.2d 39 (1979), the Supreme Court held the proper inquiry to be “whether the challenged jury instruction had the effect of relieving the State of the burden of proof ... on the critical question of petitioner’s state of mind.” If a “reasonable juror could have given the presumption conclusive or persuasion-shifting effect,” the instruction is unconstitutional. Id. at 519. In Francis v. Franklin, 471 U.S. 307, 325, 105 S.Ct. 1965, 85 L.Ed.2d 344 (1985), the Supreme Court held that an instruction was unconstitutional “[bjecause a reasonable juror could have understood the challenged portions of the jury instruction in this case as creating a mandatory presumption that shifted to the defendant the burden of persuasion on the crucial element of intent[.]” We have held that to determine whether a jury instruction unconstitutionally shifts the burden of proof, we must inquire “ “whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury has applied the challenged instruction’ in an unconstitutional manner.” Houston, 177 F.3d at 909 (citations and quotations omitted).

In both Sandstrom and Francis, the Supreme Court held jury instructions invalid for unconstitutionally shifting the burden of proof. 1 In Sandstrom, the de

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223 F.3d 959, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 9097, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6848, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 20175, 2000 WL 1154254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-alfred-patterson-v-james-h-gomez-director-ca9-2000.