Morris v. Dretke

90 F. App'x 62
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 2004
Docket03-20338
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 F. App'x 62 (Morris v. Dretke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris v. Dretke, 90 F. App'x 62 (5th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

PER CURIAM. *

Petitioner-Appellant Lorenzo Morris (“Morris”) requests a certificate of appeal-ability (“COA”) from this court in order that he may appeal the decision of the district court dismissing his federal habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, for ineffective assistance of counsel. Morris claimed that both his trial and habeas counsel failed to investigate and present evidence that he claims is both exculpatory and mitigating in nature, in connection with his murder conviction and death sentence. Because we find that the district court was correct to conclude that Morris’s state habeas petition was denied on an independent and adequate state procedural ground, and Morris has failed to overcome this procedural bar, we deny his request for a COA and affirm the district court’s decision.

DISCUSSION

I. Statement of facts

On August 5, 1990, Morris attacked seventy year old Jesse Fields (“Fields”) with fists, a knife, and a hammer. Morris later confessed to the attack. Morris stated that the attack occurred because Fields did not have any drugs to sell to him. During the attack, Morris stabbed Fields in the neck with a knife and struck him repeatedly on the head with a hammer. Morris then left Fields lying in a pool of blood and took money from Fields house. As a result of the attack Fields suffered severe head trauma, leaving him in a comatose state. He remained in a hospital for several months and was then transferred to a nursing home. During his stay in the nursing home, Fields developed gangrene in his foot, which led doctors to amputate his left leg in order to prevent the spread of infection. Fields died the day after the amputation on May 11, 1991. For the entire time from the day that *64 Fields had been attacked by Morris until the day he died, he had been comatose.

On July 31, 1991, the State of Texas indicted Morris for the murder of Fields in the course of an aggravated robbery. A jury found Morris guilty of capital murder. In the punishment phase of the trial, the State presented evidence of Morris’s long criminal history, including incidents of shoplifting, resisting arrest, carrying a weapon, aggravated assault of a police officer, and aggravated robbery. The defense did not call any punishment phase witnesses. The jury’s affirmative answers to the Texas special issues required imposition of the death penalty. 1

Morris challenged the conviction and sentence on direct appeal to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. On December 4, 1994, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Morris’s conviction and sentence. The United States Supreme Court then denied Morris’s subsequent petition for a writ of certiorari. On October 21, 1996, Morris filed an application for state habeas corpus relief. The state habeas court found no material disputed facts and decided that an evidentiary hearing on Morris’s claims was not required. That court signed the State’s proposed factual findings and legal conclusions recommending that the Court of Criminal Appeals deny habeas relief. On May 3, 2000, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals entered an order stating that the record supported the trial court’s findings and conclusions, and subsequently denied habeas relief.

On July 7, 2000, the district court appointed counsel to represent Morris in his federal habeas proceedings. Before filing his federal petition, however, Morris filed a successive state application for habeas relief. Morris later supplemented his successive application with a claim based on new Supreme Court authority. 2 The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed the successive habeas application as an abuse of the writ by a February 6, 2002 order because Morris had failed to comply with Texas’s stringent requirements for the filing of successive proceedings.

On February 8, 2002, Morris filed a federal petition for writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 with the district court in which he raised the following five substantive claims: (1) newly discovered evidence proved that Morris was actually innocent of capital murder; (2) Morris’s initial state habeas counsel provided ineffective assistance, in violation of the Sixth Amendment and the due process clause, by failing to investigate and present meritorious evidence; (3) his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to challenge the State’s theory of causation and by failing to present significant mitigating evidence in the punishment phase of the trial; (4) the trial court violated Morris’s constitutional rights by failing to instruct the jurors on the consequences of a single juror’s “no” vote on the special issues (“10-12 Rule”); and (5) the trial court failed to protect Morris’s rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments by not delivering instructions that *65 would allow the jury to consider the mitigating evidence fully.

On March 24, 2003, the district court by a Memorandum And Order (“Order”) granted the Attorney General for the State of Texas’s motion for summary judgment, denied Morris’s petition for a writ of habe-as corpus, holding that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals’ denial of his state habe-as petition was based on an independent and adequate state ground, and dismissed Morris’s case.

On appeal, Morris asks this court to grant a COA so that he may appeal the district court’s decision, which he asserts should be reversed for the following reasons. First, the disposition of his ineffective assistance of counsel claim by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals as an abuse of the writ is not the kind of “independent and adequate state ground” that would preclude this court’s review on the merits. Second, his ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim should not be procedurally barred because he can demonstrate a “fundamental miscarriage of justice” due to his “actual innocence,” which will allow this court to review his claim on the merits. Third, his Penry “nullification” claim should result in a COA either as an independent issue or as part of his ineffective assistance of counsel claim because: (a) it was sufficiently novel to avoid the state procedural bar and, and (b) there existed Penry-type mitigation evidence that the jury should have been allowed to consider and, (i) his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate this type of evidence which should have been discovered and presented to the jury; (ii) there is no requirement that any mitigating evidence contain a “nexus” that limits a defendant’s entitlement to a Penry vehicle; and (iii) the “nullification” instruction submitted to the jury by the trial judge was a structural error that requires correction despite the absence of the mitigating evidence at the trial, that has subsequently been discovered, and because the jurors were authorized to find that any evidence they heard was mitigating. Fourth, the correctness of the district court’s determination on the merits of Morris’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is debatable among jurists.

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90 F. App'x 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-dretke-ca5-2004.