Nicholas Karabin, Jr. v. George Petsock and Leroy Zimmerman, Attorney General of the State of Pennsylvania

758 F.2d 966
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 3, 1985
Docket84-5444
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 758 F.2d 966 (Nicholas Karabin, Jr. v. George Petsock and Leroy Zimmerman, Attorney General of the State of Pennsylvania) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicholas Karabin, Jr. v. George Petsock and Leroy Zimmerman, Attorney General of the State of Pennsylvania, 758 F.2d 966 (3d Cir. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

SLOVITER, Circuit Judge.

Nicholas Karabin, Jr. was convicted by a jury in the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, of first-degree murder and reckless endangerment of the murder victim’s wife stemming from a March 17, 1978 shooting. A sentence of life imprisonment was imposed for the murder and a consecutive sentence of one to two years was imposed for reckless endangerment.

New counsel was appointed for the direct appeal and fourteen assignments of error were advanced to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania which affirmed the conviction. Thereafter, Karabin filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, alleging that his two trial counsel were ineffective. The district court found that six of the seven grounds for relief were without merit but ordered an evidentiary hearing before a magistrate on the remaining ground: whether trial counsel were ineffective for failing to request stenographic recording of the opening and closing statements and side bar conferences. The district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation and denied the writ. We issued a certificate of probable cause to appeal and now affirm.

Karabin, a high school teacher and owner of a detective and security business, had marital difficulties during 1977-78, causing temporary separations from his wife and ultimately leading his wife to file for divorce in February 1978. During the separations, Karabin occasionally lived with Leith Howell, one of his students. She testified at trial as follows: On January 6, 1978 Karabin told her that he was having problems with his wife and that he wanted to kill her; that he planned to go out and kill a few people at random and then shoot his wife so that he would not be considered a suspect; that in mid-February, when his wife began divorce proceedings, Karabin *968 again became upset and repeated his statement that he intended to kill his wife in such a way that it would appear to be a random slaying by a madman on the loose.

On March 17, 1978, Karabin told Howell that he was going to start the random slayings that night. After driving around on patrol in connection with his detective business, Karabin stopped his car about two blocks from the highway and told Howell that he parked there so that no one would see the car when he shot someone from the highway. Karabin wore a raincoat, hat, glasses and mustache as a disguise and had a shotgun in the back seat of the car. While Howell remained in the car, she heard two shotgun blasts. When Karabin returned to the car, he said that he had just shot someone and turned on the police scanner on which they heard a report of the shooting while they drove home.

On April 6, 1978, after another patrol related to the security business, Howell again waited in the ear while Karabin shot someone a few blocks away. When Kara-bin returned to the car he said that he had shot a drunk near the post office, that he ran into someone he knew on the way back to the car, and that he had denied hearing a shot when asked by the person he had encountered. App. at 53a-75a. The person who was shot survived and both he and the person who had seen Karabin that night testified against him.

Karabin testified in his own defense and attributed Howell’s testimony against him to her jealousy about another woman Kara-bin was seeing during the time he lived with her, claiming that her testimony was in retaliation for his refusal to marry her. He denied having any involvement in the shootings. The jury returned a verdict of guilty in the March 17 incident, the only charges in that indictment. On direct appeal, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court rejected, without discussion, Karabin’s argument that trial counsel were ineffective for not requesting that openings, closings, and side bar conferences be recorded. Commonwealth v. Karabin, 493 Pa. 249, 253-54 n. 1, 426 A.2d 91, 93-94 n. 1 (1981).

At the time of Karabin’s trial, Pennsylvania law required the court stenographer to record:

stenographic notes of the testimony in all judicial proceedings in any trial of fact, at law or in equity, together with the judge’s charge, and of any and every ruling, order, or remark of the trial judge, or judges, relating to the case on trial, piade in the presence of the jury, in any stage of the proceedings, to which ruling, order or remark either party may except in the same manner and with the same effect as is now practiced in relation to the judge’s charge; and upon any trial without a jury, shall likewise report the proceedings, including the testimony of all witnesses examined and matters offered in evidence, and the rulings of the court upon the admission or rejection thereof, and the findings of the court____

Pa.Stat.Ann. tit. 17 § 1804 (Purdon 1962) (repealed). The statute did not require transcribing of opening and closing statements nor of side bar conferences. In addition, as we found in Oliver v. Zimmerman, 720 F.2d 766, 768 (3d Cir.1983), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 104 S.Ct. 1302, 79 L.Ed.2d 701 (1984), “[t]he general trial practice in Pennsylvania is that only testimony of witnesses and statements of the court are transcribed as of course. Opening and closing speeches are not transcribed unless requested by counsel, but any objection lodged during the course of such speeches is transcribed together with the judge’s ruling thereon.”

At the evidentiary hearing with respect to ineffectiveness of counsel conducted by the magistrate in this case, five trial attorneys testified for the prosecution, including the Chief of the Trial and Appeals Section of the Dauphin County District Attorney’s Office, a defense attorney with more than 30 years of experience who was Chairman of the Pennsylvania Bar Association’s Criminal Law Committee, the District Attorney of Lehigh County,' and both trial counsel in this case. All five stated that it was their experience and generally accept *969 ed practice not to record the openings and closings. The two attorneys who testified for the defense stated that it was their practice to request that the opening and closing statements be recorded, but they did not contradict the prosecution’s witnesses’ testimony that this was not generally done. Thus, the magistrate concluded that counsels’ failure to request recordation would not fall below the normal level of competence for defense attorneys. Moreover, the adoption of Pa.R.Crim.P. 9030 in 1981 providing that “proceedings in open court shall be recorded” suggests that the Pennsylvania Criminal Rules Committee had effected a change by insuring that remarks of counsel were recorded, in addition to the testimony of witnesses and statements of the judge.

Since it was customary practice not to request recording of openings and closings at the time of Karabin’s trial, his attorney cannot be found to have been ineffective for conforming to that standard. In Strickland v. Washington, — U.S. -, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984), the Supreme Court set forth a two-pronged test for determining when counsel is ineffective.

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Bluebook (online)
758 F.2d 966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholas-karabin-jr-v-george-petsock-and-leroy-zimmerman-attorney-ca3-1985.