Nichols v. Scott

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 1995
Docket92-02720
StatusPublished

This text of Nichols v. Scott (Nichols v. Scott) 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.

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Nichols v. Scott, (5th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

No. 92-2720

JOSEPH BENNARD NICHOLS,

Petitioner-Appellee, Cross-Appellant,

versus

WAYNE SCOTT, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division,

Respondent-Appellant, Cross-Appellee.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas

November 20, 1995

Before GARWOOD, JONES and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judges.

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

Petitioner-appellee, cross-appellant Joseph Bennard Nichols

(Nichols) was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death.

After exhausting his Texas state court remedies, Nichols sought a

writ of habeas corpus in the district court below and the court

granted relief. Respondent-appellant (Respondent), the director of

the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, now appeals to this

Court. Nichols cross-appeals the district court’s denial of certain of the remainder of his claims. We affirm in part and

reverse the district court’s grant of habeas corpus relief.

Facts and Proceedings Below

About 9:00 a.m. on the morning of October 13, 1980, Nichols,

Willie Ray Williams (Williams), Charlotte Parker (Parker), and

Evelyn Harvey (Harvey) drove to a spot in front of an apartment

building near Joseph’s Delicatessen and Grocery in Houston, Texas.

Nichols and Williams mutually intended to rob this establishment,

Nichols having suggested it as a target. Williams was armed with

a .380 semi-automatic pistol; Nichols had a snub-nosed .38

revolver. Parker parked the car and Nichols and Williams got out

and entered the deli. After entering, Nichols and Williams first

went to the back of the store, and then approached the counter.

Nichols got a corndog. Williams set a quart of beer on the counter

near the cash register. Behind the counter was deli employee

Claude Shaffer, Jr. (Shaffer). Nichols, and then Williams, each

drew their respective pistols and pointed them at Shaffer.

When Shaffer saw the guns he began to bend over or squat down.

Nichols then said something to the effect of “don’t go for the gun”

or “don’t be doing it.” Nichols then shot at Shaffer, and

immediately thereafter Williams pulled the trigger on his gun, but

it is unclear whether it then discharged.1 Shaffer then either

1 Nichols’ statement (Nichols did not testify) says “we”—he and Williams—then shot at Shaffer. Nichols’ and Williams’ statements were given October 17, 1980, after their arrests earlier that day. Williams’ statement mentions only Nichols shooting at this time. Williams’ testimony at Nichols’ trial is that Nichols drew his gun first, that Williams then drew his, each pointing them at Shaffer; that Nichols fired his gun; that Williams then pulled the trigger

2 fell or squatted down behind the counter. Nichols and Williams ran

to the door. Nichols exited. Williams either exited or partially

exited and then, according to his testimony at Nichols’ trial,

on his gun, but nothing happened and it did not discharge (Williams’ testimony at his own trial does not mention his pulling the trigger on his gun at this time). Williams testified at Nichols’ trial that Nichols fired only once and that “he [Nichols] was aiming at the man [Shaffer]” and “wasn’t aiming it behind him or somewhere else or aiming it at the floor or anything” but “was aiming at that man.” However, Williams testified that he thought Nichols missed Shaffer because Shaffer, who was squatting, did not go down and Williams saw no blood. Cindy Johnson (Johnson), one of the two other deli employees then on duty, testified that at this time Nichols shot first, but that Williams also then shot, and that in all three, or possibly two, shots were fired at that time. She said that after these shots Shaffer collapsed and there was blood on his head. James Rivera (Rivera), standing at a nearby bus stop, saw Nichols and Williams enter the deli, shortly thereafter heard two or three noises like “backfires,” turned, and then saw Nichols and Williams run out of the deli. Nichols’ statement says “We pulled our guns on the dude behind the cash register and told him to put the money in the sak [sic]. The man behind the counter started bending over behind the counter . . . and then he came up with a pistol . . . so we reacted and shot.” Williams’ testimony at Nichols’ trial was that after Nichols and he pulled their guns on Shaffer, Shaffer bent down and came up with a gun from under the counter, pointed it at Williams, whereupon Nichols fired; Shaffer, according to Williams’ testimony, never fired (and there is no evidence that he did). At his own trial, Williams testified that “before he [Shaffer] got it [the gun] all the way up, Joe [Nichols] fired” and then Shaffer “went down” in “a squatting position.” Johnson testified that she was watching Shaffer, who was looking at her, after Nichols and Williams had pointed their guns at him and that Shaffer never touched a gun and did not reach for a gun; she admitted, however, that in an earlier sworn statement she had said that after “one of the men pulled a gun” Shaffer, who kept a gun under the counter, “reached for his gun and both of the black men shot Claude.” Other evidence showed that the gun, a .45 semi-automatic pistol, belonged to another deli employee, and was found just after the robbery in its accustomed place on a shelf under the counter, with a fully- loaded clip in the handle but no shell in the chamber; there were no fingerprints on it (Williams testified that when he went back in and got the cash box, he looked for Shaffer’s gun but did not see it). No .45 caliber fired bullets or empty shell casings were found.

3 turned and fired once at Shaffer, who was still squatting behind

the counter. Williams testified that Shaffer fell back, that he

(Williams) went behind the counter to Shaffer, turned him over,

grabbed the deli’s cash box, and ran out of the deli, carrying his

gun and the cash box.2 He was picked up by Parker and Harvey, got

into the car with them, and they drove around the side of the deli

building where they saw Nichols, who then got in the car with them.

Harvey testified that Nichols told them “he had shot the man” and

“he thought he shot him in the chest,” and that Williams said he

had run back into the deli and shot the man. Parker testified that

Nichols said “I think I hit him in the chest,” and that Williams

said “he [Williams] shot the man in the shoulder.”3 A few days

later, Williams, Nichols, Parker, and Harvey were arrested.

The testimony of the Harris County Medical Examiner, Dr.

Espinola, established without contradiction that Shaffer died from

a single gunshot wound that entered his “left upper back about

seven and three fourths [inches] to the left of the midline and

three and one half inches below the top of the shoulder” and

2 At his trial Williams testified that when he and Nichols ran into each other exiting the deli: “I attempted to go out the door, coming behind Joe [Nichols], and he [Nichols] turned to me and said shoot—shoot.” Williams, being then asked “And what did you do, sir?”, replied “I just turned and shot.” 3 Rivera (see note 1, supra) testified that after he saw Nichols and Williams run out of the deli, Williams then, gun in hand, just in front of the deli door, “looked like he raised his hand and aimed the gun at me”; Rivera turned away in fright, and when he looked back both Nichols and Williams were gone; he then heard another shot and saw Williams run out of the deli with “a strong box” in his hand; Williams dropped the box, picked it up, and ran off.

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