Peter M. Gatlin v. M.K. Madding, Warden Attorney General of the State of California People of the State of California

189 F.3d 882, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6907, 99 Daily Journal DAR 8829, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 20067, 1999 WL 642038
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 1999
Docket98-56249
StatusPublished
Cited by234 cases

This text of 189 F.3d 882 (Peter M. Gatlin v. M.K. Madding, Warden Attorney General of the State of California People of the State of California) 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
Peter M. Gatlin v. M.K. Madding, Warden Attorney General of the State of California People of the State of California, 189 F.3d 882, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6907, 99 Daily Journal DAR 8829, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 20067, 1999 WL 642038 (9th Cir. 1999).

Opinion

RYMER, Circuit Judge:

California state prisoner Peter M. Gatlin appeals the district court’s order dismissing without prejudice for failure to exhaust his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to a certificate of appealability (COA) issued by a motions panel of this court. After briefing had been completed, the state moved to dismiss on the ground that we lack subject matter jurisdiction to decide the certified issue because exhaustion is a statutory requirement, not a constitutional issue as required under 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2). We disagree that our subject matter jurisdiction is implicated whenever the state asserts that a COA issued by judges of this court has been improvidently granted. Instead, we hold that objections to a request for a COA in this court must be made within thirty-five days of the notice of appeal or motion for COA, as provided by 9th Cir. R. 22-l(c). Because the state did not resist the COA within thirty-five days of Gatlin’s filing of his notice of appeal (which our rules treat as a request for COA) on the basis now asserted, we decline to consider its belated challenge. As we agree with the district court on the merits, we affirm.

I

Following a jury trial in 1994, Gatlin was found guilty of six counts of second degree robbery and one count of kidnap-ing. The jury further found true all allegations of Gatlin’s weapon use and prior convictions. Gatlin was sentenced to a term of 25 years. He appealed to the California Court of Appeal, arguing (among other things) that the trial court should have excluded two witnesses’s lineup and in-court identifications of him *885 because they were tainted by a prior im-permissibly suggestive identification procedure. Specifically, he claimed that the lineup and in-court identifications by Jan Murray, a victim of one of the robberies and the kidnaping, and Chung Sim, another victim of one of the robberies, were tainted by their earlier viewing of Gatlin in jail clothes and handcuffs in municipal court. The taint from that procedure, he maintained, was sufficient to create a substantial likelihood of misidentification and, as a result, the procedure violated due process. The court of appeal modified the judgment by deleting the one-year enhancement to count six and changing the total term of imprisonment to 24 years, but otherwise affirmed.

Acting pro se, Gatlin then petitioned for review to the California Supreme Court. In his petition, he argued that “the trial court should have excluded Jan Murray and Chung Sim’s live line-up and in-court identification of appellant.” The substance of his argument was presented as follows:

This Honorable Court should grant review of this issue on the grounds that the base term for petitioner is the kidnapping charge of Jan Murray. Prior to the incident on December 2, 1993, victim Janet Murray could not identify petitioner. She stated that she only glimpsed a person she did not recognize. Also that the glimpse did not influence her lineup or in-court identification of Gatlin.
Yet she was unable to pick petitioner out of a six pack photographic lineup prior to the December 2, 1993, incident. Immediately thereafter, she could easily identify petitioner as the person who robbed her.
There can be no doubt that this incident of December 2, 1993, had a great deal of effect on the outcome of the trial and sentences of petitioner in the instant case. Therefore, this Honorable Court must remain [sic] for retrial without the tainted line-up information. Petitioner incorporate’s [sic] herein the arguments raised by his appellate counsel on Direct Appeal on this issue.

Gatlin further stated in his conclusion that “[t]he cumulative errors discussed in this Petition For Review in Argument I through V herein denied petitioner his State as well as Federal Constitutional rights to a fair trial.” Gatlin’s petition for review was denied.

After that, Gatlin filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal district court claiming that Jan Murray’s tainted lineup and in-court identifications violated due process. The case was referred to a magistrate judge, who recommended that the petition be denied and dismissed without prejudice. He concluded that Gatlin had failed to exhaust his claim that the identification procedure violated due process because he did not present his federal constitutional theory to the California Supreme Court. Although Gatlin had attempted to raise his due process claim in his petition for review to that court through incorporating by reference his argument to the California Court of Appeal, the magistrate judge found that this was inadequate because Rule 28 of the California Rules of Court provides that a petition for review may not incorporate by reference portions of other documents.

The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation and ordered that judgment be entered de- - nying and dismissing the petition without prejudice. After judgment was entered, Gatlin timely filed a notice of appeal. He also sought a certificate of appealability from the district court. The district court denied the COA, but this court treated the notice of appeal as a request for a COA and granted it with respect to the following issue:

Whether appellant has failed to exhaust his claim that one victim’s live line-up and in-court identifications were tainted by a prior impermissibly suggestive identification and therefore violated due process, where appellant presented the claim to the state’s highest court by *886 incorporating it by reference to arguments made on direct appeal.

After the certified issue had been fully briefed and .the case calendared, the state filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, arguing that this court lacks jurisdiction to decide the issue.

II

We must first decide whether we have jurisdiction to hear this appeal. The state submits that Gatlin’s appeal is not properly before us because a COA is a jurisdictional prerequisite, and Gatlin has not satisfied § 2253’s threshold requirement of showing the violation of a constitutional right 1 because the rule of exhaustion, embodied in 28 U.S.C. § 2254, is a statutory requirement based on principles of comity. Since issues regarding exhaustion do not arise out of the constitution, the state contends that we cannot proceed because the COA should not have been issued and jurisdiction is therefore lacking.

Gatlin counters that the COA delineates the denial of a constitutional right because it refers to a denial of due process. He also argues that the “substantial showing” of a denial of that right is satisfied by the claim that “one victim’s live lineup and in-court identifications were tainted by a pri- or impermissibly suggestive identification.” In any event, he contends, a COA was issued and the matter is fully briefed, so we should not rescrutinize the COA.

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189 F.3d 882, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6907, 99 Daily Journal DAR 8829, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 20067, 1999 WL 642038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-m-gatlin-v-mk-madding-warden-attorney-general-of-the-state-of-ca9-1999.