Raymond Landry v. James A. Lynaugh, Director, Texas Department of Corrections

844 F.2d 1117, 1988 WL 25353
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 29, 1988
Docket88-2076
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 844 F.2d 1117 (Raymond Landry v. James A. Lynaugh, Director, Texas Department of Corrections) 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
Raymond Landry v. James A. Lynaugh, Director, Texas Department of Corrections, 844 F.2d 1117, 1988 WL 25353 (5th Cir. 1988).

Opinions

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

On the night of August 6, 1982, Raymond Landry confronted the Prittis family in the parking lot outside a Dairy Maid store run by the family. Pointing a gun at Kosmas Prittis, the husband and father, Landry ordered the family to turn over their money, including the money left in the store. In the course of the robbery, Landry shot Prittis in the head and killed him. The State of Texas convicted Landry of capital murder and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence on direct appeal.1 After pursuing post-conviction remedies in the Texas courts, Landry unsuccessfully applied to federal district court for a writ of habeas corpus and a stay of execution. We grant Landry’s application for a certificate of probable cause, but, finding his claims either without merit or barred by the law of this circuit, we affirm the district court’s decision and deny relief.

Landry raises fourteen claims in his ha-beas petition. Five of these relate to the State’s use of allegedly improper hypotheti-cals during the extended voir dire at his trial. The State concedes that, in an attempt to illustrate to veniremembers the meaning of the term “deliberately” under the Texas capital sentencing statute,2 it posed hypothetical situations some of which did not constitute capital murder. For example, the prosecutor asked a veniremember to consider a hypothetical case in which a defendant shoots someone in the foot who then declines to seek medical attention and so dies of gangrene. Landry complains that the use of this hypothetical and others like it led the jurors to believe that the only situations in which they might decide that a defendant acted without the deliberateness requisite for imposition of a death sentence were situations not involving capital murder at all. Landry argues further that the hypotheticals hopelessly confused the venire about the distinction between a finding of “intentional” homicide at the guilt phase of his capital trial and a finding of “deliberate” conduct at the sentencing phase. Landry asserts that the use of the improper hypotheticals resulted in a denial of his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by distracting the jury from the mandatory consideration of his individual record, character, and the particular facts of his case; by improperly expanding the class of persons eligible for the death penalty; by suggesting that proof of the elements of the crime of capital murder led inexorably to a finding of deliberateness at sentencing; and by lowering the State’s burden of proof.

The State points out that the defense never objected to the use of the hypotheticals, challenged a juror for cause on this basis, or even exhausted its peremptory challenges. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals held Landry’s challenges to the hypotheticals procedurally barred. On a federal habeas petition, we may not reach claims the State courts have held procedurally barred unless the petitioner offers good cause for his failure to comply with State procedure and demonstrates prejudice resulting from his default.3

Landry explains his counsel’s failure to object by asserting that, at the time of his trial in 1983, the legal standards establishing that the voir dire was improper had not yet developed. Under the Supreme Court’s decision in Reed v. Ross,4 a habeas petitioner may demonstrate good cause on the [1120]*1120basis of the novelty of a constitutional claim at the time of the State proceeding in which the default occurred. If the defense counsel had “no reasonable basis upon which to formulate a constitutional question,” the default is excusable.5 In Reed, the Court’s finding of novelty rested on a determination that federal constitutional law had changed. The Court identified three kinds of “clear break[s] with the past” that might justify a finding of novelty: the overruling of a precedent, the overturning of a longstanding practice never before ruled upon by the Supreme Court but generally accepted by the lower courts, and the disapproval of a practice sanctioned by the Court in prior cases.6

Landry asserts no comparable change in federal constitutional law. Indeed, he relies upon constitutional standards — requiring death-sentencing juries to exercise narrow and informed discretion and to give individualized consideration to the defendant and requiring the state to narrow the class of persons eligible for the death penalty — that were already in place at the time of his trial.7 The novelty of Landry’s claim lies, instead, in the proposed application of existing standards to condemn certain voir dire questioning never before considered by this court, but recently disapproved by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.8 We do not consider Landry’s claim sufficiently novel to justify the procedural default. The defense counsel heard the prosecutor ask the veniremembers arguably misleading questions. Constitutional standards existing at the time provided a “reasonable basis” upon which to formulate an objection, and yet there was no objection. Landry has not, therefore, shown adequate cause for the default.

Landry attempts to save his claims by asserting that his attorney’s failure to object to the improper voir dire constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. To make out a claim of ineffective assistance, Landry must show that his counsel fell below a standard of reasonable competence and that, but for the error, the result of the proceeding would probably have been different.9 Even if we held the defense counsel’s failure to object so serious an error as to overcome the “strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance,” 10 we could not grant relief because Landry has failed to show prejudice. He has not shown that, if counsel had objected and prevented the prosecution from possibly confusing the venire about the meaning of the term “deliberate,” the jury would probably have reached a different determination either as to his guilt or as to his punishment. We remain unconvinced that the jury would probably not have found “deliberate” Landry’s conduct in shooting his victim in the head in the course of a robbery, understanding “deliberate” to mean something more than “intentional.” 11

Landry asserts also that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object to the admission of a bank bag and pistol holster. The State found these items during an allegedly illegal search of Landry’s wife’s home and offered them at trial as implements of the crime. We find no incompetence in the defense counsel’s failure to object to their admission because the record reveals that the search was legal. Landry’s wife signed a form consenting to the search, and a state court hearing on the consent, subsequent to trial, produced no evidence that the police coerced or tricked her into signing the form.

[1121]*1121Landry claims that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s findings at sentencing that the murder was deliberate and that Landry would pose a continuing threat to society.12 Under Jackson v. Virgina,13

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Bluebook (online)
844 F.2d 1117, 1988 WL 25353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-landry-v-james-a-lynaugh-director-texas-department-of-ca5-1988.