Rolando Ruiz v. Lorie Davis, Director

850 F.3d 225, 2017 WL 875000, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 3943
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 5, 2017
Docket17-70006
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 850 F.3d 225 (Rolando Ruiz v. Lorie Davis, Director) 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
Rolando Ruiz v. Lorie Davis, Director, 850 F.3d 225, 2017 WL 875000, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 3943 (5th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Rolando Ruiz murdered Theresa Rodriguez in 1992; he has been sentenced to death by lethal injection, and his execution is now set for March 7, 2017. At this late hour, Ruiz seeks a certificate of appealability to allow review of the rejection by the United States District Court of his most recent federal petition for a writ of habeas corpus. He contends that the district court erred by affording deference to the state court’s determination of federal law — specifically, by applying the deferential standard of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act. We conclude that, even under a de novo standard of review, no “jurist[ ] of reason could disagree with the district court’s resolution of his constitutional claims or ... conclude the issues presented are adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further.” 1 We deny his motion for a COÁ.

I.

We will not recount again the circumstances surrounding Ruiz’s crime, his conviction, and his subsequent actions for relief on direct and collateral review. 2 Facing execution in nineteen days, Ruiz filed his third petition in the Texas state courts, arguing, among other grounds, that he was entitled to relief because of the allegedly unconstitutional combination of (1) a significant delay in time between the date of his conviction and the date of his execution and (2) the conditions of his confinement, including multiple prior last-minute stays and withdrawn execution dates he faced during that delay' — “a constitutional challenge against [the] carrying out of a death sentence on the grounds that the years on death row make the ultimate punishment cruel and unusual.” 3 Five days before his scheduled execution, the Texas Court of Appeal “dismiss[ed] Ruiz’s ... application under Article 11.071, § 5” of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure and withdrew its stay of execution. 4

After the Texas Court of Criminal Appeal’s dismissal, Ruiz waited three months before filing his petition for a writ of habe-as corpus in the United States District Court on February 10, 2017, less than a month before his newly set execution date of March 7, 2017. The district court dismissed that petition and denied COA. Ruiz *228 now seeks a COA, a prerequisite to his right to appeal dismissal of his petition. 5

II.

Ruiz’s arguments focus upon the level of review his claims received in the district court. 6 Given the present posture of the case, we can cut to the chase and assume arguendo that the state court’s rejection of Ruiz’s petition is due no deference and that we ought review his federal claims de novo. 7 This, because under de novo review, we are persuaded that we cannot grant a COA. In deciding whether Ruiz has made the requisite “substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right,” 8 we engage in “a threshold inquiry into the underlying merits of the claims” without engaging in an ultimate merits analysis and “without full consideration of the factual or legal bases adduced in support of [Ruiz’s] claims.” 9

The required substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right must have some footing in the law. And we are not aware of any court that has found an Eighth Amendment violation occasioned by years on death row while a prisoner pursues his direct and collateral appeals. 10 Our own jurisprudence on the subject is well-known: “[t]here are compelling justifications for the delay between conviction and the execution of a death sentence.... [Prisoners who have] benefited from this careful and meticulous process cannot [later] complain that the expensive and laborious process of habeas corpus appeals which exists to protect [them] violate[s] other of [their] rights.” 11 Ruiz has not directed us to a single case that has held otherwise. Under a de novo standard of *229 review, Ruiz has failed to make the “substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right” 12 necessary for a COA to issue — claims of this nature have been rejected by every court that has heard them.

III.

Much of Ruiz’s petition discusses the conditions of confinement he has faced on death row. We do not resolve the ultimate merits of Ruiz’s claim; that road is forbidden to us on a motion for a COA. 13 Nor do we address the conditions death row inmates, in Texas or elsewhere, face generally. The solitary confinement of prisoners has long been at issue in suits challenging prison conditions. 14 To the extent that Ruiz’s conditions of confinement violate his right to due process or his substantive rights under the Eighth Amendment, Congress has created a specific throughway to the federal courts to redress such wrongs: a timely § 1988 suit. 15

Despite being a named plaintiff in a § 1983 method-of-execution suit challenging Texas’s lethal injection protocol filed last year, 16 Ruiz voiced no concern regarding Texas’s death row conditions of confinement, this at a time that would have allowed him to develop his claims in the district court. Had he done so, we might be properly situated to determine the merit of such claims. Instead, he brings his grievance now, at the eleventh hour, when its development would again force a stay of execution. In response to systemic abuses by prisoners bringing dilatory claims, the federal courts — and this circuit in particular — have been forced to develop extensive jurisprudence resisting those requests for long-available claims presented, for the first time, on the eve of execution. 17 Ruiz alleges he has been in solitary confinement for the majority of the time he has been on death row. To the extent he wished to challenge that confinement, he had ample opportunity to do so. In accordance with our earlier decisions regarding last-minute claims, we are disinclined to grant him equitable relief at this late hour.

IV.

Ruiz’s claims have been heard and, from top to bottom, found meritless. Working in *230 the harness of statutory and settled common law rules, the federal and state courts have done handsprings to protect Ruiz’s procedural and substantive rights. This Court has- stayed his execution twice before to allow full consideration of his claims. His most recent claims do not warrant a third stay.

We are keenly aware of the admonitions of

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
850 F.3d 225, 2017 WL 875000, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 3943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rolando-ruiz-v-lorie-davis-director-ca5-2017.