Tremayne L. Guinn v. Michael Kemna

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 2007
Docket06-1344
StatusPublished

This text of Tremayne L. Guinn v. Michael Kemna (Tremayne L. Guinn v. Michael Kemna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tremayne L. Guinn v. Michael Kemna, (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 06-1344 ___________

Tremayne L. Guinn, * * Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * Western District of Missouri. Michael Kemna, * * Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: March 14, 2007 Filed: June 7, 2007 ___________

Before RILEY, BOWMAN, and ARNOLD, Circuit Judges. ___________

BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

Tremayne Guinn appeals from the order of the District Court1 denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We affirm.

After a jury trial in Missouri state court, Guinn was convicted of first-degree robbery, first-degree assault, and armed criminal action. The convictions were affirmed on appeal, State v. Guinn, 58 S.W.3d 538 (Mo. Ct. App. 2001) (9–2 decision), and his motion filed in state court for postconviction relief was

1 The Honorable Gary A. Fenner, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri. unsuccessful, Guinn v. State, 141 S.W.3d 94 (Mo. Ct. App. 2004) (per curiam). The evidence at trial was that Lori Clanin was returning to her apartment at 3434 Gillham in Kansas City, Missouri, at 5:20 a.m. on September 11, 1998. She was taking groceries from her car when she was approached by two men, one of whom stood very close to her and held a small pistol to her chest. After he took her purse from the car, Clanin thought he was about to shoot her, and she pushed the gun down. The man took a step back, the gun fired, and Clanin was hit and injured.

Clanin and a police detective used a computer program to create a composite sketch of her assailant that was published in The Kansas City Star and The Kansas City Call. Based on responses to those publications, the detective created a photographic lineup of possible suspects, but Clanin was unable to identify her assailant from among those photographs. Then the manager of an apartment building on Gillham near Clanin's building saw the composite sketch and contacted authorities. She thought the sketch resembled a man she had seen visiting apartment 2-E in the building she managed, and she was able to identify a photograph of Guinn as that person. Guinn's photograph was included in another array presented to Clanin, and she identified him as the man who robbed and shot her. Meanwhile, Clanin's stolen purse was found in the bathtub of an unoccupied apartment near 2-E.

In his § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus, Guinn raised four issues. The District Court found no merit to any of them, denied the petition, and denied Guinn a certificate of appealability (COA). Guinn filed an application for a COA with this Court, which we granted as to two evidentiary issues. We review de novo the District Court's decision to deny relief on these issues, applying the standards of review set forth in the habeas statute. That is, under § 2254, as amended by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), Guinn is not entitled to habeas relief unless he can show that the state-court adjudication of his claims "resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law" or "resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable

-2- determination of the facts." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). "'[C]learly established Federal law' under § 2254(d)(1) is the governing legal principle or principles set forth by the Supreme Court at the time the state court renders its decision." Lockyer v. Andrade, 538 U.S. 63, 71–72 (2003).

For his first issue, Guinn claims a violation of his constitutional rights in the state trial court's failure to allow four witnesses to testify to hearsay statements made by Cornelius Johnson, a friend of Guinn's and a tenant of apartment 2-E. (In parts of the record, Johnson and Guinn are referred to as roommates, but the building manager testified that Guinn was not on the lease.) Guinn contends that Johnson told four of Guinn's relatives that he, Johnson, shot Clanin and that these four witnesses should have been permitted to testify to Johnson's statements against interest.

Our first task is to determine the appropriate clearly established federal law. Guinn proposes that the Missouri Court of Appeals and the District Court correctly identified Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284 (1973), as setting out the clearly established law applicable to his case. But Kemna contends that "Chambers is not clearly established federal law." Br. of Appellee at 11. He relies on the Chambers Court's statement that in reaching its conclusion that the habeas petitioner in that case was denied a fair trial, the Court established "no new principles of constitutional law." Chambers, 410 U.S. at 302. Kemna misses the point. The comment was related to the fact-intensive nature of the case. See id. at 303. While perhaps not a seminal case in the areas of the law applied to the issues raised, Chambers nevertheless articulates the legal principles applicable to Guinn's claims of constitutional error.

In a later-decided plurality opinion, the Supreme Court described the Chambers holding: "erroneous evidentiary rulings can, in combination, rise to the level of a due process violation." Montana v. Egelhoff, 518 U.S. 37, 53 (1996). Kemna contends that the four dissenting justices in Egelhoff "categorically stated the opposite view" from that of the four-justice plurality, Br. of Appellee at 14, when they described

-3- Chambers "as a prohibition on enforcement of state evidentiary rules that lead, without sufficient justification, to the establishment of guilt by suppression of evidence supporting the defendant's case," Egelhoff, 518 U.S. at 62–63 (O'Connor, J., dissenting) (emphasis added). According to Kemna, because neither of these views of the Chambers decision commanded a majority in Egelhoff, no law was clearly established by the Chambers Court. Kemna asserts that "Guinn's claim, stripped of its Chambers rhetoric, boils down to whether the state court erred in excluding Johnson's confessions," relying on an Eighth Circuit case for the clearly established federal law. Br. of Appellee at 25. As we read it, the statement in the Egelhoff dissent to which Kemna refers does not reflect an "opposite view" at all. An "erroneous evidentiary ruling" can, of course, be one made "without sufficient justification." In any event, although the Chambers opinion established no new constitutional principle, it iterated and applied existing law to the facts of the case before the Court. We conclude that the Missouri Court of Appeals and the District Court correctly identified the applicable law in the Chambers line of cases, here stated yet another way: "[T]he Constitution . . . prohibits the exclusion of defense evidence under rules that serve no legitimate purpose or that are disproportionate to the ends that they are asserted to promote . . . ." Holmes v. South Carolina, 126 S. Ct. 1727, 1732 (2006) (unanimous decision) (describing arbitrary evidentiary rules discussed in previous Supreme Court opinions, including Chambers).

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Related

Pointer v. Texas
380 U.S. 400 (Supreme Court, 1965)
Chambers v. Mississippi
410 U.S. 284 (Supreme Court, 1973)
Delaware v. Van Arsdall
475 U.S. 673 (Supreme Court, 1986)
Kentucky v. Stincer
482 U.S. 730 (Supreme Court, 1987)
Michigan v. Lucas
500 U.S. 145 (Supreme Court, 1991)
Montana v. Egelhoff
518 U.S. 37 (Supreme Court, 1996)
Early v. Packer
537 U.S. 3 (Supreme Court, 2002)
Lockyer v. Andrade
538 U.S. 63 (Supreme Court, 2003)
Williams v. Taylor
529 U.S. 362 (Supreme Court, 2000)
Holmes v. South Carolina
547 U.S. 319 (Supreme Court, 2006)
Guinn v. State
141 S.W.3d 94 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2004)
State v. Guinn
58 S.W.3d 538 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2001)

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Tremayne L. Guinn v. Michael Kemna, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tremayne-l-guinn-v-michael-kemna-ca8-2007.