Warren English v. Mary Berghuis

900 F.3d 804
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 21, 2018
Docket16-2676
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 900 F.3d 804 (Warren English v. Mary Berghuis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren English v. Mary Berghuis, 900 F.3d 804 (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

BERNICE BOUIE DONALD, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner-Appellant Warren Edward English III ("English") appeals the district court's denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas corpus petition in connection with his conviction by a Michigan jury of third-degree criminal sexual conduct. Before this Court in the present appeal is a single substantive issue: whether English's Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury was violated as a result of a juror's failure to disclose her own sexual assault on voir dire. There is also a threshold procedural issue: the proper standard of review.

I. Background of the Case

In 2006, English was convicted by a jury in Michigan's 45th Circuit of third-degree criminal sexual conduct, in violation of Mich. Comp. Laws § 750 .520d(1)(c) (penile-vaginal penetration-victim physically helpless). The charged conduct was sexual intercourse with a seventeen-year-old acquaintance while she was asleep at English's home during a party. The trial court sentenced English to 21-180 months' imprisonment. English has since been released from prison.

At voir dire, the trial court had stated to the jury venire that an accused "has the right to a trial ... by a jury of [twelve] impartial persons ... " who "must be free as humanly possible, from bias, prejudice, or sympathy for either side." The court further announced that voir dire questions aimed "to find out if [each prospective juror] ha[d] any opinions or personal experiences that might influence [her] for or against the prosecution, the defendant, or any witnesses. One or more of these things could cause you to be excused."

Subsequent to the trial, at an evidentiary hearing held on September 29, 2006, "Juror A," a member of the jury that convicted English, revealed that her father had sexually abused her at age eight. Juror A stated that she heard and understood the judge's instruction to pay attention to questions and answers to other *808 jurors during voir dire, and that she did pay attention, but she only "vaguely" recalled certain jurors' testimony that they had suffered sexual abuse; those jurors' going into conference with the court outside the presence of the other jurors; and those jurors' subsequently being excused for cause. Asked whether she recalled that one or more jurors who indicated that they or a family member had suffered sexual assault had been "excuse[d] for cause," she said she "d[id]n't remember that happening." Juror A testified that the abuse had occurred "years ago," that she and her father had long since reconciled, and that "[w]hat had happened to me years ago happened to me years ago and I don't have a problem with it."

Juror A denied that she had attempted "to hide anything from the Court." When asked the reason for the nondisclosure, she said she must have "thought that there would have to be a conviction or that I would have had to went [sic] to the police" to report the abuse, in order for her to have been a victim in a criminal sense. However, Juror A stated that, when interviewed by the private investigator, she mistakenly thought she had revealed the abuse to the court. She also testified that she had "reconciled [with her abuser] many, many, many years ago," and that "[w]hat had happened to me years ago happened to me years ago and I don't have a problem with it."

English moved for a new trial based on juror misconduct; the motion was heard in a videotaped hearing on December 8, 2006 before Michigan Circuit Court for the 45th District. The court granted the motion, citing People v. Manser , 250 Mich.App. 21 , 645 N.W.2d 65 (2002) (overruled in part, People v. Miller , 482 Mich. 540 , 759 N.W.2d 850 , 863 & n.26 (2008) ). Emphasizing that there was "a material omission on the part of Juror A," the court found that this omission compromised not only English's but "both sides' right to a fair and impartial jur[y]." The court found it irrelevant "that Juror A [wa]s convinced that she was fair and impartial," because she "had the duty to disclose" the past sexual abuse. In the court's estimation, had Juror A made the revelation, as was her duty, the trial court would have excused Juror A for cause, or defense counsel would have exercised one of its remaining peremptory challenges to have her excused.

The prosecution appealed to the Michigan Court of Appeals, which reversed in a 2-1 decision on December 4, 2007 and reinstated English's conviction. People v. English , No. 269887, 2007 WL 4245412 (Mich. App. Dec. 4, 2007). The majority based its decision not on the alleged constitutional deprivation of the right to an impartial jury, but rather on the trial court's "belief that a victim of sexual abuse should automatically be excused from sitting on a sexual conduct jury," which the majority found "erroneous." Id. at *1. The majority distinguished Manser because "the experiences of the juror were similar in nature to the charges" against the defendant there, whereas the experience Juror A failed to disclose here was, in the majority's view, "very much different" than the allegations against English: "The juror in this case has [subsequently] disclosed that a family member molested her at age eight[,] whereas defendant raped a seventeen-year-old acquaintance while she slept." Id. at *2.

The dissent 1 agreed with the majority that "a victim of sexual assault is not automatically excusable for cause," but felt the proper "remedy for the trial court's erroneous *809 analysis" was not reinstatement of the verdict, but rather "remand for reconsideration under the proper legal standard." Id. at *5 (White, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). The dissent explained:

While the trial court erred in finding that the juror was excusable for cause simply because the juror had been sexually abused, it does not follow that the juror was not, in fact, excusable for cause. A trial court is not obliged to accept a juror's declaration that the juror is not biased if there is reason to doubt the assertion. Rather, a trial court must make its own determination, taking into account all the circumstances, including the juror's statements and demeanor, whether the juror can be fair and impartial.

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Bluebook (online)
900 F.3d 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-english-v-mary-berghuis-ca6-2018.