William Schrader v. John P. Whitley, Warden, and William J. Guste, Jr., Attorney General of State of Louisiana

904 F.2d 282, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 10531, 1990 WL 78581
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1990
Docket89-3648
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 904 F.2d 282 (William Schrader v. John P. Whitley, Warden, and William J. Guste, Jr., Attorney General of State of Louisiana) 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
William Schrader v. John P. Whitley, Warden, and William J. Guste, Jr., Attorney General of State of Louisiana, 904 F.2d 282, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 10531, 1990 WL 78581 (5th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

William Schrader appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for habeas corpus relief from the judgment of conviction entered against him in a Louisiana state court. Schrader was convicted in June 1986 by a jury which returned a responsive verdict of manslaughter, and the state trial court sentenced him to 21 years at hard labor, the maximum penalty for manslaughter. Schrader appealed, raising among other grounds that: (1) no rational jury could have found him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; and (2) the trial court erred in denying his motion for a continuance based on the absence of a material witness. The Louisiana Court of Appeal for the First Circuit and the Louisiana Supreme Court each addressed both issues and affirmed. 1 The district court rejected his writ petition based on the same grounds in a careful and thorough opinion. We affirm.

As Schrader’s sufficiency-of-the-evidence argument requires a comprehensive review of the trial, we summarize the facts briefly. Schrader was tried in 1986 for a death resulting from a fire at the home rented by Schrader and his family in Houma, Louisiana, on October 31, 1970. Catherine Marie Smith, a friend of Schrader’s stepdaughter, died as the result of injuries sustained in the fire, the stepdaughter suffered perma *284 nent brain damage, and Schrader’s wife, the only other occupant of the house at the time, was hospitalized but suffered no major injury. City and state officials investigated but reached no conclusion about the cause of the fire. Some fifteen years later, the state reviewed the original investigation and inspected the site of the fire, which had been preserved because of pending civil litigation, and then arrested Schrader. The state grand jury charged him with first degree murder, which the prosecutor amended without objection to a charge of murder to accord with the then-prevailing statutory scheme.

As the state court of appeals observed, the cause for the state’s delay is “not definitively revealed,” 2 but Schrader does not present a speedy-trial claim. Instead, his claims focus on the evidence presented at trial and the trial court’s refusal to allow him to improve his defense by allowing a continuance based on an absent witness.

I.

Schrader's first argument asserts that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction. Under the standard of Jackson v. Virginia, 3 habeas relief on such a claim is appropriate “if it is found that upon the record evidence adduced at the trial no rational trier of fact could have found proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” 4 Although Schrader suggests that we must also find that such a “reasonable” 5 jury would conclude that the evidence was inconsistent with every reasonable hypothesis of innocence, the authority cited concerns federal crimes; 6 in challenges to state convictions under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, only Jackson need be satisfied, even if state law would impose a more demanding standard of proof. 7 We attach “great weight” 8 to the fact that the Louisiana Supreme Court reviewed this claim under the appropriate standard. 9

Because Schrader failed to make a timely objection to that part of the charge concerning the responsiveness of a verdict of manslaughter and makes no argument of prejudice now, we consider the Jackson question with regard to the elements of the charged offense, felony murder by aggravated arson. 10 As ultimately charged, the jury was responsible for determining whether Schrader had committed murder, that is, “the killing of a human being ... [wjhen the offender is engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of aggravated arson, ... even though he has no intent to kill.” 11 Aggravated arson in turn involved “setting fire to any structure ... whereby it is foreseeable that human life might be endangered,” and required only general criminal intent. 12

*285 Schrader’s argument that the evidence was insufficient to convict him of this crime may be parsed into two components: first, that the evidence did not sufficiently establish that the fire was not accidental, but rather was intentionally set; second, that the evidence did not sufficiently tie Schrader to the fire. With regard to both, he argues principally that the passage of time rendered the State’s case infirm.

A.

The State’s two expert witnesses, Harold Myers and Jimmy Barnhill, did not examine the site of the fire until 1978 and 1985, respectively, but the owner of the property testified that he had boarded the house after the fire, and that the condition of the house was the same when Myers and Barnhill examined the site as it had been immediately after the fire. It is unclear whether a meter box and linoleum flooring had been removed, and whether, if they had been removed, this would have occurred before the defense witnesses inspected the house immediately after the fire, but Schrader does not attach particular significance to either potential source of information. In any event, Myers and Barnhill based much of their testimony on photographs taken during the official investigation itself, and on fixtures indisputably present during the fire.

Myers and Barnhill, who had conducted separate investigations at the behest of different parties, agreed that the evidence indicated a non-accidental fire, intentionally set and aided by the use of an accelerant such as gasoline. They testified that photographs of the exterior, the wooden flooring, doors, walls, and objects in the interior suggested burn, heat, and smoke patterns consistent with a rapid, intense fire originating at several locations in the house and likely spreading by virtue of a flammable liquid.

The defense presented the testimony of Howard Oubre, who as a city fire inspector had conducted an investigation of the premises with Robert Casse, then with the state fire marshall's office, immediately after the fire. Oubre and Casse had concluded that the cause of the fire could not be determined. Oubre testified that he had surveyed the house with an explosion meter, which did not indicate the presence of flammable gases or liquids, and that drafts might have produced the “hot spots” evident in the flooring. An affidavit from Casse was also introduced and stipulated to be subjectively truthful. 13

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Bluebook (online)
904 F.2d 282, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 10531, 1990 WL 78581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-schrader-v-john-p-whitley-warden-and-william-j-guste-jr-ca5-1990.