Petitioner was found guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced
to death under amended Louisiana statutes enacted after this
Court's decision in
Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.
S. 238. The Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed, rejecting
petitioner's contention that the new procedure for imposing the
death penalty is unconstitutional. The post-
Furman
legislation mandates imposition of the death penalty whenever, with
respect to five categories of homicide (here, killing during the
perpetration of an armed robbery), the jury finds the defendant had
a specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily harm. If a
verdict of guilty of first-degree murder is returned, death is
mandated regardless of any mercy recommendation. Every jury is
instructed on the crimes of second-degree murder and manslaughter
and permitted to consider those verdicts even if no evidence
supports the lesser verdicts; and, if a lesser verdict is returned
it is treated as an acquittal of all greater charges.
Held: The judgment is reversed insofar as it upheld the
death sentence, and the case is remanded. Pp.
428 U. S.
331-336;
428 U. S. 336;
428 U. S.
336-337.
319
So. 2d 317, reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, MR. JUSTICE POWELL, and MR. JUSTICE STEVENS
concluded that:
1. The imposition of the death penalty is not
per se
cruel and unusual punishment violative of the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments.
Gregg v. Georgia, ante at
428 U. S.
168-187. P.
428 U. S.
331.
2. Louisiana's mandatory death penalty statute violates the
Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. Pp.
428 U. S.
331-336.
(a) Though Louisiana has adopted a different and somewhat
narrower definition of first-degree murder than North Carolina, the
difference is not of constitutional significance, and the Louisiana
statute imposing a mandatory death sentence is invalid for
substantially the same reasons as are detailed in
Woodson v.
North Carolina, ante at
428 U. S.
289-296. Pp.
428 U. S.
331-334.
(b) Though respondent State claims that it has adopted
satisfactory procedures to comply with
Furman's
requirement that standardless jury discretion be replaced by
procedures that safeguard
Page 428 U. S. 326
against the arbitrary and capricious imposition of death
sentences, that objective has not been realized, since the
responsive verdict procedure not only lacks standards to guide the
jury in selecting among first-degree murderers, but it plainly
invites the jurors to disregard their oaths and choose a verdict
for a lesser offense whenever they feel that the death penalty is
inappropriate.
See Woodson, ante, at
428 U. S.
302-303. Pp.
428 U. S.
334-336.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN concurred in the judgment for the reasons
stated in his dissenting opinion in
Gregg v. Georgia, ante
p.
428 U. S. 227.
P.
428 U. S.
336.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL, being of the view that death is a cruel
and unusual punishment forbidden by the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments, concurred in the judgment.
Gregg v. Georgia,
ante, p.
428 U. S. 231
(MARSHALL, J., dissenting). P.
428 U. S.
336.
Judgment of the Court, and opinion of STEWART, POWELL, and
STEVENS, JJ., announced by STEVENS, J. BRENNAN, J.,
post,
p.
428 U. S. 336,
and MARSHALL, J.,
post p.
428 U. S. 336,
filed statements concurring in the judgment. BURGER, C.J., filed a
dissenting statement,
post p.
428 U. S. 337.
WHITE, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BURGER, C.J., and
BLACKMUN, and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined,
post, p.
428 U. S. 337.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting statement,
post, p.
428 U. S.
363.
Page 428 U. S. 327
Judgment of the Court, and opinion of MR. JUSTICE STEWART, MR.
JUSTICE POWELL, and MR. JUSTICE STEVENS, announced by MR. JUSTICE
STEVENS.
The question in this case is whether the imposition of the
sentence of death for the crime of first-degree murder under the
law of Louisiana violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
I
On August 18, 1973, in the early hours of the morning, Richard
G. Lowe was found dead in the office of the Lake Charles, La., gas
station where he worked. He had been shot four times in the head.
Four men -- the petitioner, Huey Cormier, Everett Walls, and Calvin
Arceneaux -- were arrested for complicity in the murder. The
petitioner was subsequently indicated by a grand jury on a
presentment that he
"[d]id unlawfully with the specific intent to kill or to inflict
great bodily harm, while engaged in the armed robbery of Richard G.
Lowe, commit first degree murder by killing one Richard G. Lowe, in
violation of Section One (1) of LSA-R.S. 14:30."
At the petitioner's trial, Cormier, Walls, and Arceneaux
testified for the prosecution. Their testimony established that,
just before midnight on August 17, the petitioner discussed with
Walls and Cormier the subject of "ripping off that old man at the
station," and that, on the early morning of August 18, Arceneaux
and the petitioner went to the gas station on the pretext of
seeking employment. After Lowe told them that there were no jobs
available, they surreptitiously made their way into
Page 428 U. S. 328
the office of the station, where Arceneaux removed a pistol from
a desk drawer. The petitioner insisted on taking possession of the
pistol. When Lowe returned to the office, the petitioner and
Arceneaux assaulted him and then shoved him into a small back room.
Shortly thereafter, a car drove up. Arceneaux went out and, posing
as the station attendant, sold the motorist about three dollars'
worth of gasoline. While still out in front, Arceneaux heard four
shots from inside the station. He went back inside and found the
petitioner gone and Lowe lying bleeding on the floor. Arceneaux
grabbed some empty "money bags" and ran.
The jury found the petitioner guilty as charged. As required by
state law, the trial judge sentenced him to death. The Supreme
Court of Louisiana affirmed the judgment.
319
So. 2d 317 (1975). We granted certiorari, 423 U.S. 1082 (1976),
to consider whether the imposition of the death penalty in this
case violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United
States Constitution.
II
The Louisiana Legislature, in 1973, amended the state statutes
relating to murder and the death penalty in apparent response to
this Court's decision in
Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.
S. 238 (1972). Before these amendments, Louisiana law
defined the crime of "murder" as the killing of a human being by an
offender with a specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily
harm, or by an offender engaged in the perpetration or attempted
perpetration of certain serious felonies, even without an intent to
kill. [
Footnote 1] The jury was
free to return any of four verdicts:
Page 428 U. S. 329
guilty, guilty without capital punishment, guilty of
manslaughter, or not guilty. [
Footnote 2]
In the 1973 amendments, the legislature changed this
discretionary statute to a wholly mandatory one, requiring that the
death penalty be imposed whenever the jury finds the defendant
guilty of the newly defined crime of first-degree murder. The
revised statute, under which the petitioner was charged, convicted,
and sentenced, provides in part that first-degree murder is the
killing of a human being when the offender has a specific intent to
kill or to inflict great bodily harm and is engaged in the
perpetration or attempted perpetration of aggravated kidnaping,
aggravated rape, or armed robbery. [
Footnote 3] In a
Page 428 U. S. 330
first-degree murder case, the four responsive verdicts are not
guilty, guilty of second-degree murder, guilty of manslaughter, and
not guilty. La.Code Crim.Proc.Ann., Art. 814(A)(1) (Supp. 1975).
The jury must be instructed on all these verdicts, whether or not
raised by the evidence or requested by the defendant. [
Footnote 4]
Under the former statute, the jury had the unfettered choice in
any case where it found the defendant guilty of murder of returning
either a verdict of guilty, which required the imposition of the
death penalty, or a verdict of guilty without capital punishment,
in which case the punishment was imprisonment at hard labor for
life. [
Footnote 5]
Page 428 U. S. 331
Under the new statute, the jury is required to determine only
whether both conditions existed at the time of the killing; if
there was a specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily
harm, and the offender was engaged in an armed robbery, the offense
is first-degree murder and the mandatory punishment is death. If
only one of these conditions existed, the offense is second-degree
murder and the mandatory punishment is imprisonment at hard labor
for life. Any qualification or recommendation which a jury might
add to its verdict -- such as a recommendation of mercy where the
verdict is guilty of first-degree murder -- is without any effect.
[
Footnote 6]
III
The petitioner argues that the imposition of the death penalty
under any circumstances is cruel and unusual punishment in
violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. We reject this
argument for the reasons stated today in
Gregg v. Georgia,
ante at
428 U. S.
168-187.
IV
Louisiana, like North Carolina, has responded to
Furman
by replacing discretionary jury sentencing in capital cases with
mandatory death sentences. Under the present Louisiana law, all
persons found guilty of first-degree murder, aggravated rape,
aggravated kidnaping, or treason are automatically sentenced to
death.
See La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § § 14:30, 14:42, 14:44,
14:113 (1974).
There are two major differences between the Louisiana and North
Carolina statutes governing first-degree murder cases. First, the
crime of first-degree murder in North Carolina includes any
willful, deliberate, and
Page 428 U. S. 332
premeditated homicide and any felony murder, whereas Louisiana
limits first-degree murder to five categories of homicide --
killing in connection with the commission of certain felonies;
killing of a fireman or a peace officer in the performance of his
duties; killing for remuneration; killing with the intent to
inflict harm on more than one person; and killing by a person with
a prior murder conviction or under a current life sentence. Second,
Louisiana employs a unique system of responsive verdicts under
which the jury in every first-degree murder case must be instructed
on the crimes of first-degree murder, second-degree murder, and
manslaughter, and must be provided with the verdicts of guilty,
guilty of second-degree murder, guilty of manslaughter, and not
guilty. [
Footnote 7]
See La.Code Crim.Proc.Ann., Arts. 809, 814 (Supp. 1975);
State v. Cooley, 260 La. 768, 771,
257
So. 2d 400, 401 (1972). By contrast, in North Carolina
instructions on lesser included offenses must have a basis in the
evidence adduced at trial.
See State v. Spivey, 151 N.C.
676, 65 S.E. 995 (1909);
cf. State v. Vestal, 283 N.C.
249,
195 S.E.2d
297 (1973).
That Louisiana has adopted a different and somewhat narrower
definition of first-degree murder than North Carolina is not of
controlling constitutional significance. The history of mandatory
death penalty statutes indicates a firm societal view that limiting
the scope of capital murder is an inadequate response to the
harshness and inflexibility of a mandatory death sentence statute.
See Woodson v. North Carolina, ante at
428 U. S.
289-296. A large group of jurisdictions first responded
to the unacceptable severity of the common law rule of automatic
death sentences for all murder convictions by narrowing the
definition of capital homicide. Each of these jurisdictions
Page 428 U. S. 333
found that approach insufficient, and subsequently substituted
discretionary sentencing for mandatory death sentences.
See
Woodson v. North Carolina, ante at
428 U. S.
290-292. [
Footnote
8]
The futility of attempting to solve the problems of mandatory
death penalty statutes by narrowing the scope of the capital
offense stems from our society's rejection of the belief that
"every offense in a like legal category calls for an identical
punishment without regard to the past life and habits of a
particular offender."
Williams v. New York, 337 U.
S. 241,
337 U. S. 247
(1949).
See also Pennsylvania ex rel. Sullivan v. Ashe,
302 U. S. 51,
302 U. S. 55
(1937). As the dissenting Justices in
Furman noted, the
19th century movement away from mandatory death sentences was
rooted in the recognition that "individual culpability is not
always measured by the category of crime committed." 408 U.S. at
408 U. S. 402
(BURGER, C.J., joined by BLACKMUN, POWELL, and REHNQUIST, JJ.,
dissenting).
The constitutional vice of mandatory death sentence statutes --
lack of focus on the circumstances of the particular offense and
the character and propensities of the offender -- is not resolved
by Louisiana's limitation of first-degree murder to various
categories of killings. The diversity of circumstances presented in
cases falling within the single category of killings during the
commission of a specified felony, as well as the variety of
possible offenders involved in such crimes, underscores the
rigidity of Louisiana's enactment and its similarity to the North
Carolina statute. Even the other more narrowly drawn categories of
first-degree murder in the Louisiana law afford no meaningful
opportunity for consideration of mitigating factors presented by
the circumstances
Page 428 U. S. 334
of the particular crime or by the attributes of the individual
offender. [
Footnote 9]
Louisiana's mandatory death sentence statute also fails to
comply with
Furman's requirement that standardless jury
discretion be replaced by procedures that safeguard against the
arbitrary and capricious imposition of death sentences. The State
claims that it has adopted satisfactory procedures by taking all
sentencing authority from juries in capital murder cases. This was
accomplished, according to the State, by deleting the jury's
pre-
Furman authority to return a verdict of guilty without
capital punishment in any murder case.
See
La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:30 (1974); La.Code Crim.Proc.Ann., Arts. 814,
817 (Supp. 1975). [
Footnote
10]
Under the current Louisiana system, however, every jury in a
first-degree murder case is instructed on the crimes of
second-degree murder and manslaughter and permitted to consider
those verdicts even if there is not a scintilla of evidence to
support the lesser verdicts.
See La Code Crim.Proc.Ann.,
Arts. 809, 814 (Supp. 1975). And, if a lesser verdict is returned,
it is treated as an acquittal of all greater charges.
See
La.Code Crim.Proc.Ann., Art. 598 (Supp. 1975). This responsive
verdict
Page 428 U. S. 335
procedure not only lacks standards to guide the jury in
selecting among first-degree murderers, but it plainly invites the
jurors to disregard their oaths and choose a verdict for a lesser
offense whenever they feel the death penalty is inappropriate.
There is an element of capriciousness in making the jurors' power
to avoid the death penalty dependent on their willingness to accept
this invitation to disregard the trial judge's instructions. The
Louisiana procedure neither provides standards to channel jury
judgments nor permits review to check the arbitrary exercise of the
capital jury's
de facto sentencing discretion.
See
Woodson v. North Carolina, ante at
428 U. S.
302-303. [
Footnote
11]
The Louisiana statute thus suffers from constitutional
deficiencies similar to those identified in the North Carolina
statute in
Woodson v. North Carolina, ante, p.
428 U. S. 20. As
in North Carolina, there are no standards provided to guide the
jury in the exercise of its power to select those first-degree
murderers who will receive death sentences, and there is no
meaningful appellate review of the jury's
Page 428 U. S. 336
decision. As in. North Carolina, death sentences are mandatory
upon conviction for first-degree murder. Louisiana's mandatory
death sentence law employs a procedure that was rejected by that
State's legislature 130 years ago, [
Footnote 12] and that subsequently has been renounced by
legislatures and juries in every jurisdiction in this Nation.
See Woodson v. North Carolina, ante at
428 U. S.
291-296. The Eighth Amendment, which draws much of its
meaning from "the evolving standards of decency that mark the
progress of a maturing society,"
Trop v. Dulles,
356 U. S. 86,
356 U. S. 101
(1958) (plurality opinion), simply cannot tolerate the
reintroduction of a practice so thoroughly discredited.
Accordingly, we find that the death sentence imposed upon the
petitioner under Louisiana's mandatory death sentence statute
violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, and must be set
aside. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Louisiana is reversed
insofar as it upheld the death sentence imposed upon the
petitioner, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
La. Rev Stat.Ann. § 14:30 (1951). The felonies were aggravated
arson, aggravated burglary, aggravated kidnaping, aggravated rape,
armed robbery, and simple robbery.
[
Footnote 2]
La.Code Crim.Proc.Ann., Art. 814 (1967).
[
Footnote 3]
La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:30 (1974):
"
First degree murder"
"First degree murder is the killing of a human being:"
"(1) When the offender has a specific intent to kill or to
inflict great bodily harm and is engaged in the perpetration or
attempted perpetration of aggravated kidnapping, aggravated rape or
armed robbery; or"
"(2) When the offender has a specific intent to kill, or to
inflict great bodily harm upon, a fireman or a peace officer who
was engaged in the performance of his lawful duties; or"
"(3) Where the offender has a specific intent to kill or to
inflict great bodily harm and has previously been convicted of an
unrelated murder or is serving a life sentence; or"
"(4) When the offender has a specific intent to kill or to
inflict great bodily harm upon more than one person; [or]"
"(5) When the offender has specific intent to commit murder and
has been offered or has received anything of value for committing
the murder."
"For the purposes of Paragraph (2) herein, the term peace
officer shall be defined and include any constable, sheriff, deputy
sheriff, local or state policeman, game warden, federal law
enforcement officer, jail or prison guard, parole officer,
probation officer, judge, district attorney, assistant district
attorney or district attorneys' investigator."
"Whoever commits the crime of first degree murder shall be
punished by death."
(In 1975, § 14:30(1) was amended to add the crime of aggravated
burglary as a predicate felony for first-degree murder. La.Acts
1975, No. 327, § 1.)
Louisiana Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:30.1 (1974) provides:
"
Second degree murder"
"Second degree murder is the killing of a human being:"
"(1) When the offender has a specific intent to kill or to
inflict great bodily harm; or"
"(2) When the offender is engaged in the perpetration or
attempted perpetration of aggravated arson, aggravated burglary,
aggravated kidnapping, aggravated escape, armed robbery, or simple
robbery, even though he has no intent to kill."
"Whoever commits the crime of second degree murder shall be
imprisoned at hard labor for life and shall not be eligible for
parole, probation or suspension of sentence for a period of twenty
years."
(In 1975, § 14:30.1 was amended to increase the period of parole
ineligibility from 20 to 40 years following a conviction for
second-degree murder. La.Acts 1975, No. 380.)
[
Footnote 4]
See State v. Cooley, 260 La. 768,
257 So. 2d
400 (1972).
[
Footnote 5]
Louisiana Code Crim.Proc.Ann., Art. 814 (1967), enumerated
"guilty without capital punishment" as one of the responsive
verdicts available in a murder case. Article 817 provided that the
jury in a capital case could qualify its verdict of guilty with the
phrase "without capital punishment."
[
Footnote 6]
La.Code Crim.Proc.Ann., Art. 817 (Supp. 1975).
[
Footnote 7]
See La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:30 (1974), set forth at
n 3,
supra.
[
Footnote 8]
At least 27 jurisdictions first limited the scope of their
capital homicide laws by dividing murder into degrees, and then
later made death sentences discretionary even in first-degree
murder cases.
[
Footnote 9]
Only the third category of the Louisiana first-degree murder
statute, covering intentional killing by a person serving a life
sentence or by a person previously convicted of an unrelated
murder, defines the capital crime at least in significant part in
terms of the character or record of the individual offender.
Although even this narrow category does not permit the jury to
consider possible mitigating factors, a prisoner serving a life
sentence presents a unique problem that may justify such a law.
See Gregg v. Georgia, ante at
428 U. S. 186;
Woodson v. North Carolina, ante at
428 U. S. 287
n. 7,
428 U. S.
292-293, n. 25.
[
Footnote 10]
Louisiana juries are instructed to return a guilty verdict for
the offense charged if warranted by the evidence, and to consider
lesser verdicts only if the evidence does not justify a conviction
on the greater offense.
See State v. Hill, 297 So. 2d 660,
662 (La.1974);
cf. State v. Selman, 300 So.
2d 467, 471-473 (La.1974).
[
Footnote 11]
While it is likely that many juries will follow their
instructions and consider only the question of guilt in reaching
their verdict, it is only reasonable to assume, in light of past
experience with mandatory death sentence statutes, that a
significant number of juries will take into account the fact that
the death sentence is an automatic consequence of any first-degree
murder conviction in Louisiana.
See Woodson v. North Carolina,
ante at
428 U. S.
302-303. Those juries that do consider sentencing
consequences are given no guidance in deciding when the ultimate
sanction of death is an appropriate punishment, and will often be
given little or no evidence concerning the personal characteristics
and previous record of an individual defendant. Moreover, there is
no judicial review to safeguard against capricious sentencing
determinations. Indeed, there is no judicial review of the
sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction.
See State
v. Brumfield, 319 So.
2d 402,
404
(La.1975);
State v. Evans, 317
So. 2d 168, 170 (La.1975);
State v.
Douglas, 278 So.
2d 485, 491 (La.1973).
[
Footnote 12]
See La.Laws 1846, c. 139.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, concurring in the judgment.
For the reasons stated in my dissenting opinion in
Gregg v.
Georgia, ante, p.
428 U. S. 227,
I concur in the judgment that sets aside the death sentence imposed
under the Louisiana death sentence statute as violative of the
Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
MR JUSTICE MARSHALL, concurring in the judgment.
For the reasons stated in my dissenting opinion in
Gregg v.
Georgia, ante, p.
428 U. S. 231,
I am of the view that the death penalty is a cruel and unusual
punishment forbidden
Page 428 U. S. 337
by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. I therefore concur in
the Court's judgment.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, dissenting.
I dissent for the reasons set forth in my dissent in
Furman
v. Georgia, 408 U. S. 238,
408 U. S. 375
(1972).
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE
BLACKMUN, and MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST join, dissenting.
Under the Louisiana statutes in effect prior to 1973, there were
three grades of criminal homicide murder, manslaughter, and
negligent homicide. La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:29 (1951). Murder was
punishable by death, La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:30 (1951), but a jury
finding a defendant guilty of murder was empowered to foreclose the
death penalty by returning a verdict of "guilty without capital
punishment." La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 15:409 (1951). Following
Furman
v. Georgia, 408 U. S. 238
(1972), which the Louisiana Supreme Court held effectively to have
invalidated the Louisiana death penalty, [
Footnote 2/1] the statutes were amended to provide four
grades of criminal homicide: first-degree murder, second-degree
murder, manslaughter, and negligent homicide. La.Rev.Stat.Ann. §
14:29 (1974 Supp.). First-degree murder was defined as the killing
of a human in prescribed situations, including where the offender,
with specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily harm, takes
another's life while perpetrating
Page 428 U. S. 338
or attempting to perpetrate aggravated kidnaping, aggravated
rape, or armed robbery. La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:30 (1974). The new
statute provides that "whoever commits the crime of first degree
murder shall be punished by death," and juries are no longer
authorized to return guilty verdicts without capital punishment.
[
Footnote 2/2] As had been the case
before 1973, the possible
Page 428 U. S. 339
jury verdicts in first-degree murder cases are also specified by
statute. As amended in 1973, these "responsive verdicts," as to
which juries were to be instructed in every first-degree murder
case, are: "guilty," "guilty of second degree murder," "guilty of
manslaughter," and "not guilty." La.Code Crim.Proc., Art. 814(A)(1)
(Supp. 1975).
The issue in this case is whether the imposition of the death
penalty under this statutory scheme upon a defendant found guilty
of first-degree murder is consistent with the Eighth Amendment,
which forbids the infliction of "cruel and unusual punishments" and
which, by virtue of the Fourteenth Amendment, is binding upon the
States.
Robinson v. California, 370 U.
S. 660 (1962). I am convinced that it is, and dissent
from the Court's judgment.
I
On August 18, 1973, Richard G. Lowe of Lake Charles, La., was
found dead in the Texaco service station where
Page 428 U. S. 340
he worked as an attendant. He had been shot four times in the
head with a pistol which was not found on the scene, but which, as
it turned out, had been kept by the station manager in a drawer
near the cash register. The gun was later recovered from the owner
of a bar, and was traded to petitioner, who was charged with
first-degree murder in an indictment alleging that, "with the
specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily harm," and
"while engaged in . . . armed robbery," he had killed Richard G.
Lowe.
At the trial, Calvin Arceneaux, testifying for the prosecution,
stated that he had participated in the robbery and that he had
taken the gun from the drawer and given it to petitioner, who had
said he wanted it because he had "always wanted to kill a white
dude." The attendant, who had been overpowered, remained inside the
station with petitioner while Arceneaux, posing as the station
attendant, went outside to tend a customer. According to Arceneaux,
Lowe was shot during this interval. Another witness, Everett Walls,
testified that he had declined to participate in the robbery, but,
by chance, had seen the petitioner at the station with a gun in his
hand. According to a third witness, Huey Cormier, who also had
refused petitioner's invitation to participate, petitioner had come
to Cormier's house early on August 18 and had said that he "had
just shot that old man . . . at the filling station." Record
134-135.
The case went to the jury under instructions advising the jury
of the State's burden of proof and of the charge in the indictment
that petitioner had killed another person with "specific intent to
kill or to inflict great bodily harm and done when the accused was
engaged in the perpetration of armed robbery." The elements which
the State was required to prove beyond reasonable doubt were
explained, including the elements of first-degree
Page 428 U. S. 341
murder and of armed robbery. [
Footnote 2/3] In accordance with the statute, the court
also explained the possible verdicts other than first-degree
murder:
"The law provides that,
Page 428 U. S. 342
in a trial of murder in the first degree, if the jury is not
convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused is guilty of
the crime of murder in the first degree, but is
Page 428 U. S. 343
convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that he is guilty of murder
in the second degree, it should render a verdict of guilty of
murder in the second degree."
The elements of second-degree murder and also of manslaughter
were then explained, whereupon the court instructed:
"If you should conclude that the defendant is not guilty of
murder in the first degree, but you are convinced beyond a
reasonable doubt that he is guilty of murder in the second degree
it would be your duty to find that defendant guilty of murder in
the second degree."
"If you should conclude that the defendant is not guilty of
murder in the first degree or murder in the second degree, but you
are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that he is guilty of
manslaughter, it would then be your duty to find the defendant
guilty of manslaughter."
"If you should conclude that the defendant is not guilty of
murder in the first degree, or murder in the second degree or
manslaughter, it would then be your duty to find the defendant not
guilty."
Finally, the court instructed the jury:
"To summarize, you may return any one of the following
verdicts:"
"1. Guilty as charged."
"2. Guilty of second degree murder."
"3. Guilty of manslaughter."
"4. Not guilty."
"Accordingly, I will now set forth the proper form
Page 428 U. S. 344
of each verdict that may be rendered, reminding you that only
one verdict shall be rendered."
"If you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the
defendant is guilty of the offense charged, the form of your
verdict should be: 'We, the jury, find the defendant guilty as
charged.'"
"If you are not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the
defendant is guilty of murder in the first degree but you are
convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of
murder in the second degree, the form of your verdict would be:
'We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of second degree
murder.'"
"If you are not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the
defendant is guilty of murder in the first degree or murder in the
second degree, but you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that
the defendant is guilty of manslaughter, the form of your verdict
would be: 'We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of
manslaughter.'"
"If you are not convinced that the defendant is guilty of murder
in the first degree, murder in the second degree or manslaughter,
the form of your verdict would be: 'We, the jury, find the
defendant not guilty.'"
The jury found the defendant guilty of first-degree murder, and
the death sentence was imposed. On appeal, the conviction was
affirmed, the Louisiana Supreme Court rejecting petitioner's
challenge to the death penalty based on the Eighth Amendment.
319 So.
2d 317 (1975).
II
Petitioner mounts a double attack on the death penalty imposed
upon him: first, that the statute under which his sentence was
imposed is too little different from
Page 428 U. S. 345
the provision. at issue in
Furman v. Georgia to escape
the strictures of our decision in that case; second, that death is
a cruel and unusual punishment for any crime committed by any
defendant under any conditions, an argument presented in
Furman and there rejected by four of the six Justices who
addressed the issue. I disagree with both submissions.
I cannot conclude that the current Louisiana first-degree murder
statute is insufficiently different from the statutes invalidated
in
Furman's wake to avoid invalidation under that case. As
I have already said, under prior Louisiana law, one of the
permissible verdicts that a jury in any capital punishment case was
authorized by statute and by its instructions to return was "guilty
without capital punishment." Dispensing with the death penalty was
expressly placed within the uncontrolled discretion of the jury,
and in no case involved a breach of its instructions or the
controlling statute. A guilty verdict carrying capital punishment
required a unanimous verdict; any juror, consistent with his
instruction and whatever the evidence might be, was free to vote
for a verdict of guilty without capital punishment, thereby, if he
persevered, at least foreclosing a capital punishment verdict at
that trial.
Under this or similar jury sentencing arrangements which were in
force in Louisiana, Georgia, and most other States that authorized
capital punishment, the death penalty came to be imposed less and
less frequently, so much so that, in
Furman v. Georgia,
the Court concluded that, in practice, criminal juries, exercising
their lawful discretion, were imposing it so seldom and so
freakishly and arbitrarily that it was no longer serving the
legitimate ends of criminal justice, and had come to be cruel and
unusual punishment violative of the Eighth Amendment. It was in
response to this judgment that Louisiana sought to
Page 428 U. S. 346
reenact the death penalty as a constitutionally valid punishment
by redefining the crime of first-degree murder and by making death
the mandatory punishment for those found guilty of that crime.
To implement this aim, the present Louisiana law eliminated the
"guilty without capital punishment" verdict. Jurors in first-degree
murder cases are no longer instructed that they have discretion to
withhold capital punishment. Their instructions now are to find the
defendant guilty if they believe beyond a reasonable doubt that he
committed the crime with which he is charged. A verdict of guilty
carries a mandatory death sentence. In the present case, the jury
was instructed as to the specific elements constituting the crime
of felony murder which the indictment charged. They were also
directed that, if they believed beyond reasonable doubt that
Roberts committed these acts, they were to return a verdict of
guilty as charged in the indictment. The jury could not, if it
believed the defendant had committed the crime, nevertheless
dispense with the death penalty.
The difference between a jury's having and not having the lawful
discretion to spare the life of the defendant is apparent, and
fundamental. It is undeniable that the unfettered discretion of the
jury to save the defendant from death was a major contributing
factor in the developments which led us to invalidate the death
penalty in
Furman v. Georgia. This factor Louisiana has
now sought to eliminate by making the death penalty compulsory upon
a verdict of guilty in first-degree murder cases. As I see it, we
are now in no position to rule that the State's present law, having
eliminated the overt discretionary power of juries, suffers from
the same constitutional infirmities which led this Court to
invalidate the Georgia death penalty statute in
Furman v.
Georgia.
Page 428 U. S. 347
Even so, petitioner submits that, in every capital case, the
court is required to instruct the jury with respect to lesser
included offenses, and that the jury therefore has unlimited
discretion to foreclose the death penalty by finding the defendant
guilty of a lesser included offense for which capital punishment is
not authorized. The difficulty with the argument is illustrated by
the instructions in this case. The jury was not instructed that it
could, in its discretion, convict of a lesser included offense. The
jury's plain instructions, instead, were to return a verdict of
guilty of murder as charged if it believed from the evidence that
Roberts had committed the specific acts constituting the offense
charged and defined by the court. Only if they did not believe
Roberts had committed the acts charged in the indictment were the
jurors free to consider whether he was guilty of the lesser
included offense of second-degree murder, and only if they did not
find beyond a reasonable doubt that Roberts was guilty of
second-degree murder were they free to consider the offense of
manslaughter. As the Supreme Court of Louisiana said in
State
v. Hill, 297 So. 2d 660, 662 (1974), and repeated in this
case, 319 So. 2d at 322,
"the use of these lesser verdicts . . . is contingent upon the
jury's finding insufficient evidence to convict the defendant of
first degree murder, with which he is charged."
See also State v. Selman, 300
So. 2d 467, 473 (La.1974),
cert. pending, No.
74-6065.
It is true that the jury in this case, like juries in other
capital cases in Louisiana and elsewhere, may violate its
instructions and convict of a lesser included offense despite the
evidence. But, for constitutional purposes, I am quite unwilling to
equate the raw power of nullification with the unlimited discretion
extended jurors under prior Louisiana statutes. In
McGautha v.
California, 402 U. S. 183
(1971), we rejected the argument that vesting
Page 428 U. S. 348
standardless sentencing discretion in the jury was
unconstitutional under the Due Process Clause. In arriving at that
judgment, we noted that the practice of jury sentencing had emerged
from the "rebellion against the common law rule imposing a
mandatory death sentence on all convicted murderers,"
id.
at
402 U. S. 198,
and from the unsatisfactory experience with attempting to define
the various grades of homicide and to specify those for which the
death penalty was required. Vesting complete sentencing power in
the jury was the upshot. The difficulties adverted to in
McGautha, however, including that of jury nullification,
are inadequate to require invalidation of the Louisiana felony
murder rule on the ground that jurors will so often and
systematically refuse to follow their instructions that the
administration of the death penalty under the current law will not
be substantially different from that which obtained under prior
statutes. Nor am I convinced that the Louisiana death penalty for
first-degree murder is substantially more vulnerable because the
prosecutor is vested with discretion as to the selection and filing
of charges, by the practice of plea bargaining, or by the power of
executive clemency. Petitioner argues that these characteristics of
the criminal justice system in Louisiana, combined with the
discretion arguably left to the jury as discussed above, insure
that the death penalty will be as seldom and arbitrarily applied as
it was under the predecessor statutes. The Louisiana statutes,
however, define the elements of first-degree murder, and I cannot
accept the assertion that state prosecutors will systematically
fail to file first-degree murder charges when the evidence warrants
it or to seek convictions for first-degree murder on less than
adequate evidence. Of course, someone
must exercise
discretion and judgment as to what charges are to be filed and
against whom; but this essential process is
Page 428 U. S. 349
nothing more than the rational enforcement of the State's
criminal law and the sensible operation of the criminal justice
system. The discretion with which Louisiana's prosecutors are
invested and which appears to be no more than normal, furnishes no
basis for inferring that capital crimes will be prosecuted so
arbitrarily and infrequently that the present death penalty statute
is invalid under
Furman v. Georgia.
I have much the same reaction to plea bargaining and executive
clemency. A prosecutor may seek or accept pleas to lesser offenses
where he is not confident of his first-degree murder case, but this
is merely the proper exercise of the prosecutor's discretion, as I
have already discussed. So too, as illustrated by this case and the
North Carolina case,
Woodson v. North Carolina, ante, p.
428 U. S. 280,
some defendants who otherwise would have been tried for
first-degree murder, convicted, and sentenced to death are
permitted to plead to lesser offenses because they are willing to
testify against their codefendants. This is a grisly trade, but it
is not irrational, for it is aimed at insuring the successful
conclusion of a first-degree murder case against one or more other
defendants. Whatever else the practice may be, it is neither
inexplicable, freakish, nor violative of the Eighth Amendment. Nor
has it been condemned by this Court under other provisions of the
Constitution.
Santobello v. New York, 404 U.
S. 257 (1971);
North Carolina v. Alford,
400 U. S. 25
(1970);
Parker v. North Carolina, 397 U.
S. 790 (1970);
Brady v. United States,
397 U. S. 742
(1970).
See also Chaffin v. Stynchcombe, 412 U. S.
17,
412 U. S. 30-31
(1973).
As for executive clemency, I cannot assume that this power,
exercised by governors and vested in the President by Art. II, § 2,
of the Constitution, will be used in a standardless and arbitrary
manner. It is more reasonable
Page 428 U. S. 350
to expect the power to be exercised by the Executive Branch
whenever it is concluded that the criminal justice system has
unjustly convicted a defendant of first-degree murder and sentenced
him to death. The country's experience with the commutation power
does not suggest that it is a senseless lottery, that it operates
in an arbitrary or discriminatory manner, or that it will lead to
reducing the death penalty to a merely theoretical threat that is
imposed only on the luckless few.
I cannot conclude, as do MR. JUSTICE STEWART, MR. JUSTICE
POWELL, and MR. JUSTICE STEVENS (hereinafter the plurality), that,
under the present Louisiana law, capital punishment will occur so
seldom, discriminatorily, or freakishly that it will fail to
satisfy the Eighth Amendment as construed and applied in
Furman
v. Georgia.
III
I also cannot agree with the petitioner's other basic argument
that the death penalty, however imposed and for whatever crime, is
cruel and unusual punishment. The opposing positions on this issue,
as well as the history of the death penalty, were fully canvassed
by various Justices in their separate opinions in
Furman v.
Georgia, and these able and lucid presentations need not be
repeated here. It is plain enough that the Constitution drafted by
the Framers expressly made room for the death penalty. The Fifth
Amendment provides that "no person shall be held to answer for a
capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or
indictment of a Grand Jury . . . ," and that no person shall be
"twice put in jeopardy of life or limb . . . nor be deprived of
life . . . without due process of law." The Fourteenth Amendment,
adopted three-quarters of a century later, likewise enjoined the
States from depriving any person of "his life" without due process
of law.
Page 428 U. S. 351
Since the very first Congress, federal law has defined crimes
for which the death penalty is authorized. Capital punishment has
also been part of the criminal justice system of the great majority
of the States ever since the Union was first organized. Until
Furman v. Georgia, this Court's opinions, if they did not
squarely uphold the death penalty, consistently assumed its
constitutionality.
Wilkerson v. Utah, 99 U. S.
130 (1879);
In re Kemmler, 136 U.
S. 436 (1890);
Louisiana ex rel . Francis v.
Resweber, 329 U. S. 459
(1947);
McGautha v. California, 402 U.
S. 183 (1971);
Witherspoon v. Illinois,
391 U. S. 510
(1968). In
Trop v. Dulles, 356 U. S.
86,
356 U. S. 99
(1958), four Members of the Court -- Mr. Chief Justice Warren and
Justices Black, Douglas, and Whittaker -- agreed that,
"[w]hatever the arguments may be against capital punishment,
both on moral grounds and in terms of accomplishing the purposes of
punishment -- and they are forceful -- the death penalty has been
employed throughout our history, and, in a day when it is still
widely accepted, it cannot be said to violate the constitutional
concept of cruelty."
Until
Furman v. Georgia, this was the consistent view
of the Court and of every Justice who in a published opinion had
addressed the question of the validity of capital punishment under
the Eighth Amendment. In
Furman, it was concluded by at
least two Justices [
Footnote 2/4]
that the death penalty had become unacceptable to the great
majority of the people of this country, and, for that reason, alone
or combined with other reasons, was invalid
Page 428 U. S. 352
under the Eighth Amendment, which must be construed and applied
to reflect the evolving moral standards of the country.
Trop v.
Dulles, supra at
356 U. S. 111;
Weems v. United States, 217 U. S. 349,
217 U. S. 378
(1910). That argument, whether or not accurate at that time, when
measured by the manner in which the death penalty was being
administered under the then-prevailing statutory schemes, is no
longer descriptive of the country's attitude. Since the judgment in
Furman, Congress and 35 state legislatures reenacted the
death penalty for one or more crimes. [
Footnote 2/5] All of these States authorize the
death
Page 428 U. S. 353
penalty for murder of one kind or another. With these profound
developments in mind, I cannot say that capital punishment has been
rejected by, or is offensive to, the prevailing attitudes and moral
presuppositions in the United States, or that it is always an
excessively cruel or severe punishment or always a disproportionate
punishment for any crime for which it might be imposed. [
Footnote 2/6] These grounds for
invalidating the death penalty are foreclosed by recent events,
which this Court must accept as demonstrating that capital
punishment is acceptable to the contemporary community as just
punishment for at least some intentional killings.
It is apparent also that Congress and 35 state legislatures are
of the view that capital punishment better serves the ends of
criminal justice than would life imprisonment, and that it is
therefore not excessive in the sense that it serves no legitimate
legislative or social ends. Petitioner Roberts, to the contrary,
submits that life imprisonment obviously would better serve the end
of reformation or rehabilitation, and that there is no satisfactory
evidence that punishing by death serves more effectively than does
life imprisonment the other major ends of imposing serious criminal
sanctions: incapacitation
Page 428 U. S. 354
of the prisoner the deterrence of others, and moral
reenforcement and retribution. The death penalty is therefore cruel
and unusual, it is argued, because it is the purposeless taking of
life and the needless imposition of suffering.
The widespread reenactment of the death penalty, it seems to me,
answers any claims that life imprisonment is adequate punishment to
satisfy the need for reprobation or retribution. It also seems
clear enough that death finally forecloses the possibility that a
prisoner will commit further crimes, whereas life imprisonment does
not. This leaves the question of general deterrence as the
principal battleground: does the death penalty more effectively
deter others from crime than does the threat of life
imprisonment?
The debate on this subject started generations ago, and is still
in progress. Each side has a plethora of fact and opinion in
support of its position, [
Footnote
2/7] some of it quite old
Page 428 U. S. 355
and some of it very new; but neither has yet silenced the other.
I need not detail these conflicting materials, most of which are
familiar sources. It is quite apparent that the relative efficacy
of capital punishment and life imprisonment to deter others from
crime remains a matter about which reasonable men and reasonable
legislators may easily differ. In this posture of the case, it
would be neither a proper or wise exercise of the power of judicial
review to refuse to accept the reasonable conclusions of Congress
and 35 state legislatures that there are indeed certain
circumstances in which the death penalty is the more efficacious
deterrent of crime.
It will not do to denigrate these legislative judgments as some
form of vestigial savagery or as purely retributive in motivation,
for they are solemn judgments, reasonably based, that imposition of
the death penalty will save the lives of innocent persons. This
concern for life and human values, and the sincere efforts of the
States to pursue them, are matters of the greatest moment, with
which the judiciary should be most reluctant to interfere. The
issue is not whether, had we been legislators, we would have
supported or opposed the capital punishment statutes presently
before us. The question here under discussion is whether the Eighth
Amendment requires us to interfere with the enforcement of these
statutes on the grounds that a sentence of life imprisonment for
the crimes at issue would as well have served the ends of criminal
justice. In my view, the Eighth Amendment
Page 428 U. S. 356
provides no warrant for overturning these convictions on these
grounds.
IV
The plurality offers two additional reasons for invalidating the
Louisiana statute, neither of which had been raised by the parties
and with both of which I disagree.
The plurality holds the Louisiana statute unconstitutional for
want of a separate sentencing proceeding in which the sentencing
authority may focus on the sentence and consider some or all of the
aggravating and mitigating circumstances. In
McGautha v.
California, 402 U. S. 183
(1971), after having heard the same issues argued twice before in
Maxwell v. Bishop, 398 U. S. 262
(1970), we specifically rejected the claims that a defendant's
"constitutional rights were infringed by permitting the jury to
impose the death penalty without governing standards," and that
"the jury's imposition of the death sentence in the same
proceeding and verdict as determined the issue of guilt was [not]
constitutionally permissible."
402 U.S. at
402 U. S. 185.
With respect to the necessity of a bifurcated criminal trial, we
had reached essentially the same result in
Spencer v.
Texas, 385 U. S. 554
(1967). In spite of these cases, the plurality holds that the State
must provide a procedure under which the sentencer may separately
consider the character and record of the individual defendant,
along with the circumstances of the particular offense, including
any mitigating circumstances that may exist. For myself, I see no
reason to reconsider
McGautha, and would not invalidate
the Louisiana statute for its failure to provide what
McGautha held it need not provide. I still share the
concluding remarks of the Court in
McGautha v.
California:
"It may well be, as the American Law Institute and the National
Commission on Reform of Federal
Page 428 U. S. 357
Criminal Laws have concluded, that bifurcated trials and
criteria for jury sentencing discretion are superior means of
dealing with capital cases if the death penalty is to be retained
at all. But the Federal Constitution, which marks the limits of our
authority in these cases, does not guarantee trial procedures that
are the best of all worlds, or that accord with the most
enlightened ideas of students of the infant science of criminology,
or even those that measure up to the individual predilections of
members of this Court.
See Spencer v Texas, 385 U. S.
554 (1967). The Constitution requires no more than that
trials be fairly conducted and that guaranteed rights of defendants
be scrupulously respected. From a constitutional standpoint, we
cannot conclude that it is impermissible for a State to consider
that the compassionate purposes of jury sentencing in capital cases
are better served by having the issues of guilt and punishment
determined in a single trial than by focusing the jury's attention
solely on punishment after the issue of guilt has been
determined."
"Certainly the facts of these gruesome murders bespeak no
miscarriage of justice. The ability of juries, unassisted by
standards, to distinguish between those defendants for whom the
death penalty is appropriate punishment and those for whom
imprisonment is sufficient is indeed illustrated by the
discriminating verdict of the jury in McGautha's case, finding
Wilkinson the less culpable of the two defendants and sparing his
life."
"The procedures which petitioners challenge are those by which
most capital trials in this country are conducted, and by which all
were conducted until a few years ago. We have determined that
these
Page 428 U. S. 358
procedures are consistent with the rights to which petitioners
were constitutionally entitled, and that their trials were entirely
fair. Having reached these conclusions, we have performed our task
of measuring the States' process by federal constitutional
standards. . . ."
402 U.S. at
402 U. S.
221-222.
Implicit in the plurality's holding that a separate proceeding
must be held at which the sentencer may consider the character and
record of the accused is the proposition that States are
constitutionally prohibited from considering any crime, no matter
how defined, so serious that every person who commits it should be
put to death regardless of extraneous factors related to his
character. Quite apart from
McGautha v. California, supra,
I cannot agree. It is axiomatic that the major justification for
concluding that a given defendant deserves to be punished is that
he committed a crime. Even if the character of the accused must be
considered under the Eighth Amendment, surely a State is not
constitutionally forbidden to provide that the commission of
certain crimes conclusively establishes that the criminal's
character is such that he deserves death. Moreover, quite apart
from the character of a criminal, a State should constitutionally
be able to conclude that the need to deter some crimes, and that
the likelihood that the death penalty will succeed in deterring
these crimes, is such that the death penalty may be made mandatory
for all people who commit them. Nothing resembling a reasoned basis
for the rejection of these propositions is to be found in the
plurality opinion.
The remaining reason offered for invalidating the Louisiana
statute is also infirm. It is said that the Eighth Amendment
forbids the legislature to require imposition of the death penalty
when the elements of the specified crime have been proved to the
satisfaction
Page 428 U. S. 359
of the jury because, historically, the concept of the mandatory
death sentence has been rejected by the community, and departs so
far from contemporary standards with respect to the imposition of
capital punishment that it must be held unconstitutional.
Although the plurality seemingly makes an unlimited
pronouncement, it actually stops short of invalidating any statute
making death the required punishment for any crime whatsoever.
Apparently there are some crimes for which the plurality, in its
infinite wisdom, will permit the States to require the death
sentence to be imposed without the additional procedures which its
opinion seems to mandate. There have always been mandatory death
penalties for at least some crimes, and the legislatures of at
least two States have now again embraced this approach in order to
serve what they deem to be their own penological goals.
Furthermore, JUSTICES STEWART, POWELL, and STEVENS uphold the
capital punishment statute of Texas, under which capital punishment
is required if the defendant is found guilty of the crime charged
and the jury answers two additional questions in the affirmative.
Once that occurs, no discretion is left to the jury; death is
mandatory. Although Louisiana juries are not required to answer
these precise questions, the Texas law is not constitutionally
distinguishable from the Louisiana system under which the jury, to
convict, must find the elements of the crime, including the
essential element of intent to kill or inflict great bodily harm,
which, according to the instructions given in this case, must be
felonious, "that is, it must be wrong or without any just cause or
excuse."
As the plurality now interprets the Eighth Amendment, the
Louisiana and North Carolina statutes are infirm because the jury
is deprived of all discretion once it finds the defendant guilty.
Yet, in the next breath, it invalidates
Page 428 U. S. 360
these statutes because they are said to invite or allow too much
discretion: despite their instructions, when they feel that
defendants do not deserve to die, juries will so often and
systematically disobey their instructions and find the defendant
not guilty or guilty of a noncapital offense that the statute fails
to satisfy the standards of
Furman v. Georgia. If it is
truly the case that Louisiana juries will exercise
too
much discretion -- and I do not agree that it is -- then it
seems strange indeed that the statute is also invalidated because
it purports to give the jury
too little discretion by
making the death penalty mandatory. Furthermore, if there is danger
of freakish and too infrequent imposition of capital punishment
under a mandatory system such as Louisiana's, there is very little
ground for believing that juries will be any more faithful to their
instructions under the Georgia and Florida systems where the
opportunity is much, much greater for juries to practice their own
brand of unbridled discretion.
In any event, the plurality overreads the history upon which it
so heavily relies. Narrowing the categories of crime for which the
death penalty was authorized reflected a growing sentiment that
death was an excessive penalty for many crimes, but I am not
convinced, as apparently the plurality is, that the decision to
vest discretionary sentencing power in the jury was a judgment that
mandatory punishments were excessively cruel, rather than merely a
legislative response to avoid jury nullifications which were
occurring with some frequency. That legislatures chose jury
sentencing as the least troublesome of two approaches hardly proves
legislative rejection of mandatory sentencing. State legislatures
may have preferred to vest discretionary sentencing power in a
jury, rather than to have guilty defendants go scot-free; but I
doubt that these events necessarily reflect
Page 428 U. S. 361
an affirmative legislative preference for discretionary systems
or support an inference that legislatures would have chosen them
even absent their experience with jury nullification.
Nor does the fact that juries at times refused to convict
despite the evidence prove that the mandatory nature of the
sentence was the burr under the jury's saddle, rather than that one
or more persons on those juries were opposed in principle to the
death penalty under whatever system it might be authorized or
imposed. Surely, if every nullifying jury had been interrogated at
the time and had it been proved to everyone's satisfaction that all
or a large part of the nullifying verdicts occurred because certain
members of these juries had been opposed to the death penalty in
any form, rather than because the juries involved were reluctant to
impose the death penalty on the particular defendants before them,
it could not be concluded that either those juries or the country
had condemned mandatory punishments as distinguished from the death
penalty itself. The plurality nevertheless draws such an inference,
even though there is no more reason to infer that jury
nullification occurred because of opposition to the death penalty
in particular cases than because one or more of the 12 jurors on
the critical juries were opposed to the death penalty in any form,
and stubbornly refused to participate in a guilty verdict. Of
course, the plurality does not conclude that the death penalty was
itself placed beyond legislative resuscitation either by jury
nullification under mandatory statutes or by the erosion of the
death penalty under the discretionary-sentencing systems that led
to the judgment in
Furman v. Georgia. I see no more basis
for arriving at a contrary conclusion with respect to the mandatory
statutes.
Louisiana and North Carolina have returned to the
Page 428 U. S. 362
mandatory capital punishment system for certain crimes.
[
Footnote 2/8] Their legislatures
have not deemed mandatory punishment, once the crime is proved, to
be unacceptable; nor have their juries rejected it, for the death
penalty has been imposed with some regularity. Perhaps we would
Page 428 U. S. 363
prefer that these States had adopted a different system, but the
issue is not our individual preferences, but the constitutionality
of the mandatory systems chosen by these two States. I see no
warrant under the Eighth Amendment for refusing to uphold these
statutes.
Indeed, the more fundamental objection than the plurality's
muddled reasoning is that, in
Gregg v. Georgia, ante at
428 U. S.
174-176, it lectures us at length about the role and
place of the judiciary, and then proceeds to ignore its own advice,
the net effect being to suggest that observers of this institution
should pay more attention to what we do than what we say. The
plurality claims that it has not forgotten what the past has taught
about the limits of judicial review; but I fear that it has again
surrendered to the temptation to make policy for, and to attempt to
govern, the country through a misuse of the powers given this Court
under the Constitution.
V
I conclude that § 14:30 of the Louisiana statutes imposing the
death penalty for first-degree murder is not unconstitutional under
the Eighth Amendment. I am not impressed with the argument that
this result reduces the Amendment to little more than mild advice
from the Framers to state legislators.
Weems, Trop, and
Furman bear witness to the contrary.
For the foregoing reasons, I dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
State v. Sinclair, 263 La. 377,
268
So. 2d 514 (1972);
State v. Poland, 263 La. 269,
268 So. 2d
221 (1972);
State v. Singleton, 263 La. 267,
268 So. 2d
220 (1972);
State v. Williams, 263 La. 284, 268 So. 2d
227 (1972);
State v. Square, 263 La. 291,
268 So. 2d
229 (1972);
State v. Douglas, 263 La. 294, 268 So. 2d
231 (1972);
State v. McAllister, 263 La. 296, 268 So. 2d
231 (1972);
State v. Strong, 263 La. 298, 268 So. 2d 232
(1972);
State v. Marks, 263 La. 355, 268 So. 2d 253
(1972).
[
Footnote 2/2]
Section 14:30 of La.Rev.Stat.Ann. (1974 Supp.), which became
effective July 2, 1973, provided:
"First degree murder is the killing of a human being:"
"(1) When the offender has a specific intent to kill or to
inflict great bodily harm and is engaged in the perpetration or
attempted perpetration of aggravated kidnapping, aggravated rape or
armed robbery; or"
"(2) When the offender has a specific intent to kill, or to
inflict great bodily harm upon, a fireman or a peace officer who
was engaged in the performance of his lawful duties; or"
"(3) Where the offender has a specific intent to kill or to
inflict great bodily harm and has previously been convicted of an
unrelated murder or is serving a life sentence; or"
"(4) When the offender has a specific intent to kill or to
inflict great bodily harm upon more than one person;"
"(5) When the offender has specific intent to commit murder and
has been offered or has received anything of value for committing
the murder."
"For the purposes of paragraph (2) herein, the term peace
officer shall be defined and include any constable, sheriff, deputy
sheriff, local or state policeman, game warden, federal law
enforcement officer, jail or prison guard, parole officer,
probation officer, judge, district attorney, assistant district
attorney or district. attorneys' investigator."
"Whoever commits the crime of first degree murder shall be
punished by death."
"Amended by Acts 1973, No. 109, § 1."
Subsection (1) of the the statute was amended in 1975 to include
"aggravated burglary." La.Acts 1975, No. 327, § 1.
As petitioner here concedes, Louisiana's post-
Furman
legislation,
supra, "narrowed" "the range of cases in
which the punishment of death
might be inflicted." Brief
for Petitioner 31 (emphasis in original). Prior to the 1973
legislation, all murders were punishable by the death penalty.
Section 14:30, La.Rev.Stat.Ann. (1951), which was applicable prior
to
Furman, provided:
"Murder is the killing of a human being,"
"(1) When the offender has a specific intent to kill or to
inflict great bodily harm; or"
"(2) When the offender is engaged in the perpetration or
attempted perpetration of aggravated arson, aggravated burglary,
aggravated kidnapping, aggravated rape, armed robbery, or simple
robbery, even though he has no intent to kill."
"Whoever commits the crime of murder shall be punished by
death."
In addition to murder, Louisiana prior to
Furman
provided for the death penalty in cases of aggravated rape (§
14:42), aggravated kidnaping (§ 14:44), and treason (§ 14:113).
Louisiana's post-
Furman legislation reenacted the death
penalty for aggravated rape (§ 14:42 (1975 Supp.)), aggravated
kidnaping (§ 14:44 (1974 Supp.)), and treason (§ 14:113 (1974
Supp.)). The constitutionality of these statutes is not before the
Court.
[
Footnote 2/3]
"There are certain facts that must be proved by the State to
your satisfaction and beyond a reasonable doubt before you can
return a verdict of guilty in this case."
"First, the State must prove that a crime was committed and that
it was committed within the Parish of Calcasieu."
"Second, the State must prove that the alleged crime was
committed by Stanislaus Roberts, the person named in the
indictment, and on trial in this case."
"Third, the State must prove that Richard G. Lowe, the person
named in the indictment as having been killed, was in fact
killed."
"Fourth, the State must prove that the killing occurred while
the defendant was engaged in an armed robbery."
"Fifth, the State must prove that the killing occurred on or
about the date alleged in the indictment, although I charge you
that it is not necessary that the State prove the exact date
alleged in the indictment."
"Sixth, the State must prove that the offense committed was
murder."
"First degree murder is defined in LSA-R. S. 14:30 as
follows:"
" First degree murder is the killing of a human being:"
" (1) When the offender has a specific intent to kill or to
inflict great bodily harm and is engaged in the perpetration or
attempted perpetration of aggravated kidnapping, aggravated rape or
armed robbery; . . ."
"The indictment in this case charged Stanislaus Roberts under
the statute. The State then, under this indictment, must prove that
the killing was unlawful and done with a specific intent to kill or
to inflict great bodily harm, and done when the accused was engaged
in the perpetration of armed robbery."
"Armed robbery is defined in LSA-R. S. 14:64 as follows:"
" Armed robbery is the theft of anything of value from the
person of another or which is in the immediate control of another,
by use of force or intimidation, while armed with a dangerous
weapon."
"Theft includes the taking of anything of value which belongs to
another without his consent. An intent to deprive the other
permanently of whatever may be the subject of the taking is
essential."
"A 'dangerous weapon' is defined by the law of Louisiana as 'any
gas, liquid or other substance or instrumentality, which, in the
manner used, is calculated or likely to produce death or great
bodily harm.'"
"The test of a dangerous weapon is not whether the weapon is
inherently dangerous, but whether it is dangerous 'in the manner
used.' Whether a dangerous weapon was used in this case is a
question to be determined by the jury in considering: (1) whether a
weapon was used; (2) the nature of the weapon if so used; (3) and
the manner in which it may have been used under the law and
definition referred to above."
"An essential element of the crime of armed robbery is specific
criminal intent, which is that state of mind which exists when the
circumstances indicate that the offender actively desired the
prescribed criminal consequences to follow his act or failure to
act."
"The requisite intent may be established by direct or positive
evidence, or it may be inferred from the acts or conduct of the
defendant or from other facts or circumstances surrounding the
alleged commission of the offense. You may consider the acts or
conduct of the defendant prior to, at the time of, or after the
alleged offense, as well as all other facts by which you might
ascertain whether the accused intended to commit the offense
charged."
"To constitute the crime of first degree murder, the offender
must have a specific intent to kill or inflict great bodily harm,
and this 'specific intent' must actually exist in the mind of the
offender at the time of the killing. If a human being is killed,
when the offender is charged under this statute, but at the time of
the killing, the offender did not have a specific intent to kill or
inflict great bodily harm, then, the killing could not be murder in
the first degree, although it might be murder in the second degree,
manslaughter, justifiable homicide or an accident. The specific
intent to kill or to inflict great bodily harm not only must exist
at the time of the killing, but it must also be felonious, that is,
it must be wrong or without any just cause or excuse."
"I charge you that it is not necessary that this specific intent
should have existed in the mind of the offender for any particular
length of time before the killing in order to constitute the crime
of murder. If the will accompanies the act, that is, if the
specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily [harm] actually
exists in the mind of the offender at the moment of the killing,
even though this specific intent was formed only a moment prior to
the act itself which causes death, it would be as completely
sufficient to make the act murder as if the intent had been formed
on the previous day, an hour earlier, or any other time."
[
Footnote 2/4]
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL wrote that the death penalty was invalid
for several independent reasons, one of which was that "it is
morally unacceptable to the people of the United States at this
time in our history." 408 U.S. at
408 U. S. 360.
That capital punishment "has been almost totally rejected by
contemporary society,"
id. at
408 U. S. 295,
was one of four factors which, together, led MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN to
invalidate the statute before us in
Furman v. Georgia.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The statutes are summarized in the Appendix to petitioner's
brief in No. 73-7031,
Fowler v. North Carolina, cert.
granted, 419 U.S. 963 (1974), and in Appendix A to the
petitioner's brief in No. 75-5394,
Jurek v. Texas, ante p.
428 U. S. 262,
decided this day. The various types of post-
Furman
statutes which have been enacted are described and analyzed in the
Note, Discretion and the Constitutionality of the New Death Penalty
Statutes, 87 Harv.L.Rev. 1690 (1974).
Following the invalidation of the death penalty in California by
the California Supreme Court on state constitutional grounds in
People v. Anderson, 6 Cal. 3d 628,
493 P.2d 880,
cert. denied, 406 U.S. 958 (1972), the State
Constitution was amended by initiative and referendum to reinstate
the penalty (with approximately two-thirds of those voting
approving the measure). Cal.Const., Art. I, § 27 (effective Nov. 7,
1972). Approximately 64% of the voters at the 1968 Massachusetts
general election voted "yes" to a referendum asking "Shall the
commonwealth of Massachusetts retain the death penalty for crime?"
See Commonwealth v. O'Neal, ___ Mass. ___, ___,
339
N.E.2d 676, 708 (1975) (Reardon, J., dissenting). For other
state referenda approving capital punishment,
see Furman v.
Georgia, 408 U.S. at
408 U. S.
437-439 (POWELL, J., dissenting): Oregon (1964),
Colorado (1966), Illinois (1970).
There have also been public opinion polls on capital punishment,
see, e.g., S.Rep. No. 93-721, pp. 13-14 (1974), but their
validity and reliability have been strongly criticized,
see,
e.g., Vidmar & Ellsworth, Public Opinion and the Death
Penalty, 26 Stan.L.Rev. 1245 (1974), and indeed neither the parties
here nor
amici rely on such polls as relevant to the issue
before us. Brief for United States as
Amicus Curiae
54.
[
Footnote 2/6]
As shown by MR. JUSTICE POWELL's opinion in
Furman v.
Georgia, 408 U.S. at
408 U. S.
442-443, n. 37, state death penalty statutes withstood
constitutional challenge in the highest courts of 25 States.
Post-
Furman legislation has been widely challenged, but
has been sustained as not contrary to the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments in the five States now before us and in Oklahoma
(
e.g., Davis v. State, 542
P.2d 532 (1975)). Final resolutions of cases in many other
States is apparently awaiting our decision in the cases decided
today.
But see Commonwealth v. O'Neal, supra, and
People ex rel. Rice v. Cunningham, 61 Ill. 2d
353,
336 N.E.2d 1
(1975), invalidating the death penalty on state law grounds.
[
Footnote 2/7]
The debate over the general deterrent effect of the death
penalty and the relevant materials were canvassed exhaustively by
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL in his separate concurring opinion in
Furman, supra at
408 U. S.
345-354. The debate has intensified since then.
See Part III of Brief for Petitioner in No. 73-7301,
Fowler v. North Carolina, supra, (esp. pp. 121-130, and
App. E, pp. 1e-10e), incorporated by reference in petitioner's
brief in this case.
See also Brief for United States as
Amicus Curiae 34-35 in this and related cases. The focal
point of the most recent stage of the debate has been Prof. Isaac
Ehrlich's study of the issue. Ehrlich, The Deterrent Effect of
Capital Punishment: A Question of Life and Death, 65 Am.Econ.Rev.
397 (June 1975). For reactions to and comments on the Ehrlich
study,
see Statistical Evidence on the Deterrent Effect of
Capital Punishment, 85 Yale L.J. 164-227 (1975).
See also
Passell, The Deterrent Effect of the Death Penalty: A Statistical
Test, 28 Stan.L.Rev. 61 (1975).
For analysis of some of the reasons for the inconclusive nature
of statistical studies on the issue,
see, e.g., Report of
the Royal Commission on Capital Punishment, 1949-1953, Cmd. 8932,
�� 62-67 (1953); Gibbs, Crime, Punishment, and Deterrence, 48
Sw.Soc.Sci.Q. 515 (1968); Hart, Murder and the Principles of
Punishment: England and the United States, 52 NW.U.L.Rev. 433,
457-458 (1957).
See also Posner, The Economic Approach to
Law, 53 Tex.L.Rev. 757, 766-768 (1975).
For a study of the deterrent effect of punishment generally,
see F. Zimring & G. Hawkins, Deterrence (1973), and
especially
id. at 16, 18-19, 31, 62-64, 186-190 (for a
general discussion of capital punishment as a deterrent).
[
Footnote 2/8]
It is unclear to me why, because legislatures found shortcomings
in their mandatory statutes and decided to try vesting absolute
discretion in juries, the legislatures are constitutionally
forbidden to return to mandatory statutes when shortcomings are
discovered in their discretionary statutes.
See Furman v.
Georgia. Florida has in effect at the present time a statute
under which the death penalty is mandatory whenever the sentencing
judge finds that statutory aggravating factors outweigh the
mitigating factors. Georgia has in effect a statute which gives the
sentencer discretion in every case to decline to impose the death
penalty. If Florida and all other states like it choose to adopt
the Georgia statutory scheme, will the Eighth Amendment prevent
them from later changing their minds and returning to their present
scheme? I would think not.
Most of the States had in effect, prior to
Furman v.
Georgia, statutes under which even the least culpable
first-degree murderer could be put to death. I simply cannot find
from the decision to adopt such statutes a constitutional rule
preventing the States from removing the standardless nature of
sentencing under such statutes and replacing them with statutes
under which all or a substantial portion of first-degree murderers
are put to death.
This is particularly true in Louisiana. The most that the
plurality can possibly infer from its own description of the
history of capital punishment in this country is that the
legislatures have rejected the proposition that
all
first-degree murderers should be put to death. This is so because
the only mandatory statutes which were historically repealed or
replaced were those which made death the mandatory punishment for
all first-degree murders. Louisiana has now passed a
statute which makes death the mandatory penalty for only five
narrow categories of first-degree murder, not for all first-degree
murders, by any means. The history relied upon by the plurality is
utterly silent on society's reaction to such a statute. It cannot
be invalidated on the basis of contemporary standards, because we
do not know that it is inconsistent with such standards.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, dissenting.
I dissent for the reasons set forth in my dissent in
Furman
v. Georgia, 408 U. S. 238,
408 U. S.
405-414 (1972), and in the other dissenting opinions I
joined in that case.
Id. at
408 U. S. 375,
408 U. S. 414,
and
408 U. S.
465.