SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
PATRICK GLEBE, SUPERINTENDENT, STAFFORD CREEK
CORRECTIONS CENTER
v. JOSHUA JAMES FROST
on petition for writ of certiorari to the
united states court of appeals for the ninth circuit
No. 14–95 Decided November 17, 2014
Per Curiam.
Over 11 days in April 2003, respondent Joshua
Frost helped two associates commit a series of armed robberies in
the State of Washington. In the main, Frost drove his confederates
to and from their crimes. On one occasion, he also entered the
house being robbed. On another, he performed surveillance in
anticipation of the robbery.
Washington charged Frost with robbery and
related offenses. Taking the witness stand, Frost admitted to his
involvement, but claimed he acted under duress. As closing
arguments drew near, however, Frost’s lawyer expressed the desire
to contend both (1) that the State failed to meet its burden of
proving that Frost was an accomplice to the crimes and (2) that
Frost acted under duress. The trial judge insisted that the defense
choose between these alternative arguments, explaining that state
law prohib-ited a defendant from simultaneously contesting the
elements of the crime and presenting the affirmative defense of
duress. So Frost’s lawyer limited his summation to duress. The jury
convicted Frost of six counts of robbery, one count of attempted
robbery, one count of burglary, and two counts of assault.
The Washington Supreme Court sustained Frost’s
conviction. It rejected the trial court’s view that state law
prohibited Frost from simultaneously contesting criminal liability
and arguing duress.
State v.
Frost, 160 Wash. 2d 765,
773–776,
161 P.3d 361, 366–368 (2007) (en banc). By preventing the
defense from presenting both theories during summation, it said,
the trial court violated the National Constitution’s Due Process
and Assistance of Counsel Clauses.
Id., at 777–779, 161
P. 3d, at 368–369. But the State Supreme Court continued, this
improper restriction of closing argument qualified as a trial error
(a mistake reviewable for harmlessness) rather than a structural
error (a mistake that requires automatic reversal).
Id., at
779–782, 161 P. 3d, at 369–370. Because the jury heard three
taped confessions and Frost’s admission of guilt on the witness
stand, and because it received proper instructions on the State’s
burden of proof, the State Supreme Court held that any error was
harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Id., at 782–783, 161
P. 3d, at 370–371.
Frost filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus
under 28 U. S. C. §2254. The District Court dismissed the
petition, App. to Pet. for Cert. 76a, and a panel of the Court of
Appeals affirmed,
Frost v.
Van Boening, 692 F.3d 924
(CA9 2012). But the Court of Appeals en banc reversed and
instructed the District Court to grant relief. 757 F.3d 910
(2014).
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), the Court of Appeals had power to
grant Frost habeas corpus only if the Washington Supreme Court’s
decision “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application
of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme
Court of the United States,” or “was based on an unreasonable
determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in
the State court proceeding.” 28 U. S. C. §2254(d). Here,
the Ninth Circuit held that the Washington Supreme Court
unreasonably applied clearly established federal law by failing to
classify the trial court’s restriction of closing argument as
structural error.
That decision cannot stand. Assuming for
argument’s sake that the trial court violated the Constitution, it
was not clearly established that its mistake ranked as structural
error.
Most constitutional mistakes call for reversal only
if the government cannot demonstrate harmlessness.
Neder v.
United States,
527 U.S.
1, 8 (1999). Only the rare type of error—in general, one that
“ ‘infect[s] the entire trial process’ ” and
“ ‘necessarily render[s] [it] fundamentally
unfair’ ”—requires automatic reversal.
Ibid. None of
our cases clearly requires placing improper restriction of closing
argument in this narrow category.
The Ninth Circuit claimed that the Washington
Supreme Court contradicted
Herring v.
New York,
422 U.S.
853 (1975).
Herring held that complete denial of
summation violates the Assistance of Counsel Clause. According to
the Ninth Circuit,
Herring further held that this denial
amounts to structural error. We need not opine on the accuracy of
that interpretation. For even assuming that
Herring
established that
complete denial of summation amounts to
structural error, it did not clearly establish that the
restriction of summation also amounts to structural error. A
court could reasonably conclude, after all, that prohibiting all
argument differs from prohibiting argument in the alternative. That
is all the more true because our structural-error cases “ha[ve] not
been characterized by [an] ‘in for a penny, in for a pound’
approach.”
Neder,
supra, at 17, n. 2.
Attempting to bridge the gap between
Herring and this case, the Ninth Circuit cited two Circuit
precedents—
United States v.
Miguel,
338 F.3d 995 (CA9 2003), and
Conde v.
Henry,
198 F.3d 734 (CA9 2000)—for the proposition that “preventing a
defendant from arguing a legitimate defense theory constitutes
structural error.” 757 F. 3d, at 916. As we have repeatedly
emphasized, how-ever, circuit precedent does not constitute
“clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme
Court.” §2254(d)(1); see,
e.g., Lopez v.
Smith, 574 U. S. ___, ___ (2014) (
per curiam)
(slip op., at 6). The Ninth Circuit acknowledged this rule, but
tried to get past it by claiming that circuit precedent could
“ ‘help . . . determine what law is “clearly
established.” ’ ” 757 F. 3d, at 916, n. 1. But
neither
Miguel nor
Conde arose under AEDPA, so
neither purports to reflect the law clearly established by this
Court’s holdings. The Ninth Circuit thus had no justification for
relying on those decisions. See
Parker v.
Matthews,
567 U. S. ___, ___ (2012) (
per curiam) (slip op., at
13).
The second rationale for the Court of Appeals’
decision is no more sound than the first. The Ninth Circuit
reasoned that, by allowing the prosecution to argue that it had
proved the elements of the crimes, but “prohibit[ing]” the defense
from responding that it had not, the trial court in effect
“forc[ed] defense counsel to concede his client’s guilt.” 757
F. 3d, at 917. By extracting this “conce[ssion],” the Ninth
Circuit continued, the trial court “relieved the State of its
burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,” “shifted the
burden of proof to Frost,” and even “directed [a] verdict on
guilt”—all “unquestionably structural [errors].”
Id., at
917–918.
No. The trial court, to begin, did not prohibit
the defense from arguing that the prosecution failed to prove the
elements of the crime. It instead precluded the defense from
simultaneously contesting reasonable doubt and claiming
duress. Reasonable minds could disagree whether requiring the
defense to choose between alternative theories amounts to requiring
the defense to concede guilt. Still more could they disagree
whether it amounts to eliminating the prosecution’s burden of
proof, shifting the burden to the defendant, or directing a
verdict. In addition, even if the trial court’s ruling somehow
“forced” the defense “at least tacitly [to] admit the elements of
the crimes,”
id., at 913, the Ninth Circuit still would have
no basis for ruling as it did. It goes much too far to suggest that
our cases clearly establish that this supposed extraction of a
“taci[t] admi[ssion]” is structural error, when they classify the
introduction of a
coerced confession only as trial error,
Arizona v.
Fulminante,
499 U.S.
279, 310 (1991).
* * *
Frost argued below that, even if it was
reasonable for the State Supreme Court to treat improper
restriction of summation as trial error, it was unreasonable for it
to find harmlessness on the facts of this case. The Court of
Appeals did not address this argument when sitting en banc, and it
is not before us today.
We grant the petition for a writ of certiorari
and respondent’s motion to proceed
in forma pauperis. We
reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.