Respondent was convicted by a jury in a Virginia state court of
rape and abduction. The trial judge denied respondent's counsel's
pretrial motion to discover the victim's statements to police
describing her assailants, their vehicle, and the location of the
alleged rape. Without consulting respondent, counsel filed a
petition for appeal that failed to include any claim that the trial
judge erred in not permitting counsel to examine the victim's
statements, notwithstanding a Virginia Supreme Court Rule providing
that only errors assigned in the petition for appeal will be
noticed, and that no error not so assigned will be admitted as a
ground for reversal. The Virginia Supreme Court refused the appeal,
and this Court denied certiorari. Thereafter, respondent filed a
pro se state habeas corpus petition, claiming that he had
been denied due process of law by the prosecution's withholding of
the victim's statements. The state court denied the petition on the
ground that the claim was barred because respondent failed to raise
it on appeal, and the Virginia Supreme Court denied certiorari.
Respondent then filed a
pro se habeas petition in Federal
District Court, which also held that the discovery claim was barred
by procedural default. On appeal, respondent disavowed any claim of
ineffective assistance of counsel, but asserted that counsel had
mistakenly omitted his discovery claim from the state petition for
appeal, and that this error was cause for his default. The Court of
Appeals reversed, holding that a federal habeas petitioner need
only satisfy the district court that the procedural default
resulted from his attorney's ignorance or inadvertence, rather than
from a deliberate tactical decision. Accordingly, the Court of
Appeals remanded to the District Court to resolve the question of
respondent's counsel's motivation for failing to appeal the
discovery claim.
Held: A federal habeas petitioner, such as respondent,
cannot show cause for a procedural default by establishing that
competent defense counsel's failure to raise a substantive claim of
error was inadvertent, rather than deliberate. Pp.
477 U. S.
485-497.
(a) The mere fact that counsel failed to recognize the factual
or legal basis for a claim, or failed to raise the claim despite
recognizing it, does not constitute cause for a procedural default.
Engle v.
Isaac, 456 U.S.
Page 477 U. S. 479
107. The question of cause for a procedural default does not
turn on whether counsel erred or on the kind of error counsel may
have made. So long as a defendant is represented by counsel whose
performance is not constitutionally ineffective under the standard
established in
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.
S. 668, there is no inequity in requiring him to bear
the risk of attorney error that results in a procedural default.
Instead, the existence of cause for a procedural default must
ordinarily turn on whether the prisoner can show that some
objective factor external to the defense impeded counsel's efforts
to comply with the State's procedural rule. While ineffective
assistance of counsel constitutes cause for a procedural default,
the exhaustion doctrine generally requires that an ineffective
assistance claim be presented to the state courts as an independent
claim before it may be used to establish cause for a procedural
default in federal habeas proceedings. Pp.
477 U. S.
485-490.
(b) There is no merit to respondent's argument that, even if
counsel's ignorance or inadvertence does not constitute cause for a
procedural default at trial, it does constitute cause for a
procedural default on appeal. A State's procedural rules serve
vital purposes on appeal, as well as at trial and on state
collateral attack, and the standard for cause should not vary
depending on the timing of a procedural default. The frustration of
the State's interests that occurs when an appellate procedural rule
is broken is not significantly diminished when counsel's breach
results from ignorance or inadvertence, rather than from a
deliberate decision, tactical or not, to abstain from raising the
claim. Failure to raise a claim on appeal reduces the finality of
appellate proceedings, deprives the appellate court of an
opportunity to review trial error, and undercuts the State's
ability to enforce its procedural rules. As with procedural
defaults at trial, these costs are imposed on the State regardless
of the kind of attorney error that led to the procedural default.
Whatever may be the case where counsel has failed to take an appeal
at all, counsel's failure to raise a particular claim on appeal is
to be scrutinized under the cause and prejudice standard when that
failure is treated as a procedural default by the state courts.
Attorney error short of ineffective assistance of counsel does not
constitute cause for a procedural default, even when that default
occurs on appeal, rather than at trial. To the contrary, cause for
a procedural default on appeal ordinarily requires a showing of
some external impediment preventing counsel from constructing or
raising the claim. Pp.
477 U. S.
490-492.
(c) Adherence to the cause and prejudice test in the conjunctive
will not prevent federal habeas corpus courts from ensuring the
fundamental fairness that is the central concern of the writ of
habeas corpus. That test is a sound and workable means of
channeling the discretion of federal habeas courts. However, in an
extraordinary case, where a constitutional
Page 477 U. S. 480
violation has probably resulted in the conviction of one who is
actually innocent, a federal habeas court may grant the writ, even
in the absence of a showing of cause for the procedural default.
Pp.
477 U. S.
492-497.
(d) Respondent has never alleged any external impediment that
might have prevented counsel from raising his discovery claim in
his state petition for review, and has disavowed any claim that
counsel's performance on appeal was so deficient as to make out an
ineffective assistance claim. Accordingly, respondent's petition
for federal habeas review of his procedurally defaulted discovery
claim must be dismissed for failure to establish cause for the
default, unless it is determined on remand that the victim's
statements contain material that would establish respondent's
actual innocence. P.
477 U. S.
497.
754 F.2d 520, reversed and remanded.
O'CONNOR, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and WHITE, POWELL, and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined.
STEVENS, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, in which
BLACKMUN, J., joined,
post, p.
477 U. S. 497.
BRENNAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which MARSHALL, J.,
joined,
post, p.
477 U. S.
516.
Page 477 U. S. 481
JUSTICE O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari in this case to consider whether a federal
habeas petitioner can show cause for a procedural default by
establishing that competent defense counsel inadvertently
Page 477 U. S. 482
failed to raise the substantive claim of error, rather than
deliberately withholding it for tactical reasons.
I
Respondent Clifford Carrier was convicted of rape and abduction
by a Virginia jury in 1977. Before trial, respondent's
court-appointed counsel moved for discovery of the victim's
statements to police describing "her assailants, the vehicle the
assailants were driving, and the location of where the alleged rape
took place." 2 Record 11. The presiding judge denied the motion by
letter to counsel after examining the statements
in camera
and determining that they contained no exculpatory evidence.
Id. at 31. Respondent's counsel made a second motion to
discover the victim's statements immediately prior to trial, which
the trial judge denied for the same reason after conducting his own
in camera examination. Tr. 151-152.
After respondent was convicted, his counsel filed a notice of
appeal to the Virginia Supreme Court assigning seven errors, of
which the fifth was:
"Did the trial judge err by not permitting defendant's counsel
to examine the written statements of the victim prior to trial, and
during the course of the trial?"
2 Record 83. Without consulting respondent, counsel subsequently
submitted the required petition for appeal, but failed to include
this claim, notwithstanding that Virginia Supreme Court Rule 5:21
provides that
"[o]nly errors assigned in the petition for appeal will be
noticed by this Court and no error not so assigned will be admitted
as a ground for reversal of a decision below."
The Virginia Supreme Court refused the appeal, and this Court
denied certiorari.
Carrier v. Virginia, 439 U.S. 1076
(1979).
A year later, respondent, by this time proceeding
pro
se, filed a state habeas corpus petition claiming that he had
been denied due process of law by the prosecution's withholding of
the victim's statements. The State sought dismissal of his
Page 477 U. S. 483
petition on the ground that respondent was barred from
presenting his due process discovery claim on collateral review
because he failed to raise that claim on appeal. The state habeas
court dismissed the petition "for the reasons stated in the Motion
to Dismiss," 1 Record, Doc. No. 12, and the Virginia Supreme Court
denied certiorari.
Respondent next filed a
pro se habeas petition in the
District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, renewing his
due process discovery claim as grounds for relief. The State filed
a motion to dismiss, asserting that respondent's failure to raise
the issue on direct appeal was a procedural default barring federal
habeas review under
Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U. S.
72 (1977), and that respondent had not exhausted his
state remedies because he could bring an ineffective assistance of
counsel claim in the state courts to establish that his procedural
default should be excused. 1 Record, Doc. No. 3. The United States
Magistrate to whom the case was referred recommended dismissal by
virtue of the procedural default, and also ruled that respondent
had not exhausted his state remedies. In reply to the Magistrate's
report, respondent alleged that his procedural default was "due to
ineffective assistance of counsel during the filing of his appeal."
App. 11. The District Court approved the Magistrate's report,
holding the discovery claim barred by the procedural default and
indicating that respondent should establish cause for that default
in the state courts.
At oral argument on appeal to the Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit, respondent abandoned any claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel, but asserted that counsel had mistakenly
omitted his discovery claim from the petition for appeal, and that
this error was cause for his default. A divided panel of the Court
of Appeals reversed and remanded.
Carrier v. Hutto, 724
F.2d 396 (1983). The court construed respondent's objection to the
denial of discovery as having rested throughout on a contention
that
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U. S. 83
(1963), requires the prosecution to disclose any evidence that
might be material to guilt, whether or not it is
Page 477 U. S. 484
exculpatory, and concluded that, when respondent's counsel
omitted this discovery claim from the petition for review, "the
issue was lost for purposes of direct and collateral review." 724
F.2d at 399. The court framed the issue before it as whether
"a single act or omission by counsel, insufficient by itself to
contravene the sixth amendment, [can] satisfy the 'cause' prong of
the exception to preclusive procedural default discussed in
Wainwright?"
Id. at 400. In answering this question, the court drew
a dispositive distinction between procedural defaults resulting
from deliberate tactical decisions and those resulting from
ignorance or inadvertence.
Id. at 401. The court
determined that only in the latter category does an attorney's
error constitute cause because, whereas a tactical decision implies
that counsel has, at worst, "reasonably but incorrectly exercise[d]
her judgment," ignorance or oversight implies that counsel
"fail[ed] to exercise it at all, in dereliction of the duty to
represent her client."
Ibid. Thus, in order to establish
cause, a federal habeas petitioner need only satisfy the district
court "that the failure to object or to appeal his claim was the
product of his attorney's ignorance or oversight, not a deliberate
tactic."
Ibid. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals remanded
to the District Court:
"[A]lthough the likelihood of attorney error appears very great
in this case, we lack testimony from Carrier's counsel which might
disclose a strategic reason for failing to appeal the
Brady issue. The question of counsel's motivation is one
of fact for the district court to resolve upon taking further
evidence."
Id. at 402.
The court also ruled that the District Court erred in suggesting
that respondent should establish cause for the default in the state
courts.
"The exhaustion requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2264 pertains to
independent claims for habeas relief, not to the proffer of
Wainwright cause and prejudice."
Ibid. Since respondent did not allege ineffective
assistance
Page 477 U. S. 485
of counsel as an independent basis for habeas relief, the case
presented no exhaustion question.
The dissenting judge believed that the petition should have been
dismissed for failure to exhaust state remedies because respondent
had never presented his discovery claim as a denial of due process
in the state courts,
id. at 403-404 (Hall, J.,
dissenting), and differed with the majority's interpretation of the
cause standard because "[it] will ultimately allow the exception to
swallow the rule."
Id. at 405. The State sought rehearing,
and the en banc Court of Appeals adopted the panel majority's
decision, with four judges dissenting.
Carrier v. Hutto,
754 F.2d 520 (1985). We now reverse and remand.
II
Wainwright v. Sykes held that a federal habeas
petitioner who has failed to comply with a State's contemporaneous
objection rule at trial must show cause for the procedural default
and prejudice attributable thereto in order to obtain review of his
defaulted constitutional claim. 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 87.
See also Francis v. Henderson, 425 U.
S. 536 (1976). In so holding, the Court explicitly
rejected the standard described in
Fay v. Noia,
372 U. S. 391
(1963), under which a federal habeas court could refuse to review a
defaulted claim only if "an applicant ha[d] deliberately by-passed
the orderly procedure of the state courts,"
id. at
372 U. S. 438,
by personal waiver of the claim amounting to "
an intentional
relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege.'"
Id. at 372 U. S. 439
(quoting Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U.
S. 458, 304 U. S. 464
(1938)). See Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. at 433 U. S. 87-88.
At a minimum, then, Wainwright v. Sykes plainly implied
that default of a constitutional claim by counsel pursuant to a
trial strategy or tactical decision would, absent extraordinary
circumstances, bind the habeas petitioner even if he had not
personally waived that claim. See id. at 433 U. S. 91, n.
14; Reed v. Ross, 468 U. S. 1,
468 U. S. 13
(1984). Beyond that, the Court left open "for
Page 477 U. S. 486
resolution in future decisions the precise definition of the
`cause' and "prejudice" standard." 433 U.S. at
433 U. S.
87.
We revisited the cause and prejudice test in
Engle v.
Isaac, 456 U. S. 107
(1982). Like
Wainwright v. Sykes, Engle involved claims
that were procedurally defaulted at trial. In seeking to establish
cause for their defaults, the prisoners argued that "they could not
have known at the time of their trials" of the substantive basis
for their constitutional claims, which were premised on
In re
Winship, 397 U. S. 358
(1970).
Engle, 456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 130.
Without deciding "whether the novelty of a constitutional claim
ever establishes cause for a failure to object,"
id. at
456 U. S. 131,
we rejected this contention because we could not conclude that the
legal basis for framing the prisoners' constitutional claims was
unavailable at the time.
Id. at
456 U. S. 133.
In language that bears directly on the present case, we said:
"We do not suggest that every astute counsel would have relied
upon
Winship to assert the unconstitutionality of a rule
saddling criminal defendants with the burden of proving an
affirmative defense. Every trial presents a myriad of possible
claims. Counsel might have overlooked or chosen to omit
respondents' due process argument while pursuing other avenues of
defense. We have long recognized, however, that the Constitution
guarantees criminal defendants only a fair trial and a competent
attorney. It does not insure that defense counsel will recognize
and raise every conceivable constitutional claim. Where the basis
of a constitutional claim is available, and other defense counsel
have perceived and litigated that claim, the demands of comity and
finality counsel against labeling alleged unawareness of the
objection as a cause for a procedural default."
Id. at
456 U. S.
133-134 (footnote omitted).
The thrust of this part of our decision in
Engle is
unmistakable: the mere fact that counsel failed to recognize the
factual or legal basis for a claim, or failed to raise the claim
despite recognizing it, does not constitute cause for a procedural
default.
Page 477 U. S. 487
At least with respect to defaults that occur at trial, the Court
of Appeals' holding that ignorant or inadvertent attorney error is
cause for any resulting procedural default is plainly inconsistent
with
Engle. It is no less inconsistent with the purposes
served by the cause and prejudice standard. That standard rests not
only on the need to deter intentional defaults, but on a judgment
that the costs of federal habeas review "are particularly high when
a trial default has barred a prisoner from obtaining adjudication
of his constitutional claim in the state courts."
Engle,
456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 128.
Those costs, which include a reduction in the finality of
litigation and the frustration of "both the States' sovereign power
to punish offenders and their good faith attempts to honor
constitutional rights,"
ibid., are heightened in several
respects when a trial default occurs: the default deprives the
trial court of an opportunity to correct any error without retrial,
detracts from the importance of the trial itself, gives state
appellate courts no chance to review trial errors, and "exacts an
extra charge by undercutting the State's ability to enforce its
procedural rules."
Id. at
456 U. S. 129.
Clearly, these considerable costs do not disappear when the default
stems from counsel's ignorance or inadvertence, rather than from a
deliberate decision, for whatever reason, to withhold a claim.
Indeed, the rule applied by the Court of Appeals would
significantly increase the costs associated with a procedural
default in many cases. In order to determine whether there was
cause for a procedural default, federal habeas courts would
routinely be required to hold evidentiary hearings to determine
what prompted counsel's failure to raise the claim in question.
While the federal habeas courts would no doubt strive to minimize
the burdens to all concerned through the use of affidavits or other
simplifying procedures, we are not prepared to assume that these
costs would be negligible, particularly since, as we observed in
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.
S. 668,
466 U. S. 690
(1984),
"[i]ntensive scrutiny of counsel . . . could dampen the ardor
and impair the independence of defense counsel, discourage the
acceptance of assigned cases,
Page 477 U. S. 488
and undermine the trust between attorney and client."
Nor will it always be easy to classify counsel's behavior in
accordance with the deceptively simple categories propounded by the
Court of Appeals. Does counsel act out of "ignorance," for example,
by failing to raise a claim for tactical reasons after mistakenly
assessing its strength on the basis of an incomplete acquaintance
with the relevant precedent? The uncertain dimensions of any
exception for "inadvertence" or "ignorance" furnish an additional
reason for rejecting it.
We think, then, that the question of cause for a procedural
default does not turn on whether counsel erred or on the kind of
error counsel may have made. So long as a defendant is represented
by counsel whose performance is not constitutionally ineffective
under the standard established in
Strickland v. Washington,
supra, we discern no inequity in requiring him to bear the
risk of attorney error that results in a procedural default.
Instead, we think that the existence of cause for a procedural
default must ordinarily turn on whether the prisoner can show that
some objective factor external to the defense impeded counsel's
efforts to comply with the State's procedural rule. Without
attempting an exhaustive catalog of such objective impediments to
compliance with a procedural rule, we note that a showing that the
factual or legal basis for a claim was not reasonably available to
counsel,
see Reed v. Ross, 468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 16, or
that "some interference by officials,"
Brown v. Allen,
344 U. S. 443,
344 U. S. 486
(1953), made compliance impracticable, would constitute cause under
this standard.
Similarly, if the procedural default is the result of
ineffective assistance of counsel, the Sixth Amendment itself
requires that responsibility for the default be imputed to the
State, which may not "conduc[t] trials at which persons who face
incarceration must defend themselves without adequate legal
assistance."
Cuyler v. Sullivan, 446 U.
S. 335,
446 U. S. 344
(1980). Ineffective assistance of counsel, then, is cause for a
procedural default. However, we think that the exhaustion
Page 477 U. S. 489
doctrine, which is
"principally designed to protect the state courts' role in the
enforcement of federal law and prevent disruption of state judicial
proceedings,"
Rose v. Lundy, 455 U. S. 509,
455 U. S. 518
(1982), generally requires that a claim of ineffective assistance
be presented to the state courts as an independent claim before it
may be used to establish cause for a procedural default. The
question whether there is cause for a procedural default does not
pose any occasion for applying the exhaustion doctrine when the
federal habeas court can adjudicate the question of cause -- a
question of federal law -- without deciding an independent and
unexhausted constitutional claim on the merits. But if a petitioner
could raise his ineffective assistance claim for the first time on
federal habeas in order to show cause for a procedural default, the
federal habeas court would find itself in the anomalous position of
adjudicating an unexhausted constitutional claim for which state
court review might still be available. The principle of comity that
underlies the exhaustion doctrine would be ill-served by a rule
that allowed a federal district court "to upset a state court
conviction without an opportunity to the state courts to correct a
constitutional violation,"
Darr v. Burford, 339 U.
S. 200,
339 U. S. 204
(1950), and that holds true whether an ineffective assistance claim
is asserted as cause for a procedural default or denominated as an
independent ground for habeas relief.
It is clear that respondent failed to show or even allege cause
for his procedural default under this standard for cause, which
Engle squarely supports. Respondent argues, nevertheless,
that his case is not controlled by
Engle, because it
involves a procedural default on appeal, rather than at trial.
Respondent does not dispute, however, that the cause and prejudice
test applies to procedural defaults on appeal, as we plainly
indicated in
Reed v. Ross, 468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 11.
Reed, which involved a claim that was defaulted on appeal,
held that a habeas petitioner could establish cause for a
procedural default if his claim is "so novel that its legal basis
is not reasonably
Page 477 U. S. 490
available to counsel,"
id. at
468 U. S. 16.
That holding would have been entirely unnecessary to the
disposition of the prisoner's claim if the cause and prejudice test
were inapplicable to procedural defaults on appeal.
The distinction respondent would have us draw must therefore be
made, if at all, in terms of the content of the cause requirement
as applied to procedural defaults on appeal. Accordingly,
respondent asks us to affirm the Court of Appeals' judgment on the
narrow ground that, even if counsel's ignorance or inadvertence
does not constitute cause for a procedural default at trial, it
does constitute cause for a procedural default on appeal. In
support of this distinction, respondent asserts that the concerns
that underlie the cause and prejudice test are not present in the
case of defaults on appeal. A default on appeal, he maintains, does
not detract from the significance of the trial or from the
development of a full trial record, or deprive the trial court of
an opportunity to correct error without the need for retrial.
Moreover, unlike the rapid pace of trial, in which it is a matter
of necessity that counsel's decisions bind the defendant, "the
appellate process affords the attorney time for reflection,
research, and full consultation with his client." Brief for
Respondent 19. Finally, respondent suggests that there is no
likelihood that an attorney will preserve an objection at trial,
yet choose to withhold it on appeal in order to "sandbag" the
prosecution by raising the claim on federal habeas if relief is
denied by the state courts.
These arguments are unpersuasive. A State's procedural rules
serve vital purposes at trial, on appeal, and on state collateral
attack. The important role of appellate procedural rules is aptly
captured by the Court's description in
Reed v. Ross of the
purposes served by the procedural rule at issue there, which
required the defendant initially to raise his legal claims on
appeal rather than on postconviction review:
"It affords the state courts the opportunity to resolve the
issue shortly after trial, while evidence is still available
Page 477 U. S. 491
both to assess the defendant's claim and to retry the defendant
effectively if he prevails in his appeal.
See Friendly, Is
Innocence Irrelevant? Collateral Attack on Criminal Judgments, 38
U.Chi.L.Rev. 142, 147 (1970). This type of rule promotes not only
the accuracy and efficiency of judicial decisions, but also the
finality of those decisions, by forcing the defendant to litigate
all of his claims together, as quickly after trial as the docket
will allow, and while the attention of the appellate court is
focused on his case."
468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 10-11.
These legitimate state interests, which are manifestly furthered by
the comparable procedural rule at issue in this case, warrant our
adherence to the conclusion to which they led the Court in
Reed
v. Ross -- that the cause and prejudice test applies to
defaults on appeal as to those at trial.
We likewise believe that the standard for cause should not vary
depending on the timing of a procedural default or on the strength
of an uncertain and difficult assessment of the relative magnitude
of the benefits attributable to the state procedural rules that
attach at each successive stage of the judicial process.
"Each State's complement of procedural rules . . . channel[s],
to the extent possible, the resolution of various types of
questions to the stage of the judicial process at which they can be
resolved most fairly and efficiently."
Id. at
468 U. S. 10. It
is apparent that the frustration of the State's interests that
occurs when an appellate procedural rule is broken is not
significantly diminished when counsel's breach results from
ignorance or inadvertence, rather than a deliberate decision,
tactical or not, to abstain from raising the claim. Failure to
raise a claim on appeal reduces the finality of appellate
proceedings, deprives the appellate court of an opportunity to
review trial error, and "undercut[s] the State's ability to enforce
its procedural rules."
Engle, 456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 129.
As with procedural defaults at trial, these costs are imposed on
the State regardless of the kind of attorney error that led to the
procedural default. Nor do we
Page 477 U. S. 492
agree that the possibility of "sandbagging" vanishes once a
trial has ended in conviction, since appellate counsel might well
conclude that the best strategy is to select a few promising claims
for airing on appeal, while reserving others for federal habeas
review should the appeal be unsuccessful. Moreover, we see little
reason why counsel's failure to detect a colorable constitutional
claim should be treated differently from a deliberate but equally
prejudicial failure by counsel to raise such a claim. The fact that
the latter error can be characterized as a misjudgment, while the
former is more easily described as an oversight, is much too
tenuous a distinction to justify a regime of evidentiary hearings
into counsel's state of mind in failing to raise a claim on
appeal.
The real thrust of respondent's arguments appears to be that, on
appeal, it is inappropriate to hold defendants to the errors of
their attorneys. Were we to accept that proposition, defaults on
appeal would presumably be governed by a rule equivalent to
Fay
v. Noia's "deliberate bypass" standard, under which only
personal waiver by the defendant would require enforcement of a
procedural default. We express no opinion as to whether counsel's
decision not to take an appeal at all might require treatment under
such a standard,
see Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 88, n.
12, but, for the reasons already given, we hold that counsel's
failure to raise a
particular claim on appeal is to be
scrutinized under the cause and prejudice standard when that
failure is treated as a procedural default by the state courts.
Attorney error short of ineffective assistance of counsel does not
constitute cause for a procedural default, even when that default
occurs on appeal, rather than at trial. To the contrary, cause for
a procedural default on appeal ordinarily requires a showing of
some external impediment preventing counsel from constructing or
raising the claim.
III
Concurring in the judgment, JUSTICE STEVENS contends that our
decision today erects an unwarranted procedural
Page 477 U. S. 493
barrier to the correction through federal habeas corpus of
violations of fundamental constitutional rights that have resulted
in a miscarriage of justice. The cause and prejudice test, in his
view, "must be considered within an overall inquiry into justice,"
post at
477 U. S. 504,
which requires consideration in every case of the character of the
constitutional claim. If the federal right asserted is of
"fundamental importance,"
post at
477 U. S. 499,
or if a violation of that right "calls into question the accuracy
of the determination of . . . guilt,"
ibid., JUSTICE
STEVENS would then balance "the nature and strength of the
constitutional claim" and "the nature and strength of the state
procedural rule that has not been observed."
Post at
477 U. S.
506.
At the outset, it should be noted that this balancing is more
apparent than real, for the concurrence makes plain that the
controlling consideration must be whether the petitioner was denied
"
fundamental fairness in the state court proceedings.'"
post at 477 U. S. 506,
n. 13 (quoting Rose v. Lundy, 455 U.
S. 509, 455 U. S. 547,
n. 17 (1982) (STEVENS, J., dissenting)). And, while JUSTICE STEVENS
argues at some length that an appellate default should be given
less weight than a trial default in applying the balancing process
he proposes, it is hard to believe that this distinction would make
any difference, given his simultaneous insistence on "carefully
preserv[ing] the exception which enables the federal writ to grant
relief in cases of manifest injustice," post at
477 U. S. 515
-- an exception that he clearly would endorse regardless of the
timing of the default.
The effect of such a reworking of the cause and prejudice test
would essentially be to dispense with the requirement that the
petitioner show cause, and instead to focus exclusively on whether
there has been a "manifest injustice" or a denial of "fundamental
fairness." We are not told whether this inquiry would require the
same showing of actual prejudice that is required by the cause and
prejudice test as interpreted in
Engle and in
United
States v. Frady, 456 U. S. 152
(1982), but the thrust of the concurrence leaves little doubt that
this is so. The showing of prejudice required under
Page 477 U. S. 494
Wainwright v. Sykes is significantly greater than that
necessary under "the more vague inquiry suggested by the words
plain error.'" Engle, 456 U.S. at 456 U. S. 135;
Frady, supra, at 456 U. S. 166.
See also Henderson v. Kibbe, 431 U.
S. 145, 431 U. S. 154
(1977). The habeas petitioner must show
"not merely that the errors at . . . trial created a
possibility of prejudice, but that they worked to his
actual and substantial disadvantage, infecting his entire
trial with error of constitutional dimensions."
Frady, supra, at
456 U. S. 170.
Such a showing of pervasive actual prejudice can hardly be thought
to constitute anything other than a showing that the prisoner was
denied "fundamental fairness" at trial. Since, for JUSTICE STEVENS,
a "constitutional claim that implicates
fundamental fairness' .
. . compels review regardless of possible procedural defaults,"
post at 477 U. S. 501,
n. 8, it follows that a showing of prejudice would invariably make
a showing of cause unnecessary.
As the concurrence acknowledges,
Engle expressly
rejected this contention that a showing of actual prejudice "should
permit relief even in the absence of cause." 456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 134,
n. 43. It may be true that the former Rule 12(b)(2) of the Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure, as interpreted in
Shotwell Mfg.
Co. v. United States, 371 U. S. 341
(1963), and
Davis v. United States, 411 U.
S. 233 (1973), treated prejudice as a component of the
inquiry into whether there was cause for noncompliance with that
rule. But, while the cause and prejudice test adopted in
Wainwright v. Sykes finds its antecedents in cases
interpreting Rule 12(b)(2), the Court in
Wainwright v.
Sykes declared that it was applying
"the rule of
Francis v. Henderson . . . barring federal
habeas review absent a showing of 'cause' and 'prejudice' attendant
to a state procedural waiver."
433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 87. In
Francis, the Court could not have been clearer that both
cause and prejudice must be shown, at least in a habeas corpus
proceeding challenging a state court conviction. 425 U.S. at
425 U. S. 542
(requiring "not only a showing of
cause' for the defendant's
failure to challenge the composition of the grand
Page 477 U. S.
495
jury before trial, but also a showing of actual prejudice").
We deal here with habeas review of a state court conviction, and at
least three decisions of this Court -- Francis, Sykes, and
Engle -- are unambiguously contrary to the approach taken
in the concurrence. We are unprepared, in the face of this weight
of authority and in view of the principles of comity and finality
these decisions reflect, to reduce the cause requirement to the
vestigial role JUSTICE STEVENS envisions for it.
Moreover, although neither
Francis nor
Wainwright
v. Sykes involved a constitutional claim that directly called
into question the accuracy of the determination of the petitioner's
guilt, the defaulted claims in
Engle, no less than
respondent's claim in this case, did involve issues bearing on the
reliability of the verdict.
In re Winship, 397 U.
S. 358 (1970), which was "the basis for [the prisoners']
constitutional claim" in
Engle, supra, at
456 U. S. 131,
holds that
"the Due Process Clause protects the accused against conviction
except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary
to constitute the crime with which he is charged."
Winship, supra, at
397 U. S. 364.
In
Ivan V. v. City of New York, 407 U.
S. 203,
407 U. S. 205
(1972) (per curiam), the Court held the rule in
Winship to
be retroactive, because
"the major purpose of the constitutional standard of proof
beyond a reasonable doubt announced in
Winship was to
overcome an aspect of a criminal trial that substantially impairs
the truthfinding function."
Consequently, our rejection in
Engle of the contention
advanced today -- that cause need not be shown if actual prejudice
is shown -- is fully applicable to constitutional claims that call
into question the reliability of an adjudication of legal
guilt.
However, as we also noted in
Engle, "[i]n appropriate
cases" the principles of comity and finality that inform the
concepts of cause and prejudice "must yield to the imperative of
correcting a fundamentally unjust incarceration." 456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 135.
We remain confident that, for the most part, "victims of a
fundamental miscarriage of justice will meet the
Page 477 U. S. 496
cause-and-prejudice standard."
Ibid. But we do not
pretend that this will always be true. Accordingly, we think that,
in an extraordinary case, where a constitutional violation has
probably resulted in the conviction of one who is actually
innocent, a federal habeas court may grant the writ even in the
absence of a showing of cause for the procedural default.
There is an additional safeguard against miscarriages of justice
in criminal cases, and one not yet recognized in state criminal
trials when many of the opinions on which the concurrence relies
were written. That safeguard is the right to effective assistance
of counsel, which, as this Court has indicated, may in a particular
case be violated by even an isolated error of counsel if that error
is sufficiently egregious and prejudicial.
United States v.
Cronic, 466 U. S. 648,
466 U. S. 657,
n. 20 (1984).
See also Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S.
at
466 U. S.
693-696. The presence of such a safeguard may properly
inform this Court's judgment in determining "[w]hat standards
should govern the exercise of the habeas court's equitable
discretion" with respect to procedurally defaulted claims,
Reed
v. Ross, 468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 9. The
ability to raise ineffective assistance claims based in whole or in
part on counsel's procedural defaults substantially undercuts any
predictions of unremedied manifest injustices. We therefore remain
of the view that adherence to the cause and prejudice test "in the
conjunctive,"
Engle, supra, at
456 U. S. 134,
n. 43, will not prevent federal habeas courts from ensuring the
"fundamental fairness [that] is the central concern of the writ of
habeas corpus."
Strickland v. Washington, supra, at
466 U. S.
697.
The cause and prejudice test may lack a perfect historical
pedigree. But the Court acknowledged as much in
Wainwright v.
Sykes, noting its
"historic willingness to overturn or modify its earlier views of
the scope of the writ, even where the statutory language
authorizing judicial action has remained unchanged."
433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 81.
The cause and prejudice test as interpreted in
Engle and
in our decision
Page 477 U. S. 497
today is, we think, a sound and workable means of channeling the
discretion of federal habeas courts.
IV
Respondent has never alleged any external impediment that might
have prevented counsel from raising his discovery claim in his
petition for review, and has disavowed any claim that counsel's
performance on appeal was so deficient as to make out an
ineffective assistance claim.
See generally Evitts v.
Lucey, 469 U. S. 387
(1985) (right to effective assistance of counsel applies on an
appeal as of right). Respondent's petition for federal habeas
review of his procedurally defaulted discovery claim must therefore
be dismissed for failure to establish cause for the default, unless
it is determined on remand that the victim's statements contain
material that would establish respondent's actual innocence.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case
is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE BLACKMUN joins, concurring in
the judgment.
The heart of this case is a prisoner's claim that he was denied
access to material that might have established his innocence. The
significance of such a claim can easily be lost in a procedural
maze of enormous complexity.
The nature of the prisoner's claim, and its importance, would be
especially easy to overlook in this case because the case involves
at least four possible procedural errors. A Virginia trial judge
may have erroneously denied respondent's counsel access to
statements that the victim had made to the police. The Virginia
Supreme Court did not address this issue, because, although
respondent's counsel included it in the assignment of errors in his
"notice of appeal," he omitted it from his "petition for appeal."
In a subsequent federal habeas corpus proceeding, the District
Court held that the
Page 477 U. S. 498
procedural default in the state appellate court effected a
waiver of any right to federal relief and therefore dismissed the
petition without examining the victim's statements. The Court of
Appeals, however, concluded that there was no waiver if counsel's
omission was the consequence of inadvertence and ordered a remand
for a hearing to determine whether the lawyer had made a deliberate
decision to omit the error from the petition for appeal. We granted
certiorari to review that decision.
This Court now reverses, holding that there is no need for a
hearing on counsel's motivation, and that, instead, the District
Court should determine whether there is merit to the habeas corpus
application by making an examination of the victim's statements. I
concur in its judgment remanding the case for further proceedings
on the substance of the claim and dispensing with the procedural
hearing ordered by the Court of Appeals; I disagree, however, with
much of what the Court has written about "cause and prejudice," as
well as with its announcement of a new standard to govern the
District Court's ultimate disposition of the case.
I
The character of respondent's constitutional claim should be
central to an evaluation of his habeas corpus petition. Before and
during his trial on charges of rape and abduction, his counsel made
timely motions for discovery of the statements made by the victim
to the police. By denying those motions, the trial court
significantly curtailed the defendant's ability to cross-examine
the prosecution's most important witness, and may well have
violated the defendant's right to review "evidence favorable to an
accused upon request . . . where the evidence is material either to
guilt or to punishment."
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U. S.
83,
373 U. S. 87
(1963). That right is unquestionably protected by the Due Process
Clause.
Ibid. See also United States v. Bagley,
473 U. S. 667
(1985);
United States v. Agurs, 427 U. S.
97 (1976). Indeed, the
Page 477 U. S. 499
Court has repeatedly emphasized the fundamental importance of
that federal right. [
Footnote
1]
The constitutional claim advanced by respondent calls into
question the accuracy of the determination of his guilt. On the
record before us, however, we cannot determine whether or not he is
the victim of a miscarriage of justice. Respondent argues that the
trial court's analysis was severely flawed. [
Footnote 2] Even if the trial judge applied the
correct standard, the conclusion that there was no "exculpatory"
material in the victim's statements does not foreclose the
possibility that inconsistencies between the statements and the
direct testimony would have enabled an effective cross-examination
to demonstrate that respondent is actually innocent. [
Footnote 3] On the other hand, it is possible
that other evidence of guilt in the record is so overwhelming that
the trial judge's decision was clearly not prejudicial to the
defendant. The important point is that we cannot evaluate the
possibility that respondent may be the victim of a fundamental
miscarriage of justice without any knowledge about the contents of
the victim's statements.
Page 477 U. S. 500
In deciding whether the District Court should have examined
these statements before dismissing respondent's habeas corpus
petition, it is useful to recall the historic importance of the
Great Writ. "The writ of habeas corpus is the fundamental
instrument for safeguarding individual freedom against arbitrary
and lawless state action."
Harris v. Nelson, 394 U.
S. 286,
394 U. S.
290-291 (1969). Its well-known history bears repetition.
The writ emerged in England several centuries ago, [
Footnote 4] and was given explicit protection
in our Constitution. [
Footnote
5] The first Judiciary Act provided federal habeas corpus for
federal prisoners. [
Footnote 6]
In 1867, Congress provided the writ of habeas corpus for state
prisoners; the Act gave federal courts
"power to grant writs of habeas corpus in all cases where any
person may be restrained of his or her liberty in violation of the
Constitution, or any treaty or law of the United States. [
Footnote 7]"
The current statute confers similar power, 28 U.S.C. §
2241(c)(3), and provides: "The court shall . . . dispose of the
matter as law and justice require." 28 U.S.C. § 2243.
As the statute suggests, the central mission of the Great Writ
should be the substance of "justice," not the form of procedures.
As Justice Frankfurter explained in his separate opinion in
Brown v. Allen, 344 U. S. 443,
344 U. S. 498
(1953):
"The meritorious claims are few, but our procedures must ensure
that those few claims are not stifled by undiscriminating
generalities. The complexities of our federalism and the workings
of a scheme of government involving the interplay of two
governments, one of which is subject to limitations enforceable by
the other, are not to be escaped by simple, rigid rules which, by
avoiding some abuses, generate others.
Page 477 U. S. 501
In
Hensley v. Municipal Court, 411 U. S.
345,
411 U. S. 349-350 (1973),
the Court similarly emphasized this approach, stating:"
"Our recent decisions have reasoned from the premise that habeas
corpus is not 'a static, narrow, formalistic remedy,'
Jones
v. Cunningham, [
371 U.S.
236,]
371 U. S. 243 [(1963)], but
one which must retain the 'ability to cut through barriers of form
and procedural mazes.'
Harris v. Nelson, 394 U. S.
286,
394 U. S. 291 (1969).
See Frank v. Mangum, 237 U. S. 309,
237 U. S.
346 (1915) (Holmes, J., dissenting)."
"The very nature of the writ demands that it be administered
with the initiative and flexibility essential to insure that
miscarriages of justice within its reach are surfaced and
corrected."
"
Harris v. Nelson, supra, at
384 U. S.
291."
"Thus, we have consistently rejected interpretations of the
habeas corpus statute that would suffocate the writ in stifling
formalisms or hobble its effectiveness with the manacles of arcane
and scholastic procedural requirements."
Accordingly, the statutory mandate to "dispose of the matter as
law and justice require" clearly requires at least some
consideration of the character of the constitutional claim.
[
Footnote 8]
II
In my opinion, the "cause and prejudice" formula that the Court
explicates in such detail today is not dispositive when the
fundamental fairness of a prisoner's conviction is at issue. That
formula is of recent vintage, particularly in comparison to the
writ for which it is invoked. It is, at most, part of a broader
inquiry into the demands of justice.
Page 477 U. S. 502
The Court cites
Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U. S.
72 (1977), as authority for its "cause and prejudice"
standard. The actual source of the standard, however, is Rule
12(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. For
Wainwright relied on cases construing that Rule in
announcing the standard.
See id. at
433 U. S.
84-85.
Rule 12(b)(2) specifies the procedure for asserting defenses and
objections based on defects in the institution of a federal
prosecution. Until part of the Rule was shifted to Rule 12(f), Rule
12(b)(2) expressly provided that the failure to follow the
specified procedure in presenting any such defense or objection
"constitutes waiver thereof"; the Rule included a proviso
authorizing the court to grant relief from the waiver "for cause
shown." [
Footnote 9] Under the
terms of the Rule, the inquiry into "cause" was not made to
ascertain whether a waiver occurred; rather, its function was to
determine whether a waiver should be excused.
The term "prejudice" was not used in Rule 12(b)(2). In
construing the rule in
Shotwell Mfg. Co. v. United States,
371 U. S. 341
(1963), however, the Court decided that a consideration of the
prejudice to the defendant, or the absence thereof, was an
appropriate component of the inquiry into whether there was "cause"
for excusing the waiver that had resulted from the failure to
follow the Rule. [
Footnote
10] Thus, under
Page 477 U. S. 503
the reasoning of the
Shotwell case -- as well as the
text of the Rule itself -- "cause" and "prejudice" were not
separate obstacles that a defendant was required to overcome to
avoid a waiver. Rather, the cause component explicitly included an
inquiry into "prejudice" -- into the nature of the claim and its
effect.
In
Davis v. United States, 411 U.
S. 233 (1973), the Court held that
"the sort of express waiver provision contained in Rule 12(b)(2)
which specifically provides for the waiver of a particular kind of
constitutional claim if it be not timely asserted,"
id. at
411 U. S.
239-240, bars a challenge, absent "cause," to the
composition of the grand jury not only on direct federal review,
but also in a federal habeas challenge to a federal conviction.
Thus, in
Davis, as in
Shotwell, the Court simply
enforced a federal rule that contained an express waiver provision.
Notably, in
Davis, the Court again considered both cause
and prejudice as part of a single inquiry. 411 U.S. at
411 U. S.
243-245.
The
Davis holding, in turn, provided the basis for the
Court's decision in
Francis v. Henderson, 425 U.
S. 536 (1976). In that case, the Court reviewed a
Louisiana rule similar to the Federal Rule at issue in
Davis and a similar constitutional claim. Relying on
Davis, the Court held that the state prisoner, having
failed to make a timely challenge to the grand jury that indicted
him, could not challenge his state conviction in a federal habeas
corpus proceeding without making a showing of both "cause" for the
failure and "actual prejudice." The Court cited the
Davis
cause-and-prejudice
Page 477 U. S. 504
analysis in determining that prejudice had not been established.
425 U.S. at
425 U. S. 542,
and n. 6.
Davis and
Francis then provided the basis for
the conclusion in
Wainwright v. Sykes, supra, that the
failure to make a contemporaneous objection to the admission of
evidence at trial will ordinarily bar a postconviction attack on
the use of such evidence absent an appropriate showing of cause and
prejudice. However, the Court's opinion in
Wainwright v.
Sykes carefully avoided any rigid definition of the terms
"cause" and "prejudice" -- terms which under Rule 12 had been used
to identify two components of a single inquiry to determine whether
an express waiver should be excused. Indeed, in
Wainwright, the Court made very clear that, although
"cause and prejudice" structured a court's inquiry, they were not
rigid procedural rules that prevented the writ's fundamental
mission -- serving justice -- from being realized:
"The 'cause-and-prejudice' exception of the
Francis
rule will afford an adequate guarantee, we think, that the rule
will not prevent a federal habeas court from adjudicating for the
first time the federal constitutional claim of a defendant who, in
the absence of such an adjudication, will be the victim of a
miscarriage of justice."
433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 90-91.
In
Wainwright itself, the Court inquired into
both cause and prejudice; the prejudice inquiry, of
course, required some inquiry into the nature of the claim and its
effect on the trial.
Id. at
433 U. S.
91.
In a recent exposition of the "cause and prejudice" standard,
moreover, the Court again emphasized that "cause and prejudice"
must be considered within an overall inquiry into justice. In
Engle v. Isaac, 456 U. S. 107
(1982), the Court closed its opinion with the assurance that it
would not allow its judge-made "cause" and "actual prejudice"
standard to become so rigid that it would foreclose a claim of this
kind:
"The terms 'cause' and 'actual prejudice' are not rigid
concepts; they take their meaning from the principles of comity and
finality discussed above. In appropriate
Page 477 U. S. 505
cases, those principles must yield to the imperative of
correcting a fundamentally unjust incarceration. Since we are
confident that victims of a fundamental miscarriage of justice will
meet the cause-and-prejudice standard,
see Wainwright v.
Sykes, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 91;
id. at
433 U. S. 94-97 (STEVENS, J.,
concurring), we decline to adopt the more vague inquiry suggested
by the words 'plain error.'"
Id. at
456 U. S. 135.
[
Footnote 11]
In order to be faithful to that promise, we must recognize that
cause and prejudice are merely components of a broader inquiry
which, in this case, cannot be performed without an examination of
the victim's statements. [
Footnote 12]
Page 477 U. S. 506
III
An inquiry into the requirements of justice requires a
consideration, not only of the nature and strength of the
constitutional claim, but also of the nature and strength of the
state procedural rule that has not been observed. In its opinion
today, the Court relies heavily on cases in which the defendant
failed to make a contemporaneous objection to an error that
occurred during a trial. Most of the reasons for finding a waiver
in that setting simply do not apply to the appellate process. Of
special importance is the fact that the state interest in enforcing
its contemporaneous objection rule is supported, not merely by the
concern with finality that characterizes state appellate rules, but
also by the concern with making the trial the "main event" in which
the issue of guilt or innocence can be fairly resolved. [
Footnote 13]
This Court has not often considered procedural defaults that
have occurred at the appellate, rather than trial, level.
Page 477 U. S. 507
In my view, it is not a coincidence that three of the most
forceful and incisive analyses of the relationship between federal
habeas corpus and state procedural defaults have emerged in the few
cases involving appellate defaults. For, with an appellate default,
the state interest in procedural rigor is weaker than at trial, and
the transcendence of the Great Writ is correspondingly clearer. The
opinions to which I refer are the dissenting opinions in
Daniels v. Allen, 344 U. S. 443
(1953), and the Court's opinions in
Fay v. Noia,
372 U. S. 391
(1963), and
Reed v. Ross, 468 U. S.
1 (1984).
In
Daniels, one of the three cases that gave rise to
the opinions in
Brown v. Allen, 344 U.
S. 443 (1953), two petitioners challenged their
convictions and death sentences on the ground that the trial judge
had erroneously denied their timely objection to the admission of
allegedly coerced confessions and to the alleged discrimination
against blacks in the selection of both grand and petit jurors.
See id. at
344 U. S. 453.
After the trial court entered judgment and pronounced its sentence,
the petitioners filed a notice of appeal and were granted 60 days
in which to serve a statement of the case on opposing counsel. As a
result of the negligence or inadvertence of petitioners' counsel,
the statement was not served on the prosecutor until the 61st day,
and petitioners' right to appeal was lost. The State Supreme Court
declined to exercise its discretion to review the merits of their
appeal.
For reasons that are ambiguous at best, [
Footnote 14] the Court held that the procedural
default barred a subsequent federal habeas corpus petition unless
the opportunity to appeal had
Page 477 U. S. 508
been lost "because of lack of counsel, incapacity, or some
interference by officials."
Id. at
344 U. S.
485-486. Because the
Daniels holding was
repudiated in
Fay v. Noia, 372 U.
S. 391 (1963), Justice Black's penetrating dissent
commands greater respect than Justice Reed's ambiguous opinion for
the Court. [
Footnote 15]
Justice Black wrote:
"
Fourth. Daniels v. Allen, No. 20. Here also
evidence establishes an unlawful exclusion of Negroes from juries
because of race. The State Supreme Court refused to review this
evidence on state procedural grounds. Absence of state court review
on this ground is now held to cut off review in federal habeas
corpus proceedings. But in the two preceding cases where the State
Supreme Court did review the evidence, this Court has also reviewed
it. I find it difficult to agree with the soundness of a philosophy
which prompts this Court to grant a second review where the state
has granted one, but to deny any review at all where the state has
granted none."
"
* * * *"
"The Court thinks that to review this question and grant
petitioners the protections guaranteed by the Constitution
would"
"subvert the entire system of state criminal justice and destroy
state energy in the detection and punishment of crime."
"I cannot agree. State systems are not so feeble. And the object
of habeas corpus is to search records to prevent illegal
imprisonments. To hold it unavailable under the circumstances here
is to degrade it. I think
Moore v. Dempsey, 261 U. S.
86, forbids this. In that case, Negroes had been
convicted and sentenced to death by an all-white jury selected
under a
Page 477 U. S. 509
practice of systematic exclusion of Negroes from juries. The
State Supreme Court had refused to consider this discrimination on
the ground that the objection to it had come too late. This Court
had denied certiorari. Later, a federal district court summarily
dismissed a petition for habeas corpus alleging the foregoing and
other very serious acts of trial unfairness, all of which had been
urged upon this Court in the prior certiorari petition. This Court
nevertheless held that the District Court had committed error in
refusing to examine the facts alleged. I read
Moore v. Dempsey,
supra, as standing for the principle that it is never too late
for courts in habeas corpus proceedings to look straight through
procedural screens in order to prevent forfeiture of life or
liberty in flagrant defiance of the Constitution.
Cf. United
States v. Kennedy, 157 F.2d 811, 813. Perhaps there is no more
exalted judicial function. I am willing to agree that it should not
be exercised in cases like these except under special circumstances
or in extraordinary situations. But I cannot join in any opinion
that attempts to confine the Great Writ within rigid formalistic
boundaries."
Brown v. Allen, 344 U.S. at
344 U. S.
552-554.
With respect to the specific argument that the Court should not
permit federal habeas corpus to be used as a substitute for a state
appeal, Justice Frankfurter similarly responded:
"The basic reason for closing both the federal and State courts
to the petitioners on such serious claims and under these
circumstances is the jejune abstraction that habeas corpus cannot
be used for an appeal. Judge Soper dealt with the deceptiveness of
this formula by quoting what Judge Learned Hand had found to be the
truth in regard to this generality thirty years ago:"
"We shall not discuss at length the occasions which will justify
resort to the writ, where the objection has been
Page 477 U. S. 510
open on appeal. After a somewhat extensive review of the
authorities twenty-four years ago, I concluded that the law was in
great confusion; and the decisions since then have scarcely tended
to sharpen the lines. We can find no more definite rule than that
the writ is available, not only to determine points of
jurisdiction,
stricti juris, and constitutional questions;
but whenever else resort to it is necessary to prevent a complete
miscarriage of justice."
"
Kulick v. Kennedy, 157 F.2d 811, 813."
Id. at
344 U. S. 558
(dissenting opinion).
Thus, in their
Daniels dissents, both Justice Black and
Justice Frankfurter vigorously disagreed with the Court's view that
the petitioners' appellate default -- their failure to file a
timely appeal -- barred review of a meritorious constitutional
claim.
As noted, the view of the
Daniels Court on the
propriety of federal habeas proceedings after a procedural default
was repudiated in
Fay v. Noia, 372 U.
S. 391 (1963), a case which also concerned an appellate
default. Noia had made a timely objection to the admissibility of
his confession in his trial on a charge of felony murder, but he
allowed the time for a direct appeal to lapse without seeking
review by a New York appellate court. In response to his subsequent
application for a federal writ of habeas corpus, the State admitted
that his conviction rested on a confession that had been obtained
from him in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, but contended
that his failure to appeal foreclosed any relief in the federal
courts. This Court rejected that contention. In a comprehensive
opinion, the Court restated three propositions of law that have not
thereafter been questioned; the
Noia opinion also,
however, contained certain dicta that has been qualified by later
opinions.
The propositions that
Noia firmly established are
these: First, the
power of the federal district court to
issue the writ of habeas corpus survives an adverse decision by a
state court, whether the state judgment is based on a review of
the
Page 477 U. S. 511
merits of the federal claim or on the applicant's procedural
default. [
Footnote 16]
Second, although a State's interest in orderly appellate procedure
justifies a denial of appellate review
in the state system
when the inadvertence or neglect of defense counsel causes a
procedural default, that state interest is not sufficient to bar a
federal remedy in appropriate cases. [
Footnote 17]
Page 477 U. S. 512
Third, as the converse of the second proposition,
Noia
also holds that the federal district court has discretion to deny
relief based on state procedural defaults in appropriate cases.
[
Footnote 18] None of these
propositions has been questioned in any subsequent case.
The dicta in the
Noia opinion that has been questioned
was an attempt to prescribe a rather rigid limitation on the
district court's discretion to deny habeas corpus relief based on
the applicant's procedural default. The opinion set forth a
standard that seemingly required federal judges to excuse every
procedural default unless the habeas applicant had personally
approved of his lawyer's deliberate decision to bypass an available
state procedure. [
Footnote
19] The breadth of that dicta was
Page 477 U. S. 513
ultimately disavowed in
Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S.
at
433 U. S. 87-88,
[
Footnote 20] but the Court
has remained faithful to the specific holding in
Noia --
that appellate default in the state system need not bar federal
habeas review -- as well as to the basic principles announced in
that opinion.
Finally, in
Reed v. Ross, 468 U. S.
1 (1984), we again considered the consequences of an
appellate procedural default. The defendant had not raised the
constitutional error in his appeal to the North Carolina Supreme
Court. Relying on
Fay v. Noia, we reaffirmed that the
federal court has power to look beyond the state procedural default
and entertain the state prisoner's application for a writ of habeas
corpus. [
Footnote 21] In
determining whether the power should be exercised, we found that
the requirements of "cause" and "prejudice" that had been discussed
in
Wainwright v. Sykes had both been satisfied. The
"cause" for the failure to object was the fact that counsel had not
anticipated later decisions from this Court that supported the
claim. We explained:
Page 477 U. S. 514
"[T]he cause requirement may be satisfied under certain
circumstances when a procedural failure is not attributable to an
intentional decision by counsel made in pursuit of his client's
interests. And the failure of counsel to raise a constitutional
issue reasonably unknown to him is one situation in which the
requirement is met."
Reed v. Ross, 468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 14.
In the
Reed opinion, we carefully identified the valid
state interest that is served by enforcing a procedural default
that forecloses state appellate review of a federal constitutional
claim,
id. at
468 U. S. 10-11;
ante at
477 U. S.
490-491. But we squarely held that this interest is not
sufficient to defeat a meritorious federal claim:
"It is true that finality will be disserved if the federal
courts reopen a state prisoner's case, even to review claims that
were so novel when the cases were in state court that no one would
have recognized them.
This Court has never held, however, that
finality, standing alone, provides a sufficient reason for federal
courts to compromise their protection of constitutional rights
under § 2254."
468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 15
(emphasis added). We thus concluded that the appellate default
would not bar federal consideration of the constitutional
claim.
Like the
Daniels dissenters, then, in
Fay and
in
Reed, against the backdrop of appellate defaults, the
Court stressed that the State's interest in finality does not
preclude review of the federal constitutional claim in a federal
habeas court. To be sure, these opinions suggested that the
power to hear claims which had been defaulted on appeal
should be used sparingly -- in "special circumstances," in the
absence of "deliberate bypass," upon a showing of "cause." Even
under such terms, however, our holding in
Reed governs the
case before us today. If the State's interest in the finality of
its judgment is not sufficient to defeat a meritorious federal
claim that was not raised on appeal because the prisoner's
Page 477 U. S. 515
lawyer did not have the ability to anticipate a later
development in the law, there is no reason why the same state
interest should defeat a meritorious federal claim simply because
the prisoner's lawyer did not exercise due care in prosecuting an
appeal. There is no more reason to saddle an innocent prisoner with
counsel's omission in one case than in the other.
IV
Procedural default that is adequate to foreclose appellate
review of a claim of constitutional error in a state criminal trial
should ordinarily also bar collateral review of such a claim in a
federal district court. But the history of the Court's
jurisprudence interpreting the Acts of Congress authorizing the
issuance of the writ of habeas corpus unambiguously requires that
we carefully preserve the exception which enables the federal writ
to grant relief in cases of manifest injustice. That exception
cannot be adequately defined by a simply stated rule. The
procedural default is always an important factor to be carefully
reviewed; as Justice Frankfurter explained: "All that has gone
before is not to be ignored as irrelevant."
Brown v.
Allen, 344 U.S. at
344 U. S. 500.
But it is equally clear that the prisoner must always have some
opportunity to reopen his case if he can make a sufficient showing
that he is the victim of a fundamental miscarriage of justice.
Whether the inquiry is channeled by the use of the terms "cause"
and "prejudice" -- or by the statutory duty to "dispose of the
matter as law and justice require," 28 U.S.C. § 2243 -- it is clear
to me that appellate procedural default should not foreclose habeas
corpus review of a meritorious constitutional claim that may
establish the prisoner's innocence.
The Court is therefore entirely correct in its decision to
remand the case for further proceedings on the substance of
respondent's claim.
Ante at
477 U. S. 497.
Because we did not grant certiorari to consider the proper standard
that should govern the further proceedings in the District Court,
and because we
Page 477 U. S. 516
have not had the benefit of briefs or argument concerning that
standard, I express no opinion on the Court's suggestion that the
absence of "cause" for his procedural default requires respondent
to prove that the "constitutional violation has probably resulted
in the conviction of one who is actually innocent,"
ante
at
477 U. S. 496,
or on the relationship of that standard to the principles
explicated in
United States v. Bagley, 473 U.
S. 667 (1985);
United States v. Agurs,
427 U. S. 97
(1976); and
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U. S.
83 (1963). There will be time enough to consider the
proper standard after the District Court has examined the victim's
statements and made whatever findings may be appropriate to
determine whether "law and justice require" the issuance of the
Great Writ in this case.
Accordingly, I concur in the judgment, but not in the Court's
opinion.
[
Footnote 1]
See Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. at
373 U. S. 87
("The principle . . . is not punishment of society for misdeeds of
a prosecutor, but avoidance of an unfair trial to the accused.
Society wins not only when the guilty are convicted, but when
criminal trials are fair; our system of the administration of
justice suffers when any accused is treated unfairly");
United
States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. at
473 U. S. 675
("The
Brady rule is based on the requirement of due
process. Its purpose is . . . to ensure that a miscarriage of
justice does not occur").
[
Footnote 2]
See Carrier v. Hutto, 724 F.2d 396, 399 (CA4 1983)
("Carrier urges that the standard which should have been employed
by the court in delimiting discovery was whether the evidence
specifically requested was
material . . . to guilt,'
Brady, 373 U.S. at 373 U. S. 87. .
. not whether it was exculpatory").
[
Footnote 3]
Indeed, a major element of respondent's defense was precisely
that the victim's identification was mistaken.
See Tr.
152-207 (cross-examination of victim);
id. at 554-560
(defense closing argument's discussion of problems with victim's
identification).
[
Footnote 4]
See 3 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *129-*138.
[
Footnote 5]
Art. I, § 9, cl. 2
[
Footnote 6]
Act of Sept. 24, 1789, ch. 20, § 14, 1 Stat. 81-82.
[
Footnote 7]
Judiciary Act of Feb. 5, 1867, ch. 28, 14 Stat. 385-386.
[
Footnote 8]
See also Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.
S. 668,
466 U. S. 697
(1984) ("fundamental fairness is the central concern of the writ of
habeas corpus"). Although a constitutional claim that may establish
innocence is clearly the most compelling case for habeas review, it
is by no means the only type of constitutional claim that
implicates "fundamental fairness" and that compels review
regardless of possible procedural defaults.
See Rose v.
Lundy, 455 U. S. 509,
455 U. S.
543-544 (1982) (STEVENS, J., dissenting).
[
Footnote 9]
In 1963, when the Court decided
Shotwell Mfg. Co. v. United
States, 371 U. S. 341,
Rule 12(b)(2) provided in relevant part:
"Defenses and objections based on defects in the institution of
the prosecution or in the indictment or information other than that
it fails to show jurisdiction in the court or to charge an offense
may be raised only by motion before trial. . . . Failure to present
any such defense or objection as herein provided constitutes a
waiver thereof, but the court for cause shown may grant relief from
the waiver."
See 371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 362.
Rule 12 has been amended since 1963, but it retains the provision
for an express waiver subject to the proviso that "the court for
cause shown may grant relief from the waiver."
See Rule
12(f).
[
Footnote 10]
"Finally, both courts below have found that petitioners were not
prejudiced in any way by the alleged illegalities in the selection
of the juries. Nor do petitioners point to any resulting prejudice.
In
Ballard, it was said (at p.195) that 'reversible error
does not depend on a showing of prejudice in an individual case.'
However, where, as here, objection to the jury selection has not
been timely raised under Rule 12(b)(2), it is entirely proper to
take absence of prejudice into account in determining whether a
sufficient showing has been made to warrant relief from the effect
of that Rule."
371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 363
(footnote omitted).
[
Footnote 11]
In the concurring opinion cited by the Court, presumably with
approval, I had written:
"The notion that a client must always consent to a tactical
decision not to assert a constitutional objection to a proffer of
evidence has always seemed unrealistic to me. Conversely, if the
constitutional issue is sufficiently grave, even an express waiver
by the defendant himself may sometimes be excused. Matters such as
the competence of counsel, the procedural context in which the
asserted waiver occurred,
the character of the constitutional
right at stake, and the overall fairness of the entire
proceeding, may be more significant than the language of the test
the Court purports to apply."
Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U. S. 72,
433 U. S. 94-96
(1977) (footnotes omitted; emphasis added).
[
Footnote 12]
Inconsistently, in
Engle v. Isaac, alongside its
references to fundamental fairness, the Court also emphasized that
a failure to show cause could bar review regardless of the
character of the claim.
See, e.g., 456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 134,
n. 43 ("Since we conclude that these respondents lacked cause for
their default, we do not consider whether they also suffered actual
prejudice. Respondents urge that their prejudice was so great that
it should permit relief even in the absence of cause.
Sykes, however, stated these criteria in the conjunctive,
and the facts of these cases do not persuade us to depart from that
approach");
id. at
456 U. S. 129
("The costs outlined above do not depend upon the type of claim
raised by the prisoner. While the nature of a constitutional claim
may affect the calculation of cause and prejudice, it does not
alter the need to make that threshold showing"). The Court's rigid
invocation of the "cause" obstacle in an opinion that also
emphasized the demands of "fundamental fairness" illustrates the
confusion that has accompanied the Court's creation and imposition
of the cause-and-prejudice standard.
See also id. at
456 U. S. 126
("Today, as in prior centuries, the writ is a bulwark against
convictions that violate
fundamental fairness"') (quoting
Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. at 433 U. S. 97
(STEVENS, J., concurring)).
[
Footnote 13]
See Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 90.
Cf. Engle v. Isaac, 456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 136,
n. 1 (STEVENS, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) ("The
failure to object generally indicates that defense counsel felt
that the trial error was not critical to his client's case;
presumably, therefore, the error did not render the trial
fundamentally unfair"). Even in the trial context, however, the
lack of objection should not be completely preclusive.
See Rose
v. Lundy, 455 U.S. at
455 U. S. 547-548, n. 17 (STEVENS, J., dissenting):
"The failure of otherwise competent defense counsel to raise an
objection at trial is often a reliable indication that the
defendant was not denied fundamental fairness in the state court
proceedings. The person best qualified to recognize such error is
normally a defendant's own lawyer. Thus, in searching for
fundamental unfairness in a trial record, I attach great importance
to the character of the objection, if any, asserted by the
defendant's counsel. But if such error is manifest, I would not
wrestle with terms such as 'cause' and 'prejudice' to determine
whether habeas corpus relief should be granted."
[
Footnote 14]
Commenting on the holding in
Daniels, Justice Harlan
wrote:
"Language in Mr. Justice Reed's opinion for the Court appeared
to support the result alternatively in terms of waiver, failure to
exhaust state remedies, and the existence of an adequate state
ground. But while the explanation may have been ambiguous, the
result was clear: habeas corpus would not lie for a prisoner who
was detained pursuant to a state judgment which, in the view of the
majority in
Daniels, rested on a reasonable application of
the State's own procedural requirements."
Fay v. Noia, 372 U. S. 391,
372 U. S.
461-462 (1963) (dissenting opinion) (footnotes
omitted).
[
Footnote 15]
Indeed, even the dissenters in
Fay v. Noia did not
defend the specific analysis in Daniels.
See 372 U.S. at
372 U. S. 462
(Harlan, J., dissenting) ("I do not pause to reconsider here the
question whether the state ground in
Daniels was an
adequate one; persuasive arguments can be made that it was
not").
[
Footnote 16]
"We have reviewed the development of habeas corpus at some
length because the question of the instant case has obvious
importance to the proper accommodation of a great constitutional
privilege and the requirements of the federal system. Our survey
discloses nothing to suggest that the Federal District Court lacked
the power to order Noia discharged because of a procedural
forfeiture he may have incurred under state law. On the contrary,
the nature of the writ at common law, the language and purpose of
the Act of February 5, 1867, and the course of decisions in this
Court extending over nearly a century are wholly irreconcilable
with such a limitation. At the time the privilege of the writ was
written into the Federal Constitution, it was settled that the writ
lay to test any restraint contrary to fundamental law, which in
England stemmed ultimately from Magna Charta but in this country
was embodied in the written Constitution. Congress, in 1867, sought
to provide a federal forum for state prisoners having
constitutional defenses by extending the habeas corpus powers of
the federal courts to their constitutional maximum. Obedient to
this purpose, we have consistently held that federal court
jurisdiction is conferred by the allegation of an unconstitutional
restraint, and is not defeated by anything that may occur in the
state court proceedings. State procedural rules plainly must yield
to this overriding federal policy."
372 U.S. at
372 U. S.
426-427.
[
Footnote 17]
"A man under conviction for crime has an obvious inducement to
do his very best to keep his state remedies open, and not stake his
all on the outcome of a federal habeas proceeding which, in many
respects, may be less advantageous to him than a state court
proceeding.
See Rogers v. Richmond, 365 U. S.
534,
365 U. S. 547-548. And if,
because of inadvertence or neglect, he runs afoul of a state
procedural requirement, and thereby forfeits his state remedies,
appellate and collateral, as well as direct review thereof in this
Court, those consequences should be sufficient to vindicate the
State's valid interest in orderly procedure. Whatever residuum of
state interest there may be under such circumstances is manifestly
insufficient in the face of the federal policy, drawn from the
ancient principles of the writ of habeas corpus, embodied both in
the Federal Constitution and in the habeas corpus provisions of the
Judicial Code, and consistently upheld by this Court, of affording
an effective remedy for restraints contrary to the
Constitution."
Id. at
372 U. S.
433-434.
[
Footnote 18]
"Discretion is implicit in the statutory command that the judge,
after granting the writ and holding a hearing of appropriate scope,
'dispose of the matter as law and justice require,' 28 U.S.C. §
2243; and discretion was the flexible concept employed by the
federal courts in developing the exhaustion rule. Furthermore,
habeas corpus has traditionally been regarded as governed by
equitable principles.
United States ex rel. Smith v.
Baldi, 344 U. S. 561,
344 U. S.
573 (dissenting opinion). Among them is the principle
that a suitor's conduct in relation to the matter at hand may
disentitle him to the relief he seeks. Narrowly circumscribed, in
conformity to the historical role of the writ of habeas corpus as
an effective and imperative remedy for detentions contrary to
fundamental law, the principle is unexceptionable."
Id. at
372 U. S.
438.
[
Footnote 19]
"If a habeas applicant, after consultation with competent
counsel or otherwise, understandingly and knowingly forewent the
privilege of seeking to vindicate his federal claims in the state
courts, whether for strategic, tactical, or any other reasons that
can fairly be described as the deliberate bypassing of state
procedures, then it is open to the federal court on habeas to deny
him all relief if the state courts refused to entertain his federal
claims on the merits -- though of course only after the federal
court has satisfied itself, by holding a hearing or by some other
means, of the facts bearing upon the applicant's default.
Cf.
Price v. Johnston, 334 U. S. 266,
334 U. S.
291. At all events, we wish it clearly understood that
the standard here put forth depends on the considered choice of the
petitioner.
Cf. Carnley v. Cochran, 369 U. S.
506,
369 U. S. 513-517;
Moore
v. Michigan, 355 U. S. 155,
355 U. S.
162-165. A choice made by counsel not participated in by
the petitioner does not automatically bar relief"
Id. at
372 U. S. 439
(footnote omitted).
[
Footnote 20]
"It is the sweeping language of
Fay v. Noia, going far
beyond the facts of the case eliciting it, which we today
reject."
433 U.S. at
433 U. S.
87-88.
"We have no occasion today to consider the
Fay rule as
applied to the facts there confronting the Court. . . ."
"The Court in
Fay stated its
knowing-and-deliberate-waiver rule in language which applied not
only to the waiver of the right to appeal, but to failures to raise
individual substantive objections in the state trial."
Id. at
433 U. S. 88, n.
12.
[
Footnote 21]
"Our decisions have uniformly acknowledged that federal courts
are empowered under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 to look beyond a state
procedural forfeiture and entertain a state prisoner's contention
that his constitutional rights have been violated.
See, e.g.,
Francis v. Henderson, 425 U. S. 536,
425 U. S.
538 (1976);
Fay v. Noia, 372 U. S.
391,
372 U. S. 398-399 (1963).
See generally W. Duker, A Constitutional History of Habeas
Corpus 181-211 (1980). The more difficult question, and the one
that lies at the heart of this case is: what standards should
govern the exercise of the habeas court's equitable discretion in
the use of this power?"
468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 9.
JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom JUSTICE MARSHALL joins, dissenting.
*
I
A
Like the Great Writ from which it draws its essence,
see
Engle v. Isaac, 456 U. S. 107,
456 U. S. 126
(1982), the root principle underlying 28 U.S.C. § 2254 is that
government in a civilized society must always be accountable for an
individual's imprisonment; if the imprisonment does not conform to
the fundamental requirements of law, the individual is entitled to
his immediate release. Of course, the habeas corpus relief
available under § 2254 differs in many respects from its common law
counterpart. Most significantly, the scope of the writ has been
adjusted to meet changed conceptions of the kind of criminal
proceedings so fundamentally defective as to make imprisonment
under them unacceptable.
See, e.g. Moore v. Dempsey,
261 U. S. 86
(1923);
Johnson
v.
Page 477 U. S. 517
Zerbst, 304 U.
S. 458 (1938);
Waley v. Johnston, 316 U.
S. 101 (1942);
Brown v. Allen, 344 U.
S. 443 (1953);
Fay v. Noia, 372 U.
S. 391 (1963). At the same time, statutory habeas relief
has become more difficult to obtain as a result of certain
procedural limitations created to reflect the unique character of
our federal system.
See, e.g., 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)
(exhaustion of state remedies).
The "cause and prejudice" rule of
Wainwright v. Sykes,
433 U. S. 72
(1977), is one such procedural limitation. A judicially created
restriction that is not required -- or even suggested -- by the
habeas statute itself, the "cause and prejudice" rule is sometimes
thought to represent an application of the familiar principle that
this Court will decline to review state court judgments which rest
on independent and adequate state grounds, even where those
judgments also decide federal questions. To be sure, the fact that
a state court judgment rests on a purely procedural ground may
preclude direct Supreme Court review of that judgment where, as
applied, the state procedural rule furthers a legitimate interest.
See Henry v. Mississippi, 379 U.
S. 443,
379 U. S.
447-449 (1965). However, in
Fay v. Noia, supra,
the doctrine that procedural defaults may constitute an independent
and adequate state law ground was held not to limit the
jurisdiction of the federal courts under the habeas corpus statute.
Id. at
372 U. S.
426-435. That conclusion has subsequently been
reaffirmed on several occasions.
See Francis v. Henderson,
425 U. S. 536,
425 U. S. 538
(1976);
Wainwright v. Sykes, supra, at
433 U. S. 83;
Reed v. Ross, 468 U. S. 1,
468 U. S. 9
(1984).
Despite the existence of federal
power to entertain a
habeas petition in the face of a procedural default, the Court in
Fay v. Noia acknowledged "a limited discretion" in the
federal court to refuse to exercise its jurisdiction on behalf
of
"an applicant who has deliberately bypassed the orderly
procedure of the state courts and in doing so has forfeited his
state court remedies."
372 U.S. at
372 U. S. 438.
This exception was recognized "[a]s a matter of comity,"
Wainwright v. Sykes,
Page 477 U. S.
518
supra, at
433 U. S. 83, in
order to accord state courts and state procedures the respect due
them in a federal system.
See Reed v. Ross, supra, at
468 U. S. 10-11;
Engle v. Isaac, supra, at
456 U. S.
126-129;
Francis v. Henderson, supra, at
425 U. S. 539.
Thus, the withholding of federal habeas jurisdiction for certain
procedurally defaulted claims is a form of abstention.
Cf.,
e.g., Younger v. Harris, 401 U. S. 37
(1971);
Burford v. Sun Oil Co., 319 U.
S. 315 (1943). [
Footnote
2/1]
The general principles for deciding whether abstention is proper
are well established. "Abstention from the exercise of federal
jurisdiction is the exception, not the rule."
Colorado River
Water Conservation District v. United States, 424 U.
S. 800,
424 U. S. 813
(1976). As we have previously noted,
"'[t]he doctrine of abstention . . . is an extraordinary and
narrow exception to the duty of a District Court to adjudicate a
controversy properly before it.'"
Ibid. (quoting
Allegheny County v. Frank Mashuda
Co., 360 U. S. 185,
360 U. S. 188
(1959)). Where Congress has granted individuals the right to a
federal forum, we cannot deny that right simply because we disagree
with Congress' determination that federal review is desirable.
Rather, abstention must be justified by weighty concerns of comity
and judicial administration, and even then abstention should not be
ordered without a careful balancing of those concerns against
concerns favoring the exercise of federal jurisdiction.
Cf.
415 U. S.
Thompson, 415 U. S. 452,
Page 477 U. S. 519
415 U. S.
460-462 (1974);
Wooley v. Maynard, 430 U.
S. 705,
430 U. S.
709-712 (1977);
Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc.,
422 U. S. 922
(1975).
These principles apply as much to abstention from the exercise
of federal habeas corpus jurisdiction as to any other area of
federal jurisdiction. For while Congress did leave the federal
courts considerable latitude to shape the availability of the writ,
Congress did not issue this Court a mandate to sharpen its skills
at
ad hoc legislating. The same rules of construction that
guide interpretation of other statutes apply to the federal habeas
corpus statute. Accordingly, the decision whether to direct federal
courts to withhold habeas jurisdiction clearly conferred upon them
by Congress must be made with the understanding that such
abstention doctrines constitute "
extraordinary and narrow'"
exceptions to the "virtually unflagging obligation" of federal
courts to exercise their jurisdiction, Colorado River Water
Construction District v. United States, supra, at 424 U. S. 813,
424 U. S. 817
(quoting Allegheny County v. Frank Mashuda Co., supra, at
360 U. S.
188). Moreover, judicial renouncement of federal habeas
corpus jurisdiction can take place only after careful consideration
of the competing interests militating for and against the exercise
of federal jurisdiction, and the presumption is heavily in favor of
exercising federal jurisdiction. 424 U.S. at 424 U. S.
817.
B
The competing interests implicated by a prisoner's petition to a
federal court to review the merits of a procedurally defaulted
constitutional claim are easily identified. On the one hand, "there
is Congress' expressed interest in providing a federal forum for
the vindication of the constitutional rights of state prisoners."
Reed v. Ross, 468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 10. In
enacting § 2254,
"Congress sought to"
"interpose the federal courts between the States and the people,
as guardians of the people's federal rights -- to protect the
people from unconstitutional action."
Ibid. (quoting
Mitchum v. Foster, 407 U.
S. 225,
407 U. S. 242
(1972)). This interest is at its strongest
Page 477 U. S. 520
where the state court has declined to consider the merits of a
constitutional claim, for, without habeas review, no court will
ever consider whether the petitioner's constitutional rights were
violated.
These interests must be weighed against the State's interest in
maintaining the integrity of its rules and proceedings, an interest
that would be undermined if the federal courts were too free to
ignore procedural forfeitures in state court. 468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 10. The
criminal justice system in each State is structured both to
determine the guilt or innocence of defendants and to resolve all
questions incident to that determination, including the
constitutionality of the procedures leading to the verdict. Each
State's complement of procedural rules facilitates this process
by
"channeling, to the extent possible, the resolution of various
types of questions to the stage of the judicial process at which
they can be resolved most fairly and efficiently."
Ibid. Procedural default rules protect the integrity of
this process by imposing a forfeiture sanction for failure to
follow applicable state procedural rules, thereby deterring
litigants from deviating from the State's scheme. Generally, the
threat of losing the right to raise a claim in state proceedings
will be sufficient to ensure compliance with the State's procedural
rules: a defendant loses nothing by raising all of his claims at
trial, since the state court judgment will have no
res
judicata effect in later habeas proceedings,
Brown v.
Allen, 344 U. S. 443
(1953), while he retains the possibility of obtaining relief in the
state courts.
See Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S.
103-104, and n. 5 (BRENNAN, J., dissenting).
Nonetheless, to the extent that federal habeas review of a
procedurally defaulted claim is available, the broad deterrent
effect of these procedural default rules is somewhat diminished.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Page 477 U. S. 521
The Court's view of how properly to balance these competing
concerns has changed over time. In
Fay v. Noia, we
concluded that the State's interest "in an airtight system of
forfeitures" was generally insufficient to require federal courts
to refrain from exercising their habeas jurisdiction. 372 U.S. at
372 U. S. 432,
372 U. S.
438-440. We held that federal courts should refuse to
exercise their jurisdiction only
"[i]f a habeas applicant . . . understandingly and knowingly
forewent the privilege of seeking to vindicate his federal claims
in the state courts, whether for strategic, tactical, or any other
reasons that can fairly be described as the deliberate bypassing of
state procedures."
Id. at
372 U. S. 439.
This holding sensibly accommodated
Page 477 U. S. 522
the competing interests described above: on the one hand, the
State's interest in preventing litigants from ignoring its
procedural rules is at its strongest where the decision not to
raise a claim is made knowingly and deliberately; correspondingly,
the prisoner's entitlement to a federal forum is at its weakest,
since it may well be only the deliberate failure to submit the
claim to the state courts that has necessitated federal review.
Under these circumstances, the affront to comity principles is at
its greatest: by its indifference in entertaining the petition to
the prisoner's trial strategy, the federal court, in effect,
ratifies the deliberate circumvention of state procedural rules. If
refusal to exercise federal habeas power to upset a state court
conviction is ever appropriate, it is under circumstances such as
these.
The Court struck a somewhat different balance 14 years later
when it revisited the question of withholding federal habeas
jurisdiction of procedurally defaulted claims in
Wainwright v.
Sykes. Police officers testified at Sykes' trial about
inculpatory statements he had made in their presence. No objection
was made at the time this testimony was offered, which meant, under
a state procedural rule, that any objections were forfeited.
Subsequently, Sykes filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in
the federal court, asserting that his statements were inadmissible
because he had not understood his
Miranda warnings. The
District Court granted the writ, but this Court reversed, holding
that the District Court should never have entertained Sykes' habeas
petition at all. Rejecting "the sweeping language of
Fay v.
Noia," the Court concluded that
Fay's deliberate
bypass test paid insufficient respect to the State's interests --
viewed through the prism of federalism and comity concerns -- in
seeing its procedural default rules enforced. 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 87-88.
The Court held, instead, that federal courts should decline to
exercise their habeas jurisdiction absent a stronger showing by the
prisoner that federal review is appropriate. Specifically, the
Court held that federal habeas review of a procedurally defaulted
claim should ordinarily be withheld unless the petitioner
Page 477 U. S. 523
shows "cause" for the procedural default and "prejudice" to his
case from the underlying error.
Id. at
433 U. S.
87.
The Court left open "for resolution in future decisions the
precise definition of the
cause'-and-`prejudice' standard,"
ibid., noting only that "it is narrower than the standard
set forth," ibid., in Fay v. Noia, and suggesting
that, as such, it would provide a better balance between the
interests of a petitioner and those of the State, id. at
433 U. S. 88-91.
I thought then that Wainwright v. Sykes was wrongly
decided, and I continue to believe so for the reasons I stated
there and in subsequent cases. See Wainwright v. Sykes,
supra, at 433 U. S. 99-118
(BRENNAN, J., dissenting); Engle v. Isaac, 456 U.S. at
456 U. S.
137-151 (BRENNAN, J., dissenting); United States v.
Frady, 456 U. S. 152,
456 U. S.
178-187 (1982) (BRENNAN, J., dissenting). But at least
the Court in Wainwright v. Sykes was prudent enough to
leave the task of defining "cause" and "prejudice" to subsequent
cases. For, to the extent that the availability of federal habeas
review of procedurally defaulted claims turns on the
cause-and-prejudice test, [Footnote
2/3] then it is in the context of giving that test meaning that
the Court must undertake the careful evaluation of the interests of
the State and defendant that is required to determine whether
federal courts may properly decline to exercise jurisdiction
conferred upon them by Congress.
II
A
The particular question we must decide in this case is whether
counsel's inadvertent failure to raise a substantive claim of error
can constitute "cause" for the procedural default.
Page 477 U. S. 524
Wainwright v. Sykes held that defense counsel's
tactical decision to bypass a state procedure does not constitute
cause. 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 91, n.
14;
see also ante at
477 U. S. 485;
Reed v. Ross, 468 U.S. at
468 U. S. 13.
That result may arguably be defended on grounds similar to those
which justified the result in
Fay v. Noia, i.e., that the
deterrent interests underlying the State's procedural default rule
are at their apogee where counsel's decision to bypass a state
procedure is deliberate. However, to say that the petitioner should
be bound to his lawyer's tactical decisions is one thing; to say
that he must also bear the burden of his lawyer's inadvertent
mistakes is quite another. Where counsel is unaware of a claim or
of the duty to raise it at a particular time, the procedural
default rule cannot operate as a specific deterrent to
noncompliance with the State's procedural rules. Consequently, the
State's interest in ensuring that the federal court help prevent
circumvention of the State's procedural rules by imposing the same
forfeiture sanction is much less compelling. To be sure, applying
procedural default rules even to inadvertent defaults furthers the
State's deterrent interests in a general sense by encouraging
lawyers to be more conscientious on the whole. However, as the
Court has pointed out in another context, such general deterrent
interests are weak where the failure to follow a rule is
accidental, rather than intentional.
See United States v.
Leon, 468 U. S. 897,
468 U. S.
908-917 (1984).
I believe that this incremental state interest simply is not
sufficient to overcome the heavy presumption against a federal
court's refusing to exercise jurisdiction clearly granted by
Congress. This is especially so where the petitioner has satisfied
the prejudice prong of the
Wainwright v. Sykes test. That
is, where a petitioner's constitutional rights have been violated
and that violation may have affected the verdict, a federal court
should not decline to entertain a habeas petition solely out of
deference to the State's weak interest in punishing lawyers'
inadvertent failures to comply with state
Page 477 U. S. 525
procedures. I would therefore hold that "cause" is established
where a procedural default resulted from counsel's inadvertence,
and I respectfully dissent from the Court's decisions in both
Murray v. Carrier, No. 84-1554, and
Smith v.
Murray, No. 85-5487. [
Footnote
2/4]
B
Even if I did not believe that this difference in the State's
interests was sufficient to require holding that counsel's
inadvertence constitutes cause, there is an additional difference
in the
defendant's interests that compels this conclusion
in
Smith v. Murray: the fact that it is a capital case. To
the extent that, as I have argued above, the definition of cause
requires consideration of the interests of the defendant, as well
as of the State, it strikes me as cruelly unfair to bind a
defendant to his lawyer's inadvertent failure to prevent
prejudicial constitutional error -- thus barring access to
federal
Page 477 U. S. 526
review -- where the consequence to the defendant is death. With
the understanding that "execution is the most irremediable and
unfathomable of penalties; that death is different,"
Ford v.
Wainwright, ante at
477 U. S. 411;
see also Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.
S. 280,
428 U. S. 305
(1976) (opinion of Stewart, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ.), this Court
has been particularly scrupulous in demanding that the proceedings
which condemn an individual to death not be marred by
constitutional error. Against this background of special concern,
"comity" and "federalism" concerns simply do not require such an
exercise of this Court's discretion in capital cases.
* [This opinion applies also to No. 85-5487,
Smith v.
Murray, Director, Virginia Department of Corrections, post p.
477 U. S.
527.]
[
Footnote 2/1]
There is one important difference between abstention in the
habeas context and in other contexts. In our other abstention
cases, federal jurisdiction has been withheld partly because of
ongoing proceedings or the possibility of future proceedings in the
state courts; in the habeas context, the state proceedings have
already taken place, and the petitioner's federal claim has not
been considered on the merits. If anything, however, this
difference makes the practice of abstaining more suspect in the
habeas context, and suggests that the federal courts should adhere
even more closely to the principle -- discussed in text -- that
abstention is a narrow exception to the general rule requiring
federal courts to exercise power conferred upon them by
Congress.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Court has often suggested, as it does again today, that the
"reduction in the finality of litigation" caused by habeas review
justifies a broad construction of the cause-and-prejudice test.
Ante at
477 U. S.
486-487 (citing
Engle v. Isaac, 456 U.
S. 107,
456 U. S. 128
(1982)). In fact, "finality" concerns have no bearing on the
question whether a federal court should refuse to exercise its
habeas jurisdiction because of a procedural default. From the
standpoint of the State's finality interests, there is no
difference whatever between making habeas review available after
the state court has denied a claim on the merits, and making such
review available after the state court has denied the claim on
procedural default grounds. In both situations, the State has
determined that the litigation is at an end, and the federal court
has reopened the case to consider releasing the petitioner from
custody. No one questions the availability of habeas relief where
the state court has denied the claim on the merits. Accordingly,
treating likes alike, such relief should also be available where
the claim is denied because of a procedural default,
unless the
State's interest in enforcing its default rules requires a
different result. General "finality" concerns simply are not
relevant.
The same is true of the Court's other habeas corpus bogeymen,
such as the tendency of habeas review to detract from the
importance of the trial as the "main event,"
Wainwright v.
Sykes, 433 U. S. 72,
433 U. S. 90
(1977), and to frustrate the State's "good faith attempts to honor
constitutional rights,"
Engle v. Isaac, supra, at
456 U. S. 128.
These "costs" are present whenever a claim has been denied by the
state court on the merits in precisely the same way, and to
precisely the same extent, as where that claim is denied on
procedural default grounds. Indeed, if anything, these "costs" are
present to a greater extent where a federal court reviews a
constitutional claim that the state court has considered and
rejected. Therefore, if federal jurisdiction is to be renounced
where there has been a procedural default, it must be because of
some particular need to enforce the State's procedural default
rules.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Although
Wainwright v. Sykes held only that the
cause-and-prejudice test should be applied to violations of
contemporaneous-objection rules, subsequent cases have extended the
cause-and-prejudice test well beyond that narrow holding.
See
Engle v. Isaac, 456 U. S. 107
(1982);
United States v. Frady, 456 U.
S. 152 (1982);
Reed v. Ross, 468 U. S.
1 (1984). It is still an open question "whether
counsel's decision not to take an appeal at all" -- the question
presented on the facts of
Fay v. Noia -- is governed by
the deliberate bypass rule or the cause-and-prejudice test.
Ante at
477 U. S.
492.
[
Footnote 2/4]
I do not mean to suggest by this that I accept the Court's
decision in
Wainwright v. Sykes ,or that I think that a
habeas petitioner should ever have to show "cause" and "prejudice"
to gain access to the federal courts under § 2254. As noted above,
I continue to believe that
Wainwright v. Sykes represented
an illegitimate exercise of this Court's very limited discretion to
order federal courts to decline to entertain habeas petitions. My
point is simply that, even accepting the validity of
Wainwright's "cause and prejudice" test, the Court must
still carefully balance the relevant interests, and, when this
balancing is done properly, it is apparent that counsel's
inadvertence should constitute "cause." Accordingly, I would affirm
the decision of the Court of Appeals in
Murray v.
Carrier.
While reversing the holding of the Court of Appeals that
counsel's inadvertence establishes "cause," the Court goes on to
declare that
"where a constitutional violation has probably resulted in the
conviction of one who is actually innocent, a federal court may
grant the writ even in the absence of a showing of cause for the
procedural default."
Ante at
477 U. S. 496.
Under such circumstances, the Court explains,
"the principles of comity and finality that inform the concepts
of cause and prejudice 'must yield to the imperative of correcting
a fundamentally unjust incarceration.'"
Ante at
477 U. S. 495
(quoting
Engle v. Isaac, supra, at
456 U. S.
135). Although I believe that principles of "comity" and
"finality" yield upon far less than a showing of actual innocence,
because this inquiry represents a narrowing of the "cause and
prejudice" test, I agree that it is proper.