On petition for writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court of
Georgia.
The petition for writ of certiorari is denied.
Justice MARSHALL, with whom Justice BRENNAN joins, dissenting
from denial of certiorari.
I dissent from the Court's denial of certiorari because it lets
stand a ruling of the Georgia Supreme Court which violates the
Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment as made applicable to
the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, Benton v. Maryland,
395 U.S.
784, 794, 2062 (1969). Because of the Georgia Supreme Court's
blatant misreading of a decision by the United States Court of
Appeals which granted habeas corpus relief to the petitioner, he
will again be subjected to the State's attempt to impose a death
sentence upon him even though a federal district court has made an
undisturbed ruling that a death sentence recommended by a jury was
invalid due to insufficiency of the evidence.
In February 1976, the petitioner, Charlie Young, Jr., was
convicted of murder, armed robbery and robbery by intimidation. At
the sentencing phase of the trial, the jury condemned the
petitioner to death after finding that the murder was accompanied
by two statutorily defined aggravating circumstances: the murder
was committed while the petitioner was engaged in the commission of
another capital felony, Ga.Code 17-10- 30(b)(2),
Page 464 U.S.
1057 , 1058
and the petitioner committed the murder for the purpose of
receiving money, id., (b)(4).1 The Supreme Court of Georgia
affirmed the conviction and the sentence. Young v. State, 237 Ga.
852,
230 S.E.2d 287
(1976). Subsequently, the Supreme Court of Georgia affirmed a lower
state court's denial of Young's application for habeas corpus
relief. Young v. Ricketts, 242 Ga. 559,
250 S.E.2d
404 (1978), cert. denied sub nom. Young v. Zant, 442 U.S. 934
(1979).
Young then initiated habeas corpus proceedings in United States
District Court for the Middle District of Georgia. The District
Court rejected Young's challenge to the validity of his conviction
but set aside his death sentence. Young v. Zant,
506 F.
Supp. 274 (M.D.Ga.1980). The District Court's order was based
upon two holdings. First, the court held that Young had been denied
effective assistance of counsel at the sentencing stage of his
trial, in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the
federal constitution. Id., at 278.2 Second, the District Court held
that
Page 464 U.S.
1057 , 1059
the evidence presented at trial "was not legally sufficient to
support the jury's finding beyond a reasonable doubt that the
murder was committed in the course of an armed robbery or for the
purpose of obtaining money." Id., at 280 (emphasis in
original).
The United States Court of Appeals reversed the District Court's
rejection of Young's challenge to his conviction. Young v. Zant,
677 F.2d
792 (CA11 1982). The Court of Appeals held that Young had also
been denied effective assistance of counsel at the guilt phase of
his trial. [
Footnote 3] Finding
the conviction invalid, the appellate court directed the District
Court to grant the petitioner habeas corpus relief. The Court of
Appeals noted the District Court's holding that Young had been
denied effective assistance of counsel at the sentencing phase of
the trial, id., at 795, and its holding that insufficiency of the
evidence nullified the jury's finding of aggravating circumstances.
Id., at 799 and n. 12. However, the Court of Appeals did not
discuss either of these holdings.
In the wake of the federal appellate decision, the State
reindicted Young for the same offenses. Moreover, the State again
sought the death penalty based upon the same two aggravating
circumstances previously charged, along with an additional
allegation that the murder was " outrageously or wantonly vile,
horrible, or inhuman in that it involved torture, depravity of
mind, or an aggravated battery to the victim." Ga. Code
17-10-30(b)(7).4
Young resisted the State's renewed attempt to impose the death
penalty upon him, claiming that such an attempt would expose him to
double jeopardy in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments. The trial court, however, denied his plea of dou-
Page 464 U.S.
1057 , 1060
ble jeopardy. Young then filed an interlocutory appeal to the
Supreme Court of Georgia. That Court, with one Justice dissenting,
affirmed the trial court. Young v. State, 251 Ga. 153,
303 S.E.2d 431
(1983). The Supreme Court of Georgia ruled that the Double Jeopardy
Clause is not implicated by this case because, in its view, the
federal Court of Appeals' decision reversing the District Court not
only vacated that part of the District Court's holding which
related to Young's conviction, but also that part of the holding
which related to the insufficiency of the evidence underlying the
jury finding of aggravating circumstances. In the words of the
Georgia Supreme Court:
"Rather than reversing in part and
affirming in part, the Court of Appeals chose to substitute its
opinion for that of the district court. . . . [T]he effect of this
reversal was to nullify the entire opinion of the district court
and to place the parties in the position quo ante, subject, of
course, to the holdings of the court of appeals." Young v. State,
supra, at 155, 303 S.E.2d at 433.
In other words, according to the Supreme Court of Georgia, the
Court of Appeals' decision wiped away the District Court's holding
that the finding of aggravating circumstances was invalid and thus
removed that holding as an impediment to a renewed attempt to
impose the death penalty.
This Court should review the decision of the Supreme Court of
Georgia because it clearly misread the ruling of the Court of
Appeals and thereby improperly avoided the petitioner's compelling
Double Jeopardy claim. Purporting to interpret the Court of
Appeals' ruling, the Supreme Court of Georgia concluded that the
effect of the reversal by the Court of Appeals of part of the
District Court's holding regarding federal habeas corpus relief was
to nullify the entire opinion of the District Court. In reality,
however, the Court of Appeals' decision related only to the
question whether petitioner received effective assistance of
counsel at the guilt-or-innocence phase of his trial. [
Footnote 5] Reversing the District
Page 464 U.S.
1057 , 1061
Court, the Court of Appeals held that Young had been denied
effective assistance at the guilt-or-innocence phase of the trial.
The Court of Appeals said nothing, however, to disturb the District
Court's holding that the jury's finding of aggravating
circumstances was not reasonably supported by the evidence
presented at trial. Indeed, the opinion notes the District Court's
conclusion with apparent approval because it cites counsel's
obliviousness to the clear insufficiency of the evidence as yet
another example of counsel's incompetence. 677 F.2d, at 799 and n.
12.
The Georgia Supreme Court has committed a glaring error by
ignoring the Court of Appeals' express limitation of its ruling to
the question whether petitioner had been denied effective
assistance of counsel at the guilt-or-innocence phase of his trial.
The opinion clearly states that "[ t]he district court's denial of
the writ of habeas corpus with respect to the guilt phase of
Charlie Young's trial is therefore REVERSED." ( emphasis added)
Young v. Zant, supra, 677 F.2d, at 800. In light of the Court of
Appeals' explicit statement that it reversed only with respect to
the guilt phase of petitioner's trial, it is inexplicable how the
Supreme Court of Georgia could conclude that the effect of the
Court of Appeals' holding was "to nullify the entire opinion of the
district court." 251 G. L.R., at 116.
Given appropriate recognition, the District Court's undisturbed
ruling that the jury's finding of aggravating circumstances was not
rationally supported by the evidence solidly supports the
petitioner's claim that the State should be prevented by the Double
Jeopardy Clause from seeking to reimpose a death sentence upon him.
This conclusion is dictated by this Court's decisions in Bullington
v. Missouri,
451 U.S.
430 (1981), and Burks v. United States,
437 U.S. 1 (1978).
In Bullington, this Court held that the Double Jeopardy Clause
was applicable to the sentencing proceeding in a capital case in
Missouri because, under the relevant state law, the sentencing
proceeding "was itself a trial on the issue of punishment." 451
U.S., at 438. Describing the trial-like features of the sentencing
procedure, the Court observed that
"The jury [in the sentencing phase of
the trial] was not given unbounded discretion to select an
appropriate punishment from a wide range authorized by statute.
Rather, a separate hearing was required and was held, and the jury
was
Page 464 U.S.
1057 , 1062
presented both a choice between two alternatives and standards
to guide the making of that choice. Nor did the prosecution simply
recommend what it felt to be an appropriate punishment. It
undertook the burden of establishing certain facts beyond a
reasonable doubt in its quest to obtain the harsher of the two
alternative verdicts." Ibid.
These features also characterize the sentencing proceeding under
which the petitioner was initially sentenced to death. In Georgia,
as in Missouri, an accused may be sentenced to death only after a
separate sentencing hearing, governed by the
beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard. Indeed, the Georgia Supreme
Court has itself noted that the Missouri death penalty statute "is
essentially the same as the Georgia statute." Godfrey v. State, 248
Ga. 616, 617, 284 S.E.2d 422, 424 (1981), cert. denied, 456 U.S.
919 (1982). Young, then, like the accused in Bullington, supra, was
sentenced in a proceeding that was itself a trial on the issue of
punishment and thus a proceeding subject to the Double Jeopardy
Clause.
In Burks, supra, the Court held that an accused may not be
subjected to a second trial when conviction in the initial trial is
reversed based on insufficiency of evidence. Because the sentencing
hearing under Georgia's capital punishment scheme is the equivalent
of a trial, at least for the purposes of determining the
applicability of the Double Jeopardy Clause, the District Court's
holding that the jury's finding of aggravating circumstances is not
rationally supported by the evidence should preclude the State from
again seeking the death penalty on the basis of those aggravating
circumstances.
Moreover, the State should be precluded from seeking the death
penalty in this case even though it has alleged a third aggravating
circumstance in addition to the two it alleged in the first trial.
Having been given one fair chance to prove beyond a reasonable
doubt the existence of aggravating circumstances sufficient to
justify the execution of Charles Young, Jr., the State should not
be allowed a second chance to have him condemned to death. We
stated in Burks, supra, that "[t]he Double Jeopardy Clause forbids
a second trial for the purpose of affording the prosecution another
opportunity to supply evidence which it failed to muster in the
first proceeding." 437 U.S., at 11. Tacking on an additional
allegation of an aggravating circumstance is merely a
transparent
Page 464 U.S.
1057 , 1063
attempt by the State to create a second opportunity to supply
evidence which it failed to muster in the first sentencing hearing.
Furthermore, in Bullington, supra, the Court specifically noted
that its decision to prevent a State from seeking the death penalty
in a retrial where, in the previous trial, a jury had declined to
impose a death sentence did "not at all depend upon the State's
announced intention to rely only upon the same aggravating
circumstances it sought to prove at [the] first trial or upon its
statement that it would introduce no new evidence in support of its
contention that [the accused] deserves the death penalty." 451
U.S., at 446.
This Court has indicated in a wide variety of contexts that in
matters involving capital punishment, a heightened degree of
judicial scrutiny is warranted given the special nature of the
interest at stake: the very life of the accused. Here, however, the
Court is willing to allow the State of Georgia to seek anew to
impose the death penalty upon Charlie Young, Jr. even though it is
almost certainly the case that absent the Georgia Supreme Court's
egregious misreading of the United States Court of Appeals'
decision in Young v. Zant, supra, the State would be barred from
again seeking the death penalty. I therefore dissent from the
Court's denial of a writ of certiorari.
Footnotes
Footnote 1 In addition to
the death sentence, the jury also sentenced Young to life
imprisonment for armed robbery and to 20 years' imprisonment for
robbery by intimidation.
Footnote 2 The District
Court found that the petitioner's attorney had no understanding
whatsoever of the Georgia capital trial and sentencing procedures.
In a capital case in Georgia, there is first a trial to determine
the guilt or innocence of the defendant. A separate sentencing
hearing follows a determination of guilt. In effect, capital
sentencing is a trial on the issue of punishment, embodying the
hallmarks of the trial on guilt or innocence. See infra, at
1061-1062.
Petitioner's attorney failed to present any evidence during the
sentencing hearing in mitigation of punishment, and refused to
allow the petitioner to take the stand in his own behalf, thereby
depriving the petitioner of the only sentencing phase witness for
the defense-the petitioner himself. Young v. Zant,
506 F.
Supp. 274, 278-280 (M.D.Ga.1980).
The District Court rejected the petitioner's claim that he had
been deprived of effective assistance of counsel at the
guilt-or-innocence phase of the trial, finding that the
petitioner's attorney afforded him " reasonably effective
assistance." Id., at 278. This finding, however, is inconsistent
with the court's observation that the petitioner's attorney " had
no apparent understanding whatsoever of the bifurcated nature of
the Georgia capital trial and sentencing procedures," id., at
278-279, and that the attorney had used the utterly ridiculous
strategy of admitting guilt but pleading for a life sentence at the
guilt phase of the trial. Id., at 279. Subsequently, the Court of
Appeals reversed this finding, holding instead that the petitioner
had also been denied effective assistance at the guilt phase of his
trial. Young v. Zant,
677 F.2d
792 ( CA5 1982).
Footnote 3 According to the
Court of Appeals, the attorney "did not accord Young even a modicum
of professional assistance at any time" during the trial. Young v.
Zant, 677 F.2d, at 794-795.
Footnote 4 The District
Court practically invited the State to renew its attempt to seek
the death penalty against Young by suggesting that "the
circumstances of this murder may justify a finding of some other
aggravating circumstance, such as aggravated battery." Young v.
Zant, supra, 506 F.Supp., at 281. Subsequent to the District
Court's suggestion but prior to the State's decision to seek the
death penalty at Young's retrial, this Court held, in Bullington v.
Missouri,
451 U.S.
430, 101 S. Ct. 1852 (1981), that the Double Jeopardy Clause
was applicable to capital sentencing hearings like the one to which
the petitioner was subjected at his first trial. See infra, at
1061-1062.
Footnote 5 The Court of
Appeals did not review the District Court's finding of
insufficiency of the evidence at the sentencing phase of the trial
because, having ruled that Young's conviction was illegal, there
was no need to review the propriety of the sentence. The Court of
Appeals thus left that aspect of the District Court's ruling
undisturbed.