Petitioner, a Maryland prison inmate, was tried by a state court
jury and convicted of the first-degree murder of his cellmate. In
the trial's sentencing phase, the same jury found that the State
had established the statutory aggravating factor that petitioner
committed the murder while he was confined in a correctional
institution, and marked "no" beside each mitigating circumstance
referenced on the verdict form, thereby requiring the imposition of
the death penalty under Maryland's capital sentencing scheme.
Petitioner challenged the sentence on the ground that the Maryland
capital punishment statute, as applied to him, was
unconstitutionally mandatory. He asserted that the statute, as
explained to the jury by the court's instructions and as
implemented by the verdict form, required imposition of the death
sentence if the jury unanimously found an aggravating circumstance,
but could not agree unanimously as to the existence of any
particular mitigating circumstance; thus, even if some or all of
the jurors were to believe that some mitigating circumstance or
circumstances were present, unless they could unanimously agree on
the existence of the same mitigating factor, the sentence
necessarily would be death. The Maryland Court of Appeals concluded
that the death sentence was constitutionally sound, interpreting
the statute's unanimity requirement as applying to jury
determinations of all critical issues, including the acceptance or
rejection of mitigating circumstances. The court observed that the
verdict form was to be regarded as requiring the jury to agree
unanimously in order to mark "no" with respect to the existence of
each mitigating circumstance, and that the trial judge's
instructions stressed the need for unanimity on all issues
presented. The court concluded that, when a jury could not agree
unanimously to accept or reject a particular mitigating
circumstance, the answer to that circumstance on the verdict form
should be left blank and the jury should proceed to the balancing
phase, where each juror should weigh the mitigating circumstances
he or she found to be established and balance them against the
aggravating circumstances unanimously found.
Held:
1. In a capital case, the sentencer may not be precluded from
considering, as a mitigating factor, any relevant circumstance,
including any aspect of the defendant's character or record and any
of the circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffers as
a basis for a sentence
Page 486 U. S. 368
less than death. Under Maryland's statute, if the sentencer
finds that any mitigating circumstances have been proved to exist,
it then proceeds to decide whether those circumstances outweigh the
aggravating circumstances. But if petitioner is correct, a jury
that does not unanimously agree on the existence of any single
mitigating circumstance may not give mitigating evidence any effect
whatsoever, and must impose the death sentence. If that
interpretation is correct, the case must be remanded for
resentencing. Pp.
486 U. S.
373-375.
2. There is a substantial probability that reasonable jurors,
upon receiving the judge's instructions in this case, and in
attempting to complete the verdict form as instructed, well may
have thought they were precluded from considering any mitigating
evidence unless all 12 jurors agreed on the existence of a
particular mitigating circumstance. Because the jury could have
understood that it should mark "no" on the verdict form when it
failed to agree unanimously that a mitigating circumstance existed,
some jurors might have been prevented from considering factors
which might call for a less severe penalty, and petitioner's death
sentence cannot stand. Pp.
486 U. S. 375-384.
(a) With respect to findings of guilt, a jury's verdict must be
set aside if it can be supported on one ground but not on another,
and the reviewing court is uncertain which of the two grounds was
relied upon by the jury in reaching the verdict. Review of death
sentences demands even greater certainty that the jury's
conclusions rested on proper grounds. Pp.
486 U. S.
375-377.
(b) While the Court of Appeals' construction of the jury
instructions and verdict form is plausible, it cannot be concluded,
with any degree of certainty, that the jury did not adopt
petitioner's interpretation instead. Nothing in the verdict form or
the judge's instructions even arguably is construable as suggesting
that the jury could leave an answer blank and proceed to the next
step in its deliberations. A jury following the instructions set
out in the verdict form could be precluded from considering
mitigating evidence if only a single juror adhered to the view that
such evidence should not be so considered. Pp.
486 U. S.
377-380.
(c) There is no extrinsic evidence of what the jury in this case
actually thought, but the portions of the record relating to the
verdict form and the judge's instructions indicate that there is at
least a substantial risk that the jury was misinformed. Moreover,
since the time when this case was decided below, the Court of
Appeals has promulgated a new verdict form expressly covering the
situation where there is a lack of unanimity as to the existence or
nonexistence of a particular mitigating factor, and providing for
the consideration of all mitigating evidence in determining the
sentence. This shows at least some concern on that court's part
that juries could misunderstand the previous instructions as
Page 486 U. S. 369
to unanimity and the consideration of mitigating evidence by
individual jurors. Pp.
486 U. S.
380-384.
310 Md. 33, 527 A.2d 3, vacated and remanded.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN, WHITE, MARSHALL, and STEVENS, JJ., joined. BRENNAN, J.,
post, p.
486 U. S. 389,
and WHITE, J.,
post, p.
486 U. S. 389,
filed concurring opinions. REHNQUIST, C.J., filed a dissenting
opinion, in which O'CONNOR, SCALIA, and KENNEDY, JJ., joined,
post, p.
486 U. S.
390.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner seeks review of a decision of Maryland's highest
court which construes that State's capital sentencing scheme in a
manner that preserves its constitutionality, but which may not have
been evident at all to the jury charged with the sentencing
function in this case. Because we have no reason to believe that
the jury also arrived at this "saving" construction, we must vacate
the sentence of death and remand the case for resentencing.
I
Petitioner Ralph Mills was tried by a state court jury and
convicted of the first-degree murder of his cellmate in the
Maryland Correctional Institution in Hagerstown. The jury found
that petitioner repeatedly had stabbed his victim with a "shank" or
homemade knife. In the sentencing phase of the trial, the same jury
found that the State had established
Page 486 U. S. 370
the one statutory aggravating circumstance it propounded,
namely, that petitioner "committed the murder at a time when he was
confined in a correctional institution." App. 99. Defense counsel
sought to persuade the jury of the presence of certain mitigating
circumstances, in particular, petitioner's relative youth, his
mental infirmity, his lack of future dangerousness, and the State's
failure to make any meaningful attempt to rehabilitate petitioner
while he was incarcerated.
Id. at 89-93. [
Footnote 1] On the verdict form provided by
the trial court pursuant to the then-existing, but since rescinded,
Maryland Rule of Procedure 772A, the jury marked "no" beside each
referenced mitigating circumstance, and returned a sentence of
death. [
Footnote 2]
Page 486 U. S. 371
Petitioner challenged his conviction and sentence on various
grounds, including an argument that the Maryland capital punishment
statute, Md.Ann.Code, Art. 27, § 413 (1987), as applied to
him, was unconstitutionally mandatory. [
Footnote 3] Petitioner construed the statute, as explained
to the jury by the court's instructions and as implemented by the
verdict form, to require the imposition of the death sentence if
the jury unanimously found an aggravating circumstance, but could
not agree unanimously as to the existence of any particular
mitigating circumstance. According to petitioner's view, even if
some or all of the jurors were to believe some mitigating
circumstance or circumstances were present, unless they could
unanimously agree on the existence of the same mitigating factor,
the sentence necessarily would be death.
The Maryland Court of Appeals concluded that the imposition of
petitioner's death sentence was constitutionally sound.
Page 486 U. S. 372
310 Md. 33, 527 A.2d 3 (1987). The court did not dispute that,
if the statute and form were read as petitioner suggested, jurors
would be improperly prevented from giving due consideration to
mitigating evidence. The court, however, interpreted the statute
differently, and held that the requirement of unanimity applied to
jury determinations of all critical issues, including the
acceptance or rejection of mitigating circumstances, observing that
the verdict form was to be regarded as requiring the jury to agree
unanimously in order to mark "no" with respect to the existence of
each mitigating circumstance, and that the trial judge's
instructions stressed the need for unanimity on all issues
presented. In the absence of unanimity on the ultimate question of
what sentence should be imposed, the statute required the
imposition of life imprisonment.
See § 413(k)(2).
[
Footnote 4] Thus, in the
court's view,
"[a]s long as one juror believes that there exists a mitigating
factor, and that this factor is not outweighed by the aggravating
circumstances, and if such juror continues to adhere to his or her
position, the sentence will not be death under the statutory
scheme."
310 Md. at 54, 527 A.2d at 13.
The Court of Appeals recognized, however, that the statute did
not fully provide what was to transpire when unanimity was lacking
at various stages of the sentencing deliberation. Concluding that
the state legislature did not intend that the jury should deadlock
and impose a life sentence
Page 486 U. S. 373
whenever it could not agree unanimously to accept or reject a
particular mitigating circumstance, and, pursuant to its statutory
authority to fill gaps in the sentencing process,
see
§ 413(1), the Court of Appeals instructed that the jury should
proceed to the balancing stage, leaving its answer to that
circumstance blank. The court directed that each juror weigh the
mitigating circumstances he or she found to be established and
balance them against the aggravating circumstances unanimously
found by the jury. 310 Md. at 66-68, 527 A.2d at 19-20.
The dissenting judge sharply disagreed with the majority's view
that the state legislature intended to make the rejection of a
mitigating circumstance the kind of ultimate issue that requires
unanimity. He observed that the law generally requires unanimity
only for verdicts, not for an alternative "predicate or historic
fact" in support of the verdict.
Id. at 95, 527 A.2d at
33. The dissent also concluded that it was probable, or at least
reasonably possible, that the jury understood that a "no" answer on
the verdict form represented a failure to find unanimously the
existence of the circumstance, rather than a unanimous
determination that the circumstance did not exist.
Id. at
92-95, 527 A.2d at 32-33.
Because of the importance of the issue in Maryland's capital
punishment scheme, we granted certiorari. 484 U.S. 975 (1987).
II
Petitioner's argument is straightforward, and well illustrated
by a hypothetical situation he contends is possible under the
Maryland capital sentencing scheme: [
Footnote 5]
"If eleven jurors agree that there are six mitigating
circumstances, the result is that no mitigating circumstance
Page 486 U. S. 374
is found. Consequently, there is nothing to weigh against any
aggravating circumstance found, and the judgment is death, even
though eleven jurors think the death penalty wholly
inappropriate."
Brief for Petitioner 11. The dissent below postulated a
situation just as intuitively disturbing: all 12 jurors might agree
that some mitigating circumstances were present, and even that
those mitigating circumstances were significant enough to outweigh
any aggravating circumstance found to exist. But unless all 12
could agree that the same mitigating circumstance was present, they
would never be permitted to engage in the weighing process or any
deliberation on the appropriateness of the death penalty. 310 Md.
at 79-81, 527 A.2d at 25-26.
Although jury discretion must be guided appropriately by
objective standards,
see Godfrey v. Georgia, 446 U.
S. 420, 428 (1980) (plurality opinion), it would
certainly be the height of arbitrariness to allow or require the
imposition of the death penalty under the circumstances so
postulated by petitioner or the dissent. [
Footnote 6] It is beyond dispute that, in a capital
case
"'the sentencer [may] not be precluded from considering,
as
a mitigating factor, any aspect of a defendant's character or
record and any of the circumstances of the offense that the
defendant proffers as a basis for a sentence less than death.'"
Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 U. S. 104,
455 U. S. 110
(1982), quoting
Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.
S. 586,
438 U. S. 604
(1978) (plurality opinion) (emphasis in original).
See Skipper
v. South Carolina, 476 U. S. 1,
476 U. S. 4
(1986). The corollary that "the sentencer may not refuse to
consider
or be precluded from considering
Page 486 U. S. 375
any relevant mitigating evidence'" is equally "well
established."
Ibid. (emphasis added), quoting
Eddings, 455
U.S. at
455 U. S. 114.
[
Footnote 7]
Under Maryland's sentencing scheme, if the sentencer finds that
any mitigating circumstance or circumstances have been proved to
exist, it then proceeds to decide whether those mitigating
circumstances outweigh the aggravating circumstances, and sentences
the defendant accordingly. § 413(h). But if petitioner is
correct, a jury that does not unanimously agree on the existence of
any mitigating circumstance may not give mitigating evidence any
effect whatsoever, and must impose the sentence of death.
See 310 Md. at 67, 527 A.2d at 19. Under our decisions, it
is not relevant whether the barrier to the sentencer's
consideration of all mitigating evidence is interposed by statute,
Lockett v. Ohio, supra; Hitchcock v. Dugger, 481 U.
S. 393 (1987); by the sentencing court,
Eddings v.
Oklahoma, supra; or by an evidentiary ruling,
Skipper v.
South Carolina, supra. The same must be true with respect to a
single juror's holdout vote against finding the presence of a
mitigating circumstance. Whatever the cause, if petitioner's
interpretation of the sentencing process is correct, the conclusion
would necessarily be the same:
"Because the [sentencer's] failure to consider all of the
mitigating evidence risks erroneous imposition of the death
sentence, in plain violation of
Lockett, it is our duty to
remand this case for resentencing."
Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 U.S. at
455 U. S. 117,
n. (O'CONNOR, J., concurring).
III
A
The critical question, then, is whether petitioner's
interpretation of the sentencing process is one a reasonable
jury
Page 486 U. S. 376
could have drawn from the instructions given by the trial judge
and from the verdict form employed in this case.
See Francis v.
Franklin, 471 U. S. 307,
471 U. S.
315-316 (1985) ("The question . . . is not what the
State Supreme Court declares the meaning of the charge to be, but
rather what a reasonable juror could have understood the charge as
meaning"), citing
Sandstrom v. Montana, 442 U.
S. 510,
442 U. S.
516-517 (1979).
Accord, California v. Brown,
479 U. S. 538
(1987). If the jury understood the verdict form as the Court of
Appeals asserted it should have, then every time it marked "no"
beside a mitigating circumstance, it indicated its unanimous
conclusion that petitioner had not proved the relevant facts by a
preponderance of the evidence, and thus the court properly upheld
the judgment. [
Footnote 8] On
the other hand, if the jury understood that it should mark "no"
when it failed to agree unanimously that a mitigating circumstance
existed, then some jurors were prevented from considering "factors
which may call for a less severe penalty,"
Lockett v.
Ohio, 438 U.S. at
438 U. S. 605,
and petitioner's sentence cannot stand.
With respect to findings of guilt on criminal charges, the Court
consistently has followed the rule that the jury's verdict must be
set aside if it could be supported on one ground but not on
another, and the reviewing court was uncertain which of the two
grounds was relied upon by the jury in reaching the verdict.
See, e.g., Yates v. United States, 354 U.
S. 298,
354 U. S. 312
(1957);
Stromberg v. California, 283 U.
S. 359,
283 U. S.
367-368 (1931). In reviewing death sentences, the Court
has demanded even greater certainty that the jury's conclusions
rested on proper grounds.
See, e.g., Lockett v. Ohio, 438
U.S. at
438 U. S. 605
("[T]he risk that the death penalty
Page 486 U. S. 377
will be imposed in spite of factors which may call for a less
severe penalty . . . is unacceptable and incompatible with the
commands of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments");
Andres v.
United States, 333 U. S. 740,
333 U. S. 752
(1948) ("That reasonable men might derive a meaning from the
instructions given other than the proper meaning of § 567 is
probable. In death cases, doubts such as those presented here
should be resolved in favor of the accused"); [
Footnote 9]
accord, Zant v. Stephens,
462 U. S. 862,
462 U. S.
884-885 (1983). Unless we can rule out the substantial
possibility that the jury may have rested its verdict on the
"improper" ground, we must remand for resentencing. [
Footnote 10]
B
While conceding that the Court of Appeals' construction of the
jury instructions and
Page 486 U. S. 378
verdict form is plausible, we cannot conclude, with any degree
of certainty, that the jury did not adopt petitioner's
interpretation of the jury instructions and verdict form. At the
conclusion of the sentencing phase, the judge distributed copies of
the form to the jurors. (This form is reproduced in its entirety,
with the answers given, in the
486
U.S. 367app|>Appendix to this opinion.) After reading aloud
the instruction part of the form's Section I and stressing the
unanimity requirement, the judge explained:
"[Y]ou must consider whether the aggravating circumstance number
two has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. If you unanimously
conclude that it has been so proven, you should answer that
question yes.
If you are not so satisfied, then of course you
must answer no."
App. 70 (emphasis added). We find it difficult to read into that
statement a requirement that the "no" answer, like the "yes"
answer, must be unanimous. Indeed, the verdict form establishes at
least a rough equivalence between the lack of unanimity to write
"yes," and writing "no": the jury learns from the form that its
failure to write "yes" beside any aggravating circumstance leads to
the imposition of a life sentence, the same result that obtains if
the jury answers "no" for every aggravating circumstance.
The judge then moved on to Section II of the form, which
addresses the jury's determination of which, if any, mitigating
circumstances exist. The language at the beginning of that section
is identical to that at the beginning of Section I, except that the
standard of proof is by a preponderance of the evidence, rather
than beyond a reasonable doubt,
see 486
U.S. 367app|>Appendix to opinion,
post at
486 U. S. 387,
and we presume that, unless instructed to the contrary, the jury
would read similar language throughout the form consistently. The
jury was instructed to mark each answer "yes" or "no." Although it
was clear that the jury could not mark "yes" in any box without
unanimity, nothing the judge said dispelled the probable inference
that "no" is the opposite of "yes," and therefore the appropriate
answer to reflect an inability to answer a question in the
affirmative. [
Footnote 11]
Nothing in the verdict form or the
Page 486 U. S. 379
judge's instructions even arguably is construable as suggesting
the jury could leave an answer blank and proceed to the next stage
in its deliberations. [
Footnote
12]
The only place on the form where the jury had an opportunity to
write anything more than "yes" or "no" was with respect to
mitigating circumstance number eight,
see 486
U.S. 367app|>Appendix to opinion,
post at
486 U. S. 388,
which permits the jury to recognize as mitigating anything, in
addition to the enumerated mitigating factors, that petitioner
offered as a basis for a sentence less than death. The judge
explained to the jury that, if it found any such "other" mitigating
circumstances, it must list them in the space provided, and "[i]f
you find no other mitigating circumstance, then you make no entry
upon those lines under number eight." App. 73. No instruction was
given indicating what the jury should do if some, but not all, of
the jurors were willing to recognize something about petitioner,
his background, or the circumstances of the crime, as a mitigating
factor.
Ordinarily, a Maryland jury reaches the balancing stage of the
deliberation process any time it unanimously finds at least one
mitigating circumstance, or, under the interpretation adopted by
the Court of Appeals in this case, any time the jury does not
unanimously reject all mitigating circumstances. Had the jurors
that sentenced petitioner reached
Page 486 U. S. 380
Section III, [
Footnote
13] they would have found that, even if they had read the
verdict form as the Court of Appeals suggests they could have, and
marked "yes" or "no" only on the basis of unanimity as to either,
they were not free at this point to consider
all relevant
evidence in mitigation as they balanced aggravating and mitigating
circumstances. Section III instructed the jury to weigh only those
mitigating circumstances marked "yes" in Section II. Any mitigating
circumstance not so marked, even if not unanimously rejected, could
not be considered by any juror. A jury following the instructions
set out in the verdict form could be
"precluded from considering,
as a mitigating factor,
[an] aspect of a defendant's character or record [or a]
circumstanc[e] of the offense that the defendant proffer[ed] as a
basis for a sentence less than death,"
Skipper v. South Carolina, 476 U.S. at
476 U. S. 4, if
even a single juror adhered to the view that such a factor should
not be so considered. [
Footnote
14]
Page 486 U. S. 381
C
There is, of course, no extrinsic evidence of what the jury in
this case actually thought. We have before us only the verdict form
and the judge's instructions. Our reading of those parts of the
record leads us to conclude that there is at least a substantial
risk that the jury was misinformed. The dissenting judge below was
astounded by the majority's reading of the statute and verdict
form, which, he said, "appears out of the blue after nearly ten
years of extensive litigation involving this statute." 310 Md. at
94, 527 A.2d at 33. Looking to the only evidence of jury
interpretation available, the dissent noted that, on 25 sentencing
forms completed in capital cases in which the death penalty was
imposed, no answer as to the existence of mitigating circumstances
was ever left blank.
Id. at 94, n. 9, 527 A.2d at 33, n.
9.
One additional bit of evidence about the natural interpretation
of the form has become available since this case was decided below
on June 25, 1987. On an emergency basis, the Court of Appeals
promulgated a new Findings and Sentencing Determination form.
See Md. Rule Proc. 4-343(e) (amended July 27, 1987,
effective Aug. 17, 1987). The new form expressly incorporates the
unanimity requirement as to both accepting and rejecting
aggravating circumstances. More significantly, however, the section
concerning mitigating circumstances is completely rewritten and
changed. Now, under each statutory mitigating circumstance, the
jury is asked to choose from among three options:
"
(Mark only one)"
"___ (a) We unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence
that the above circumstance exists."
"___ (b) We unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence
that the above circumstance does not exist."
"___ (c) After a reasonable period of deliberation, one or more
of us, but fewer than all 12, find by a preponderance
Page 486 U. S. 382
of the evidence that the above circumstance exists."
Md.Ann.Code, Md. Rules, Vol. 1 (1988), pp. 494-497. As before,
the new verdict form also provides the jury the opportunity to
articulate "additional mitigating circumstances." The new form,
however, unlike the one used in petitioner's case, explicitly
directs the jury to articulate any such "additional" circumstances
that the jurors unanimously agree exist, and any found by "[o]ne or
more . . but fewer than all 12" of the jurors.
Id. at
497.
With respect to the consideration of mitigating evidence during
the weighing and balancing process, the new verdict form instructs
jurors as follows:
"(If the jury unanimously determines in Section III that no
mitigating circumstances exist, do not complete Section IV. Proceed
to Section V and enter 'Death.' If the jury
or any juror
determines that one or more mitigating circumstances exist,
complete Section IV.)"
Ibid. (emphasis added).
Section IV now reflects the requirement that jurors not be
prevented from considering all evidence in mitigation:
"Each
individual juror shall weigh the aggravating
circumstances found unanimously to exist against any mitigating
circumstances found unanimously to exist,
as well as against
any mitigating circumstances found by that individual juror to
exist."
Ibid. (emphasis added).
Although we are hesitant to infer too much about the prior
verdict form from the Court of Appeals' well meant efforts to
remove ambiguity from the State's capital sentencing scheme, we
cannot avoid noticing these significant changes effected in
instructions to the jury. We can and do infer from these changes at
least some concern on the part of that court that juries could
misunderstand the previous instructions as to unanimity and the
consideration of mitigating evidence by individual jurors. We also
note, for what it may be worth, that in two cases tried since a
Maryland jury has been
Page 486 U. S. 383
given the option of reporting nonunanimous votes, the jury has
done so. [
Footnote 15]
No one on this Court was a member of the jury that sentenced
Ralph Mills, or of any similarly instructed jury in Maryland. We
cannot say with any degree of confidence which interpretation
Mills' jury adopted. But common sense and what little extrinsic
evidence we possess suggest that juries do not leave blanks and do
not report themselves as deadlocked over mitigating circumstances
after reasonable deliberation,
see Tr. of Oral Arg. 42,
unless they are expressly instructed to do so.
The decision to exercise the power of the State to execute a
defendant is unlike any other decision citizens and public
officials are called upon to make. Evolving standards of societal
decency have imposed a correspondingly high requirement of
reliability on the determination that death is the appropriate
Page 486 U. S. 384
penalty in a particular case. The possibility that petitioner's
jury conducted its task improperly certainly is great enough to
require resentencing.
IV
We conclude that there is a substantial probability that
reasonable jurors, upon receiving the judge's instructions in this
case and in attempting to complete the verdict form as instructed,
well may have thought they were precluded from considering any
mitigating evidence unless all 12 jurors agreed on the existence of
a particular such circumstance. Under our cases, the sentencer must
be permitted to consider all mitigating evidence. The possibility
that a single juror could block such consideration, and
consequently require the jury to impose the death penalty, is one
we dare not risk.
We therefore vacate the judgment of the Court of Appeals insofar
as it sustained the imposition of the death penalty. [
Footnote 16] The case is remanded to
that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Among the mitigating circumstances recognized by statute in
Maryland, which the jury was instructed to consider, are:
"4. The murder was committed while the capacity of the defendant
to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his
conduct to the requirements of law was substantially impaired as a
result of mental incapacity, mental disorder, or emotional
disturbance."
"5. The youthful age of the defendant at the time of the
crime."
"
* * * *"
"7. It is unlikely that the defendant will engage in further
criminal activity that would constitute a continuing threat to
society."
"8. Any other facts which the jury or the court specifically
sets forth in writing that it finds as mitigating circumstances in
the case."
Md.Ann.Code, Art. 27, § 413(g) (1987).
The defense introduced evidence, including the testimony of
petitioner's mother, demonstrating that petitioner had only a
sixth-grade education, that he was 20 years old at the time of the
murder, and that he had been in trouble from a young age. Since
petitioner was 11 or 12 years old, his mother had been in contact
with state agencies concerning his behavior. Petitioner underwent
therapy as a child, was diagnosed as having "minimal brain damage,"
and was placed on medication. Petitioner early developed drug and
alcohol problems, and was assigned first to the German Children's
Home and then to the Maryland Training School for Boys. App. 45-53.
At the time of the murder of his cellmate, petitioner was serving
the second year of a 30-year sentence for an earlier murder in the
second degree.
[
Footnote 2]
The jury was instructed to report their conclusions on a
Findings and Sentence Determination form called for by Rule 772A.
Prior to petitioner's sentencing, Rule 772A was replaced by
Maryland Rule of Procedure 4-343, which stipulated the use of a
form similar to the one used in this case. The dissent below noted
that the form provided under Rule 4-343 should have been used at
petitioner's trial, but concluded that no prejudice resulted to
petitioner from the use of the similar, but incorrect, form. 310
Md. 33, 77, n. 2, 527 A.2d 3, 24, n. 2 (1987). Petitioner has not
raised here any objection about the use of the outdated form, as
opposed to the then-prescribed form. The form actually used at
petitioner's trial, with the answers given, is set out in its
entirety in the
486
U.S. 367app|>Appendix to this opinion.
[
Footnote 3]
The Court of Appeals of Maryland disposed of the claim on the
merits despite petitioner's failure,
see App. 74; Tr. of
Oral Arg. 12-13, to object to the verdict form or jury instructions
at the sentencing proceeding. Presumably, the Court of Appeals
found this appropriate either as review for plain error,
see
generally 3A C. Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure §
856 (2d ed.1982), or because it concluded that Maryland law did not
otherwise bar petitioner's claim. In any event, in view of the
Maryland court's review on the merits, our jurisdiction over the
federal constitutional question is established.
See, e.g., Orr
v. Orr, 440 U. S. 268,
440 U. S.
274-275 (1979);
Franks v. Delaware,
438 U. S. 154,
438 U. S.
161-162 (1978).
We note, in passing, that counsel for petitioner had filed a
pretrial motion in which he asserted generally:
"That Article 27, Section 413 and 414, and Maryland Rule 772
unconstitutionally restrict the discretion of the finder of fact in
determining whether the death penalty should be imposed."
Record 24.
[
Footnote 4]
At the time of petitioner's trial, § 413(k)(2)
provided:
"If the jury, within a reasonable time, is not able to agree as
to sentence, the court shall dismiss the jury and impose a sentence
of imprisonment for life."
See 310 Md. at 55, 527 A.2d at 13. By 1987 Md.Laws, ch.
237, effective July 1, 1987, § 413(k)(2) was amended to
read:
"If the jury, within a reasonable time, is not able to agree as
to whether a sentence of death shall be imposed, the court may not
impose a sentence of death."
We perceive nothing significant for petitioner's case in this
1987 amendment.
[
Footnote 5]
Section 413(b) affords the convicted capital defendant a choice
between sentencing by the judge or by the jury. In this case,
petitioner invoked his right to be sentenced by his jury. Our
discussion of Maryland's sentencing scheme is limited to that
context.
[
Footnote 6]
Indeed, the Court of Appeals contemplated only two alternative
lawful consequences of a lack of unanimity to accept or reject a
mitigating circumstance: the jury could deadlock, requiring the
imposition of a life sentence, or, as that court has now
prescribed, the jury could proceed to the balancing stage, where
each juror would consider all the evidence in mitigation to reach a
conclusion as to whether the death penalty was warranted.
[
Footnote 7]
No one has argued here, nor did the Maryland Court of Appeals
suggest, that mitigating evidence can be rendered legally
"irrelevant" by one holdout vote.
[
Footnote 8]
Under Maryland law, the jury was not free at this stage to
decide that the relevant facts, even if proved, did not have a
mitigating effect. That decision already has been made by the state
legislature.
See § 413(g);
see also Tr. of
Oral Arg. 38-40. The jury's discretion in attaching significance to
the presence of mitigating circumstances is properly exercised at
the subsequent balancing stage in the process.
See §
413(h).
[
Footnote 9]
In
Andres v. United States, 333 U.
S. 740 (1948), the Court construed a federal statute
that required imposition of the death penalty for first-degree
murder unless the guilty verdict was "qualified" by the addition of
the phrase "without capital punishment."
See id. at
333 U. S. 742,
and n. 1. The Court concluded that the statute required the jury to
be unanimous both as to guilt and as to whether the death penalty
should be imposed, rather than, as the Government contended,
requiring that the death penalty be imposed unless the jury
unanimously agreed to impose the qualification. The Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit had also rejected the Government's
contention, and arrived at a construction of the statute similar to
that of this Court, but found that the jury instructions had
conveyed the proper construction to the jury. This Court disagreed,
finding that, under the instructions the jury received, they might
"reasonably conclude that, if they cannot all agree to grant mercy,
the verdict of guilt must stand unqualified."
Id. at
333 U. S.
752.
[
Footnote 10]
We find puzzling the dissent's citation,
post at 394,
of
Jurek v. Texas, 428 U. S. 262,
428 U. S. 279
(1976) (WHITE, J., concurring in judgment), a case in which the
Court upheld the very different sentencing procedure followed in
Texas. While juries indeed may be capable of understanding the
issues posed in capital sentencing proceedings, they must first be
properly instructed.
[
Footnote 11]
As the dissent ably reports, the trial judge stressed "[o]ver
and over again,"
post at
486 U. S. 393,
that the jury's findings had to be unanimous. But not once in any
of those instructions did the trial court explain to the jury that,
if it could not reach unanimity to answer "yes," it could do
something other than answer "no." The dissent, like the trial
court, confuses repetition with clarity, pronouncing "over and over
again" that there was only one way the jury could have understood
its instructions.
See post at
486 U. S. 391,
486 U. S. 392,
486 U. S. 393,
and
486 U. S. 394.
Not even the Maryland Court of Appeals believed that.
See,
infra at
486 U. S.
381-383.
[
Footnote 12]
At the conclusion of Section II, once again, the instructions
were to the effect that the failure to answer "yes" to any question
obtained the same consequence as answering "no" to all
questions:
"[I]f one or more of the above in section two have been marked
yes, then you go on to section three. If all of the above in
section two are marked no, then you do not complete section
three."
App. 73.
[
Footnote 13]
The jury in this case apparently never reached the balancing
stage of the process. When the jury returned to the courtroom to
report its verdict, even the judge was confused by their failure to
complete Section III in accordance with the form's instructions.
See App. 96. The prosecutor suggested, during a colloquy
with the court, that the jurors were "hung up on that language."
Ibid.
[
Footnote 14]
For example, some jurors in this case might have found that
petitioner's age, 20, constituted a mitigating factor,
i.e., youthfulness, under § 413(g)(5). Indeed, in his
sentencing report, the trial judge noted: "There was evidence from
which the jury could have found the existence of Mitigating
Circumstance No. 5 (youthful age)." App. 108. Other jurors, on the
other hand, might have accepted the prosecutor's argument that
petitioner was "not youthful in terms of the criminal justice
system,"
id. at 79, because of his history of criminal
activity. Under such circumstances, the lack of unanimity would
have prevented the jury from marking that answer "yes." Regardless
of whether the answer was marked "no" or left blank, the
instructions in Section III would prevent those jurors who thought
petitioner's youthfulness was relevant to the ultimate sentencing
decision from giving that mitigating circumstance any weight.
[
Footnote 15]
Petitioner has lodged with this Court copies of the sentencing
forms used in those two cases. In
Wooten-Bey v. State, the
new sentencing form appears to have made a significant difference:
the jury found one aggravating circumstance, but failed to agree on
any mitigating circumstance. It did, however, report three
statutory mitigating circumstances as found by one or more but
fewer than all 12 jurors. The jury also articulated three
nonstatutory mitigating circumstances, as found by one or more, but
not all, jurors. The jury then reported that it did not unanimously
find that the aggravating circumstances marked "proven" outweighed
the mitigating circumstances, and unanimously fixed the sentence at
life imprisonment.
See Findings and Sentencing
Determination in No. C.T. 83-1497C (Cty.C.Prince George's Cty.,
1987).
In
Doering v. State, the jury used a verdict form
apparently containing aspects of both the old and new forms. The
jurors were instructed that, in the event one or more of them found
a mitigating circumstance not agreed to by all 12, they could leave
that answer blank. The jury exercised that option with respect to
one statutory mitigating circumstance. The jury also articulated an
additional nonstatutory mitigating circumstance found by one or
more, but not all 12 jurors. Upon balancing aggravating against
mitigating circumstances, the jury sentenced the defendant to
death.
See Findings and Sentencing Determination in No.
86-CR-6128 (Cty.C.Baltimore Cty., 1987).
[
Footnote 16]
Because our conclusion on this issue is sufficient to dispose of
the case, we refrain from any review of the Court of Appeals'
sua sponte declaration,
see 310 Md. at 72, n. 14,
527 A.2d at 22, n. 14, that no "victim impact statement" was
introduced in evidence, in contravention of our decision last Term
in
Booth v. Maryland, 482 U. S. 496
(1987).
|
486
U.S. 367app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE COURT
FINDINGS AND SENTENCE DETERMINATION FORM
EMPLOYED AT PETITIONER'S TRIAL
Section I
"Based upon the evidence, we unanimously find that each of the
following aggravating circumstances which is marked
Page 486 U. S. 385
'yes' has been proven BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT and each
aggravating circumstance which is marked 'no' has not been proven
BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT:"
"1. The victim was a law enforcement officer who was murdered
while in the performance of his duties."
X
___ ___
yes no
"2. The defendant committed the murder at a time when he was
confined in a correctional institution."
X
___ ___
yes no
"3. The defendant committed the murder in furtherance of an
escape from or an attempt to escape from or evade the lawful
custody, arrest or detention of or by an officer or guard of a
correctional institution or by a law enforcement"
X
___ ___
yes no
"4. The victim was a hostage taken or attempted to be taken in
the course of a kidnapping or abduction or an attempt to kidnap or
abduct."
X
___ ___
yes no
"5. The victim was a child abducted in violation of Code,
Article 27, § 2."
X
___ ___
yes no
Page 486 U. S. 386
"6. The defendant committed the murder pursuant to an agreement
to contract for remuneration or the promise of remuneration to
commit the murder."
X
___ ___
yes no
"7. The defendant engaged or employed another person to commit
the murder, and the murder was committed pursuant to an agreement
or contract for remuneration or the promise of remuneration."
X
___ ___
yes no
"8. At the time of the murder, the defendant was under the
sentence of death or imprisonment for life."
X
___ ___
yes no
"9. The defendant committed more than one offense of murder in
the first degree arising out of the same incident."
X
___ ___
yes no
"10. The Defendant committed the murder while committing or
attempting to commit robbery, arson or rape or sexual offense in
the first degree."
X
___ ___
yes no
"(If one or more of the above are marked 'yes,' complete Section
II. If all of the above are marked 'no,' do not complete Sections
II and III.) "
Page 486 U. S. 387
"
Section II"
"Based upon the evidence, we unanimously find that each of the
following mitigating circumstances which is marked 'yes' has been
proven to exist by A PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE and each
mitigating circumstance marked 'no' has not been proven by A
PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE:"
"1. The defendant previously (i) has not been found guilty of a
crime of violence; and (ii) has not entered a plea of guilty or
nolo contendere to a charge of a crime of violence; and (iii) has
not been granted probation on stay or entry of judgment pursuant to
a charge or a crime of violence. As used in this paragraph, 'crime
of violence' means abduction, arson, escape, kidnapping,
manslaughter, except involuntary manslaughter, mayhem, murder,
robbery, or rape or sexual offense in the first or second degree,
or an attempt to commit any of these offenses, or the use of a
handgun in the commission of a felony or another crime of
violence."
X
___ ___
yes no
"2. The victim was a participant in the defendant's conduct or
consented to the act which caused the victim's death."
X
___ ___
as:
"yes no"
"3. The defendant acted under substantial duress, domination or
provocation of another person, but not so substantial as to
constitute a complete defense to the prosecution."
X
___ ___
yes no
Page 486 U. S. 388
"4. The murder was committed while the capacity of the defendant
to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his
conduct to the requirements of law was substantially impaired as a
result of mental incapacity, mental disorder or emotional
disturbance."
X
___ ___
yes no
"5. The youthful age of the defendant at the time of the
crime."
X
___ ___
yes no
"6. The act of the defendant was not the sole proximate cause of
the victim's death."
X
___ ___
yes no
"7. It is unlikely that the defendant will engage in further
criminal activity that would constitute a continuing threat to"
X
___ ___
yes no
"8. Other mitigating circumstances exist, as set forth
below:"
None.
"(If one or more of the above in Section II have been marked
'yes,' complete Section III. If all of the above in Section II are
marked 'no,' you do not complete Section III.)"
"
Section III"
"Based on the evidence, we unanimously find that it has been
proven by A PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE that the mitigating
circumstances marked 'yes' in
Page 486 U. S. 389
Section II outweigh the aggravating circumstances marked 'yes'
in Section I."
___ ___
yes no
"
DETERMINATION OF SENTENCE"
"Enter the determination of sentence either 'Life Imprisonment'
or 'Death' according to the following instructions:"
"1. If all of the answers in Section I are marked 'no,' enter
'Life Imprisonment.'"
"2. If Section III was completed and was marked 'yes,' enter
'Life Imprisonment.'"
"3. If Section II was completed and all of the answers were
marked 'no' then enter 'Death.'"
"4. If Section III was completed and was marked 'no,' enter
'Death.'"
"We unanimously determine the sentence to be Death."
App. 99-103.
JUSTICE BRENNAN, concurring.
I join the Court's opinion, and agree fully with its analysis as
to why, under our current death penalty jurisprudence, the death
sentence in this case must be vacated. I write separately only
because the judgment, which is without prejudice to further
sentencing proceedings, does not expressly preclude the
reimposition of the death penalty. Adhering to my view that the
death penalty is in all circumstances cruel and unusual punishment
prohibited by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments,
Gregg v.
Georgia, 428 U. S. 153,
428 U. S. 227
(1976), I would direct that the resentencing proceedings be
circumscribed such that the State may not reimpose the death
sentence.
JUSTICE WHITE, concurring.
The issue in this case is how reasonable jurors would have
understood and applied their instructions. That is the issue
Page 486 U. S. 390
the Court's opinion addresses, and I am persuaded that the Court
reaches the correct solution. Hence, I join the Court's
opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST, with whom JUSTICE O'CONNOR, JUSTICE
SCALIA, and JUSTICE KENNEDY join, dissenting.
The Court here decides that the sentence imposed by a Maryland
jury is constitutionally infirm because the Court cannot be certain
that each juror understood the sentencing instructions and charges
to the jury. Last Term, in
California v. Brown,
479 U. S. 538
(1987), we reaffirmed our view that the relevant inquiry is not
whether an impermissible interpretation of instructions to the
jury, however improbable, is literally possible; it is instead
"what a reasonable juror could have understood the charge as
meaning."
Id. at 541. I think the instructions and charges
to the jury in this case pass this test, and I would affirm
petitioner's sentence, as well as his conviction.
I
Petitioner, already serving a 30-year sentence for a murder he
committed in 1982, stabbed his cellmate 6 times in the chest and 39
times in the back with a homemade knife. Petitioner had threatened
to kill his cellmate several weeks earlier if numerous demands were
not met by the prison warden, and on August 6, 1984, he made good
on his threat. Evidence at trial strongly suggested that this
brutal assault was unprovoked, and was initiated while the victim
was asleep.
After finding petitioner guilty of first-degree murder, the
Maryland jury hearing his case proceeded to the sentencing phase of
the trial. As part of the sentencing process, the jury was provided
with the standard sentencing form. Although the sentencing form is
reproduced in the
486
U.S. 367app|>Appendix to the majority's opinion, I believe
it is useful to review the instructions and the charges that
confronted the jurors.
Page 486 U. S. 391
Section I of the sentencing form requires the jurors unanimously
to determine whether or not several aggravating circumstances
existed; the jurors unanimously found that "[t]he defendant
committed the murder at a time when he was confined in a
correctional institution." App. 99-101. After reaching this
decision, the jury moved on to Section II of the form, which
began:
"Based upon the evidence we unanimously find that each of the
following mitigating circumstances which is marked 'yes' has been
proven to exist by A PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE, and each
mitigating circumstance marked 'no' has not been proven by A
PREPONDERANCE OF THE EVIDENCE."
486
U.S. 367app|>Appendix to opinion of Court,
ante at
387. These instructions were followed by seven possible mitigating
factors. After each one was the choice "___ yes [or] ___ no"; the
jurors checked "no" for each factor, and for the eighth and final
question whether "[o]ther mitigating circumstances exist, as set
forth below," the jury wrote "none." App. 101-103.
The jury's negative responses, when examined in the light of the
directions in Section II, admit of but one reasonable
interpretation: the jury
unanimously found that no
mitigating factors existed that should be weighed against the
aggravating circumstance that it unanimously determined was
present. This is "what a reasonable juror [would] have understood
the charge as meaning," and there is absolutely no reason to think
that this meaning was not abundantly plain to the jurors acting
under these instructions. [
Footnote
2/1]
Page 486 U. S. 392
These instructions, which by themselves would serve as an
understandable guide to the jury in its deliberations, were
accompanied by additional charges from the trial judge. Although
the Court ignores several of these charges, I don't think it open
to doubt that they reinforce the jury's understanding that it must
unanimously reach a decision on each question before proceeding to
the next. After distributing the sentencing forms, the trial judge
delivered the following charges:
"Let me remind you that, in reaching your determination as to
any of the issues raised by the case and presented to you on this
sentencing form,
your verdict must be unanimous; that is,
all twelve of you must agree."
"
* * * *"
"Now should you find the existence unanimously and beyond a
reasonable doubt of aggravating circumstance number two and mark
that yes, then you should proceed to section two, which begins at
the top of page two. That provides that based upon the evidence we
unanimously find that each of the following mitigating
circumstances which is marked yes has been proven to exist by a
preponderance of the evidence, and each mitigating circumstance
marked no has not been proven by a preponderance of the evidence.
Again I stress that
your finding as to mitigating circumstances
must be unanimous, that is you must all agree."
"
* * * *"
"
Again let me stress the requirement of unanimity, that
is your finding under section two and your findings
Page 486 U. S. 393
under section three must be one in which all twelve of you
agree."
"
* * * *"
"Again let me remind you of the burdens of proof as I have
defined them for you and the requirement that
your verdict or
your decision with regard to any of these items must be
unanimous."
"
* * * *"
"Let me remind you that . . . as you consider each of the
circumstances, you must indicate yes or no,
however your
unanimous decision falls."
Id. at 69, 70-71, 73, 74, 95 (emphasis added).
Over and over again, the trial court exhorted the jury that
every determination made on the sentencing form had to be
a unanimous one. This repeated emphasis, when combined with the
instructions on the face of Section II itself, simply had to alert
the jury to the requirement of unanimity. To conclude otherwise, as
the Court does, applies to the deliberations of jurors and the
instructions of judges a requirement of freedom from any ambiguity
more suitable to mathematics or the physical sciences than to the
affairs of human beings. [
Footnote
2/2]
I am also more than a little uncertain about the standard the
majority purports to employ in finding that the jury may not have
understood its instructions as intended. In
California v.
Brown, 479 U. S. 538
(1987), we held that the correct inquiry in this situation is
"
what a reasonable juror could have understood the charge as
meaning.'" Id. at
479 U. S. 541, quoting
Page 486 U. S. 394
Francis v. Franklin, 471 U. S. 307,
471 U. S. 316
(1985);
see also Sandstrom v. Montana, 442 U.
S. 510,
442 U. S.
516-517 (1979). Thus, in
Brown we found that a
reasonable juror would reject the construction of the jury charge
advanced by the defendant, and would instead understand that the
trial judge's instruction not to rely on "mere sympathy" was "a
directive to ignore only the sort of sympathy that would be totally
divorced from the evidence adduced during the penalty phase." 479
U.S. at
479 U. S. 542.
Similarly, in
Jurek v. Texas, 428 U.
S. 262 (1976), a majority of the Court concluded that
the issues arising in the Texas sentencing proceeding "have a
common sense core of meaning, and that criminal juries should be
capable of understanding them."
Id. at
428 U. S. 279
(WHITE, J., concurring in judgment) (agreeing with joint opinion by
Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.).
Jurek demonstrates
that the interpretation a reasonable juror would give to
instructions from the trial court is the determinative element in
this Court's review.
For this reason, the Court's reliance on
Lockett v.
Ohio, 438 U. S. 586
(1978), and
Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 U.
S. 104 (1982), is misplaced. The issue here is not
whether the jurors were permitted to hear all the extenuating
evidence petitioner cared to present; they undoubtedly were.
Rather, as in
Brown and
Jurek, the question is
whether a reasonable juror operating under the trial court's
instructions would have considered this evidence of mitigating
circumstances in a constitutional manner. In the present case,
would a reasonable juror understand that, to mark "no" to each
mitigating factor on the sentencing form, all 12 jurors must agree?
The language of Section II of the form, when coupled with the
repeated instructions from the trial judge, leaves no doubt that
the answer is in the affirmative.
The Court states that "[b]ecause we have no reason to believe
that the jury also arrived at" the proper interpretation of the
sentencing form, petitioner's sentence must be vacated and his case
remanded for resentencing.
Ante at
486 U. S. 369.
The
Page 486 U. S. 395
Court also proposes that, "[u]nless we can rule out the
substantial possibility that the jury may have rested its verdict"
on an improper construction of the sentencing instructions and jury
charges, petitioner's sentence must be set aside.
Ante at
486 U. S. 377.
This formulation obscures considerably what I view as the correct
standard set forth in
Brown. Short of ordering a separate
trial to investigate the knowledge of each juror and the
discussions among all 12, I can envision no method by which the
court can ever attain the level of certainty on which the majority
insists. Jury deliberations are by nature secret, and the mental
processes of individual jurors equally recondite. To demand this
degree of assurance in conducting judicial review of jury
proceedings would establish a standard which can never be
satisfied.
As the preceding discussion indicates, if the "reasonable juror"
standard is employed, the instructions on the sentencing form and
the charges given to the jury in this case are constitutionally
unexceptionable, and petitioner's sentence should be upheld.
II
Since the majority finds dispositive petitioner's argument that
the jurors may not have understood the unanimity requirements of
the sentencing instructions and jury charges, it does not reach the
second issue in the case.
See ante at
486 U. S. 384,
n. 16. Because I would reject the challenge to the instructions, I
must continue on and deal with petitioner's claim that the trial
judge improperly allowed into evidence statements concerning the
personal characteristics of the victim, Paul Brown, in violation of
our recent decision in
Booth v. Maryland, 482 U.
S. 496 (1987). Although petitioner failed to object at
trial to the introduction of this evidence, [
Footnote 2/3] the Maryland Court of Appeals nonetheless
found that the information
Page 486 U. S. 396
about Brown did not constitute a proscribed victim impact
statement. The issue is thus properly before this Court,
see
Orr v. Orr, 440 U. S. 268,
440 U. S.
274-275 (1979);
Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.
S. 213,
462 U. S. 218,
n. 1 (1983);
McGoldrick v. Compagnie Generale
Transatlantique, 309 U. S. 430,
309 U. S.
434-435 (1940), and I would uphold the Court of Appeals'
determination.
Attached to the Maryland Division of Parole and Probation's
investigation report of the crime was a memorandum to the State's
Attorney which summarized an interview conducted by a caseworker
with the victim's brother and sister-in-law. After petitioner's
counsel informed the court that he had read the memorandum and did
not object to its admission, the trial judge allowed it into
evidence. In its entirety, the memorandum stated:
"Paul and Thomas Brown came from a family of six. At a very
young age, they were removed from their parents [
sic]
custody because of neglect and placed in separate foster homes.
(Removal by the Department of Social Services was prompted by
Paul's being hospitalized at age 4 for anemia and
malnutrition)."
"Paul was a hyperactive child, and hard to handle, which
resulted in a lot of beatings from his various guardians. He ran
away constantly from the various homes in which he had been placed.
After awhile, Paul, at the age of 15, just started living on the
streets. He was eventually sent to the Maryland Training School for
Boys. Paul never really had a home or a family as such. 'I (Thomas
Brown) tried to keep in touch with Paul by writing and visiting him
whenever possible. I always had good homes and a good life, and
always felt so guilty that there was nothing I could do to help
Paul. After all, I was only one year older than he.'"
"'Paul was a good person who had a tough life, a lot of bad
breaks, no family, no home, nobody to really give him a chance. I
sometimes think he felt more secure in prison, because he had no
one on the outside. Sure, he
Page 486 U. S. 397
committed crimes, but he wasn't violent. He did what he had to
do to survive, and he got involved with a lot of bad people.'"
310 Md. 33, 72, n. 14, 527 A.2d 3, 22, n. 14 (1987).
Several points should be made about this memorandum. First, it
did not purport to be, and the Maryland Court of Appeals found that
it did not fall within the statutory requirements of, a victim
impact statement under Maryland law.
See ibid.; see also
Md.Ann.Code, Art. 41, § 4-609(c) (1986). The statements
summarized in the memorandum did not describe the effect of the
murder on the family and friends of the victim. Nor did the
memorandum contain opinions and characterizations by Paul Brown's
brother and sister-in-law of the crime. At most, this thumbnail
sketch of the victim's difficult childhood and frequent encounters
with correctional authorities gave the jury a quick glimpse of the
life petitioner chose to extinguish.
I joined the dissents in
Booth v. Maryland, supra, at
482 U. S. 515
and 519, and continue to believe that that case was wrongly
decided. Virtually no limits are placed on the mitigating evidence
a capital defendant may introduce concerning his own history and
circumstances, yet the State is precluded from demonstrating the
loss to the victim's family, and to society as a whole, through the
defendant's homicide. If a jury is to assess meaningfully the
defendant's moral culpability and blameworthiness, one essential
consideration should be the extent of the harm caused by the
defendant. In large measure, the Court's decision in
Booth
prevents the jury from having before it all the information
necessary to determine the proper punishment for a first-degree
murder.
But even if I were to accept the majority's rationale in
Booth, I would still find that the statements about the
victim summarized in the present memorandum were correctly admitted
into evidence. The victim impact statements ruled inadmissible in
Booth, in addition to containing information about the
elderly couple killed by the defendant, also included
Page 486 U. S. 398
substantial material concerning the effect of the crime on the
victims' family and friends, the loss to the community, and the
family's perceptions of the defendant. By contrast, the summary
admitted here gave only the barest of details about Paul Brown
himself, and no information at all about the impact of his death on
others. I do not interpret
Booth as foreclosing the
introduction of all evidence, in whatever form, about a murder
victim, and would thus conclude that the trial court did not commit
error in admitting the summary in this case.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The majority attempts, through the backdoor of a footnote,
see ante at
486 U. S. 380,
n. 14, to explain what an individual juror might have considered
persuasive as a mitigating circumstance. In addition to pointing up
the fact that the majority has no evidence to support the
hypothetical reading of the sentencing form it imputes to the jury,
a review of the mitigating factors offered by petitioner in this
case reveals that they were extraordinarily weak. At sentencing,
petitioner urged that his "youthful age" of 20 should weigh in his
favor, and argued that, despite the fact that he had murdered
twice, it was "unlikely that [he would] engage in further criminal
activity that would constitute a continuing threat to society." 310
Md. 33, 57, 527 A.2d 3, 14 (1987). Petitioner also asserted as an
extenuating circumstance the failure of the State effectively to
reform him. In view of the vacuity of these proffered mitigating
factors, it is hardly surprising that the jury would unanimously
reject them.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Court seems to derive support from the fact that the
Maryland Court of Appeals has recently modified its sentencing
form,
see ante at
486 U. S. 381-383. While any clarification in the form
is of course welcome, the amendment is of no legal relevance to our
decision today. As discussion at oral argument suggested, a
sentencing instruction that is constitutionally acceptable may be
improved in any number of ways. Tr. of Oral Arg. 11-12. Our
determination here is only whether the sentencing instructions and
the jury charges submitted in this case were permissible.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Petitioner did, however, challenge the Maryland Court of
Appeals' decision on the admissibility of the evidence about the
victim in his petition for certiorari and in his brief.
See Pet. for Cert. 8-10; Brief for Petitioner 21-24.