Michael
Van McDougall
appeals the district court's denial of his
petition for a writ of habeas corpus. He
claims errors of constitutional dimension in
his trial which resulted in his convictions
of felonious assault, kidnapping and first
degree murder, and his sentence of death
imposed as a result of the murder conviction.
His claims of error are:
1. That
the jury instructions at the sentencing
phase violated his right under Lockett v.
Ohio, 438 U.S. 586, 98 S.Ct. 2954, 57 L.Ed.2d
973 (1978), to have the jury consider all of
his mitigating evidence when making its
sentencing decision.
2. That
the district court refused to allow him to
introduce evidence in the form of opinions
from certain professors in the fields of
Anthropology, English, Philosophy,
Psychology, Communications and Rhetoric as
to how the jury instructions would have been
understood by a reasonable juror.
3. That
the jury instructions in the sentencing
phase unconstitutionally interfered with the
jury's consideration of non-statutory
mitigating circumstances.
4. That
his death sentence was unconstitutionally
imposed because at the time of his trial
North Carolina juries were permitted to
return verdicts to the lesser included
offense of second degree murder when there
was no evidence to support such a verdict.
5. That
the conduct of his lead trial attorney was
so outrageous that he was denied a fair
trial as required by the Sixth, Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments.
Finding no
error, we affirm.
* A
detailed account of the facts supporting the
conviction is set forth in State v.
McDougall, 308 N.C. 1, 301 S.E.2d 308, cert.
denied, 464 U.S. 865, 104 S.Ct. 197, 78 L.Ed.2d
173 (1983), so we provide only a summary
that may assist in framing the issues.
In the
early morning hours of August 21, 1979,
McDougall rang the doorbell at the home of
his neighbors, Vicki Dunno and Diane Parker,
who lived together at 1420 Blueberry Lane,
Charlotte, North Carolina.
He begged to be
admitted and claimed that his wife had cut
her leg badly and he needed alcohol and
bandages for her, and that he needed to call
a doctor. Miss Parker took alcohol and
bandages and placed them outside the back
door and then went back to the front of the
house where appellant began calling her by
name and saying that he needed to talk to
her because he needed help for his wife.
He explained that he was her neighbor, Mike,
and continued to plead to get into the house.
Unfortunately, Diane Parker let McDougall
into the house. They went into the kitchen
where Vicki Dunno was checking the telephone
directory for a doctor's number. While this
was going on, defendant walked from the
kitchen into the den and began to "check out
the house."
At this point Diane Parker took
the telephone book from Vicki Dunno and
started to dial for help. McDougall returned
to the kitchen and picked up a butcher knife.
He then grabbed Diane by the arm and put the
knife in front of her face and told her to
put down the telephone.
A struggle developed
and Diane told Vicki to run next door and
get help. Vicki ran out to the front yard
but she slipped on wet grass, and in the
course of falling, lost her glasses. While
she was looking for her glasses, McDougall
came out of the house and told Vicki that
she was not going anywhere, and another
struggle ensued. Diane came out of the house
holding a knife, and McDougall took the
knife from her.
After another struggle he
grabbed the two women by their hair and
dragged them back into the house. At the
time McDougall was 6'2" tall and weighed
about 220 pounds; Vicki was 25 years of age,
5'10" tall and weighed 130 pounds; and Diane
was 27 years of age, 5'2" tall and weighed
125 pounds.
McDougall
demanded the car keys, and when they were
delivered, he forced both women back outside
and told them he was going to put them in
the trunk. Vicki then threw the keys away,
and McDougall threw her to the ground and
began to stab her. Vicki screamed to Diane
to run for help. She ran but McDougall
caught her and stabbed her 22 times.
Two of
these wounds were to the heart and medical
evidence established that most of the wounds
occurred while she was in a prone position.
There were also defensive cuts about her
hands. Diane Parker's body was found in the
yard of McDougall's home. The butcher knife,
which was found at the scene, was identified
as the murder weapon.
While
McDougall was chasing Diane, Vicki Dunno
dialed the emergency number, 911, and police
arrived and began looking for McDougall.
When they brought in search lights,
McDougall came from behind some bushes
saying, "I give up. Okay, I give up." There
was blood smeared on his person, his shirt
and pants and a blood analysis showed that
this blood matched the blood type of the
deceased.
Shortly
after McDougall's arrest, his family
retained Charlotte attorney Wallace Osborne
to represent him. Because of his limited
experience in criminal cases, Osborne
associated Attorney
Michael Scofield with McDougall's
consent.
Mr. Scofield had considerable
criminal experience and had been an
Assistant United States Attorney in the
Western District of North Carolina and a
Public Defender for Mecklenburg County,
North Carolina. The attorneys arranged to
send McDougall to a psychiatric hospital for
mental evaluation, and to secure information
about his amnesia, since he claimed no
memory of the events of August 21, 1979.
While at the hospital McDougall was treated
by Dr. Stephan S. Teich, a psychiatrist, and
Courtney Mullin, a "juristic psychologist",
both of whom were privately retained. These
individuals had previously been associated
with Attorney Jerome Paul in the defense of
other criminal cases and they urged
McDougall to retain Attorney Paul for his
defense. After meeting with Attorney
Scofield, McDougall and his family, Paul was
retained in May 1980 to represent appellant
together with Attorneys Scofield and Osborne.
All three attorneys participated in the
three-week trial, which included the guilt
and the sentencing phases, and resulted in
the death sentence now under attack.
At trial,
the defense contended that McDougall
suffered a cocaine induced psychosis,
underlying depression and organic brain
damage. He was alleged to have injected
himself with cocaine on the night of the
murder, and he claimed amnesia as to all
events surrounding the crimes. He did not
testify in the guilt phase of the trial but
he did testify during the sentencing phase.
The
appellant's guilt of the murder of Diane
Parker is not an issue in the present
appeal. The evidence of guilt was
overwhelming.
During the
sentencing phase, it was established that
McDougall had been convicted of rape in
March 1974, and that prior to stabbing Diane
Parker to death, he had stabbed Vicki Dunno.
Defendant introduced evidence that he was
present, as a young boy, when his
grandfather committed suicide, and since
that event he has experienced hallucinations
and heard his grandfather's voice. He also
contended that he suffered from cocaine
induced psychosis, organic brain damage and
depression, and that at the time of the
murder, he thought he was fighting his
mother, who was hitting him with an
automobile radio antenna.
At the
conclusion of the evidence, the oral
arguments and the charge in the sentencing
phase, the trial judge submitted to the jury
a verdict form containing four questions,
with the first two questions having four
subparts each. This is entitled "Issues and
Recommendation as to Punishment" and is set
forth below with the answers given by the
jury.
ISSUES
1. Do you find from the
evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt the
existence of one or more of the following
aggravating circumstances?
ANSWER: Yes
a. Has the
defendant previously been convicted of a
felony involving the use of violence to the
person?
ANSWER:
Yes
b. Was the
murder in this case committed for the
purpose of avoiding or preventing a lawful
arrest?
ANSWER: No
c. Was the
murder in this case especially heinous,
atrocious, or cruel?
ANSWER:
Yes
d. Was the
murder in this case part of a course of
conduct by the defendant which included the
commission by the defendant of another crime
of violence against another person?
ANSWER:
Yes
2. Do you find from the
evidence the existence of one or more of the
following mitigating circumstances?
ANSWER: Yes
a. Was the
murder in this case committed while the
defendant was under the influence of mental
or emotional disturbance?
ANSWER:
Yes
b. Was the
defendant's capacity to appreciate the
criminality of his conduct or his capacity
to conform his conduct to the requirements
of law impaired?
ANSWER:
Yes
c. Was the
age of the defendant at the time of the
murder in this case a mitigating factor?
ANSWER: No
d. Is there any other
circumstance or circumstances arising from
the evidence which you deem to have
mitigating value?
ANSWER:
Yes
3. Do you find, beyond a
reasonable doubt, that the mitigating
circumstance or circumstances you have found
is or are insufficient to outweigh the
aggravating circumstance or circumstances
you have found?
ANSWER: Yes
4. Do you find beyond a
reasonable doubt that the aggravating
circumstance or circumstances you have found
is or are sufficiently substantial to call
for the imposition of the death penalty?
ANSWER: Yes
RECOMMENDATION AS TO
PUNISHMENT
We, the
jury, unanimously recommend that the
defendant, Michael
Van
McDougal, be
sentenced to Death. (Indicate your
recommendation by writing "Life Imprisonment"
or "Death".)
II(a)
Appellant
contends that the jury instructions as to
sentencing interfered with the jury's
consideration of mitigating circumstances
and resulted in a mandatory death sentence.
He specifically claims that the instructions
violated his right under Lockett v. Ohio,
438 U.S. 586, 98 S.Ct. 2954, 57 L.Ed.2d 973
(1978), to have the jury consider all of his
mitigating evidence. Appellant concedes that
there was a strong case of aggravation, but
he argues that there was also a strong case
of mitigation. He claims the jury could not,
under the charge, consider the mitigating
evidence in making its ultimate sentencing
decision in answer to the fourth question,
unless it found the mitigating circumstances
outweighed the aggravating circumstances. He
argues that under the jury instructions, if
the mitigating circumstances did not
outweigh the aggravating circumstances, such
mitigation would not be considered by the
jury and would violate the Lockett
requirement that:
The Eighth
and Fourteenth Amendments require that the
sentencer, in all but the rarest kind of
capital case, 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.
Id. at
604, 98 S.Ct. at 2964-65 (footnotes omitted).
McDougall
also claims that the fourth question should
have included a requirement that the jury
consider mitigating circumstances again when
answering this inquiry. He buttresses this
argument with the decision of the Supreme
Court of North Carolina in his original
appeal, McDougall, 301 S.E.2d at 327, which
requires that in future trials the fourth
question should read:
(4) Do you
find beyond a reasonable doubt that the
aggravating circumstance or circumstances
found by you is, or are, sufficiently
substantial to call for the imposition of
the death penalty when considered with the
mitigating circumstance or circumstances
found by you?
(New
language underlined.)
However,
the Supreme Court of North Carolina did not
find prejudicial error at McDougall's trial
as a result of the trial court's failure to
include the phrase "when considered with the
mitigating circumstance or circumstances
found by you" in the body of the fourth
question. The court merely stated that the
inclusion of this language "more
appropriately framed" the fourth issue and
should thereafter be used.
Appellant
also argues that the sentencing charge
violated his due process rights because it
instructed the jury that it had a "duty"
under certain circumstances to give an
affirmative answer to question 4 and make a
recommendation of death.
The
instruction as to issues 3 and 4 provided:
The third
issue for your consideration reads as
follows:
3. Do you
find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the
mitigating circumstance or circumstances you
have found is or are insufficient to
outweigh the aggravating circumstance or
circumstances you have found?
On this
issue the burden is upon the state to prove
to you from the evidence beyond a reasonable
doubt that the mitigating circumstances you
find are insufficient to outweigh any
aggravating circumstances you may have found.
If you
find from the evidence one or more
mitigating circumstances, you must weigh the
aggravating circumstances against the
mitigating circumstances. In so doing, you
are the sole judges of the weight to be
given to any individual circumstance which
you find, whether aggravating or mitigating.
Your weighing should not consist of merely
adding up the number of aggravating
circumstances and mitigating circumstances.
Rather, you must decide from all of the
evidence what value to give to each
circumstance, and then weigh the aggravating
circumstances, so valued, against the
mitigating circumstances, so valued, and
finally determine whether the aggravating
circumstances outweigh the mitigating
circumstances.
So then,
Members of the Jury, if the State has proven
to you from the evidence beyond a reasonable
doubt that the mitigating circumstances you
find are insufficient to--that is, do not--outweigh
the aggravating circumstances you find, it
would then be your duty to answer this third
issue "Yes." However, if you do not so find,
or if you have a reasonable doubt, then it
would be your duty to answer this issue
"No."
If you
answer this issue "Yes," then you would come
to consider the fourth issue. If you answer
this issue "No," it would be your duty to
recommend that the defendant be sentenced to
life imprisonment.
The fourth
issue for your consideration reads as
follows:
4. Do you
find beyond a reasonable doubt that the
aggravating circumstance or circumstances
you have found is or are sufficiently
substantial to call for the imposition of
the death penalty?
On this
issue the burden is on the State to prove to
you from the evidence beyond a reasonable
doubt that the aggravating circumstances
found, if any, are sufficiently substantial
to call for the imposition of the death
penalty.
Substantial means having substance or weight,
important, significant or momentous.
Aggravating circumstances may exist in a
particular case and still not be
sufficiently substantial to call for the
death penalty. Therefore, it is not enough
for the State to prove from the evidence
beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of
one or more aggravating circumstances. It
must also prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that such aggravating circumstances are
sufficiently substantial to call for the
death penalty, and before you may answer "Yes,"
you must agree unanimously that they are.
If you
unanimously find beyond a reasonable doubt
that any aggravating circumstance or
circumstances found by you are sufficiently
substantial to call for the death penalty,
you would answer this issue "Yes." If you do
not so find, or have a reasonable doubt,
then you would answer this issue "No."
If you
answer this issue "No," it would be your
duty to recommend that the defendant be
imprisoned for life.
So then,
Members of the Jury, finally I instruct you
for you to recommend that the defendant be
sentenced to death, the State must prove
three things beyond a reasonable doubt, as I
have defined that term, from the evidence:
FIRST,
that one or more statutory aggravating
circumstances existed; and,
SECOND,
that the mitigating circumstances found by
you are insufficient to outweigh the
aggravating circumstances, if any, found by
you; and,
THIRD,
that the aggravating circumstances, if any,
found by you are sufficiently substantial to
call for the imposition of the death
penalty.
....
If the
State has proven these three things to you
beyond a reasonable doubt, and you
unanimously so find, it would be your duty
to recommend that the defendant be sentenced
to death. If you do not so find, or if you
have a reasonable doubt to one or more of
these things, it would be your duty to
recommend that the defendant be sentenced to
life imprisonment.
Appellant
misreads Lockett and the clear language and
meaning of the jury instructions given.
There has been no showing that McDougall was
limited in any way in his presentation of
evidence as to mitigation. Nothing proffered
by him was excluded by the trial judge.
Lockett
involved the Ohio death sentence statute
which the Supreme Court found to be
unconstitutional because it too narrowly
limited the sentencer's discretion to
consider the circumstances of the crime and
the record and character of the offender as
mitigating factors. There is no limitation
under North Carolina law, or under the jury
instructions given, upon the sentencer's
discretion as to what it may consider as
circumstances in mitigation, and the jury is
allowed to and was instructed in this case
to consider every circumstance. The trial
court instructed as to mitigating
circumstances:
2. Do you
find from the evidence the existence of one
or more of the following mitigating
circumstances?
A
mitigating circumstance is that circumstance
arising from the evidence which does not
constitute a justification or excuse for a
killing, or which reduces it to a lesser
degree of crime than first-degree murder,
but which nevertheless may be considered as
extenuating or reducing the moral
culpability of the killing, or which makes
it less deserving of extreme punishment than
other first-degree murders. The law of North
Carolina specifies the mitigating
circumstances which might be considered by
you, and only those circumstances created by
statute, about which I shall instruct you,
may be considered by you.
The
defendant has the burden of persuading you
of the existence of any mitigating
circumstance. The defendant must satisfy you
from the evidence taken as a whole, not
beyond a reasonable doubt, but merely to
your satisfaction, of the existence of any
mitigating circumstance. If you are so
satisfied, you would answer "Yes" as to that
circumstance; otherwise, "No."
I will now
explain to you the applicable law as to each
of these circumstances. The first
circumstance you shall consider reads as
follows:
a. Was the
murder in this case committed while the
defendant was under the influence of mental
or emotional disturbance?
Being
under mental or emotional disturbance is
similar to being in a heat of passion upon
adequate provocation. Generally, heat of
passion upon adequate provocation means that
a person's state of mind, mental or
emotional, was at the time so violent as to
overcome his reason, such that he could not
form a deliberate purpose and control his
actions, and which may consist of anything
which has a natural tendency to produce such
passion in a person of average mind or
disposition. However, as to this
circumstance, a person may be under the
influence of mental or emotional disturbance
even though he had no adequate provocation
and even though his mental and emotional
disturbance was not so strong as to
constitute heat of passion or to preclude
deliberation. Mental or emotional
disturbance may result from any cause or may
exist without apparent cause. For this
mitigating circumstance to exist, it is
sufficient that the defendant's mind or
emotions were disturbed, that is,
interrupted or interfered with, from any
cause, whether from consumption of drugs,
mental illness, or other cause, and that he
was under the influence of that disturbance
when he killed Diane Parker. A person would
be under the influence of mental or
emotional disturbance if a mental or
emotional condition existed which influenced
his conduct so as to make it different than
it otherwise would have been.
So, if you
are satisfied from the evidence that at the
time of the murder of Diane Parker, the
defendant was under the influence of mental
or emotional disturbance, from any cause,
then it would be your duty to find this
mitigating circumstance, and you would
indicate so by answering this sub-part (a) "Yes."
If you do not so find, you would indicate so
by answering this sub-part (a) "No."
The second
circumstance you shall consider reads as
follows:
b. Was the
defendant's capacity to appreciate the
criminality of his conduct or his capacity
to conform his conduct to the requirements
of law impaired?
As I
instructed you in the first phase of this
case, a person would be legally insane if,
as a result of mental disease or defect, he
did not know the nature and quality of his
act, or did not know his act was wrong.
Ladies and
Gentlemen of the Jury, there is a
typographical error in the next sentence. I
will read the sentence as it should be:
However, as to this circumstance, the
capacity to appreciate the criminality of
one's conduct or conform his conduct to the
law is not the same. That phrase appearing
thereafter is stricken. This means, Members
of the Jury, that this circumstance is not
the same as I instructed you with regard to
legal insanity. Even though a defendant may
know that his act is wrong, he may
nevertheless lack capacity to appreciate its
wrongfulness, that is, to fully comprehend
or be fully sensible of the criminality or
wrongfulness of his conduct. It is
sufficient if his capacity to appreciate the
wrongfulness of his conduct was impaired,
that is, lessened or diminished.
Even
though the defendant did appreciate the
criminality of his conduct, if his capacity
to follow the law and refrain from engaging
in the illegal conduct was impaired, this
circumstance would then exist, since a
person may appreciate that his conduct is
wrong and still lack the capacity to refrain
from such conduct.
The
defendant need not have lacked all capacity
to conform. It is sufficient if such
capacity as he might otherwise have had is
impaired, that is, lessened or diminished.
The cause
of such impaired capacity may be mental
disease, defect, or illness or the effect of
drug intoxication, or any other cause
sufficient to cause an impairment of the
capacity to appreciate the criminality of
his conduct, or to conform his conduct to
the requirements of law.
So, if you
are satisfied from the evidence that at the
time of the murder of Diane Parker, the
defendant's capacity to appreciate the
criminality of his conduct was impaired, and/or
that the defendant's capacity to conform his
conduct to the requirement of law was
impaired, then it would be your duty to find
this mitigating circumstance, and you would
indicate so by answering this sub-part (b) "Yes."
If you do not so find, you would indicate so
by answering this sub-part (b) "No."
The third
circumstance you shall consider reads as
follows:
c. Was the
age of the defendant at the time of the
murder in this case a mitigating factor?
If you
find that the age of the defendant at the
time of the murder in this case was an
extenuating factor, or lessens the severity
of, or suggests a lesser penalty for the
murder of Diane Parker, then it would be
your duty to find this mitigating
circumstance, and you would indicate so by
answering this sub-part (c) "Yes." If you do
not so find, you would indicate so by
answering this sub-part (c) "No."
The fourth
circumstance you shall consider reads as
follows:
d. Is
there any other circumstance or
circumstances arising from the evidence
which you deem to have mitigating value?
As to this
circumstance, you may consider any
circumstance from the evidence which you are
satisfied lessens the seriousness of the
murder or suggests a lesser penalty than
otherwise may be required, such as the
defendant's character, education,
environment, habits, mentality, propensities
and record, and any other circumstances
arising from the evidence which you deem to
have mitigating value. Specifically, you may
consider: (1) the defendant's love for his
wife; (2) the defendant's love for his child;
(3) the defendant's attitude toward abortion;
(4) the defendant's attempt to remove
himself from the drug culture in Georgia to
lead a good and useful life; (5) his
progress with psychotherapy; (6) his
behavior when not suffering from the effects
of mental illness; (7) any remorse as a
result of his acts; (8) his behavior when
not intoxicated with drugs; (9) his desire
to love his family; (10) his employment
experience at Pump and Lighting; and any
other redeeming quality of the defendant.
Likewise, you shall consider any other
circumstance arising from the evidence which
you deem to have mitigating value.
So then,
if you find from the evidence any one or
more of the mitigating circumstances
specifically enumerated in the preceding
paragraph or any other mitigating
circumstance arising from the evidence which
you deem to have mitigating value, then it
would be your duty to answer this sub-part
(d) "Yes." Otherwise, "No."
So then,
Members of the Jury, as to this second issue
I instruct you that if you find one or more
of the mitigating circumstances from the
evidence, it would be your duty to answer
the issue "Yes," and you would do so by
placing your answer in the blank space
provided immediately under the second issue.
If you do not find at least one of these
mitigating circumstances from the evidence,
you would then answer this second issue
"No," and you would do so by placing your
answer in the blank space provided
immediately under the second issue.
In any
event, whether you answer this issue "Yes"
or "No," if you have answered the first
issue "Yes," you will proceed to consider
the third issue.
The jury,
by its answers to questions 2, 2(a), 2(b),
and 2(d), found that there were mitigating
circumstances because at the time of the
murder appellant was under the influence of
a mental or emotional disturbance, and his
capacity to appreciate the criminality of
his conduct and his capacity to conform his
conduct to the requirements of law were
diminished.
Although
the charge states that the law of North
Carolina specifies the mitigating
circumstances that may be considered, the
language of the charge under Issue 2(d) is
so broad that it includes anything that the
defendant may proffer. This part of the
charge was proper under N.C.Gen.Stat. Sec.
15A-2000(f)(9). After listing eight
mitigating circumstances which may be
considered by a jury in a capital case,
there is a catchall provided in (f)(9): "Any
other circumstance arising from the evidence
which the jury deems to have mitigating
value." The judge instructed the jury that
it could consider the 10 mitigating
circumstances submitted by McDougall during
the sentencing phase, and McDougall was not
limited in any way in submitting evidence in
mitigation.
II(b)
Appellant
claims the jury charge on the fourth
question was unconstitutional because the
failure to include the phrase "when
considered with the mitigating circumstance
or circumstances found by you" was a
limitation on the jury's discretion. We do
not find this argument persuasive.
In Rook v.
Rice, 783 F.2d 401 (4th Cir.), cert. denied,
478 U.S. 1022, 106 S.Ct. 3315, 92 L.Ed.2d
745 (1986), we considered a similar claim
that the fourth question submitted on the
form "Issues and Recommendation as to
Punishment" should have contained the
particular language added by the Supreme
Court of North Carolina in McDougall's
original appeal. 301 S.E.2d at 327. The
North Carolina Supreme Court did not find
the absence of this phrase to be prejudicial
to the defendant and we concluded in Rook:
At the
outset, we find nothing in the Supreme Court
of North Carolina's decision in McDougall
which constitutionally mandates a particular
order or form for the sentencing
instructions in Rook's case. In McDougall,
the court was attempting to establish
uniformity in sentencing based on North
Carolina's applicable statute. It was not
setting forth a federal constitutional
standard.
Appellant
has not convinced us that we should change
our holding in Rook. He argues that the
state may not limit the jury's discretion in
deciding the ultimate issue of whether to
impose the death sentence, and that the
language used by the court in submitting
Issue 4 is a limitation on the jury's
discretion. In reviewing the entire charge,
it is manifest that the jury was clearly and
completely instructed on mitigation and the
vital role of mitigation in the North
Carolina sentencing procedure. The North
Carolina Supreme Court clearly explained
this in McDougall's original appeal:
The fourth
issue is not an isolated, independent
question that may be answered without
reference to the other issues and
circumstances of the case. This is
manifested by the language of the General
Assembly--"[b]ased on these considerations"
should the defendant be sentenced to death
or life imprisonment. N.C.Gen.Stat. Sec.
15A-2000(b)(3) (Cum.Supp.1981). In deciding
the fourth issue, the jury must consider the
aggravating circumstances found, the
mitigating circumstances found, and the
degree to which the aggravating
circumstances outweigh the mitigating
circumstances. The jury must compare the
totality of the aggravating circumstances
with the totality of the mitigating
circumstances and be satisfied beyond a
reasonable doubt that the statutory
aggravating circumstances found are
sufficiently substantial to call for the
imposition of the death penalty and that the
death penalty is justified and appropriate.
In
submitting and explaining to the jury the
printed form "Issues and Recommendation as
to Punishment," the trial judge used the
words "mitigation" and/or "mitigating" 27
times, and these instructions left no doubt
as to the importance of mitigation and how
it should be considered and weighed by the
jury in deciding the ultimate question.
II(c)
We are not
persuaded that Mills v. Maryland, 486 U.S.
367, 108 S.Ct. 1860, 100 L.Ed.2d 384 (1988),
affords any comfort to McDougall or support
for his position. In Mills, the court found
that under the Maryland death penalty
statute, the trial judge's charge and the
verdict form, the jury could have believed
that the death sentence was mandatory if it
had unanimously found an aggravating
circumstance, but it could not unanimously
agree on the existence of any particular
mitigating circumstance. These are not our
facts, and the rationale of Mills does not
extend so far. McDougall argues that since
mitigating circumstances are not mentioned
in the fourth issue, the jury could not
consider them, and therefore the death
penalty became mandatory. This position will
not withstand examination.
First, the
fourth issue is not viewed in isolation, and
it is a part of the "Issues and
Recommendation as to Punishment" and is
considered only after the jury has
considered and answered the first three
issues. It can only be reached after
mitigation has been considered and compared
to any elements of aggravation. Second, even
when the aggravating circumstances outweigh
the mitigating circumstances, a death
sentence is not mandatory or automatic. The
jury must still consider whether the
aggravating circumstances are sufficiently
substantial to call for the imposition of
the death penalty. Third, under the charge
given in McDougall, any finding of an
aggravating circumstance must be unanimous
and beyond a reasonable doubt, but
mitigating circumstances did not require
unanimity but "must satisfy you from the
evidence taken as a whole, not beyond a
reasonable doubt, but merely to your
satisfaction, of the existence of any
mitigating circumstance." Such language is
clear and did not create confusion similar
to that in Mills.
We find
that the jury instructions did not in any
way interfere with the jury's consideration
of mitigating circumstances so as to result
in a mandatory death penalty.
II(d)
We find no
merit to the claim that the use of the word
"duty" in the instructions required the jury
to return a verdict of death. The word "duty"
was used in a number of places in the
instructions, and "duty" was used to
indicate the jury's responsibility to act
after it had made or failed to make certain
findings of fact. The instructions advised
the jury that it had a duty to answer "No"
under certain findings and a duty to then
recommend life imprisonment.
Since
Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238, 92 S.Ct.
2726, 33 L.Ed.2d 346 (1972), the Supreme
Court has tried to reduce the risk that the
death penalty will be imposed in an
arbitrary and capricious manner. In
California v. Brown, 479 U.S. 538, 541, 107
S.Ct. 837, 839, 93 L.Ed.2d 934 (1987), it
found as the first prerequisite of a valid
death sentence that "sentencers may not be
given unbridled discretion in determining
the fates of those charged with capital
offenses. The Constitution instead requires
that death penalty statutes be structured so
as to prevent the penalty from being
administered in an arbitrary and
unpredictable fashion." Therefore, North
Carolina has adopted statutory provisions
designed to eliminate this risk. If a
sentence is not to be arbitrary and
capricious, the jury, in a capital case,
must have clear instructions as to its duty
after it has made certain factual findings.
This is clearly explained in State v. Pinch,
306 N.C. 1, 32, 292 S.E.2d 203, 227, cert.
denied, 459 U.S. 1056, 103 S.Ct. 474, 74
L.Ed.2d 622 (1982). In Pinch, both the
prosecutor and the judge advised the jury
that it had a duty to recommend death if it
found one or more aggravating circumstances,
that the aggravating circumstances
outweighed the mitigating circumstances
beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the
aggravating circumstances were substantial
enough to warrant the death penalty. The
court also instructed the jury that it had a
duty to recommend a sentence of life
imprisonment if it did not find any one of
these three elements. The defendant argued
that these instructions prejudicially
withdrew from the jury its final option to
recommend life notwithstanding its earlier
findings. The court answered this argument:
The jury
had no such option to exercise unbridled
discretion and return a sentencing verdict
wholly inconsistent with the findings it had
made pursuant to G.S. 15A-2000(c). The jury
may not arbitrarily or capriciously impose
or reject a sentence of death. Instead, the
jury may only exercise guided discretion in
making the underlying findings required for
a recommendation of the death penalty within
the "carefully defined set of statutory
criteria that allow them to take into
account the nature of the crime and the
character of the accused." State v. Johnson,
298 N.C. 47, 63, 257 S.E.2d 597, 610 (1979);
see State v. Barfield, 298 N.C. 306, 349-52,
259 S.E.2d 510, 541-43 (1979), cert. denied,
448 U.S. 907, 100 S.Ct. 3050, 65 L.Ed.2d
1137 (1980). Moreover, defendant's
contention was implicitly answered in State
v. Goodman, 298 N.C. 1, 257 S.E.2d 569
(1979), in which this Court overruled an
assignment of error alleging that the trial
court had erred in failing to instruct the
jury that it could still recommend life
imprisonment even though it found that the
aggravating circumstances outweighed the
mitigating ones. Justice Britt, speaking for
the Court in Goodman, explained that:
[I]t would be improper to
instruct the jury that they may, as
defendant suggests, disregard the procedure
outlined by the legislature and impose the
sanction of death at their own whim. To do
so would be to revert to a system pervaded
by arbitrariness and caprice. The exercise
of such unbridled discretion by the jury
under the court's instruction would be
contrary to the rules of Furman [v. Georgia,
408 U.S. 238, 92 S.Ct. 2726, 33 L.Ed.2d 346]
and the cases which have followed it.
Id. at 35, 257 S.E.2d at
590. For these reasons, we hold that the
jury was correctly informed that it had a
duty to recommend a sentence of death if it
made the three findings necessary to support
such a sentence under G.S. 15A-2000(c).
Id. at
33-34, 292 S.E.2d at 227.
We find no
constitutional infirmity in the use of the
word "duty" to explain the jury's
responsibility to act after it has
unanimously made the statutory findings
during the sentencing phase of the trial.
II(e)
Defendant
argues that the North Carolina capital
sentencing procedure and its application to
his trial do not meet the requirements set
forth in McCleskey v. Kemp, 481 U.S. 279,
107 S.Ct. 1756, 95 L.Ed.2d 262 (1987),
because after narrowing the jury's
discretion by establishing aggravating and
mitigating circumstances, it further
interfered with its discretion by not
allowing it to consider or reconsider
mitigation on the fourth question.
In
McCleskey, Justice Powell identified the
constitutionally permissible range of
discretion in imposing the death sentence
as:First, there is a required threshold
below which the death penalty cannot be
imposed. In this context, the State must
establish rational criteria that narrow the
decisionmaker's judgment as to whether the
circumstances of a particular defendant's
case meet the threshold. Moreover, a
societal consensus that the death penalty is
disproportionate to a particular offense
prevents a State from imposing the death
penalty for that offense. Second, States
cannot limit the sentencer's consideration
of any relevant circumstance that could
cause it to decline to impose the penalty.
In this respect, the State cannot channel
the sentencer's discretion, but must allow
it to consider any relevant information
offered by the defendant.
Id. at
305-06, 107 S.Ct. at 1774.
Justice
Powell went on to observe that McCleskey
could not successfully argue that his death
sentence for murder was disproportionate to
the crime. The facts in the McCleskey case
are not nearly so vicious and aggravated as
the murder committed by McDougall, so we
need not discuss the first McCleskey element.
The North
Carolina law complies with the second
requirement of McCleskey because it does not
limit the sentencer's consideration of any
relevant circumstance that could cause it to
decline to impose the death penalty.
N.C.Gen.Stat. Sec. 15A-2000(f) sets forth
mitigating circumstances as follows:
(f)
Mitigating Circumstances.--Mitigating
circumstances which may be considered shall
include, but not be limited to, the
following:
(1) The defendant has no
significant history of prior criminal
activity.
(2) The capital felony
was committed while the defendant was under
the influence of mental or emotional
disturbance.
(3) The victim was a
voluntary participant in the defendant's
homicidal conduct or consented to the
homicidal act.
(4) The defendant was an
accomplice in or accessory to the capital
felony committed by another person and his
participation was relatively minor.
(5) The defendant acted
under duress or under the domination of
another person.
(6) The capacity of the
defendant to appreciate the criminality of
his conduct or to conform his conduct to the
requirements of law was impaired.
(7) The age of the
defendant at the time of the crime.
(8) The defendant aided
in the apprehension of another capital felon
or testified truthfully on behalf of the
prosecution in another prosecution of a
felony.
(9) Any other
circumstance arising from the evidence which
the jury deems to have mitigating value.
(1977, c.
406, s. 2; 1979, c. 565, s. 1; c. 682, s. 9;
1981, c. 652, s. 1.)
The
catchall language of (f)(9) allows the jury
to consider any other circumstance arising
from the evidence that it deems to be
mitigating.
The
McDougall jury was properly instructed on
aggravating and mitigating circumstances,
and was not limited or restricted in any way
by the statute or by the court in its
consideration of mitigating circumstances.
II(f)
Appellant
argues that after the jury had weighed the
aggravating circumstances against the
mitigating circumstances and found that the
mitigating circumstances were not sufficient
to outweigh the aggravating circumstances,
the death penalty was mandatory in violation
of Sumner v. Shuman, 483 U.S. 66, 107 S.Ct.
2716, 97 L.Ed.2d 56 (1987). Sumner has no
application to the present facts because it
involved a statute that mandated a death
penalty for a prison inmate convicted of
murder while serving a life sentence without
possibility of parole. The North Carolina
plan does not mandate the death penalty.
After a jury finding that the mitigating
circumstances are insufficient to outweigh
the aggravating circumstances, the jury must
proceed to the question of whether the
aggravating circumstances are sufficiently
substantial to call for the imposition of
the death penalty. A North Carolina jury may
find that the mitigating circumstances fail
to outweigh the aggravating circumstances,
and may still find that the aggravating
circumstances are not sufficiently
substantial to impose the death penalty, so
there is no Sumner problem on the present
facts, because the North Carolina law does
not mandate the death penalty, and it did
not limit the sentencer's consideration of
any relevant information offered by the
defendant.
Our
conclusion on this issue is reinforced by
the recent opinions in Blystone v.
Pennsylvania, --- U.S. ----, 110 S.Ct. 1078,
108 L.Ed.2d 255 (1990), and Boyde v.
California, --- U.S. ----, 110 S.Ct. 1190,
108 L.Ed.2d 316 (1990). In Blystone the
Court approved the Pennsylvania statute
which provided that the verdict must be a
sentence of death if the jury unanimously
finds at least one specified aggravating
circumstance and no mitigating circumstances.
This statute deprived the jury of any
sentencing discretion once it had found one
aggravating circumstance but no mitigating
circumstance. The Court found that the
Pennsylvania statute was constitutional
because the jury was allowed to consider and
give effect to all relevant mitigating
evidence and the statute was not
impermissibly mandatory.
In Boyde,
the Court found no constitutional problem
with the California jury instructions that
directed the jury in a capital case to
consider all aggravating and mitigating
circumstances and, "if you conclude that the
aggravating circumstances outweigh the
mitigating circumstances you shall impose a
sentence of death. However, if you determine
that the mitigating circumstances outweigh
the aggravating circumstances, you shall
impose a sentence of confinement in the
state prison for life without the
possibility of parole." The Boyde Court
found that the California instruction
complied with the requirement of
individualized sentencing in capital cases
because the jury was allowed to consider all
relevant mitigating evidence.
The jury
instructions approved in Blystone and Boyde
are much more direct and mandatory than
those used in McDougall's trial. In all
three trials the jury was allowed to
consider all relevant mitigating evidence.
In Pennsylvania if the jury found an
aggravating circumstance and no mitigating
circumstance, it was instructed, "The
verdict must be a sentence of death." In
California if the aggravating circumstances
outweighed the mitigating circumstances, the
jury was instructed, "You shall impose a
sentence of death." In McDougall's case the
jury was instructed to weigh the aggravating
circumstances against the mitigating
circumstances, and in order to proceed to
the next step in the sentencing process, the
jury must find beyond a reasonable doubt
that the mitigating circumstances were
insufficient to outweigh the aggravating
circumstances. McDougall was given an
additional protection that was not provided
in California and Pennsylvania, because
McDougall's jury was instructed that after
finding beyond a reasonable doubt that the
mitigating circumstances were insufficient
to outweigh the aggravating circumstances,
it must decide beyond a reasonable doubt
that the aggravating circumstances were "sufficiently
substantial to call for the imposition of
the death penalty." The McDougall jury was
advised that after making the necessary
findings, it had a "duty" to recommend a
certain sentence, while the jury in Blystone
was advised, "The verdict must be a sentence
of death" and the jury in Boyde was
instructed, "You shall impose a sentence of
death." The language of Blystone ("must")
and of Boyde ("shall") is stronger and more
mandatory than "duty" used in the McDougall
instructions. The common thread running
through the instructions that have been
approved is the direction that the jury be
allowed to consider all relevant mitigating
circumstances. This was made abundantly
clear to the jury in the present charge.
III
We find no
merit to McDougall's claim that his sentence
is unconstitutional because at the time of
his trial North Carolina juries were
permitted to return verdicts of guilty to
the lesser included offense of second degree
murder when there was no evidence to support
such a verdict. He erroneously relies upon
Roberts v. Louisiana, 428 U.S. 325, 96 S.Ct.
3001, 49 L.Ed.2d 974 (1976), in which the
Court struck down the Louisiana mandatory
death penalty for first degree murder, and
gave as one of its reasons:
Under the
current Louisiana system, however, every
jury in a first-degree murder case is
instructed on the crimes of second-degree
murder and manslaughter and permitted to
consider those verdicts even if there is not
a scintilla of evidence to support the
lesser verdicts.
Id. at
334, 96 S.Ct. at 3006. The court found that
this practice lacked the necessary standards
to guide the jury in selecting among first-degree
murderers, and invited the jurors to
disregard their oaths and introduced an
element of capriciousness by allowing the
jurors to avoid the death penalty by
disregarding the trial judge's instructions.
Roberts makes clear that this is not the law
in North Carolina: "By contrast, in North
Carolina instructions on lesser included
offenses must have a basis in the evidence
adduced at trial." Id. at 332, 96 S.Ct. at
3005.
In ruling
upon McDougall's motion for appropriate
relief, Honorable Frank W. Snepp of the
North Carolina Superior Court found:
The record
in defendant's case shows that his case was
submitted to the jury on both the theory of
premeditation and deliberation, and felony
murder. The jury found the defendant guilty
of felony first degree murder, but not of
premeditated first degree murder.
A possible
verdict of second degree murder was
submitted to the jury as an alternative to a
finding of guilt of first degree murder
under premeditation and deliberation, which
was to be answered only if the jury failed
to find the defendant guilty of first degree
murder upon either theory.
In this
case, the evidence as to the ingestion of
drugs by the defendant would have supported
a verdict of second degree murder, so that
its submission was proper under Hopper v.
Evans, [456 U.S. 605, 102 S.Ct. 2049, 72
L.Ed.2d 367 (1982) ].
We find no
violation of Roberts v. Louisiana because
there was evidence upon which the jury could
have returned a verdict of second degree
murder, and North Carolina does not have a
mandatory death sentence for first degree
murder as Louisiana had at the time of
Roberts.
IV
Several
months after filing his habeas petition in
the federal court, appellant moved to expand
the record under Habeas Rule 7 to include
the affidavits of seven experts in the
fields of Anthropology, Linguistics,
Philosophy, Logic, Clinical Psychology,
Rhetoric, Communications and English
Literature in an effort to convince the
court that the trial judge's instructions
relating to the weighing of aggravating and
mitigating circumstances under the third
issue, and the language of the fourth issue
violated McDougall's Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendment rights, because a reasonable juror
could have interpreted these instructions as
not allowing the jury to consider mitigating
circumstances in deciding the fourth issue.
Appellant also sought to introduce the
results of certain tests conducted by one of
the experts using students at the University
of North Carolina to demonstrate how a
reasonable juror would have interpreted the
instructions.
We find no
error in the district court's refusal to
accept the proffered affidavits and test
results. The test of the charge is what a
reasonable juror would have understood the
entire charge to mean. Francis v. Franklin,
471 U.S. 307, 315-16, 105 S.Ct. 1965,
1971-72, 85 L.Ed.2d 344 (1985). We agree
with the district court that the proffered
affidavits were not relevant to a
determination of the constitutionality of
the instructions. The interpretation of
instructions given by seven academics,
employed eight years after the trial, are
irrelevant. The result of a test given to
students at the University of North Carolina
would not enlighten the court as to how a
reasonable juror, who had heard three weeks
of testimony, jury arguments from the
attorneys, and the complete charge of the
judge, would have interpreted a few
sentences in the charge.
In
California v. Brown, 479 U.S. 538, 107 S.Ct.
837, 93 L.Ed.2d 934 (1987), the Court
cautioned when interpreting the meaning of a
charge:
[W]e "must
focus initially on the special language
challenged." If the specific instruction
fails constitutional muster, we then review
the instructions as a whole to see if the
entire charge delivered a correct
interpretation of the law.
Id. at
541, 107 S.Ct. at 839 (citation omitted).
Brown also teaches that common sense should
be applied, that the meaning of a word may
be known from the accompanying words, and
that the instructions must be reviewed as a
whole to see if the entire charge delivered
a correct interpretation of the law.
Applying the Brown test we find no
constitutional infirmity in the challenged
language of the jury instruction, and we
find no error in the refusal of the
proffered affidavits and test results.
V
We now
turn to the appellant's claims that the
behavior of his lead attorney, Jerome Paul,
was so outrageous that he was denied his
Sixth Amendment right to effective
assistance of counsel at his trial, that he
was denied due process required by the
Fourteenth Amendment, and that the
reliability of the jury verdict was
undermined by the violation of the Eighth
Amendment. Although we agree that certain
acts of Attorney Paul were unethical,
outrageous and even illegal, appellant has
failed to show that these acts caused any
prejudice to him or undermined the
reliability of the jury verdict.
As we have
previously noted, McDougall's family
originally retained Attorney Wallace Osborne,
and, because of Osborne's limited experience
in criminal cases, Attorney
Michael Scofield
was retained with McDougall's consent. Mr.
Scofield was an experienced criminal trial
lawyer. When the attorneys sent McDougall to
Dorothea Dix Hospital for psychiatric
examination and evaluation of his sanity, he
was seen by Dr. Steven Teich, a psychiatrist,
Ms. Courtney Mullin, a "juristic" or
correctional psychologist, and Dr. Brad
Fisher. Dr. Teich and Ms. Mullin had been
associated with Jerome Paul in defense of
prior criminal cases, and they recommended
that McDougall retain Attorney Paul. They
arranged a meeting between Paul and
McDougall at the hospital. Attorney Paul had
also been a patient of Dr. Teich. Paul met
with Attorney Scofield, the defendant and
defendant's family, and he was retained to
represent defendant. The evidence shows that
Paul's plan of defense was to be a team
effort. The team included the three lawyers,
Dr. Teich, Ms. Mullin, a paralegal, a
professor of psychology, a hypnotist, a
toxicologist, a pollster, and others.
The trial
began on June 9, 1980 and after extensive
voir dire examination, a jury of six whites
and six blacks was seated. After a lengthy
trial, the jury, on July 18, 1980, found
that the defendant was not insane. On July
21, 1980, the jury found him guilty of
murder and on July 25, 1980, it recommended
the death sentence.
Appellant
now lists fourteen examples of Attorney
Paul's conduct, which he claims denied him
effective assistance of counsel. These are:
(1) At the
time of Paul's first contact with McDougall
and his family, Paul's license to practice
in North Carolina had already been suspended
once and he faced four additional formal
charges from the state bar;
(2) Paul
gained admission to the case through
misrepresentation, lying about his own track
record and disparaging Scofield and Osborne;
(3) Paul
took command of the case, relegating
Scofield and Osborne to minor roles and
disregarding their advice;
(4) Paul
caused strong dissension and division among
counsel, experts, family and client;
(5) Paul's
theatrical strategies so enraged Scofield
that a yelling match with Paul and McDougall
ensued and Scofield boycotted jury selection
for a full day;(6) Just before trial was to
start, Paul's license to practice was
suspended a second time and he was twice
reprimanded;
(7) On the
day trial began, the State Bar reaffirmed
the original suspension of Paul's license;
(8) During
trial, Paul was so sick with migraines that
he visited local emergency rooms at least
nine times and sought other treatment as
well; Paul had earlier told the State Bar
that migraines incapacitated him for days at
a time;
(9) During
trial, Paul took large quantities of legal
drugs that would cause mental confusion and
a hangover effect;
(10)
During trial, headache pain caused Paul to
leave while court was in session, to lie
sprawled on a nearby office floor, and to be
absent from court, once for at least a full
half-day;
(11)
During trial, Paul was at times too sick to
examine witnesses, and precipitously
assigned such tasks to Scofield;
(12)
During trial, Paul suborned perjury from
both McDougall, his mother, and his wife;
(13)
During trial, Paul took illegal drugs and
gave them to McDougall; as a result,
Scofield stopped meeting with McDougall and
Paul in the jail's conference room;
(14) Paul
gave a penalty phase last-closing argument
that was so bad that co-counsel viewed it as
"stupid" and harmful, and one of North
Carolina's preeminent trial lawyers viewed
it as incompetent.
Paul's
misbehavior has been examined in depth by a
North Carolina Superior Court judge, who
heard the motion for appropriate relief, and
by the United States District Court judge,
who heard the federal petition for writ of
habeas corpus. Both made extensive findings
of fact, which we have reviewed and find to
be well supported by the evidence. Each
judge found that Paul's actions did not
result in ineffective assistance of counsel
or deny McDougall a fair trial.
As to the
claim that Paul was not licensed to practice
law in North Carolina at the time of the
trial in June and July 1980, the state court
found that the orders of suspension from
practice were not effective until April 2,
1981. The defendant made the same arguments
before the state judge as he has made in
federal court and these were clearly
answered by Judge Snepp:
The
defendant argues that I should disregard the
finding of the State Bar Counsel, and hold
that Paul's license was in fact suspended
before he accepted employment in this case,
or that, at least, the suspension became
effective during the trial.
To do so
would be to disregard the entire statutory
scheme governing the discipline of members
of the bar in North Carolina, which is
beyond the powers of this court.
The fact
is, that at the time Paul represented the
defendant, his license to practice law in
North Carolina had not been suspended by
reason of any action of the Disciplinary
Hearing Commission which was final under the
law, and, as the testimony of Scofield, and
the later order of reinstatement show, the
State Bar did not consider it to be final at
the time.
I
therefore find that Paul, at the time he
represented the defendant, was duly licensed
to practice law in North Carolina.
McDougall
claims that Paul gained admission to the
case through misrepresentation and lied
about his own track record. Judge Snepp
found that Paul had violated a number of the
Canons of the Code of Professional
Responsibility by "puffing his wares," but
McDougall had not shown that this in any way
prejudiced his defense. How an attorney
obtains employment is not the measure of
ineffective assistance of counsel.
Paul's
mental and physical condition during trial
did not result in ineffective assistance of
counsel. Paul was one of a team of attorneys
and experts defending the appellant. Paul
had suffered from severe migraine headaches
for a number of years and these had been
exacerbated by the illness and death of his
son three years prior to the trial of this
case. Dr. Teich treated Paul for depression
and another physician had treated him for
migraines. This doctor was of the opinion
that Paul was emotionally and intellectually
capable of practicing law at the time of the
trial. Both Paul and Dr. Teich expected the
stress of the long trial to result in
migraines, and Dr. Teich was present during
the entire trial. He arranged for a
Charlotte neurosurgeon to review Paul's
condition. Of the nine visits to area
hospitals, eight of these visits were at
night, and one was in the morning before
court convened. Three of the visits occurred
on days when the court was not in session.
Paul's capacity in the courtroom was not
adversely affected by these hospital visits
or the medical attention he received.
Attorney
Scofield was an experienced criminal trial
lawyer, and Paul's inability to conduct the
examination of two witnesses had no adverse
effect on the legal representation the
appellant received, because these witnesses
were adequately questioned by Attorney
Scofield. Appellant has made no showing that
Mr. Scofield's services were inadequate, or
that he was prejudiced by Mr. Scofield's
examination of the two witnesses.
There has
been no showing that the legal drugs taken
by Paul during trial resulted in prejudice
to the defendant. Many lawyers and judges
are on various forms of medication while
attending to their duties in the courtroom,
but this is not the test. The appellant must
show that the medication affected his
attorney in such a way that the attorney
could not and did not render adequate legal
assistance during the trial. A review of the
record shows that Paul was active throughout
the trial and Judge Snepp found that there
was no evidence of any error resulting from
his mental or physical condition and
concluded:
Paul
actively and vigorously participated in the
vast majority of all aspects of the trial.
He conducted lengthy voir dire examination
of jurors; examined and cross-examined
witnesses; lodged proper objections;
participated in planning sessions with co-counsel;
conferred with defendant; argued motions;
made jury arguments; and otherwise
discharged the duties of a defense counsel.
If Paul
suborned perjury by McDougall, his mother
and his wife, as appellant alleges, these
were illegal acts, but there has been no
showing as to how appellant was prejudiced
by them.
Appellant
attacks the closing jury argument made by
Jerome Paul at the conclusion of the
sentencing phase of the trial. He contends
that the argument was little more than a
disjointed personal history of Paul, and
that the argument was so outrageous that
Paul's performance during the penalty phase
was inadequate and incompetent. Appellant
supports this claim with the testimony of
Attorney Scofield at the post-conviction
relief hearing stating that the argument was
"tactless, ill-advised, [and] stupid."
Attorney Osborne testified that he found the
argument "extremely foreign to his
philosophy and beliefs." Charlotte attorney
Allen Bailey, a trial lawyer of 34 years
experience and a past president of the North
Carolina Academy of Trial Lawyers, filed an
affidavit in the same proceeding stating
that the argument failed to meet the
standard of legal practice in any county in
North Carolina and was so outrageous that
Paul's performance during the penalty phase
was inadequate.
We know,
from the testimony taken at the post-conviction
relief hearing, that the defense attorneys
discussed with each other the general theme
of their closing arguments prior to
presenting them. Attorneys Osborne and
Scofield made the first two arguments and
covered the irrevocability of a death
penalty verdict, the mitigating factors in
favor of the defendant, Biblical passages in
support of mercy, other arguments indicating
the death penalty was not a proper solution
for McDougall, and McDougall's impaired
ability to conform his behavior to the law.
These were conventional arguments that are
often heard in death penalty cases.
The
argument of Paul was different, and it was
planned to be different. During voir dire
examination of prospective witnesses,
Attorney Paul began to sow the seeds for his
frontal attack upon the death penalty. Prior
to making this argument, Paul discussed it
with Dr. Teich. His attack upon the death
penalty was a preplanned part of the defense
strategy, although, after the fact,
Attorneys Osborne and Scofield had some
second thoughts about the way this attack
was delivered.
In his
final comments to the jury, Paul attacked
the death penalty head-on as a cold blooded,
premeditated killing by the state. He argued
that when society executes people it breeds
violence, that the death penalty was a tool
of totalitarians and fascists, and that
believers in capital punishment love killing.
He quoted Clarence Darrow in his defense of
Loeb and Leopold. He talked about love and
nonviolence and his admiration of Martin
Luther King, Jr., who had preached
nonviolence. He invoked the memory of his
young son, who had died of leukemia, and
reminded the jury that while there was life
there was love. He then quoted extensively
from the Sermon on the Mount including a
complete recitation of the Beatitudes. He
spoke of the brotherhood of man and advised
the jury that only persons who oppose
capital punishment are honored by history.
Judge
Forrest Ferrell, the North Carolina Superior
Court judge, who presided at the defendant's
trial and had presided over a number of
other capital cases, filed an affidavit in
the state post-conviction proceedings
stating that he found Paul's closing
argument was as good as, if not better than,
other death penalty arguments he had heard.
He did not think it offensive to the jury
but rather believed it to be a play upon the
conscience of the jury. His affidavit
concluded:
It is my
professional opinion, as a trial-judge who
has presided over many serious felony trials
and nine capital cases, that Jerry Paul's
argument was appropriate, effective and well
within the range of competence and expertise
expected of attorneys in criminal cases.
Judge
Snepp, who presided at the post-conviction
relief hearings and heard the testimony of
the witnesses, found:
I find as
a fact that at the time Paul chose to make
the argument, the circumstances were these:
The
defendant had been found guilty of a
particularly brutal first degree murder, an
equally brutal assault, and kidnapping. The
State had presented evidence at the
sentencing hearing that the defendant had
been previously convicted of the forcible
rape of a young woman, who testified at the
sentencing hearing. The defendant's
explanation of the crimes was voluntary
ingestion of cocaine, and traumatic
childhood experiences. The testimony of Dr.
Teich suggested that he may, as a child,
have killed his grandfather.
Six of the
twelve jurors were black. Paul knew that to
achieve the best possible result for the
defendant, a recommendation of life
imprisonment, he had to convince only one
juror to maintain that position. N.C.G.S.
15A-2000(b). Scofield told the jurors, in
his opening argument for the defense, that
it was necessary for the jurors to agree on
a death sentence, or there would not be one.
The
evidence is undisputed that Paul
intentionally framed his argument to
influence black members of the panel, worked
hard on it, and discussed it with Dr. Teich.
It is in
the light of these circumstances that the
defendant's claim of ineffectiveness must be
weighed.
Weighing
the content of Paul's argument in the light
of the Strickland [v. Washington, 466 U.S.
668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674]
guidelines, I cannot conclude that, under
the circumstances facing him, it was conduct
which was "outside the wide range of
professionally competent assistance" as
required by Strickland, supra. If, as he
obviously planned and hoped, one juror had
refused to join in the recommendation of
death, the only possible satisfactory result
would have been attained. That he did not
succeed does not demonstrate that the
argument constituted ineffectiveness, and
the fact that the jury deliberated for seven
hours before returning a verdict tends to
belie the opinion of Scofield that Paul's
argument was "stupid," and Bailey's that it
was offensive to the jurors.
I find
that Paul's closing argument at the
sentencing stage of the case was, under the
circumstances then existing, trial strategy
which was within the range of reasonably
effective assistance of counsel. I further
find that the defendant has failed to show
that there is a reasonable probability that,
but for the argument, the finding of the
jury would have been different.
One of the
most difficult duties of a trial lawyer is
to make an effective jury argument seeking
mercy for his client from a jury that has
just convicted the client of a brutal and
bloody murder. How does he seek mercy for
one who has shown no mercy? How does he
discuss the mitigating circumstances when
there are so precious few? He might quote
the Bible, or Shakespeare, or even Clarence
Darrow as was done in this case. He may
invoke the irrevocability of the death
sentence, the finality of death and argue
that the death penalty is not a deterrent.
All of these arguments were made, but what a
lawyer is really trying to do in the
sentencing phase of a capital case is to
appeal to just one juror who will hold out
against the death penalty and thereby
prevent it.
How does
one raise a doubt in the mind of one juror
or convince one juror that death is not a
proper sentence when the murder has been so
vicious? The more cruel and vicious the
facts, the more difficult the lawyer's task
in presenting an effective argument for
mercy. Desperate facts may require a
desperate argument or an unusual approach, a
different appeal that may shake the belief
of one juror and prevent the unanimity
necessary for a recommendation of death.
Attorneys Scofield and Osborne made the
usual appeals to the death phase jury and
Jerome Paul made the desperate appeal, but
it was an appeal that was a strategic choice,
made with full knowledge of the facts and
the law, and the options available to him.
The
closing argument is being attacked after the
verdict. The trial judge did not think it
was inappropriate. He was on the scene and
had heard all of the testimony and could
appreciate the desperate circumstances
facing McDougall and his attorneys. The jury
deliberated for seven hours, which would
indicate that something a defense attorney
said or did gave the jurors pause. Paul's
argument was not an impromptu expression of
his personal beliefs. It was a deliberate
approach that he chose after discussion with
co-counsel and Dr. Teich. Attorney Scofield
admitted in the post-conviction hearing that
Paul had spent a great deal of time thinking
and talking about his closing argument and
its possible impact upon the jury. This
argument was unusual and innovative, but it
was a choice that represented trial strategy
and is subject to review under the standards
enunciated in Strickland v. Washington, 466
U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674
(1984). Justice O'Connor noted the problem
of determining what services were reasonable
when all circumstances are considered. She
stated:
No
particular set of detailed rules for
counsel's conduct can satisfactorily take
account of the variety of circumstances
faced by defense counsel or the range of
legitimate decisions regarding how best to
represent a criminal defendant. Any such set
of rules would interfere with the
constitutionally protected independence of
counsel and restrict the wide latitude
counsel must have in making tactical
decisions. See United States v. Decoster,
199 U.S.App.D.C. at 371, 624 F.2d at 208. [
(D.C.Cir.) ] Indeed, the existence of
detailed guidelines for representation could
distract counsel from the overriding mission
of vigorous advocacy of the defendant's
cause. Moreover, the purpose of the
effective assistance guarantee of the Sixth
Amendment is not to improve the quality of
legal representation, although that is a
goal of considerable importance to the legal
system. The purpose is simply to ensure that
criminal defendants receive a fair trial.
Judicial
scrutiny of counsel's performance must be
highly deferential. It is all too tempting
for a defendant to second guess counsel's
assistance after conviction or adverse
sentence, and it is all too easy for a court,
examining counsel's defense after it has
proved unsuccessful, to conclude that a
particular act or omission of counsel was
unreasonable. Cf. Engle v. Isaac, 456 U.S.
107, 133-134 [102 S.Ct. 1558, 1574-75, 71
L.Ed.2d 783] (1982). A fair assessment of
attorney performance requires that every
effort be made to eliminate the distorting
effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the
circumstances of counsel's challenged
conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from
counsel's perspective at the time. Because
of the difficulties inherent in making the
evaluation, a court must indulge a strong
presumption that counsel's conduct falls
within the wide range of reasonable
professional assistance; that is, the
defendant must overcome the presumption that,
under the circumstances, the challenged
actions "might be considered sound trial
strategy." See Michel v. Louisiana, supra,
[350 U.S. 91] at 101 [76 S.Ct. 158 at 164,
100 L.Ed. 83.] There are countless ways to
provide effective assistance in any given
case. Even the best criminal defense
attorneys would not defend a particular
client in the same way. See Goodpaster, The
Trial for Life: Effective Assistance of
Counsel in Death Penalty Cases, 58
N.Y.U.L.Rev. 299, 343 (1983).
The
availability of intrusive post-trial inquiry
into attorney performance or of detailed
guidelines for its evaluation would
encourage the proliferation of
ineffectiveness challenges. Criminal trials
resolved unfavorably to the defendant would
increasingly come to be followed by a second
trial, this one of counsel's unsuccessful
defense. Counsel's performance and even
willingness to serve could be adversely
affected. Intensive scrutiny of counsel and
rigid requirements for acceptable assistance
could dampen the ardor and impair the
independence of defense counsel, discourage
the acceptance of assigned cases, and
undermine the trust between attorney and
client.
Thus, a
court deciding an actual ineffectiveness
claim must judge the reasonableness of
counsel's challenged conduct on the facts of
the particular case, viewed as of the time
of counsel's conduct. A convicted defendant
making a claim of ineffective assistance
must identify the acts or omissions of
counsel that are alleged not to have been
the result of reasonable professional
judgment. The court must then determine
whether, in light of all the circumstances,
the identified acts or omissions were
outside the wide range of professionally
competent assistance. In making that
determination, the court should keep in mind
that counsel's function, as elaborated in
prevailing professional norms, is to make
the adversarial testing process work in the
particular case. At the same time, the court
should recognize that counsel is strongly
presumed to have rendered adequate
assistance and made all significant
decisions in the exercise of reasonable
professional judgment.
Id. at
688-90, 104 S.Ct. at 2065-66.
When we
review the claim of ineffective assistance
because of Paul's closing argument, we must
remember the circumstances faced by the
defendant and his attorneys. McDougall had
been convicted upon the testimony of
eyewitnesses of the vicious murder of one
young female and the brutal assault and
kidnapping of another. After conviction his
problems increased during the sentencing
phase because of the aggravating
circumstances proved against him,
particularly the testimony of a young woman
whom he had previously raped. A team of
lawyers and experts had been assembled and
represented him during the three weeks of
trial. The division of final arguments had
been agreed upon and the content of Paul's
argument had been discussed. The argument
represented a different approach and a
calculated risk that it might appeal to one
or more jurors and prevent the unanimous
verdict necessary to impose the death
sentence. In reviewing the record and trying
to recreate the circumstances that produced
this argument, we are impressed by the
opinion of the trial judge that the argument
was well within the range of competence and
expertise expected. When we give the
performance of Paul the highly deferential
scrutiny required by Strickland, we find
that the appellant has failed to prove
Paul's performance was deficient or that
appellant was denied adequate counsel as
guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment.
Although
we do not recommend Paul's closing argument
as a model for future use, it did not
deprive McDougall of counsel under the
Constitution. In considering Paul's actions
throughout the trial, it must be remembered
that he was but one of three attorneys
representing the appellant, and we must not
be distracted by some of his unorthodox
actions. We must review the complete legal
advice and services McDougall received from
the defense team representing him. Such a
review convinces us, as it did the trial
court, the post-conviction relief court and
the district court, that McDougall did not
establish his claim of ineffectiveness of
counsel.
VI
We have
delayed this opinion, at appellant's request,
to await the opinion of the Supreme Court in
McKoy v. North Carolina, --- U.S. ----, 110
S.Ct. 1227, 108 L.Ed.2d 369 (1990), because
it involves the North Carolina capital
sentencing scheme. We further delayed the
filing of this opinion to allow the Supreme
Court of North Carolina to reconsider
McDougall's sentence in light of McKoy.
McDougall petitioned the Supreme Court of
North Carolina to remand his case to the
Superior Court of Mecklenburg County for the
imposition of a life sentence under the
holding in McKoy, or in the alternative for
a writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court of
North Carolina in order to reargue his
appeal. The motions have been denied.
We have
carefully considered McKoy and find it has
no application to the present case. In McKoy
the jury was instructed during the
sentencing stage that any mitigating
circumstances must be unanimously found
before they could be considered and weighed
against aggravating circumstances in
determining the sentence. The Supreme Court
found that the unanimity requirement
impermissibly limited the jurors'
consideration of mitigating evidence in
violation of Mills v. Maryland, 486 U.S.
367, 108 S.Ct. 1860, 100 L.Ed.2d 384 (1988),
because one juror could prevent unanimity
and thereby prevent the other eleven jurors
from giving effect to mitigating evidence.
In
charging on question 2, which related to
mitigating circumstances, the McDougall jury
was not instructed that its findings on
mitigation must be unanimous.
The McKoy
issue was not raised by appellant at his
trial or on direct appeal. The issue was not
raised in his state post-conviction motion
for appropriate relief and it was not raised
in his petition for writ of habeas corpus in
the United States District Court, nor was it
raised in his appeal to this court. The
Supreme Court of North Carolina has denied
his motion for a writ of certiorari to bring
the issue before it ten years after his
trial. McKoy is an extension of Mills v.
Maryland, which was decided eight years
after McDougall's conviction. The McDougall
facts are not the same as McKoy, but even if
they were, the McKoy and Mills cases
represent new law and would not be applied
retroactively on collateral review. Teague
v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 109 S.Ct. 1060, 103
L.Ed.2d 334 (1989).
For the
reasons set forth above, we find no error,
and we affirm.