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- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
- --------
- No. 91-1738
- --------
- JERRY D. GILMORE, PETITIONER v. KEVIN
- TAYLOR
- on writ of certiorari to the united states court
- of appeals for the seventh circuit
- [June 7, 1993]
-
- Justice Blackmun, with whom Justice Stevens joins,
- dissenting.
- The Court today holds that it cannot decide whether
- Kevin Taylor has suffered a denial of Due Process, be-
- cause Teague v. Lane, 489 U. S. 288 (1989), and its
- progeny preclude the announcement or application of a
- new rule on federal habeas corpus. The Court further
- concludes, as it must in order to avoid reaching the
- merits, that neither exception to Teague's proscription of
- a new rule applies in this case. See ante, at 11. The
- second Teague exception permits the retroactive applica-
- tion of -`watershed rules of criminal procedure' implicating
- the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal
- proceeding,- Saffle v. Parks, 494 U. S. 484, 495 (1990)
- (quoting Teague, 489 U. S., at 311). Unlike the Court, I
- am fully persuaded that this exception does apply in this
- case. Therefore, even assuming arguendo that the major-
- ity is correct in concluding that Taylor asks this Court to
- announce a -new rule,- Teague does not preclude the
- retroactive application of that rule.
- Taylor argues that the substantive criminal law existing
- at the time of a defendant's alleged offense must be the
- law that governs the trial of that offense. I believe that
- he is correct and that the principle he asserts is a funda-
- mental one. I therefore would affirm the judgment of the
- Court of Appeals.
-
- I
- At the time that Taylor was tried for the -murder- of
- Scott Siniscalchi, Illinois law defined murder and volun-
- tary manslaughter as two distinct crimes, albeit with two
- elements in common. To be guilty of either crime, a
- defendant had to have (1) caused the death of the victim,
- and (2) intended to kill or cause great bodily harm to the
- victim. The distinction between voluntary manslaughter
- and murder at the time of Taylor's offense was that a
- defendant who acted either -under a sudden and intense
- passion resulting from serious provocation,- or under an
- unreasonable (but honest) belief that deadly force was
- justified to prevent the defendant's own imminent death
- or great bodily harm, was guilty of voluntary manslaugh-
- ter but not guilty of murder. Ill. Rev. Stat., ch. 38, - 9-2
- (1985). In other words, under Illinois law at the time of
- Taylor's offense, a person who killed under specific circum-
- stances of provocation was innocent of murder.
- At the close of Taylor's trial, the presiding judge found
- that sufficient evidence in support of voluntary man-
- slaughter had been presented to require a jury instruction
- under Illinois law. The judge therefore determined that
- he would -let the Jury decide . . . whether that provoca-
- tion existed here or did not exist here.- App. 96. No one
- has challenged this finding on appeal. Yet the presiding
- judge did not explain to the jury that provocation was an
- affirmative defense to murder. Instead, after telling the
- jury about the two elements of murder (intent and causa-
- tion of death), the judge stated: -If you find from your
- consideration of all the evidence that each one of these
- propositions has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt,
- you should find the Defendant guilty.- Id., at 129. The
- judge went on to instruct the jury that a person is guilty
- of voluntary manslaughter when he has killed an individ-
- ual while possessing the requisite state of mind, and at
- -the time of the killing he acts under a sudden and
- intense passion resulting from serious provocatin [sic] by
- the deceased. Serious provocation is conduct sufficient to
- excite an intense passion in a reasonable person.- Id., at
- 130. Finally, the judge gave the following instruction in
- an apparent attempt to explain the relation between the
- murder and the voluntary manslaughter charges:
- -As stated previously, the Defendant is charged with
- committing the offense of murder and voluntary
- manslaughter. If you find the Defendant guilty, you
- must find him guilty of either offense; but not both.
- On the other hand, if you find the Defendant not
- guilty, you can find him not guilty on either or both
- offenses.- Id., at 131.
- Even the prosecutor thought these instructions may
- have failed to inform the jury of the relation between the
- offenses of murder and manslaughter under Illinois law.
- Id., at 98-99. He accordingly suggested that the judge
- include an instruction explaining that Taylor's provocation
- claim could serve to constitute a complete defense to the
- murder charge. Id., at 99. The prosecutor indicated that
- he had raised this possibility because -I just don't want
- to knowingly create error here.- Id., at 101. The trial
- judge declined the suggestion and responded to the
- prosecutor's concern: -We're not doing it knowingly; we're
- doing it out of ignorance.- Ibid.
- After deliberations, the jury announced that it had
- found Taylor guilty of murder. It then returned a signed
- verdict form to that effect. Id., at 131, 137. The jury
- never mentioned the manslaughter charge and returned
- unsigned both the guilty and not-guilty forms for that
- offense. Id., at 139-140.
-
- II
- A jury instruction is unconstitutional if there is a
- -reasonable likelihood that the jury has applied the
- challenged instruction in a way that prevents the consid-
- eration of constitutionally relevant evidence.- Boyde v.
- California, 494 U. S. 370, 380 (1990). I explain in
- greater detail below why testimony that demonstrates that
- a defendant killed under provocation is constitutionally
- relevant evidence in a murder trial in Illinois. A thresh-
- old question, however, is whether the jury's instructions
- in this case created a reasonable likelihood that the jury
- would not consider such provocation evidence.
- No one appears to contest the proposition that a jury
- of lay people would not understand from the instructions
- that it should find Taylor not guilty of murder if it
- concluded that he acted under provocation. The judge
- explained to the jury that it could convict Taylor of either
- murder or manslaughter (or neither) but not both. App.
- 131. In instructing that Taylor could not be found guilty
- of both offenses, however, the judge failed to explain that
- a defendant, in fact, could satisfy the elements of both
- offenses. He failed to inform the jury that indeed when-
- ever the elements of voluntary manslaughter (intent,
- causation, and provocation) are satisfied, the elements of
- murder (intent and causation) are satisfied as well. And,
- of course, he therefore did not clarify that the jury must
- choose manslaughter over murder in the event that the
- elements of both offenses are made out.
- The relation between murder and voluntary manslaugh-
- ter in Illinois at the time of Taylor's offense was a compli-
- cated one. Provocation was both a component of man-
- slaughter and a defense to murder. The easy way to
- convey this idea is to explain that to find a defendant
- guilty of murder, the jury must find (1) that there was
- intent, (2) that there was causation, and (3) that there
- was no provocation. The prosecutor explained to the
- judge that he might have had to provide such an instruc-
- tion under Illinois law. See id., at 99.
- What the judge actually did, however, was simply to list
- the elements of each offense, starting with murder, tell
- the jury that it could convict Taylor of only one but not
- of both, and send the jury to deliberate. In the delibera-
- tion room, the jurors had four sheets of paper, each of
- which provided spaces for the jurors' signatures. The
- sheets indicated, respectively, verdicts of -Not Guilty of
- the offense of murder,- -Guilty of the offense of murder,-
- -Not Guilty of the offense of Voluntary Manslaughter,-
- and -Guilty of the offense of Voluntary Manslaughter,- in
- that order. See id., at 135, 137, 139-140. The jurors
- signed neither the guilty nor the not-guilty verdict forms
- regarding voluntary manslaughter. This is almost cer-
- tainly because the instruction for murder preceded the
- instruction for manslaughter, the verdict forms for murder
- preceded the verdict forms for manslaughter, and the
- jurors understood that once they had found Taylor guilty
- of murder, they could not, consistent with the judge's
- instructions, find him guilty of manslaughter. There was
- therefore no need, under the instructions they received,
- to consider manslaughter and provocation. Taylor's jury
- never knew that provocation made out a complete defense
- to murder.
- The State itself concedes that the instructions -violated
- state law by permitting the jury to find Taylor guilty of
- murder without considering his affirmative defense.- Brief
- for Petitioner 12. According to a unanimous Illinois
- Supreme Court evaluating the same instructions given in
- another case: -These instructions essentially assure that
- if the jury follows them, the jury cannot possibly convict
- a defendant of voluntary manslaughter.- People v.
- Reddick, 123 Ill. 2d 184, 194, 526 N. E. 2d 141, 145
- (1988). The Seventh Circuit concluded: -No matter how
- clearly either the State or the defense proved the exis-
- tence of the mitigating `manslaughter defenses,' the jury
- could nevertheless return a murder verdict in line with
- the murder instruction as given.- Falconer v. Lane, 905
- F. 2d 1129, 1136 (1990). Because of the jury's ignorance,
- respondent Taylor suffered a fundamental deprivation of
- his constitutional rights that seriously diminished the
- likelihood of an accurate conviction.
-
- III
- To understand why an instruction that prevents the jury
- from considering provocation evidence violates the Consti-
- tution, it is necessary to examine the operation of the
- criminal law in regulating the conduct of citizens in a free
- society. As explained below, the instructions in this case
- in effect created an ex post facto law, diminished the
- likelihood of an accurate conviction, and deprived Taylor
- of his right to a fair trial.
-
- A
- 1
- This Court consistently has held that the Constitution
- requires a State to provide notice to its citizens of what
- conduct will subject them to criminal penalties and of
- what those penalties are. See Miller v. Florida, 482 U. S.
- 423, 429 (1987) (explaining the constitutional prohibition
- against ex post facto laws, U. S. Const., Art. I, 9, cl. 3,
- 10, cl. 1); Beazell v. Ohio, 269 U. S. 167, 169 (1925)
- (same); Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1, 77 (1976) (explain-
- ing the Due Process requirement that defendants be on
- notice that their conduct violates the criminal law); Bouie
- v. City of Columbia, 378 U. S. 347, 351 (1964) (same).
- People can conform their conduct to the dictates of the
- criminal law only if they can know what the criminal law
- has to say about their conduct. Proper warning is a
- constitutional imperative.
- Illinois, through its criminal statutes, warned Taylor
- that his actions, as conceded at trial, were against the
- law. Illinois, however, did not warn him that murder and
- voluntary manslaughter would be treated as interchange-
- able or equivalent offenses. A defendant convicted of
- voluntary manslaughter, for example, could be incarcer-
- ated for as short a term as 4 years, and could be impris-
- oned for a maximum term of 15 years. A convicted
- murderer, in contrast, could be imprisoned for no fewer
- than 20 years and up to a maximum of 40 years, absent
- aggravating factors. See Ill. Rev. Stat., ch. 38, --9-2(c),
- 1005-8-1(1) and (4) (1985). Under Illinois law at the
- time of Taylor's acts, then, the offense that he claims he
- committed-voluntary manslaughter-was not treated as
- an offense of nearly the same seriousness as murder.
- Nevertheless, in the presence of provocation evidence, a
- murder instruction read without an adequate explanation
- of the affirmative defense of provocation treats murder
- and voluntary manslaughter as equivalent offenses.
- Because provocation evidence was undisputedly present in
- this case, the failure to explain its operation as a defense
- to murder amounted to the application to Taylor of an ex
- post facto murder law.
- A useful analogy to the relation between voluntary
- manslaughter and murder in this case is the relation
- between self-defense and murder elsewhere in the criminal
- law. In those States in which self-defense is an affirma-
- tive defense to murder, the Constitution does not require
- that the prosecution disprove self-defense beyond a reason-
- able doubt. See, e.g., Martin v. Ohio, 480 U. S. 228
- (1987). This is because only elements of an offense impose
- this heavy burden of proof upon the State. Ibid. Despite
- its status as an affirmative defense, however, self-defense
- converts what is otherwise murder into justifiable homi-
- cide. In other words, the person who kills in self-defense,
- instead of being guilty of murder, is guilty of no offense
- at all.
- It is easy to see in the context of self-defense how the
- omission of an affirmative-defense instruction fundamen-
- tally denies the defendant Due Process. Consider the
- following hypothetical example. As a citizen who is
- presumed to know the law, see Atkins v. Parker, 472
- U. S. 115, 130 (1985), Jane Doe chooses to kill John
- Smith when he threatens her with substantial bodily
- harm or death, on the correct theory that she is not
- committing murder under state law. Doe has a right to
- rely on the representation of her state legislature that her
- conduct is legal. If the State then were to try her for
- murder and not permit her to plead self-defense, the
- State's breach of this representation undoubtedly would
- violate principles of fundamental fairness.
- It may be more difficult to sympathize with Kevin
- Taylor than with the hypothetical Jane Doe, because Doe
- acted legally and Taylor concededly did not. Not all
- crimes are equal, however, and if Illinois announces that
- it will treat murder more seriously than voluntary man-
- slaughter, then Taylor has a right to rely on that an-
- nouncement when he makes a decision to engage in
- conduct punishable as a less serious crime. This Court
- in Mullaney v. Wilbur, 421 U. S. 684, 698 (1975), said:
- -Indeed, when viewed in terms of the potential differ-
- ence in restrictions of personal liberty attendant to
- each conviction, the distinction . . . between murder
- and manslaughter may be of greater importance than
- the difference between guilt or innocence for many
- lesser crimes.-
- 2
- By equating voluntary manslaughter with murder and
- thereby, in effect, applying an ex post facto murder law
- to Taylor, the instructions in this case made it highly
- likely that the jury would return an inaccurate murder
- conviction.
- As explained above, under Illinois law at the time of
- Taylor's offense, the presence of provocation reduced
- murder to voluntary manslaughter. This meant that state
- law defined the category of murder to exclude voluntary
- manslaughter and therefore considered a person who was
- guilty of voluntary manslaughter also to be innocent of
- murder. Any procedure that increased the likelihood of
- a murder conviction despite the presence of provocation,
- thus also decreasing the likelihood of a manslaughter
- conviction, was therefore a procedure that diminished the
- likelihood of an accurate conviction by the jury. Because
- the procedure in this case prevented the jury from even
- considering the voluntary manslaughter option, it severely
- diminished the likelihood of an accurate conviction. See
- Butler v. McKellar, 494 U. S. 407, 416 (1990). The
- instructions given in this case essentially ensured that a
- person guilty of voluntary manslaughter would be con-
- victed, wrongly, of murder.
- Returning to the hypothetical example set forth above,
- the omission of a self-defense instruction in Jane Doe's
- case would distort the definition of murder by causing the
- jury to include killings in self-defense within that defini-
- tion. A person who kills in self-defense, however, like a
- person who kills under provocation, is not guilty of
- murder under state law and is therefore not subject to the
- penalties prescribed for murder. Any conviction that
- results from the omission of a state law affirmative
- defense is therefore, in the case of provocation and in the
- case of self-defense, an inaccurate conviction.
- The State suggests that the right asserted by Taylor is
- the same as that recognized by this Court in Beck v.
- Alabama, 447 U. S. 625 (1980). See Brief for Petitioner
- 17. In Beck, this Court held that a capital defendant is
- entitled to a lesser included offense instruction if there is
- evidence in the record to support such an instruction. We
- left open the question whether Beck applies in the non-
- capital context. Id., at 638, n. 14. The State here asserts
- that because many courts of appeals have rejected such
- a right in the noncapital context, this Court could do the
- same with respect to Taylor's claim. See Brief for Peti-
- tioner 17 and n. 7. This assertion is without merit.
- Like the right Taylor claims, Beck entitles certain
- defendants to have the jury consider less drastic alterna-
- tives to murder. This, however, is where the similarity
- between the two rights ends. In Beck, the Court's concern
- and the reason for the required lesser included offense
- instruction was that jurors might ignore their reasonable-
- doubt instruction. Where the defendant is -`plainly guilty
- of some offense,'- 447 U. S., at 634, quoting Keeble v.
- United States, 412 U. S. 205, 213 (1973) (emphasis in
- original), there is a risk that absent a lesser included
- offense instruction, the jurors will convict a defendant of
- capital murder, thereby exposing him to the death pen-
- alty, because they do not want to set a guilty person free.
- In other words, the failure to provide a lesser included
- offense instruction in the capital context is a problem only
- to the extent that we fear that jurors will choose to
- disregard or nullify their reasonable-doubt instruction.
- In Taylor's case, the concern is just the opposite-that
- the jurors will follow their instructions and thereby
- convict the defendant of murder because they are ignorant
- of the fact that provocation reduces the offense to volun-
- tary manslaughter. The failure to include a proper
- voluntary manslaughter instruction literally distorts the
- definition of murder by extending it to include voluntary
- manslaughter and thereby misinforming the jury.
- Whether or not we would choose to extend Beck and its
- presumption of jury nullification to the noncapital defen-
- dant has no bearing on the outcome of this case. The
- right at issue here is one premised upon the notion that
- jurors faithfully follow what they understand to be their
- instructions. This premise clearly operates in the capital
- and noncapital contexts alike. See Richardson v. Marsh,
- 481 U. S. 200, 211 (1987).
-
- B
- Through his instructions, then, the trial judge in this
- case applied an ex post facto murder law to Taylor and
- thereby misled the jury as to the definition of murder.
- But the trial judge also violated another of Taylor's
- constitutional rights. When the judge prevented Taylor's
- jurors from considering his provocation defense, the judge
- deprived Taylor of his Sixth Amendment and Fourteenth
- Amendment right to a fair trial.
- The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitu-
- tion guarantee every criminal defendant the right to
- remain silent. Our precedents have explained that this
- right precludes the State from calling the defendant as a
- witness for the prosecution. See, e.g., South Dakota v.
- Neville, 459 U. S. 553, 563 (1983) (the -classic Fifth
- Amendment violation- consists of requiring the defendant
- to testify at his own criminal trial); Malloy v. Hogan, 378
- U. S. 1 (1964) (the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process
- Clause incorporates the Fifth Amendment right to remain
- silent against the States). The State must provide all
- evidence necessary to a conviction if the defendant chooses
- not to testify.
- Taylor gave up this important right and took the
- witness stand to testify about his crime. He evidently did
- so to avail himself of the provocation defense provided by
- Illinois law. Taylor admitted under oath that he broke
- into his former wife's home and intentionally and fatally
- stabbed Scott Siniscalchi. App. 80-81. He also testified,
- however, that he had been provoked by the victim. Id.,
- at 76-81. In its closing argument, the defense therefore
- asked the jury to find that he had acted under sudden
- and intense passion when he killed Siniscalchi and
- therefore was not guilty of murder. Id., at 112-121.
- When the judge instructed the jurors, he effectively told
- them to disregard Taylor's provocation testimony. Absent
- that testimony, of course, the most important evidence
- before the jurors when they deliberated was that Taylor
- had taken the stand and had sworn to them that his
- actions violated both elements of the murder statute. As
- far as the jurors could tell, Taylor had confessed to the
- crime of murder in open court.
- Taylor never indicated a desire to plead guilty to
- murder. Indeed, he offered testimony that tended to show
- that he was innocent of murder. Yet the trial judge failed
- to follow the very statute that had prompted Taylor to
- testify. By so doing, the judge effectively transformed
- exculpatory testimony into a plea of guilty to murder.
- When a defendant intentionally pleads guilty to an
- offense, he has a constitutional right to be informed about
- the consequences of his plea. See Mabry v. Johnson, 467
- U. S. 504, 509 (1984); Marshall v. Lonberger, 459 U. S.
- 422, 436 (1983). Taylor, however, was never apprised of
- the consequences of his testimony. Instead, he was
- affirmatively misled into unknowingly confessing to a
- crime of which he claimed he was innocent. The judge's
- erroneous instructions thereby vitiated Taylor's right to a
- fair trial, guaranteed him by the Sixth and Fourteenth
- Amendments.
-
- IV
- The omission of an adequate affirmative-defense instruc-
- tion constitutes a profound violation of a defendant's
- constitutional rights. It creates an ex post facto law,
- misinforms the jury as to the governing legal principles,
- and denies a defendant his right to a fair trial. -Although
- the precise contours of [the second Teague] exception may
- be difficult to discern, we have usually cited Gideon v.
- Wainwright, 372 U. S. 335 (1963), holding that a defen-
- dant has the right to be represented by counsel in all
- criminal trials for serious offenses, to illustrate the type
- of rule coming within the exception.- Saffle v. Parks, 494
- U. S., at 495. The right to an affirmative-defense instruc-
- tion that jurors can understand when there is evidence to
- support an affirmative defense is as significant to the
- fairness and accuracy of a criminal proceeding as is the
- right to counsel. It is indeed critical in a case like this
- one, where the defendant takes the stand and concedes
- the elements of murder in order to prove his affirmative
- defense.
- Kevin Taylor has not requested a rule that would
- unreasonably place stumbling blocks in the path of law
- enforcement nor has he asked this Court to announce a
- rule that is only marginally related to the underlying
- right to a fair trial. On the contrary, he has asked that
- he be convicted of voluntary manslaughter if he is guilty
- of voluntary manslaughter, that he be spared a sentence
- for murder if he is innocent of murder, and that his judge
- not effectively instruct the jury to disregard the exculpa-
- tory part of his testimony and attend only to that which
- would ensure a conviction for murder. If he is denied
- what he asks, he is denied a fair trial.
- I respectfully dissent and would affirm the judgment of
- the Court of Appeals.
-