Joseph Ward, III v. United States ( 2020 )


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  •                                     PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 19-6626
    JOSEPH M. WARD, III, Captain (0-3) U.S. Air Force,
    Petitioner – Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Respondent – Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at
    Alexandria. Liam O’Grady, Senior District Judge. (1:18-cv-00569-LO-MSN)
    Argued: September 8, 2020                               Decided: December 10, 2020
    Before KING and FLOYD, Circuit Judges, and Thomas S. KLEEH, United States District
    Judge for the Northern District of West Virginia, sitting by designation.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge King wrote the opinion, in which Judge Floyd and
    Judge Kleeh joined.
    ARGUED: Captain Brian Lee Mizer, AIR FORCE APPELLATE DEFENSE DIVISION,
    Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, for Appellant. Matthew James Mezger, OFFICE OF THE
    UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: G.
    Zachary Terwilliger, United States Attorney, John E. Swords, Special Assistant United
    States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia,
    for Appellee.
    KING, Circuit Judge:
    In these 
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
     proceedings, Joseph M. Ward III petitioned in the Eastern
    District of Virginia for habeas corpus relief from his military court convictions and
    sentence, claiming violations of his Fifth Amendment right to due process and Sixth
    Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel. The district court dismissed
    Ward’s § 2241 petition under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) for lack of
    jurisdiction over the due process claim and under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a
    plausible ineffective assistance claim. See Ward v. United States, No. 1:18-cv-00569 (E.D.
    Va. Mar. 27, 2019), ECF No. 10 (the “Dismissal Order”). As explained below, we affirm
    the dismissal of Ward’s § 2241 petition but recognize that Rule 12(b)(6) is the proper basis
    for the dismissal of both claims.
    I.
    A.
    The record reflects that Ward, then a Captain in the Air Force, was charged with
    nine violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, including two specifications of
    aggravated sexual assault, two specifications of forcible sodomy, three specifications of
    assault consummated by battery, and two specifications of conduct unbecoming an officer
    and a gentleman. The charged crimes involved two women — referred to herein as “M.W.”
    and “R.S.” — who had been dating Ward in 2011 and 2012 when he allegedly victimized
    them. Although M.W. and R.S. disclosed that they had numerous consensual sexual
    encounters with Ward, they also accused him of various acts of sexual assault.
    2
    In December 2012, Ward was tried by a general court-martial at Davis-Monthan Air
    Force Base in Arizona. The prosecution presented evidence that M.W. had reported to
    Ward’s command earlier that year that Ward was engaging in threatening behavior against
    her (conduct that did not include sexual assault). Shortly thereafter, R.S. separately went
    to Ward’s command and requested a “no-contact” order against him. Pressed to explain
    why she was seeking the order, R.S. divulged that Ward had sexually assaulted her.
    Because of R.S.’s allegations, military investigators set up an interview with M.W., in
    which she revealed that she also had been sexually assaulted by Ward. Under the
    prosecution’s theory of the case, R.S. and M.W. were credible because — despite not
    knowing each other — their allegations against Ward were quite similar. The defense
    countered with a theory, however, that R.S. and M.W. actually were acquainted and
    conspired to falsely accuse Ward of sexual assault to punish him for being unfaithful to
    and then scorning each of them.
    Over Ward’s objection, the military judge instructed the jurors that, if one charged
    act of sexual assault was proved by at least a preponderance of the evidence, that act could
    be used as propensity evidence when considering other sexual assault charges. See J.A.
    196-97. 1 That propensity instruction was based on a pattern instruction in the then-
    applicable 2006 version of the Military Judges’ Benchbook, addressing how a jury could
    use propensity evidence under Military Rule of Evidence 413, entitled “Similar Crimes in
    1
    Citations herein to “J.A. __” refer to the contents of the Joint Appendix filed by
    the parties in this appeal.
    3
    Sexual Offense Cases.” Precedent of the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces suggested
    that the propensity instruction was proper. See United States v. Burton, 
    67 M.J. 150
    , 152-
    53 (C.A.A.F. 2009); United States v. Wright, 
    53 M.J. 476
    , 481-83 (C.A.A.F. 2000). And,
    “at that time, the common understanding of the law [among the trial judges and the lower
    military courts of criminal appeals] was that charged misconduct could be used as
    propensity evidence under [Rule] 413.” See United States v. Hukill, 
    76 M.J. 219
    , 222
    (C.A.A.F. 2017). The judge in Ward’s court-martial proceedings instructed, inter alia, that
    “proof of one [charged] sexual assault creates no inference that the accused is guilty of any
    other sexual assault. However, it may demonstrate that the accused has a propensity to
    commit that type of offense.” 
    Id. at 197
    .
    The prosecutor referenced the propensity instruction in his closing arguments,
    explaining that “here’s what it boils down to: If you believe that [Ward committed] one of
    those [charged] sexual assaults . . . to a preponderance of the evidence, but it doesn’t meet
    that beyond a reasonable doubt, you can still use that for another offense to show that he
    has a propensity to commit sexual assaults.” See J.A. 202. The prosecutor elaborated:
    So you can think, “Well, I think [Ward] did it. I think he committed the
    assault against [M.W.], but it doesn’t rise to the level of beyond a reasonable
    doubt, but I still think he did it.” You can actually use that for the sexual
    assault alleged against [R.S.] That’s an important instruction for you guys
    to consider because these charges, these victims, it didn’t happen in a
    vacuum. And so this evidence can be used in a very important way.
    
    Id. at 202-03
    .
    Ultimately, however, the prosecutor emphasized in his closing arguments that the
    case turned on the joint credibility of M.W. and R.S. That is, the prosecutor argued that
    4
    the jurors would either believe both women because of their similar accounts of sexual
    assault and convict Ward on all nine charges, or the jurors would doubt the women’s
    credibility based on Ward’s theory of a conspiracy and acquit him on all charges. See J.A.
    228-30. Ward’s defense counsel then pronounced in his closing arguments that “I agree
    that this case is about credibility of [M.W. and R.S.]. And I agree that it’s essentially an
    all-or-nothing case.” 
    Id. at 250
    . Thereafter, the members of the court-martial convicted
    Ward on all charges and sentenced him to eight years of confinement.
    Although Ward’s counsel had repeatedly stated his objection to the propensity
    instruction during the court-martial proceedings, he failed to raise any challenge to that
    instruction on direct appeal. By its decision of October 23, 2014, the Air Force Court of
    Criminal Appeals rejected the appellate issues presented by Ward and confirmed his
    convictions and sentence. The Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces denied review of
    that decision by its order of February 18, 2015.
    B.
    On June 27, 2016, more than a year after Ward’s losing efforts to overturn his
    convictions on direct appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces decided in United
    States v. Hills that a propensity instruction like the one given during Ward’s court-martial
    proceedings constituted a misuse of Military Rule of Evidence 413 and a breach of the
    defendant’s Fifth Amendment right to due process. See 
    75 M.J. 350
    , 354-57 (C.A.A.F.
    2016). With respect to the constitutional error in giving the instruction, the Hills court
    reasoned that allowing the use of charged conduct as propensity evidence to prove other
    charges “violated [the defendant’s] presumption of innocence and right to have all findings
    5
    made clearly beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     at 356 (citing In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    ,
    363-64 (1970); Coffin v. United States, 
    156 U.S. 432
    , 453-54 (1895)). In the court’s words,
    “[i]t is antithetical to the presumption of innocence to suggest that conduct of which an
    accused is presumed innocent may be used to show a propensity to have committed other
    conduct of which he is presumed innocent.” 
    Id.
    Within the next year, the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces reiterated its Hills
    holding in its May 2, 2017 decision in Hukill. The Hills and Hukill decisions explained
    that, on direct appeal, an improper propensity instruction is subject to harmless error
    review.      See Hills, 75 M.J. at 358 (“If instructional error is found when there are
    constitutional dimensions at play, the appellant’s claims must be tested for prejudice under
    the standard of harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” (alteration and internal quotation
    marks omitted)); accord Hukill, 76 M.J. at 222. The propensity instructions in Hills and
    Hukill were determined to be prejudicial; in direct appeals in the military courts since then,
    similar instructions have been deemed prejudicial in some circumstances and harmless in
    others.
    On July 12, 2017, a then-imprisoned Ward filed a petition in the Air Force Court of
    Criminal Appeals for a writ of error coram nobis, invoking the Hills and Hukill decisions
    and asserting that the propensity instruction given during his court-martial proceedings
    contravened his Fifth Amendment right to due process. On September 20, 2017, while
    Ward’s coram nobis petition was pending, the court of criminal appeals issued its decision
    in Lewis v. United States, 
    76 M.J. 829
     (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. 2017), denying the coram nobis
    6
    petition of another prisoner who claimed under Hills and Hukill that a propensity
    instruction was unconstitutional.
    Favorably to the petitioner, the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals recognized in
    Lewis that it has “jurisdiction over a petition for a writ of coram nobis alleging an earlier
    judgment of conviction previously reviewed by this court was flawed in some fundamental
    respect.” See 76 M.J. at 833. For support, the Lewis court invoked the precedent of
    Chapman v. United States, 
    75 M.J. 598
     (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. 2016). The Chapman decision
    explained that — although, unlike federal district courts, the Air Force Court of Criminal
    Appeals lacks jurisdiction over habeas corpus petitions — it possesses jurisdiction over
    coram nobis petitions. See 75 M.J. at 600-01 (citing United States v. Denedo, 
    556 U.S. 904
     (2009)). 2
    After confirming its jurisdiction over the coram nobis petition, however, the Lewis
    court proceeded to rule that the petitioner failed to satisfy the threshold requirements for
    relief. See 76 M.J. at 834. As outlined in Chapman, such requirements include that “no
    remedy other than coram nobis is available to rectify the consequences of the error” and
    that “the sentence has been served, but the consequences of the erroneous conviction
    2
    In its Denedo decision, the Supreme Court observed that “coram nobis is . . . an
    extraordinary tool to correct a legal or factual error” and that “an application for the writ is
    properly viewed as a belated extension of the original proceeding during which the error
    allegedly transpired.” See 
    556 U.S. at 912-13
    . The Court also explained that “[b]ecause
    [a] request for coram nobis is simply a further step in [the petitioner’s] criminal appeal, the
    . . . jurisdiction [of a military court of criminal appeals] to issue the writ derives from the
    earlier jurisdiction it exercised to hear and determine the validity of the conviction on direct
    review.” 
    Id. at 914
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    7
    persist.” See 75 M.J. at 601 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Lewis petitioner failed
    to satisfy those requirements, the court explained, because he “remain[ed] in confinement”
    and thus was “eligible to seek a writ of habeas corpus from a federal district court.” See
    76 M.J. at 834.
    Finally, in apparent dicta, the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals observed in its
    Lewis decision that “[e]ven if [the petitioner] met the threshold requirements for coram
    nobis relief, his petition would fail on the issue of retroactive application of Hills.” See 76
    M.J. at 834. The Lewis court provided a lengthy explanation of why it interpreted Hills to
    announce a new rule of criminal procedure that was not a watershed rule and therefore
    “would [not] apply retroactively to [the petitioner’s] case.” See id. at 834-36 (assessing
    retroactivity of Hills under principles of Teague v. Lane, 
    489 U.S. 288
     (1989) (plurality
    opinion)).
    On September 21, 2017, the day after it issued its decision denying the coram nobis
    petition in Lewis, the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals entered an order summarily
    denying Ward’s coram nobis petition. The order simply cited the Lewis decision, as well
    as the Chapman decision on which Lewis relied.
    Following the denial of his coram nobis petition by the Air Force Court of Criminal
    Appeals on the basis of Lewis and Chapman, Ward appealed to the Court of Appeals for
    the Armed Forces. By its one-sentence order of November 13, 2017, that court denied
    Ward’s appeal without explanation or citation to any authority, including Lewis or
    Chapman. Notably, in a decision issued that same day in another case, United States v.
    8
    Gray, the court disclaimed jurisdiction over the coram nobis petition at issue therein. See
    
    77 M.J. 5
    , 6 (C.A.A.F. 2017).
    C.
    On May 10, 2018, Ward filed his habeas corpus petition under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
     in
    the Eastern District of Virginia, where he is now on parole. In support of his Fifth
    Amendment due process claim, Ward contends — like he did in his coram nobis petition
    in the military courts — that the propensity instruction given during his court-martial
    proceedings contravened his right to due process, as subsequently recognized by the Court
    of Appeals for the Armed Forces in its Hills and Hukill decisions. With respect to his Sixth
    Amendment ineffective assistance claim, which he did not raise in the military courts,
    Ward asserts that his counsel was constitutionally ineffective in failing to challenge the
    propensity instruction on direct appeal before Hills and Hukill were decided.
    The government filed a motion to dismiss Ward’s § 2241 petition on February 19,
    2019, and the district court granted that motion by its Dismissal Order of March 27, 2019.
    The district court dismissed the Fifth Amendment due process claim under Federal Rule of
    Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) for lack of jurisdiction, on the ground that the claim was fully and
    fairly considered by a military court. The court relied on the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Burns v. Wilson, 
    346 U.S. 137
     (1953), for the proposition that “[w]hen a military court has
    ‘fully and fairly’ considered the issues raised in a federal habeas petition, ‘it is not open to
    a federal civil court to grant the writ simply to re-evaluate the evidence.’” See Dismissal
    Order 3 (quoting Burns, 
    346 U.S. at 142
    ). The district court reasoned that the Air Force
    Court of Criminal Appeals fully and fairly considered Ward’s due process claim by
    9
    dismissing it pursuant to that court’s Lewis decision, in that Lewis “held, albeit in dicta,
    that the rule announced in Hills did not apply retroactively on collateral review.” 
    Id.
     As
    the district court explained its ruling, “[b]ecause [Ward’s] Hills arguments have . . . already
    been fully and fairly considered by a military court, this Court lacks jurisdiction to
    reconsider them.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Next, the district court dismissed the Sixth Amendment ineffective assistance claim
    under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. In so
    doing, the court recognized that Ward was obliged to “allege facts that, if true, would
    establish that (a) his appellate counsel’s representation fell below ‘an objective standard of
    reasonableness’ and (b) ‘there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
    unprofessional errors, the result of’ his direct appeal ‘would have been different.’” See
    Dismissal Order 3-4 (quoting Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 688, 694 (1984)).
    Without reaching the prejudice prong, the court then concluded that Ward’s ineffective
    assistance claim fails on the performance prong. Specifically, the court determined that
    although Ward’s counsel objected to the propensity instruction at trial, “counsel did not act
    unreasonably in failing to re-raise [Ward’s] preserved objections [on direct appeal].” Id.
    at 4. In its analysis, the court observed that counsel generally has no duty to raise a
    frivolous issue or even all colorable claims on appeal. Id. The court also emphasized that
    “until the [Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces] decided Hills after [Ward’s] direct
    appeal had become final, military appellate court precedent held that evidence of charged
    offenses of sexual assault could properly be used as propensity evidence under Military
    10
    Rule of Evidence 413.” Id. (citing three decisions issued by military courts of criminal
    appeals after Ward’s direct appeal concluded and prior to Hills).
    Ward timely noted this appeal from the district court’s Dismissal Order. We possess
    jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    II.
    Our review of the district court’s dismissal of Ward’s 
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
     petition is
    de novo. See Willenbring v. United States, 
    559 F.3d 225
    , 231 (4th Cir. 2009) (“We review
    de novo the legal rulings made by a district court in habeas corpus proceedings.”). We
    begin with the dismissal of the Fifth Amendment due process claim and then turn to the
    dismissal of the Sixth Amendment ineffective assistance claim.
    A.
    At the outset, we recognize that the district court erred in characterizing its dismissal
    of Ward’s Fifth Amendment due process claim as a dismissal under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 12(b)(1) for lack of jurisdiction. See Dismissal Order 3 (relying on Burns v.
    Wilson, 
    346 U.S. 137
     (1953)). That is because, as the Supreme Court explained in its Burns
    decision, § 2241 “vests federal courts with jurisdiction over applications for habeas corpus
    from persons confined by the military courts.” See 
    346 U.S. at 139
    . Although the Burns
    Court did caution that a military court decision that “has dealt fully and fairly with an
    allegation in [the § 2241] application” is “‘final’ and ‘binding’ upon all courts,” the Court
    emphasized “that this does not displace the civil courts’ jurisdiction.” Id. at 142. Stated
    another way, the federal court possesses jurisdiction over the § 2241 petition but “cannot
    11
    review” claims “fully and fairly reviewed” by the military courts. See United States v.
    Willenbring, 178 F. App’x 223, 224-25 (4th Cir. 2006).
    In any event, if the district court properly determined that Ward’s Fifth Amendment
    due process claim was fully and fairly considered by a military court, then the dismissal of
    that claim is appropriate under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief
    can be granted. Ward offers several arguments as to why his due process claim was not
    accorded full and fair consideration by a military court, including the following:
    ●      Contrary to the Dismissal Order, the Air Force Court of Criminal
    Appeals cannot have fully and fairly considered Ward’s due process
    claim by relying on mere dicta — i.e., the dicta in Lewis v. United
    States, 
    76 M.J. 829
     (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. 2017), indicating that the
    rule of United States v. Hills, 
    75 M.J. 350
     (C.A.A.F. 2016), is not
    retroactively applicable in coram nobis proceedings;
    ●      The Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals also cannot have fully and
    fairly considered Ward’s due process claim in reliance on Lewis’s
    principal ruling that coram nobis relief is unavailable to a petitioner
    eligible to seek a writ of habeas corpus from a federal court, as the
    district court’s resultant inability to entertain the claim would leave
    Ward “in limbo,” see Br. of Appellant 15; and
    ●      By denying Ward’s appeal in the coram nobis proceedings on the
    same day that it issued its decision disclaiming jurisdiction over the
    coram nobis petition in United States v. Gray, 
    77 M.J. 5
     (C.A.A.F.
    2017), the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces evidenced that it
    denied Ward’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction and therefore did not
    fully and fairly consider his due process claim.
    Without unnecessarily delving into those complicated issues, we conclude that the
    Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal of Ward’s Fifth Amendment due process claim is proper for a
    reason readily apparent from the record: The propensity instruction given during Ward’s
    court-martial proceedings was insufficiently prejudicial to entitle him to habeas corpus
    12
    relief. Simply put, Ward cannot satisfy the heavy “burden of demonstrating that [the
    propensity] instruction was so prejudicial that it . . . by itself so infected the entire trial that
    the resulting conviction[s] violate[] due process.” See Henderson v. Kibbe, 
    431 U.S. 145
    ,
    154 (1977) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    As heretofore recounted, the prosecution presented an “all-or-nothing case” that
    hinged on the joint credibility of Ward’s two victims. The jury’s primary reason for
    believing the women was the similarity of their accounts of being sexually abused by Ward,
    and the jury’s principal basis for doubting the women was Ward’s theory that they
    conspired to falsely accuse him of sexual assault. In these circumstances, it is improbable
    that the jury believed one of the women beyond a reasonable doubt but not the other and
    then relied on the propensity instruction to convict Ward on all charges. Accordingly, it is
    questionable whether the propensity instruction would be deemed prejudicial under even
    the harmless error standard applied by the military courts in direct appeals. See Hills, 75
    M.J. at 358; see also United States v. Hukill, 
    76 M.J. 219
    , 222 (C.A.A.F. 2017). To be
    sure, Ward cannot demonstrate that the propensity instruction was sufficiently prejudicial
    to entitle him to habeas corpus relief.
    B.
    For similar reasons, we conclude that the Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal of Ward’s Sixth
    Amendment ineffective assistance claim is proper. Notably, Ward contests the district
    court’s ruling that his ineffective assistance claim fails on the performance prong of
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 688 (1984); specifically, Ward argues that because
    other lawyers were challenging similar instructions during the relevant time period, his
    13
    counsel acted unreasonably in failing to raise the propensity instruction as an issue on direct
    appeal. We need not reach and address the merits of that contention, however, because
    Ward’s claim clearly fails on Strickland’s prejudice prong. See 
    466 U.S. at 694
     (requiring
    “a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different”). As we explained in affirming the dismissal of
    Ward’s Fifth Amendment due process claim, the propensity instruction may well have
    constituted harmless error under Hills and Hukill. Thus, Ward cannot show a reasonable
    probability that a challenge to the propensity instruction on direct appeal would have been
    successful.
    III.
    Pursuant to the foregoing, we affirm the dismissal by the district court of the Eastern
    District of Virginia of Ward’s habeas corpus petition under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
    .
    AFFIRMED
    14