Brian Stark v. Daniel White ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                                NOT FOR PUBLICATION                             FILED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                          FEB 22 2022
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT                       MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
    U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
    BRIAN THOMAS STARK,                                  No. 20-35722
    Petitioner-Appellant,            D.C. No. 2:14-cv-01538-JCC
    v.
    DANIEL WHITE,                                        MEMORANDUM*
    Respondent-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Washington
    John C. Coughenour, District Judge, Presiding
    Submitted June 11, 2021**
    Seattle, Washington
    Before: W. FLETCHER, WATFORD, and COLLINS, Circuit Judges.
    Brian T. Stark (“Stark”) appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for
    a writ of habeas corpus, which in its present form challenges his conviction in the
    Washington state courts on two counts of child molestation and one count of
    incest. We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1291
    , 2253(a). Reviewing the
    district court’s ruling de novo, see Visciotti v. Martel, 
    862 F.3d 749
    , 760 (9th Cir.
    2016), we affirm.
    *
    This disposition is not appropriate for publication and is not precedent except as
    provided by Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3.
    **
    The panel unanimously concludes that this case is suitable for decision without
    oral argument. See FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C).
    1. In post-conviction proceedings in the Washington state courts, Stark
    contended that his trial counsel had been ineffective in failing to interview, and to
    call at trial, his nephew, Jeffrey Stark (“Jeffrey”). According to Stark, Jeffrey
    would have contradicted key details of one of the alleged episodes of molestation
    claimed by Stark’s step-daughter C.W., viz., an incident that assertedly occurred
    when C.W., Stark, and Jeffrey went bike riding together and Stark sent Jeffrey
    home. In support of this contention, Stark presented a letter purportedly written by
    Jeffrey in 2011, three years prior to Jeffrey’s untimely death from cancer, together
    with declarations from Stark’s wife and sister-in-law that Stark contended provided
    adequate foundation for the letter. The letter asserted that the author would “testify
    under oath” that C.W.’s allegations about this incident were “false because we
    never went on a bike ride and Brian never told me to go home.”
    In “the last reasoned decision from the state court,” Murray v. Schriro, 
    882 F.3d 778
    , 801 (9th Cir. 2018) (simplified), the Acting Commissioner of the
    Washington Supreme Court concluded that, under the Washington Evidence Rules,
    the letter was both insufficiently authenticated and “classic hearsay.” Setting aside
    the letter as not constituting “competent evidence,” the Acting Commissioner
    concluded that Stark had failed to show sufficient prejudice and that his
    “ineffective assistance claim necessarily fails for lack of evidentiary support.” A
    2
    majority of the Justices of the Washington Supreme Court voted to deny Stark’s
    motion to modify the Acting Commissioner’s ruling.
    a. Stark first contends that the state supreme court’s rejection of the
    proffered letter violated his due process rights. Stark raised this federal issue in his
    motion to modify the Acting Commissioner’s ruling in the Washington Supreme
    Court, and that court’s summary denial of that motion must therefore be
    understood as a rejection of that claim on the merits. See Harrington v. Richter,
    
    562 U.S. 86
    , 99 (2011). Consequently, we review this issue through the deferential
    standards of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”).1
    Given the reasonable questions raised concerning the foundation and reliability of
    the letter, the state court reasonably concluded that exclusion of the letter did not
    render the state post-conviction proceedings so fundamentally unfair as to amount
    to a due process violation. See Estelle v. McGuire, 
    502 U.S. 62
    , 75 (1991); see
    also 
    id. at 70
     (noting that, subject to the “‘fundamental elements of fairness’”
    required by the Due Process Clause, States have discretion to set their own rules of
    procedure and evidence) (citation omitted).
    The parties also vigorously dispute whether the state court correctly applied
    the relevant state rules, but “it is not the province of a federal habeas court to
    1
    We would reach the same conclusion even if we reviewed this issue de novo.
    3
    reexamine state-court determinations on state-law questions.”2 
    Id.
     at 67–68.
    Although Stark argues that the Commissioner violated his due process rights by
    applying those state-law rules in an arbitrary and wholly unexpected manner, cf.
    Hicks v. Oklahoma, 
    447 U.S. 343
    , 346 (1980), the Washington Supreme Court
    reasonably rejected that contention.
    In short, under any standard of review, we perceive no basis in federal law
    for setting aside or disregarding the state court’s ruling excluding the alleged letter
    from Jeffrey on state-law grounds.
    b. We reject Stark’s remaining challenges to the state supreme court’s
    denial of his ineffective assistance claim. The court’s conclusion that, after
    application of the evidence rules, Stark lacked sufficient evidence of prejudice to
    meet the ineffective-assistance standards of Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984), was a decision on the merits of that claim and is therefore entitled to
    deference under AEDPA. Given the exclusion of the alleged letter from Jeffrey,
    the state high court did not act unreasonably in concluding that the remaining
    record did not contain sufficient evidence of prejudice under Strickland.
    2. Applying AEDPA’s deferential standards, we conclude that the
    2
    To the extent that the Washington courts’ resolution of this state-law
    admissibility issue rested on predicate determinations of fact, Stark failed to rebut
    those factual findings by clear and convincing evidence. 28 U.S.C. 2254(e)(1); see
    also Bradshaw v. Richey, 
    546 U.S. 74
    , 79 (2005).
    4
    Washington courts reasonably rejected Stark’s further contention that a particular
    jury instruction at his trial unconstitutionally lessened the State’s burden of proof.
    The relevant jury instruction was a specific unanimity instruction that—in a
    portion that Stark does not challenge—told the jurors that, to convict Stark on each
    count, the jurors must respectively find “one particular act” of molestation or
    intercourse to “be proved beyond a reasonable doubt, and you must unanimously
    agree as to which act has been proved.” Stark challenges only a preliminary
    sentence added to the instruction, which used the following language to describe
    the multiple acts that had been the subject of testimony in the case: “Evidence has
    been produced suggesting that the defendant committed acts of Child Molestation
    in the First Degree and Incest in the First Degree on multiple occasions.” Stark
    contends that this sentence essentially told the jurors that Stark had committed
    such acts “and that their only task was to agree to the same act for each count.”
    The instruction, according to Stark, thereby reduced the State’s burden to prove
    every element of the offenses beyond a reasonable doubt and effectively directed a
    verdict.
    The last reasoned decision on this issue was likewise issued by the Acting
    Commissioner of the Washington Supreme Court, and a majority of the Court’s
    Justices voted to uphold that ruling. Stark asserts that the Acting Commissioner’s
    ruling addressed only Stark’s state-law grounds for challenging the instruction and
    5
    overlooked his federal-law arguments, but we disagree. Although citing a state
    case in discussing the issue, the Acting Commissioner specifically concluded that
    the challenged instruction was not “tantamount to a directed verdict.” That
    standard is at least as protective as the federal constitutional standard, which
    forbids “a directed verdict for the State” in a criminal case and instead requires the
    State to “prove every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which the
    defendant is charged beyond a reasonable doubt.” Rose v. Clark, 
    478 U.S. 570
    ,
    580 (1986) (simplified); see also State v. Jackman, 
    104 P.3d 686
    , 690 (Wash. App.
    2004) (holding that provision of Washington Constitution prohibiting judicial
    comment or charge on factual matters was violated by instruction that
    “impermissibly relieved the State of its burden of proving an essential element of
    the crime beyond a reasonable doubt and . . . was tantamount to a directed
    verdict”). Stark has not rebutted the presumption that the Acting Commissioner
    rejected Stark’s federal arguments on the merits. Johnson v. Williams, 
    568 U.S. 289
    , 301 (2013) (“[I]f the state-law rule subsumes the federal standard—that is, if
    it is at least as protective as the federal standard—then the federal claim may be
    regarded as having been adjudicated on the merits.”) Accordingly, AEDPA
    deference applies to the state high court’s adjudication of this federal claim. See
    Harrington, 
    562 U.S. at 99
    .
    The state supreme court reasonably found that, in the context of the jury
    6
    instructions as a whole, the challenged sentence did not relieve the State of its
    burden of proving every element of the crimes charged. Reasonable jurists could
    conclude, as the Acting Commissioner did, that the sentence was “an awkwardly
    worded statement to the effect that evidence was presented of the alleged crimes”;
    that the phrasing “did not convey or imply an instruction to the jury to give
    particular weight to the State’s evidence or that the evidence was credible”; and
    that the challenged sentence did not undermine the other clear instructions that the
    State had the burden to prove every element beyond a reasonable doubt.
    AFFIRMED.
    7