Frederic Dixon v. Brian Williams, Sr. ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •                 FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    FREDERIC K. DIXON,                        No. 10-17145
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    D.C. No.
    v.                      2:09-cv-00066-
    PMP-PAL
    BRIAN E. WILLIAMS, SR.; ATTORNEY
    GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEVADA,           ORDER AND
    Respondents-Appellees.         AMENDED
    OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Nevada
    Philip M. Pro, Senior District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    March 10, 2014—San Francisco, California
    Filed April 30, 2014
    Amended June 11, 2014
    Before: John T. Noonan, Sidney R. Thomas,
    and Marsha S. Berzon, Circuit Judges.
    Per Curiam Opinion
    2                      DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    SUMMARY*
    Habeas Corpus
    The panel reversed the district court’s denial of a
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
     habeas corpus petition challenging a jury
    instruction on self-defense.
    The trial court gave an inaccurate jury instruction that an
    honest but “reasonable” (instead of “unreasonable”) belief in
    the necessity for self-defense does not negate malice and does
    not reduce the offense from murder to manslaughter. The
    panel held that this error was not harmless, because the error
    reduced the State’s burden for convicting petitioner of murder
    instead of voluntary manslaughter, and improperly limited the
    jury’s consideration of the kind of provocation that could give
    rise to manslaughter, even if the other elements of
    manslaughter were established.
    COUNSEL
    Randolph Fiedler (argued) and Debra A. Bookout, Assistant
    Federal Public Defenders; Rene L. Valladares, Federal Public
    Defender, Las Vegas, Nevada, for Petitioner-Appellant.
    Michael J. Bongard (argued), Deputy Attorney General;
    Catherine Cortez Masto, Nevada Attorney General, Ely,
    Nevada, for Respondent-Appellee.
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    DIXON V. WILLIAMS                        3
    ORDER
    The Slip Opinion filed on April 30, 2014 is amended as
    follows:
    The last sentence of the first full paragraph on page 11 is
    deleted and replaced with the following sentence:
    But this “reasonable likelihood” inquiry does
    not apply when the disputed instruction is
    erroneous rather than ambiguous. See Boyde,
    494 U.S. at 380 (distinguishing situations
    when the test would apply from those where
    the instruction at issue was “concededly
    erroneous [or] found so by a court”); see also
    Ho v. Carey, 
    332 F.3d 587
    , 592 (9th Cir.
    2003).
    With this amendment, the panel has unanimously voted
    to deny the petition for rehearing. Judge Thomas and Judge
    Berzon have voted to deny the petition for rehearing en banc,
    and Judge Noonan so recommends.
    The full court has been advised of the suggestion for
    rehearing en banc and no active judge has requested a vote on
    whether to rehear the matter en banc. Fed. R. App. P. 35.
    The petition for rehearing is DENIED and the suggestion
    for rehearing en banc is REJECTED.
    No future petitions for rehearing or rehearing en banc will
    be entertained.
    4                    DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    OPINION
    PER CURIAM:
    Petitioner Frederic K. Dixon seeks federal habeas relief
    on the basis that the state trial court improperly instructed the
    jury on self-defense in violation of his Fourteenth
    Amendment right to due process. We agree and reverse the
    district court’s denial of habeas relief.
    I
    Dixon was charged in the district court of Clark County,
    Nevada with murder with a deadly weapon for the shooting
    death of Derrick Nunley on November 14, 2003.
    The parties do not dispute most of the facts related to the
    shooting, including the following: Early in the morning on
    the day of the shooting, Dixon went to Club 7, a night club in
    Las Vegas, with his two younger brothers, Gabriel and
    Marcus Anderson. When Dixon’s girlfriend tried to leave,
    Troy Nunley (also known as Fly) and his friends were
    standing next to her vehicle in the parking lot. The Nunley
    group was asked to move to allow her to leave. They refused,
    and she hit Nunley in the arm as she backed up her car.
    Nunley became upset, kicked the woman’s car, and screamed
    obscenities at her. When Dixon came out of the club, Nunley
    began yelling at him as well, and, at some point, removed a
    box cutter from his pocket. One of the club’s security
    officers grabbed Nunley’s arm to prevent him from using the
    box cutter.
    Dixon and his brothers left the club’s parking lot, and
    drove to the Palms Hotel and Casino. They were followed by
    DIXON V. WILLIAMS                       5
    a group of Nunley’s friends, who made threatening gestures
    through the windows of their vehicles. After Dixon and his
    brothers reached the parking lot of the Palms, Nunley’s
    friends arrived. Due to the loud commotion, the Palms
    security personnel did not allow the groups to enter the
    casino. In the parking lot, a fist fight began between
    Nunley’s group and Dixon’s group. Someone in Nunley’s
    group began throwing rocks at Dixon and his brothers.
    Nunley pulled out the box cutter again, and brandished it at
    Dixon, repeatedly threatening that “I’m going to cut your face
    off,” and that he would kill Dixon.
    At some point, Nunley returned to his car and entered it
    from the passenger side, without closing the door. Dixon
    returned to his vehicle, got a gun, ran to Nunley’s car, and
    shot him four times. Nunley died at the scene.
    At trial, Dixon did not deny shooting Nunley. Instead, he
    argued that he shot Nunley in self-defense. Jury Instruction
    19, which set forth the basic parameters of self-defense,
    contained an error. The instruction stated in full:
    The killing of another person in self-defense
    is justified and not unlawful when the person
    who does the killing actually and reasonably
    believes:
    1. That there is imminent danger that the
    assailant will either kill him or cause him
    great bodily injury; and
    2. That it is absolutely necessary under
    the circumstances for him to use in self-
    defense force or means that might cause
    6                DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    the death of the other person, for the
    purpose of avoiding death or great bodily
    injury to himself and/or others.
    A bare fear of death or great bodily injury is
    not sufficient to justify a killing. To justify
    taking the life of another in self-defense, the
    circumstances must be sufficient to excite the
    fears of a reasonable person placed in a
    similar situation. The person killing must act
    under the influence of those fears alone and
    not in revenge.
    An honest but reasonable belief in the
    necessity for self-defense does not negate
    malice and does not reduce the offense from
    murder to manslaughter.
    The right of self-defense is not available to an
    original aggressor, that is a person who has
    sought a quarrel with the design to force a
    deadly issue and thus through his fraud,
    contrivance or fault, to create a real or
    apparent necessity for making a felonious
    assault.
    However, where a person, without voluntarily
    seeking, provoking, inviting, or willingly
    engaging in a difficulty of his own free will, is
    attacked by an assailant, he has the right to
    stand his ground and need not retreat when
    faced with the threat of deadly force.
    DIXON V. WILLIAMS                                7
    (emphasis added). It is undisputed that the italicized word
    should have been “unreasonable.”1
    The trial court instructed the jury on first-degree murder,
    second-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, and
    involuntary manslaughter. “Murder” was defined as “the
    unlawful killing of a human being, with malice aforethought,
    either express or implied.” In contrast, Instruction 12
    provided:
    Voluntary Manslaughter is the unlawful
    killing of a human being, without malice
    aforethought and without deliberation or
    premeditation. It is a killing upon a sudden
    quarrel or heat of passion, caused by a
    provocation sufficient to make the passion
    irresistible.
    The provocation required for Voluntary
    Manslaughter must either consist of a serious
    and highly provoking injury inflicted upon the
    person killing, sufficient to excite an
    irresistible passion in a reasonable person, or
    an attempt by the person killed to commit a
    serious personal injury on the person killing.
    For the sudden, violent impulse of passion to
    be irresistible resulting in a killing, which is
    Voluntary Manslaughter, there must not have
    1
    The trial court noticed a spelling error in the same instruction — in the
    last paragraph, “attacked” was misprinted as “attached” — made a
    handwritten correction to the instruction, and informed the jurors of the
    correction.
    8                   DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    been an interval between the assault or
    provocation and the killing sufficient for the
    voice of reason and humanity to be heard; for,
    if there should appear to have been sufficient
    time for a cool head to prevail and the voice
    of reason to be heard, the killing shall be
    attributed to deliberate revenge and
    determined by you to be murder. The law
    assigns no fixed period of time for such an
    interval but leaves its determination to the
    jury under the facts and circumstances of the
    case.
    Instruction 13 further stated:
    The heat of passion which will reduce a
    homicide to Voluntary Manslaughter must be
    such an irresistible passion as naturally would
    be aroused in the mind of an ordinarily
    reasonable person in the same circumstances.
    A defendant is not permitted to set up his own
    standard of conduct and to justify or excuse
    himself because his passions were aroused
    unless the circumstances in which he was
    placed and the facts that confronted him were
    such as also would have aroused the
    irresistible passion of the ordinarily
    reasonable man if likewise situated. The basic
    inquiry is whether or not, at the time of the
    killing, the reason of the accused was
    obscured or disturbed by passion to such an
    extent as would cause the ordinarily
    reasonable person of average disposition to
    act rashly and without deliberation and
    DIXON V. WILLIAMS                                 9
    reflection and from such passion rather than
    from judgment.
    The jury found Dixon guilty of second-degree murder
    with a deadly weapon.2 Dixon was sentenced to life with the
    possibility of parole.
    Dixon appealed, arguing, among other things, that the
    self-defense instruction was clearly erroneous. The Nevada
    Supreme Court affirmed the conviction. It agreed that the
    jury instruction was erroneous:
    Jury Instruction 19, which attempts to
    describe[] the standard for self-defense, reads
    in part: “An honest but reasonable belief in
    the necessity for self-defense does not negate
    malice and does not reduce the offense from
    murder to manslaughter.” This is clearly an
    incorrect statement of the law. The jury
    instruction should read: “An honest but
    unreasonable belief in the necessity for self-
    defense does not negate malice and does not
    reduce the offense from murder to
    manslaughter.”
    (emphasis in original). But, applying a harmless error
    analysis, the Nevada Supreme Court held that the error did
    not warrant a new trial. It stated,
    2
    The jury began deliberating at about 7:10 p.m. on Thursday, October
    28, 2004, and returned a verdict by 2:32 a.m. on Friday, October 29, 2004.
    It does not appear that the jurors asked the trial court any questions during
    their deliberations.
    10                  DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    We conclude that this error was harmless.
    The first four paragraphs of Jury Instruction
    19 state correctly that a defendant who
    reasonably believes there is imminent danger
    of death or bodily harm may use deadly force
    to defend himself. The instruction then
    incorrectly states that an honest but
    reasonable belief will not reduce a murder
    charge to manslaughter.
    Eyewitnesses testified that the altercation
    between Dixon and Nunley was over before
    Dixon shot him. Nunley had put away a knife
    and was walking back toward his car. Dixon
    had stepped back from the scene, and the
    direct physical confrontation was over. The
    jury heard testimony that Dixon then walked
    deliberately back to his car, unlocked the
    door, and grabbed a gun. Dixon then ran over
    to Nunley’s vehicle and shot him repeatedly.
    Although one statement in the instruction was
    incorrect, we conclude beyond a reasonable
    doubt that, given the totality of the jury
    instructions and the evidence admitted at trial,
    the error did not substantially prejudice the
    jury’s deliberations and verdict.
    Dixon filed a pro se state post-conviction petition, which
    the state district court denied. Dixon timely appealed, and the
    Nevada Supreme Court affirmed the district court’s decision.
    Thereafter, Dixon filed a pro se federal habeas corpus
    petition raising the erroneous jury instruction. The district
    DIXON V. WILLIAMS                       11
    court denied the petition, holding that the state Supreme
    Court’s denial of the claim on direct appeal was not contrary
    to, or an unreasonable application of, federal law, and was not
    based on an unreasonable finding of fact. A panel of this
    court granted Dixon a certificate of appealability as to
    “whether the trial court’s jury instruction on self-defense
    deprived appellant of due process.” Thereafter, counsel was
    appointed to represent Dixon on appeal.
    II
    A writ of habeas corpus may be issued for a state prisoner
    only if “he is in custody in violation of the Constitution or
    law or treaties of the United States.”               
    28 U.S.C. §§ 2241
    (c)(3), 2254(a). Under the Antiterrorism and
    Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), which applies to
    Dixon’s petition, a federal court may grant a habeas petition
    with respect to a “claim that was adjudicated on the merits”
    in state court only if the state’s decision “was contrary to, or
    involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established
    Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the
    United States,” or “was based on an unreasonable
    determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented
    in the State court proceeding.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d). “A
    district court’s decision to grant or deny a petition for habeas
    corpus under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
     is reviewed de novo.” Dows
    v. Wood, 
    211 F.3d 480
    , 484 (9th Cir. 2000) (citation omitted).
    A
    “When considering an allegedly erroneous jury
    instruction in a habeas proceeding, an appellate court first
    considers whether the error in the challenged instruction, if
    any, amounted to ‘constitutional error.’” Evanchyk v.
    12                    DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    Stewart, 
    340 F.3d 933
    , 939 (9th Cir. 2003) (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). “In a criminal trial, the State
    must prove every element of the offense, and a jury
    instruction violates due process if it fails to give effect to that
    requirement.” Middleton v. McNeil, 
    541 U.S. 433
    , 437
    (2004). But “not every ambiguity, inconsistency, or
    deficiency in a jury instruction rises to the level of a due
    process violation.” 
    Id.
     The appropriate inquiry “is whether
    the ailing instruction . . . so infected the entire trial that the
    resulting conviction violates due process.” 
    Id.
     (quoting
    Estelle v. McGuire, 
    502 U.S. 62
    , 72 (1991)) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). “[A] single instruction to a jury
    may not be judged in artificial isolation, but must be viewed
    in the context of the overall charge.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Boyde v.
    California, 
    494 U.S. 370
    , 378 (1990)) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    “If the charge as a whole is ambiguous, the question is
    whether there is a ‘reasonable likelihood that the jury has
    applied the challenged instruction in a way’ that violates the
    Constitution.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Estelle, 
    502 U.S. at 72
    ). But this
    “reasonable likelihood” inquiry does not apply when the
    disputed instruction is erroneous rather than ambiguous. See
    Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 380
     (distinguishing situations when the
    test would apply from those where the instruction at issue was
    “concededly erroneous [or] found so by a court”); see also Ho
    v. Carey, 
    332 F.3d 587
    , 592 (9th Cir. 2003).
    When the Nevada Supreme Court addressed the
    instructional error on direct appeal, it held that the instruction
    “incorrectly states that an honest but reasonable belief will
    not reduce a murder charge to manslaughter,” and was an
    “inaccurate statement of the law.” In other words, the
    Nevada Supreme Court held that such a belief in fact could
    DIXON V. WILLIAMS                              13
    contribute to reducing a murder charge to manslaughter under
    state law. That statement of the Nevada Supreme Court is
    binding on this court, Bradshaw v. Richey, 
    546 U.S. 74
    , 76
    (2005) (“a state court’s interpretation of state law, including
    one announced on direct appeal of the challenged conviction,
    binds a federal court sitting in habeas corpus”), and correctly
    reflects the underlying law of manslaughter in Nevada.3
    The error did reduce the State’s burden for convicting
    Dixon of murder instead of voluntary manslaughter. As
    correctly noted in the other instructions, “[m]urder is the
    unlawful killing of a human being, with malice aforethought,
    either express or implied,” but “[v]oluntary manslaughter is
    the unlawful killing of a human being, without malice
    aforethought and without deliberation or premeditation.” The
    instructions also properly explained that voluntary
    manslaughter “is a killing upon a sudden quarrel or heat of
    3
    The State’s characterization of the Nevada Supreme Court’s holding
    on direct appeal is incorrect. The State maintains that the Nevada
    Supreme Court held that the portion of the jury instructions with the error
    was intended to address the doctrine of imperfect self-defense, which
    Dixon had not tried to invoke at trial, and the corrected version only tells
    jurors that this defense is not available in Nevada, so Dixon could not
    have benefitted from the defense if the jury had been properly instructed.
    See Runion v. State, 
    13 P.3d 52
    , 59 (Nev. 2000); Hill v. State, 
    647 P.2d 370
    , 370–71 (Nev. 1982). In states that recognize this defense, if a
    defendant entertained an honest but unreasonable belief in the necessity
    of self-defense, the greatest charge of which he can be convicted is
    manslaughter, because such a belief would by itself negate malice, which
    is a required element for murder. Hill, 
    647 P.2d at 371
    .
    But the Nevada Supreme Court only made this observation
    “[a]dditionally,” and in a footnote. Its primary holding was that the
    instruction as actually given contained an incorrect statement of the law
    regarding murder and manslaughter, as discussed in the text.
    14                      DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    passion, caused by a provocation sufficient to make the
    passion irresistible.” They further stated that the required
    provocation “must either consist of a serious and highly
    provoking injury inflicted upon the person killing, sufficient
    to excite an irresistible passion in a reasonable person, or an
    attempt by the person killed to commit a serious personal
    injury on the person killing.” (emphasis added). But because
    the jurors also were told that an “honest but reasonable belief
    in the necessity for self-defense . . . does not reduce the
    offense from murder to manslaughter,” the jurors were not
    permitted to find the second, “serious personal injury”
    provocation required for voluntary manslaughter even if they
    determined that Dixon had honestly and reasonably believed
    that Nunley had attempted or was attempting to kill or
    seriously physically injure him.
    Under state law, such a belief may contribute to reducing
    the murder charge to manslaughter, by helping establish the
    requisite provocation. The instruction was facially erroneous,
    because it stated otherwise.4 As a result, the kind of
    provocation that could give rise to manslaughter was
    improperly limited, even if the other elements of
    manslaughter were established. And the error was a
    constitutional one, as it made more onerous for the defendant,
    and less onerous for the prosecution, conviction for a lesser
    rather than a greater offense. See Cool v. United States,
    4
    The jury was given otherwise accurate instructions regarding self-
    defense. But those instructions addressed self-defense as a complete
    defense to the killing. The erroneous instruction, in contrast, dealt with
    the reduction of the offense from murder to manslaughter by negating
    malice. It is the only instruction that directly addressed the relationship
    of self-defense to this reduction.
    DIXON V. WILLIAMS                       15
    
    409 U.S. 100
    , 104 (1972); Mendez v. Knowles, 
    556 F.3d 757
    ,
    768 (9th Cir. 2009).
    B
    “Even where constitutional error is found, ‘in § 2254
    proceedings a court must [also] assess the prejudicial impact
    of constitutional error’ under the Brecht [v. Abrahamson,
    
    507 U.S. 619
     (1993)] standard.” Merolillo v. Yates, 
    663 F.3d 444
    , 454 (9th Cir. 2011) (quoting Fry v. Pliler, 
    551 U.S. 112
    ,
    121–22 (2007)) (first alteration in original). Under Brecht,
    habeas petitioners are entitled to relief if “the error ‘had
    substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining
    the jury’s verdict.’” 
    507 U.S. at 637
    . As explained by the
    Supreme Court,
    [I]f one cannot say, with fair assurance, after
    pondering all that happened without stripping
    the erroneous action from the whole, that the
    judgment was not substantially swayed by the
    error, it is impossible to conclude that
    substantial rights were not affected. The
    inquiry cannot be merely whether there was
    enough to support the result, apart from the
    phase affected by the error. It is rather, even
    so, whether the error itself had substantial
    influence.
    Merolillo, 
    663 F.3d at 454
     (quoting Kotteakos v. United
    States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    , 765 (1946)) (alteration in original).
    “Where the record is so evenly balanced that a judge ‘feels
    himself in virtual equipoise as to the harmlessness of the
    error’ and has ‘grave doubt’ about whether an error affected
    a jury [substantially and injuriously], the judge must treat the
    16                  DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    error as if it did so.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting O’Neal v. McAninch,
    
    513 U.S. 432
    , 435-38 (1995)) (alteration in original).
    The State suggests that Dixon must fulfill both the Brecht
    test and also show “that the Nevada Supreme Court’s
    application of United States Supreme Court law was
    objectively unreasonable” under AEDPA. But the Supreme
    Court has “explained that we need not conduct an analysis
    under AEDPA of whether the state court’s harmlessness
    determination on direct review — which is governed by the
    ‘harmless beyond a reasonable doubt’ test set forth in
    Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24 (1967) — was
    contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly
    established federal law.” Pulido v. Chrones, 
    629 F.3d 1007
    ,
    1012 (9th Cir. 2010) (citing Fry, 
    551 U.S. at
    119–20). “This
    is because the Brecht test ‘obviously subsumes’ the ‘more
    liberal AEDPA/Chapman standard which requires only that
    the state court’s harmless-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt
    determination be unreasonable.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Fry, 
    551 U.S. at 120
    ). Thus, “[w]e ‘apply the Brecht test without regard for
    the state court’s harmlessness determination.’” Ayala v.
    Wong, No. 09-99005, slip op. at 33–34 (9th Cir. Feb. 25,
    2014) (quoting Pulido, 
    629 F.3d at 1012
    ). Applying the
    Brecht test, we conclude that the instructional error had
    substantial and injurious influence on the jury’s verdict.
    As the Nevada Supreme Court noted, there was testimony
    that the confrontation between Dixon and Nunley was over
    and Nunley had retreated to his car by the time Dixon went to
    his own car, retrieved a gun, ran to Nunley’s car and shot him
    while saying, “That’s what you get for pulling a knife on
    me.” But there was other testimony that could have
    supported a finding of adequate provocation for voluntary
    manslaughter purposes, had the jury been properly instructed.
    DIXON V. WILLIAMS                       17
    Among other evidence, Dixon’s younger brother, Gabriel
    Anderson, who was present throughout the relevant events,
    testified about dangerous confrontations in different settings,
    in all of which Nunley, not Dixon, was the aggressor and
    during all of which Dixon tried repeatedly to de-escalate the
    situation, only to have Nunley continue his threats and
    violence. Anderson described an atmosphere in which the
    brothers were faced with Nunley and his threatening friends,
    making him “scared for my life.” In the first parking lot, for
    example, Anderson saw Nunley hold a box cutter and appear
    to be ready to use it “to cut or stab” Dixon, a possibility that
    dissipated only when a security guard intervened. Also at
    that location, Anderson witnessed Nunley’s friends yelling
    and screaming threats at Dixon.
    In the second parking lot, Anderson heard several people
    in Nunley’s group yelling at him and his brothers, “Going to
    kill you mother fucker. You’re not getting out of Las Vegas
    alive. You mother fuckers are going to die.” He described
    trying to leave the parking lot for the safety of the casino,
    only to be prevented from entering by security guards.
    Anderson then saw Nunley “jump[] out with a knife” and
    swing it at Dixon, while telling Dixon repeatedly, “I’m going
    to cut your mother fuckin’ face off.” Nunley also threatened
    Dixon, “You can dodge this knife, but you can’t dodge these
    bullets.” Anderson then saw Nunley “[take] off towards his
    car.”
    Dixon’s defense counsel argued that Dixon reasonably
    believed that Nunley was going to his car to retrieve a gun, to
    follow through on his threat that Dixon would not be able to
    “dodge” his “bullets.” The defense also maintained that
    Nunley was not about to leave the scene, based on the
    18                  DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    testimony that he had entered the car’s passenger side door,
    not the driver’s side, and had left the door open.
    That Nunley was the aggressor, and that Dixon was
    “frightened,” “not aggressive” and tried to end the
    confrontations was corroborated by Nunley’s friend, Jermaine
    Clay. Clay further corroborated many of the threats that
    Nunley made to Dixon and the intimidating actions taken by
    Nunley’s friends, such as throwing rocks at Dixon and his
    brothers. Clay also heard Nunley continue to say things to
    Dixon as Dixon walked toward Nunley’s car.
    At trial, a psychiatrist testified that, “to a reasonable
    degree of medical probability, Mr. Dixon interpreted the
    collective behavior of the victim as an authentic and
    immediate threat to his life and to the lives of his . . .
    brothers.” The psychiatrist also stated that “Mr. Dixon was
    convinced that he . . . and his family were in acute danger,
    vital danger, that he was going to be killed and he acted in
    accordance with that perception.”
    In short, although there was also evidence to the contrary,
    there was considerable evidence the jury could have credited
    that Dixon had acted with adequate provocation, even though
    he could not establish the elements of the defense of self-
    defense and thereby avoid conviction for the killing
    altogether. In light of the other events, in which Nunley had
    repeatedly brandished a knife and threatened Dixon, and was
    the original aggressor, the jurors could have decided that
    Dixon had an “honest but reasonable belief in the necessity
    for self-defense,” because Nunley had attempted to commit
    “a serious personal injury on” Dixon, and that insufficient
    time had passed between the provocation and shooting for the
    passion thereby provoked to pass and “a cool head to
    DIXON V. WILLIAMS                         19
    prevail.” Jury Instr. No. 12. Thus, but for the erroneous jury
    instruction, the jurors reasonably may have convicted on the
    reduced charge of voluntary manslaughter instead of second-
    degree murder. “[B]ecause we have ‘grave doubt[s] as to the
    harmlessness of [this] error,’ we must rule for the Petitioner.”
    Cudjo v. Ayers, 
    698 F.3d 752
    , 770 (9th Cir. 2012) (alterations
    in original).
    We note that the outcome is the same under the
    AEDPA/Chapman standard. Chapman provides that “the test
    for determining whether a constitutional error is harmless . . .
    is whether it appears ‘beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    error complained of did not contribute to the verdict
    obtained.’” Neder v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 1
    , 15 (1999)
    (quoting Chapman, 
    386 U.S. at 24
    ). Here, the Nevada
    Supreme Court “conclude[d] beyond a reasonable doubt that,
    given the totality of the jury instructions and the evidence
    admitted at trial, the error did not substantially prejudice the
    jury’s deliberations and verdict.” Although the Nevada
    Supreme Court stated that it considered in so concluding “the
    totality of . . . the evidence admitted at trial,” it recited only
    the testimony that supported the verdict and did not
    acknowledge any of the testimony supporting provocation
    through reasonable fear of serious injury. Proper application
    of the Chapman standard requires consideration of “the trial
    record as a whole.” Vasquez v. Hillery, 
    474 U.S. 254
    , 269
    (1986) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    We reverse the district court’s denial of Dixon’s petition
    for writ of habeas corpus, and remand with instructions to
    grant a conditional writ as to the second-degree murder
    conviction, requiring the State to release Dixon from custody
    as to that conviction unless the State initiates new trial
    20               DIXON V. WILLIAMS
    proceedings within a reasonable period of time to be
    determined by the district court.
    REVERSED and REMANDED.