State of Louisiana v. Valentino Roman Hodge ( 2019 )


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  • FOR IMMEDIATE NEWS RELEASE                                                         NEWS RELEASE #49
    FROM: CLERK OF SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    The Opinion(s) handed down on the 19th day of November, 2019, are as follows:
    BY WEIMER, J.:
    2019-KA-00568        STATE OF LOUISIANA VS. VALENTINO ROMAN HODGE (Parish of Sabine)
    c/w
    2019-KA-00569
    This case is before the court on direct appeal from a district court ruling declaring
    unconstitutional the jury verdict regime found in La. Const. art. I, § 17 and La.
    C.Cr.P. art. 782, which allow for verdicts on a vote of ten of twelve jurors for
    felonies committed before January 1, 2019. The district court committed the
    following two interrelated errors: (i) creating, on that court’s own initiative (sua
    sponte), a constitutional challenge to statutory law and to provisions of the
    Louisiana Constitution and (ii) striking down the jury verdict regime as
    unconstitutional on the basis of an earlier, nonbinding district court holding. Based
    on these errors, this court vacates the district court’s ruling and remands for further
    proceedings.
    VACATED AND REMANDED.
    Chief Judge Susan M. Chehardy of the Court of Appeal, Fifth Circuit, appointed as
    Justice pro tempore, sitting for the vacancy in the First District.
    Retired Judge James Boddie appointed Justice ad hoc, sitting for Clark, J.
    Johnson, C.J., dissents and assigns reasons.
    11/19/2019
    SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    NO. 2019-KA-0568 c/w 2019-KA-0569
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    VERSUS
    VALENTINO RAMON HODGE
    ON APPEAL FROM THE 11TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT,
    PARISH OF SABINE
    WEIMER, Justice.1
    This case is before the court on direct appeal from a district court ruling
    declaring unconstitutional the jury verdict regime found in La. Const. art. I, § 17 and
    La. C.Cr.P. art. 782, which allow for verdicts on a vote of ten of twelve jurors for
    felonies committed before January 1, 2019. The district court committed the
    following two interrelated errors: (i) creating, on that court’s own initiative (sua
    sponte), a constitutional challenge to statutory law and to provisions of the Louisiana
    Constitution and (ii) striking down the jury verdict regime as unconstitutional on the
    basis of an earlier, nonbinding district court holding. Based on these errors, this court
    vacates the district court’s ruling and remands for further proceedings.
    BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    1
    Chief Judge Susan M. Chehardy of the Court of Appeal, Fifth Circuit, assigned as Justice pro
    tempore, sitting for the vacancy in the First District; Retired Judge James Boddie Jr., appointed
    Justice ad hoc, sitting for Justice Clark.
    By separate bills of information, the defendant was charged with one count of
    domestic abuse battery by strangulation in the presence of a minor in violation of La.
    R.S. 14:35.3(B)(7),(I) and with one count of possession of a firearm by a convicted
    felon in violation of La. R.S. 14:95.1. These alleged felony crimes both occurred on
    December 5, 2016.
    The defendant pleaded not guilty, and the charges were slated for a jury trial.2
    Owing in large measure to the defendant’s vacillation between being represented by
    appointed counsel and seeking retained counsel, the trial date was continued several
    times.
    On January 24, 2019, the state filed a motion in limine seeking to have the
    district court declare that the defendant would be tried by a jury composed of twelve
    jurors, ten of whom must concur to render a verdict. The next day, without a hearing,
    the district court signed an order denying the state’s motion in limine and declaring
    that the defendant is entitled to a unanimous jury verdict pursuant to the district
    court’s own earlier ruling in State v. Melvin Cartez Maxie, 11th Judicial District
    Court, No. 13-CR-72522, rendered on October 11, 2018.
    In Maxie, decided by the same judge, the district court ruled that the
    nonunanimous jury regime ran afoul of the federal constitution’s Equal Protection
    Clause. The state appealed, but before the record was lodged in this court, the state
    dismissed the appeal, apparently to once again vest the district court with jurisdiction,
    based on Mr. Maxie’s intent to submit a guilty plea.3
    2
    The charges were given separate, consecutive docket numbers in the district court. Although
    apparently not formally consolidated, the cases proceeded simultaneously with pleadings and rulings
    bearing both docket numbers. Similarly, the cases have been given separate docket numbers in this
    court; but for grammatical simplicity, this opinion will refer to these two matters as a single case,
    and this court’s analysis and determination apply to both district court cases.
    3
    Notably, any continued efficacy of the holding of unconstitutionality in Maxie would create its
    own challenges because that ruling was appealed, but the defendant subsequently entered into a plea
    2
    The state appealed the instant case, urging that this court has jurisdiction over
    the district court’s declaration of a statute’s unconstitutionality. See La. Const. art.
    V, § 5(D), quoted infra.
    DISCUSSION
    As a preliminary matter, this court is called on to evaluate the very nature of
    the district court’s ruling because the state and the defendant differ on its purported
    effect. The state argues the ruling is a declaration of unconstitutionality, which in
    straightforward fashion renders the ruling susceptible of a direct appeal to this court.
    The defendant argues the ruling is confined to denying the state’s motion in limine
    and indicating the defendant is entitled to a unanimous jury verdict for adjudicating
    his potential guilt. The after effect of the defendant’s argument is that a direct appeal
    to this court is unavailable; any appeal by the state must be taken to the intermediate
    court of appeal. The defendant acknowledges, however, that even if a direct appeal
    to this court is disallowed, this court has discretion to convert the state’s appeal to a
    review under this court’s supervisory jurisdiction.
    The position of the state is correct. The district court’s ruling places its prior
    decision in Maxie as the ultimate authority on the number of jurors required for a
    guilty verdict,4 notwithstanding that La. Const. art. I, § 175 and La. C.Cr.P. art.
    bargain. One could reasonably question whether the defendant’s plea vitiated any claim of
    unconstitutionality of the nonunanimous jury regime. However, given the ruling in this matter,
    which largely turns on this court’s constitutional authority to serve as the final authority on
    declarations of unconstitutionality, it is unnecessary to unravel the Gordian knot of procedural
    complexity in Maxie.
    4
    The district court’s ruling recites that “the Defendant is entitled to a unanimous jury verdict
    pursuant to this Court’s judgment in State v. Melvin Cartez Maxie, Docket No. 13-CR-72522,
    decided and filed on October 11, 2018.”
    5
    In pertinent part, La. Const. art. I, § 17(A) provides:
    A criminal case in which the punishment may be capital shall be tried before
    a jury of twelve persons, all of whom must concur to render a verdict. A case for an
    offense committed prior to January 1, 2019, in which the punishment is necessarily
    3
    782(A)6 explicitly allow for guilty verdicts on a vote of ten of twelve jurors for
    felonies committed before January 1, 2019. By subordinating constitutional and
    statutory provisions to the district court’s own ruling in Maxie, the district court
    essentially ruled Louisiana’s constitutional and statutory provisions are
    unconstitutional in reference to the federal constitution. Dispelling any doubt, the
    order of appeal notably recites that the district court rendered a “decision that Article
    1, § 17 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974 and Article 782 is facially
    unconstitutional,” and “the State’s Motion for Appeal to the Louisiana Supreme Court
    is GRANTED.” Thus, the state’s direct appeal to this court is proper. See La. Const.
    art. V, § 5(D), quoted infra.
    Having determined the district court indeed declared that La. Const. of 1974
    art. I, § 17 and La. C.Cr.P. art. 782 are unconstitutional, the next step in the analysis
    is guided by a considerable history of Louisiana jurisprudence prohibiting courts from
    sua sponte striking down constitutional and statutory law. In State v. Board of
    Supervisors, La. State Univ. & Agr. & Mechanical College, 
    228 La. 951
    , 
    84 So. 2d 597
    , 600 (1955), this court held that “all Acts of the Legislature are constitutional
    until declared otherwise in proceedings brought contradictorily between interested
    persons.” More recently, this court found the principles prohibiting a court from sua
    sponte striking down statutory law also prohibit any sua sponte striking down
    confinement at hard labor shall be tried before a jury of twelve persons, ten of whom
    must concur to render a verdict.
    6
    In pertinent part, La. C.Cr.P. art. 782(A) provides:
    A case in which punishment may be capital shall be tried by a jury of twelve
    jurors, all of whom must concur to render a verdict. A case for an offense committed
    prior to January 1, 2019, in which punishment is necessarily confinement at hard
    labor shall be tried by a jury composed of twelve jurors, ten of whom must concur
    to render a verdict.
    4
    provisions of the state constitution, inasmuch as “[a] constitutional provision is a
    more basic, fundamental provision than a statutory enactment.” State v. Bazile,
    11-2201, p. 6 (La. 1/24/12), 
    85 So. 3d 1
    , 4. In Bazile, this court explained the
    prohibition against a court raising a constitutional challenge sua sponte is rooted in
    the fact that “judges were charged by their judicial oaths to enforce” the laws as
    written. 
    Id., 11-2201 at
    5, 85 So. 2d at 4 
    (citing Greater New Orleans Expressway
    Com’n v. Olivier, 04-2147, p. 10 (La. 1/19/05), 
    892 So. 2d 570
    , 577).
    Inherent in the defendant’s position, noted earlier, that the district court did not
    issue a declaration of unconstitutionality, is that the district court did not do so sua
    sponte. This court disagrees with the defendant as to the substance of the district
    court’s ruling and further review of the procedural origins of that determination
    compels the conclusion that the district court’s ruling was rendered sua sponte.
    While it is true that “there is no single procedure for attacking the constitutionality
    of a statute,” this court has identified a typical three-step analysis for a challenger to
    carry his burden to prove unconstitutionality. State v. Hatton, 07-2377, p. 14 (La.
    7/1/08), 
    985 So. 2d 709
    , 719. “First, a party must raise the unconstitutionality in the
    trial court; second, the unconstitutionality of a statute must be specially pleaded; and
    third, the grounds outlining the basis of unconstitutionality must be particularized.”
    
    Id. Here, it
    was not the defendant, but the state that raised a question about the
    number of jurors necessary to render a guilty verdict. The state sought recognition
    of the nonunanimous verdict requirement via a motion in limine, which, consistent
    with the state’s present position, did not urge that the nonunanimous verdict
    provisions were unconstitutional.
    In a more usual case, a determination that the district court erred in creating a
    constitutional issue where none was presented might end the analysis of the district
    5
    court’s ruling. See, e.g., 
    Bazile, supra
    ; 
    Hatton, supra
    . This is not a usual case. The
    substantive reason the district court gave within the ruling itself7 for finding the
    nonunanimous verdict provision unconstitutional was the district court’s earlier
    holding in Maxie. For his part, the defendant argues “[t]he district court was entitled
    and bound to rule in accordance with its own prior, undisturbed judgment in Maxie.”
    This court disagrees.
    Maxie, as noted above, was a district court ruling that the nonunanimous jury
    verdict was unconstitutional, pursuant to the federal constitution. The chief obstacle
    to applying the holding in Maxie to other cases is the same provision presently
    empowering this court to review the declaration of unconstitutionality in this case,
    i.e., La. Const. art. V, § 5(D) (“a case shall be appealable to the supreme court if …
    a law or ordinance has been declared unconstitutional.”). Stated simply, if the district
    court’s Maxie ruling prevents the district court from reviewing the constitutionality
    of nonunanimous verdicts, this court will likewise be prevented from appellate review
    of any evidence and argument on constitutionality.8 Such a situation would defeat the
    authority accorded to this court to serve as the final, statewide authority as to what
    laws pass constitutional muster.
    7
    The district court’s reference to the basis for its ruling of unconstitutionality within the ruling itself
    distinguishes this case from Greater New Orleans Expressway Com’n v. Olivier, 02-2795, pp.
    3-4 (La. 11/18/03), 
    860 So. 2d 22
    , 24. In Olivier, this court found it lacked direct appellate
    jurisdiction under La. Const. art. V, § 5(D) because only the district court’s reasons for judgment,
    not the judgment itself, indicated that the statute at issue was unconstitutional. 
    Id. The distinction
    here of the judgment itself declaring laws unconstitutional negates a restrictive observation made in
    Olivier that “[a]ppeals are taken from the judgment, not the written reasons for judgment.” 
    Id. at 3,
    at 24. Formal distinctions aside, it would be nonsensical for this court’s observation in Olivier
    to thwart the full exploration of the very basis of this court’s jurisdiction, which is constitutionally
    conferred in the present case.
    8
    In the present case, there was no evidence or argument adduced on the constitutionality of La.
    Const. art. I, § 17 and La. C.Cr.P. art. 782.
    6
    In an analogous criminal case, City of Shreveport v. Baylock, 
    236 La. 133
    ,
    
    107 So. 2d 419
    (1958), this court considered whether a district court judge was bound
    by a prior declaration of unconstitutionality by another district court judge. Just as
    here, the prior declaration of unconstitutionality had not been evaluated on appeal.
    The defendant argued the declaration of unconstitutionality barred his prosecution
    under an ordinance that had been declared to be unconstitutional. This court held that
    the prior declaration of unconstitutionality by the district court did not bar the
    defendant’s prosecution under that ordinance. 
    Id., 107 So.2d
    at 422.
    In Baylock, this court surveyed the jurisprudence of other jurisdictions and
    noted a consensus of “holdings … that a definitive judgment of a tribunal that is not
    a court of last resort is conclusive only for the particular case decided and is not
    binding in future cases.” 
    Id. at 421.
    Importantly, this court also reasoned that if the
    prior district court judgment of unconstitutionality was binding in a later case, that
    would bar “this court on a review of the judgment . . . from later determining the same
    constitutional issue.” 
    Id. at 422.
    Although Baylock was decided under a previous
    state constitution, these rationales remain applicable today because the
    constitutionally-mandated jurisdictional principles then and now are substantially the
    same. Compare La. Const. of 1921 art. VII, § 10(2) (1958) (“Cases in which . . . a
    law of this state has been declared unconstitutional” are among those that “shall be
    appealable to the Supreme Court.”), with La. Const. of 1974 art. V, § 5(D) (“a case
    shall be appealable to the supreme court if … a law or ordinance has been declared
    unconstitutional.”).
    At this concluding juncture, a longstanding rule–reflecting the primary role of
    legislation in the justice system–bears repeating: “Statutes are generally presumed to
    be constitutional and the party challenging the validity of the statute bears the burden
    7
    of proving it is unconstitutional.” Hatton, 07-2377 at 
    13, 985 So. 2d at 719
    (citing
    State v. Fleury, 01-0871, p. 5 (La. 10/16/01), 
    799 So. 2d 468
    , 472; State v. Brenner,
    
    486 So. 2d 101
    , 103 (La. 1986); and State v. Rones, 
    223 La. 839
    , 
    67 So. 2d 99
    , 105
    (1953)). Likewise, “[a] constitutional provision begins as a legislative enactment and,
    therefore, also requires enforcement by the district court.” Bazile, 11-2201 at 
    6, 85 So. 3d at 4
    (citing La. Const. art. XIII, § 1(A) and (C)). Measured by these principles,
    the district court’s declaration of unconstitutionality in this case represents two
    simultaneous errors: (i) creating, sua sponte, a constitutional challenge to statutory
    and constitutional provisions and (ii) striking down those laws as unconstitutional on
    the basis of an earlier, nonbinding district court ruling.
    DECREE
    For the foregoing reasons, the ruling of the district court is hereby vacated and
    this matter is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with
    this opinion.
    VACATED AND REMANDED.
    8
    11/19/2019
    SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    No. 2019-KA-00568
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    VS.
    VALENTINO RAMON HODGE
    ON APPEAL FROM THE 11TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT,
    PARISH OF SABINE
    JOHNSON, C.J., dissents and assigns reasons.
    I disagree that the district court created a constitutional issue where none was
    presented. Sua sponte means “without prompting or suggestion; on its own motion.”
    Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). In this case, it was the state—not the court—who
    essentially forced the issue when it filed the motion in limine seeking an answer as to the
    number of jurors necessary to render a guilty verdict. As a result, the district court ruled
    that defendant was entitled to a unanimous jury verdict, effectively taking judicial notice
    of the court’s previous ruling on the constitutionality issue in State v. Maxie, 13-CR-72522,
    11th Judicial District Court, Sabine Parish (October 11, 2018). It is undeniable that the
    adoption of Louisiana’s nonunanimous jury system, currently set forth in La. Const. art. I,
    § 17 and La. C.Cr. P. art. 782, was motivated by racial bias. In my view, the district court’s
    rulings in Maxie and this case, finding Louisiana’s nonunanimous jury scheme violates the
    Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, are correct. Therefore, I must
    respectfully dissent.
    Louisiana is one of only two states, with Oregon being the other, which allows split
    jury verdicts in felony cases. The nonunanimous jury system has undergone constitutional
    challenges as a violation of the Sixth Amendment. In 1972, the United States Supreme
    Court in Apodaca v. Oregon, 
    406 U.S. 404
    , 
    92 S. Ct. 1628
    , 
    32 L. Ed. 2d 184
    (1972),
    effectively ruled in a split decision that the Sixth Amendment requires unanimous verdicts
    in federal courts—but the 14th Amendment does not require unanimous verdicts in state
    courts. This court has relied on Apodaca to continue to uphold the constitutionality of
    1
    Louisiana’s system. See State v. Bertrand, 08-2215 (La. 3/17/09), 
    6 So. 3d 738
    . Notably, a
    renewed Sixth Amendment challenge to our law is currently pending before the United
    States Supreme Court in Ramos v. Louisiana, 18-5924, 
    139 S. Ct. 1318
    , 
    203 L. Ed. 2d 563
    (2019), wherein the Court is considering whether the Fourteenth Amendment fully
    incorporates the Sixth Amendment guarantee of a unanimous jury verdict in criminal cases.
    The issue of nonunanimous juries has gained scholarly attention and discourse because of
    increased public awareness regarding the racist roots of the Louisiana system. Last year
    Louisiana voters approved a constitutional amendment requiring unanimous jury verdicts
    in felony cases. The amendment applies to felony offenses committed on or after January
    1, 2019. See La. Const. art. I, § 17. Thus, the fate of defendants such as Mr. Hodge is still
    in the hands of divided juries as part of a system with racist origins and discriminatory
    effect. In my view, it is time to hold this Jim Crow era law unconstitutional.
    It is unfortunate that this court has chosen not to rule on the merits of the
    constitutional issue due to the majority’s finding of procedural errors. The evidence
    underlying the district court’s ruling demonstrates the law is unconstitutional as a violation
    of the Equal Protection Clause. In determining whether a law violates the Equal Protection
    Clause, the Supreme Court has held there must be proof of racially discriminatory intent
    or purpose in addition to a racially disproportionate impact. See Arlington Heights v.
    Metropolitan Housing Dev. Corp., 
    429 U.S. 252
    , 265, 
    97 S. Ct. 555
    , 
    50 L. Ed. 2d 450
    (1977). The documented materials from Louisiana’s 1898 Constitutional Convention leave
    no doubt that the nonunanimous jury verdict system in Louisiana was created for the
    invidious discriminatory purpose of minimizing or canceling out the voting power of black
    jurors and to deny African-Americans meaningful participation in the institution of jury
    service.
    The provision permitting nonunanimous felony convictions was adopted during the
    1898 Constitutional Convention and codified as Article 116:
    The General Assembly shall provide for the selection of competent and
    intelligent jurors. All cases in which the punishment may not be at hard labor
    shall, until otherwise provided by law, which shall not be prior to 1904, be
    tried by the judge without a jury. Cases in which the punishment may be at
    hard labor shall be tried by a jury of five, all of whom must concur to render
    2
    a verdict; cases in which the punishment is necessarily at hard labor, by
    a jury of twelve, nine of whom concurring may render a verdict; cases in
    which the punishment may be capital, by a jury of twelve, all of whom must
    concur to render a verdict.
    La. Const. art. 116 (1898) (emphasis added). This provision was approved during a
    convention which celebrated white supremacy. Hon. E.B. Kruttschnitt, President of the
    Convention, opened with the following relevant remarks:
    In the first place, my fellow-citizens, we are all aware that this convention
    has been called by the people of the State of Louisiana principally to deal
    with one question, and we know that but for the existence of that one question
    this assemblage would not be sitting here today. We know that this
    convention has been called together by the people of the State to eliminate
    from the electorate the mass of corrupt and illiterate voters who have during
    the last quarter of a century degraded our politics.
    ***
    I believe that our Northern fellow-citizens begin to feel the race sympathy
    stilling within their breasts. They know that the question which we are trying
    to solve here is one which imperils not only the integrity of the future
    government of the State of Louisiana and those of eight or ten other Southern
    States, but that we sitting here as a deliberate assembly, and the assemblies
    of the other Southern States, are to decide whether the presidential office is
    to be put up for barter and sale on account of the irresponsible character of
    the constituency in these Southern States. And of the venality and corruption
    of the delegations which they send to certain national conventions.
    Only a few years back, it might have been considered impolite to say what I
    am now saying, but there are men standing high today in the councils of the
    nation, who have seen the doors of the White House barred to them by the
    ignorant and corrupt delegations of Southern negroes, and we know that they
    cannot but feel a sympathy with us in our aspirations and efforts.
    Official Journal of the Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of the State of
    Louisiana (1898), 9-10. The purpose of the convention was further confirmed in closing
    remarks by Judge Thomas J. Seemes, Chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary:
    We met here to establish the supremacy of the white race, and the white race
    constitutes the Democratic party of this State. There is, therefore, in my
    judgment, no separation whatever, between the interests of the State and
    those of the Democratic party, and if we are to be subjected to criticism
    because our ordinances may have been colored with the view, in some
    instances, of promoting the interests of the Democratic party, as those
    interests are not separated from the State, I feel no hesitancy in saying that
    we have done no injury to the State.
    ***
    Now then, what have we done? is the question. Our mission was, in the first
    place, to establish the supremacy of the white race in this State to the extent
    to which it could be legally and constitutionally done and what has our
    ordinance on suffrage, the constitutional means by which we propose to
    maintain that ascendency, done? We have established throughout the State
    white manhood suffrage.
    3
    
    Id. at 374-75.
    Judge Seemes went on to explain the convention delegates established a poll
    tax, an educational test for voters, and the requirement that voters should own property.
    However, the new constitution also provided an exception for white men who were
    “grandfathered,” and they would not be required to satisfy these new voter requirements as
    long as they registered to vote by a particular deadline. 
    Id. at 375.
    Moreover, Mr. Kruttschnitt again addressed the convention in closing, making clear
    they would have gone even further in denying and suppressing the rights of African-
    Americans but were limited by the United States Constitution and federal courts:
    But I say to you, as George D. Tillman said to the South Carolina convention,
    when the labors of that convention were criticized: We have not been free;
    we have not drafted the exact Constitution that we should like to have
    drafted; otherwise we should have inscribed in it, if I know the popular
    sentiment of this State, universal white manhood suffrage and the exclusion
    from the suffrage of every man with a trace of African blood in his veins. We
    could not do that, on account of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution
    of the United States and, therefore, we did what has been so well expressed
    by the Supreme Court of Mississippi …within the field of permissible action,
    under the limitations imposed by the Federal Constitution, the convention
    swept the field of expedients to obstruct the exercise of suffrage by the negro
    race.
    ***
    The first and foremost, and most important, problem which confronted us
    was that of the suffrage.
    ***
    We have placed it within the power of the people of this State to have
    elections as fair and as pure as those in the State of Massachusetts herself;
    and I say to you that we can appeal to the conscience of the nation, both
    judicial and legislative and I don’t believe that they will take the
    responsibility of striking down the system which we have reared in order to
    protect the purity of the ballot box, and to perpetuate the supremacy of the
    Anglo-Saxon race in Louisiana. If they do, theirs be the responsibility for
    bringing back the methods which have prevailed in the past- not ours. We
    have laid them aside. We have reared a perfectly clean structure, and we
    intend to have a clean electorate, if the rest of the nation will allow it, and
    believe that they will.
    Our mission was, in the first place, to establish the supremacy of the white
    race in this State.
    
    Id. at 379-81.
    This shocking landscape is plainly outlined in the official records of the 1898
    Convention, and has been thoroughly explained and put into context by scholarly experts.
    Such expert testimony is part of the evidence underlying the district court’s declaration of
    unconstitutionality. A review of this underlying evidence is critical to fully explain the
    4
    underpinnings of the establishment of the nonunanimous jury system in Louisiana. The
    district court’s ruling was based on its own prior ruling in State v. 
    Maxie, supra
    . In Maxie,
    the court conducted a full evidentiary hearing on Maxie’s constitutional challenge to the
    nonunanimous jury scheme and issued written reasons for finding a unanimous jury verdict
    is constitutionally required for conviction. 1 The parties in Maxie stipulated to certain
    documents to be submitted into evidence, including a certified transcript of a Motions
    Hearing in the matter of State v. Lee, No. 500-034 & 498-666, Criminal District Court,
    Parish of Orleans, 2/3/17, which included testimony from expert witnesses called in that
    matter, namely Professor Emeritus of History Lawrence Powell of Tulane University and
    Professor Kim Taylor-Thompson of New York University. Additionally, the defense called
    three live witnesses: John Simerman of The Advocate newspaper, Professor Thomas Aiello,
    and Professor Thomas Frampton. Mr. Simerman worked with two other individuals to
    develop the investigative series, “Tilting the Scales,” regarding the history of Louisiana’s
    nonunanimous jury verdict system and its pernicious effects on the criminal justice system.
    Mr. Simerman was called to testify as to the methodology of the study and to verify and
    authenticate the data and conclusions as detailed in the published series. Mr. Simerman
    provided a detailed analysis as to the collection methods for the dataset used to calculate
    the impact of a non-unanimous jury verdict scheme on the Louisiana criminal justice
    system.
    Professor Thomas Aiello, an associate professor of history and African-American
    studies at Valdosta State University, authored Jim Crow’s Last Stand, a comprehensive
    book on the history and context of Louisiana’s majority verdict system. Thomas Aiello,
    Jim Crow’s Last Stand–Nonunanimous Jury Verdicts in Louisiana (Louisiana State
    University Press 2015). Professor Aiello was accepted by the court as an expert historian.
    Professor Aiello’s testimony made clear that following Reconstruction, many in Louisiana
    became increasingly concerned about the ability of African-Americans to exercise
    1 Although the Maxie court’s reasons for judgment were not made part of the record in this case,
    that document is included in the Joint Appendix submitted in the United States Supreme Court by
    the parties in Ramos v. Louisiana, No. 18-5924, Joint Appendix, p. 25-83;
    https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/18/18-5924/102616/20190611121914120_18-
    5924%20Joint%20Appendix%20-%20Final.pdf; 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , *24-71.
    5
    “political and legal power.” One of the key areas where African-Americans were
    participating, outside of voting, was in jury service because the United States Supreme
    Court had held in Strauder v. West Virginia, 
    100 U.S. 303
    (1879), that the Fourteenth
    Amendment prohibited excluding residents from jury duty on the basis of race. 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *39. However, the white South pushed back against this and attempted to
    exclude minority members in every conceivable manner. 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *39.
    Professor Aiello testified the general consensus was that African-Americans did not
    deserve to serve on juries in Louisiana, explaining that “[w]hile the end of the Civil War
    did make the slaves free, it did not make them the peers of white people in Southern white
    minds. And if you were supposed to get a fair trial by a jury of your peers, there are a very
    scant few white Southerners in the Gilded Age who saw black jurors as their peers; and it
    was an affront to justice for white people to put black jurors in front of them to decide their
    fate.” 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *40. Professor Aiello further testified the purpose of the
    Constitutional Convention of 1898 was clear and unequivocal, “to eliminate black political
    power.” 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *44-45. The Maxie court stated:
    Professor Aiello testified as to the historical context surrounding the
    constitutional conventions of both 1898 and 1973. He provided a detailed
    analysis of the prevailing sentiments and feelings of the delegates at the
    conventions and the general societal beliefs during these periods of time. His
    testimony persuasively demonstrated that race was a motivating factor
    behind the adoption of the 1898 constitution, especially with respect to
    disenfranchisement of minority voters and stripping the ability of minorities
    to influence the judicial system. His testimony also persuasively showed that
    the 1973 convention was not free from racial consideration and that the
    delegates at the convention were keenly aware of the racial tensions when
    drafting the new constitution. His testimony provides the historical basis for
    this Court’s determination that the non-unanimous jury verdict scheme in
    Louisiana was motivated by invidious racial discrimination.
    
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *37-38.
    Professor Thomas Frampton, lecturer at Harvard University on staff as a Climenko
    Fellow, with a B.A. and M.A. from Yale University, summa cum laude, and a J.D., with
    highest honors, from Berkeley School of Law, was proffered and accepted by the court as
    an expert lawyer, with a specialty in legal history, race, and the law. Professor Frampton
    endorsed Professor Aiello’s testimony and concurred with his conclusions and analysis.
    
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *48-49. Professor Frampton was retained as an expert to perform
    6
    an independent empirical analysis of the data collected by Mr. Simerman for The Advocate
    series. He performed his own data analysis to verify the results as presented were accurate.
    He also performed empirical analysis of the data according to Supreme Court precedent
    with respect to disparate impact and proving unconstitutional racial discrimination. 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *49. Based on his empirical analyses of the data, it was his expert opinion
    that “the non-unanimous jury verdict system operated today just as it was intended in 1898:
    to silence African-Americans on juries and to render their jury service meaningless.” 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *52. Professor Frampton explained that he performed his analysis in the
    context of the literature pioneered by Dr. Kim Taylor-Thompson on “empty votes.” Dr.
    Taylor-Thompson defined “empty votes” as “those cast by the minority in a super-majority
    regime. These votes are essentially meaningless because a majority can come to the
    conclusion without discussion or inclusion of the minority point of view.” 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *50 n. 1. Dr. Frampton’s data analysis revealed that “only 43 percent of empty
    votes are cast by white jurors. This represents a 21 percent absolute disparity, or 21 percent
    less than what would be expected if there were nothing else operating on the outcome.
    African-American votes represented 31.3 percent of overall votes cast, but represented 51.2
    percent of the empty votes cast. This is an absolute disparity of 20 percent.” 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *51. Further, given the data provided by The Advocate, Dr. Frampton
    concluded that these disparities cannot be explained from random variation in the data and
    that these findings are statistically significant under Supreme Court precedent in the race-
    discrimination context. 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *51-52.
    Professor Frampton also examined the data with respect to the impact on defendant
    as opposed to juror representation. The data revealed that “African-American defendants
    are convicted by non-unanimous juries 43 percent of the time and that white defendants
    are convicted by non-unanimous juries 33 percent of the time. Comparing these rates of
    conviction by non-unanimous verdicts, Professor Frampton found a disparity of
    approximately 30 percent. That is, African-Americans are 30 percent more likely to be
    convicted by non-unanimous juries than white defendants. These results were statistically
    significant and indicated racial discrimination against African-American defendants.”
    7
    
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *52-53. Professor Frampton further opined that “jury deliberations
    tend to be less robust and shorter when non-unanimous verdict rules are in place. That is,
    once the minimum number of votes are achieved, deliberations end, regardless of the desire
    of the minority to continue deliberating.” 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *53.
    The evidence and expert testimony proves that the motivating factor behind the
    Constitutional Convention of 1898 was to establish white supremacy throughout the State
    of Louisiana. As noted by the Maxie court, “the leaders of the convention openly and on
    the record endorsed racial discrimination and white supremacy as the goal and the outcome
    of the Convention.” 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *58. The evidence submitted in Maxie further
    proves that the current law is also unconstitutional as applied. Although the law has
    minimally changed since the 1898 Constitution, and now requires ten jurors to agree, rather
    than the original nine juror requirement, this change did not eliminate the discriminatory
    impact of non-unanimous jury verdicts. The current law is still traceable to the original
    system and still has discriminatory effects. See United States v. Fordice, 
    505 U.S. 717
    , 734,
    
    112 S. Ct. 2727
    , 
    120 L. Ed. 2d 575
    (1992). As found by the Maxie court, “the 1974 provision
    is rooted in and fairly traceable to the provisions of the 1898, 1913, and 1921 constitutions
    allowing for non-unanimous verdicts. It has already been conclusively established that the
    1898 provision is unconstitutional under the Arlington Heights…jurisprudence. It is also
    the undisputed expert testimony of Professor Aiello that the provisions in 1913 and 1921
    were reenacted without debate or comment.” 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *62. The court further
    cited Professor Aiello’s testimony that the final outcome of the 1973 Constitutional
    Convention was to compromise and keep the unanimity requirement only as to capital cases
    and to increase the rule to 10-to-2. The 1973 Convention wanted to decrease, but not
    eliminate, the discriminatory impact of non-unanimous jury verdicts. Both Mr. Simerman
    and Professor Frampton testified regarding the disparate impact on African-Americans that
    stem from the current non-unanimous verdict rule, and both indicated that the empirical
    analyses they conducted showed statistically significant results that demonstrate disparate
    impacts. 
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *63.
    8
    In written reasons for judgment, the Maxie court detailed the unopposed and
    unchallenged evidence produced at the hearing and concluded:
    The evidence, unopposed and unchallenged by the State establishes the
    following: 1) The original 1898 enactment was motivated by invidious racial
    discrimination; 2) The enactment of 1973 perpetuates the disparate impact of
    the 1898 provision; 3) The delegates at the Convention of 1973 did not
    cleanse the racial motivation from 1898; 4) The delegates at the Convention
    of 1973 at the very least tacitly acknowledged the discriminatory impact of
    the 1898 provision and merely attempted to ameliorate, but not cure, this
    disparate impact; 5) The current provision perpetuates invidious racial
    discrimination; and 6) The current non-unanimous jury verdict scheme
    disparately affects African-American jurors by negating their jury service
    and disparately affecting African-American defendants by overwhelmingly
    convicting them by non-unanimous juries.
    
    2018 WL 8545357
    , at *71. This evidence compels a finding that Louisiana’s non-
    unanimous jury scheme violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment.
    Although the majority of this court does not decide the constitutional issue today,
    we should not ignore the shameful history surrounding our system, nor shy away from
    forcing its end. “The history of nonunanimous criminal jury verdicts acts as its own
    advocate for ending the practice.” 
    Aiello, supra
    , at p. xi.
    9