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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
JUSTICES OF BOSTON MUNICIPAL COURT v. LYDON, 466 U.S. 294 (1984)
466 U.S. 294
JUSTICES OF BOSTON MUNICIPAL COURT v. LYDON
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
No. 82-1479.
Argued December 6, 1983
Decided April 18, 1984
Under Massachusetts law, a defendant charged with certain minor
crimes in Boston Municipal Court may elect to have a bench trial or a
jury trial. If he chooses a jury trial and is convicted, he has the
normal appellate process open to him, but if he chooses a bench trial
and is dissatisfied with the results, he has an absolute right to a
trial de novo before a jury and need not allege error at the bench
trial to obtain de novo review. However, there is no right to
appellate review of a bench trial conviction. Respondent elected to
undergo a first-tier bench trial on a charge of knowing possession of
implements designed for breaking into an automobile to steal property.
He was convicted and sentenced to a jail term, the trial judge having
rejected his claim that the prosecution had introduced no evidence of
intent to steal. Respondent then requested a de novo jury trial and
was released on personal recognizance pending retrial. Before the jury
trial commenced, respondent moved to dismiss the charge on the ground
that no evidence of intent had been presented at the bench trial and
thus retrial was barred under Burks v. United States,
437 U.S. 1 , which held that the Double Jeopardy Clause bars a
second trial when a reviewing court reverses a conviction on the
ground that the evidence presented at the first trial was legally
insufficient. The motion to dismiss was denied, and respondent then
sought relief in the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, which
ultimately held that Burks was inapplicable because no appellate court
had ruled that the evidence was insufficient at respondent's bench
trial. The Massachusetts court also ruled that a trial de novo without
a determination as to the sufficiency of the evidence at the bench
trial would not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause. Respondent then
sought habeas corpus relief in Federal District Court, which held that
respondent was "in custody" for purposes of 28 U.S.C. 2254(b) and that
he had exhausted his state remedies. Finding for respondent on the
merits, the court concluded that, under Burks, a second trial was
foreclosed if the evidence against respondent at the bench trial was
insufficient, and that there was insufficient evidence of intent at
the bench trial to support respondent's conviction. The Court of
Appeals affirmed.
Held:
1. The District Court had jurisdiction to entertain respondent's
habeas corpus action. Pp. 300-303.
[466 U.S. 294, 295]
(a) For purposes of the federal habeas corpus statutes,
respondent was in "custody" even though his conviction was vacated
when he applied for a trial de novo and he had been released on
personal recognizance. The use of habeas corpus is not restricted to
situations in which the applicant is in actual physical custody. The
Massachusetts statute under which respondent was released subjected
him to restraints not shared by the public generally, including the
obligations to appear in court for trial and not to depart without
leave. Cf. Hensley v. Municipal Court,
411 U.S. 345 . Pp. 300-302.
(b) Respondent had exhausted his state remedies with respect to
his double jeopardy claim. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
rejected his claim, and the fact that he might ultimately be
acquitted at the trial de novo did not alter the fact that he had
taken his claim that he should not be tried again as far as he could
in the state courts. A requirement that a defendant run the entire
gamut of state procedures, including retrial, prior to consideration
of his claim in federal court, would require him to sacrifice the
protection of the Double Jeopardy Clause against being twice put to
trial for the same offense. Pp. 302-303.
2. Respondent's retrial de novo without any judicial
determination of the sufficiency of the evidence at his prior bench
trial will not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause. Pp. 304-313.
(a) Ludwig v. Massachusetts,
427 U.S. 618 - upholding a prior Massachusetts two-tier system
of trial courts that differed from the present one by requiring a
defendant to participate in the first-tier proceedings and by not
allowing him to choose a jury trial in the first instance - was not
disturbed by the decision in Burks, supra, and is dispositive of the
double jeopardy issue here. Pp. 304-306.
(b) In this case, the State is not attempting, contrary to the
guarantees embodied in the Double Jeopardy Clause, to impose
multiple punishments for a single offense or to convict respondent
after acquittal. Respondent has not been acquitted; he simply
maintains that he ought to have been. Pp. 306-308.
(c) The concept of "continuing jeopardy" is implicit in the
general rule that the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar retrial
after reversal of a conviction. Acquittal terminates the initial
jeopardy, and Burks recognizes that a determination by a reviewing
court that the evidence was legally insufficient likewise terminates
the initial jeopardy. Respondent failed to identify any stage of the
state proceedings that can be held to have terminated jeopardy. Pp.
308-310.
(d) The Massachusetts system does not constitute governmental
oppression of the sort against which the Double Jeopardy Clause was
intended to protect, even when a defendant convicted at the first
tier claims insufficiency of the evidence. The defendant's absolute
right to obtain a de novo jury trial without alleging error at the
bench [466 U.S. 294,
296] trial ameliorates the danger of affording the
prosecution an opportunity to supply evidence which it failed to
muster in the first proceeding. The prosecution has every incentive
to put forward its strongest case at the bench trial, because an
acquittal would preclude reprosecution of the defendant. There is
nothing to stop a defendant from choosing a bench trial for the sole
purpose of getting a preview of the State's case to enable him to
prepare better for the jury trial. The two-tier system, unlike a
more conventional system, gives a defendant two opportunities to be
acquitted on the facts. If the prosecution obtains a conviction at
the second trial, the defendant then has the usual appellate
remedies. Pp. 310-312.
698 F.2d 1, reversed.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BLACKMUN
and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined; in Parts I and II of which BRENNAN,
MARSHALL, and STEVENS, JJ., joined; and in Parts I, II-B, III, and IV
of which BURGER, C. J., and POWELL, J., joined. BRENNAN, J., filed an
opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, in which
MARSHALL, J., joined, post, p. 313. POWELL, J., filed an opinion
concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, in which BURGER, C.
J., joined, post, p. 327. STEVENS, J., filed an opinion concurring in
part and concurring in the judgment, post, p. 328. O'CONNOR, J., filed
an opinion concurring in the judgment, post, p. 337.
Barbara A. H. Smith, Assistant Attorney General of Massachusetts,
argued the cause for petitioners. With her on the briefs were Francis
X. Bellotti, Attorney General, and Michael J. Traft.
David B. Rossman argued the cause for respondent. With him on the
brief was Eva Nilsen.
*
[
Footnote * ] Eric D. Blumenson, Burt Neuborne, Charles S. Sims,
John Reinstein, and Marjorie Heins filed a brief for the American
Civil Liberties Union et al. as amici curiae urging affirmance.
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari,
463 U.S. 1206 (1983), to review a decision of the Court of Appeals
for the First Circuit affirming the issuance of a writ of habeas
corpus. The Court of Appeals agreed with the District Court that the
trial de novo of respondent Lydon, pursuant to Massachusetts'
"two-tier" [466 U.S.
294, 297] system for trying minor crimes, would violate
his right not to be placed twice in jeopardy for the same crime,
because it determined that insufficient evidence of a critical element
of the charge was adduced at the first-tier trial. We reverse.
I
Under Massachusetts law, a defendant charged with certain crimes in
Boston Municipal Court may elect either a bench trial or a jury trial.
Mass. Gen. Laws Ann., ch. 218, 26, 26A (West Supp. 1983-1984). If a
defendant chooses a jury and is convicted, he has the normal appellate
process open to him, while a defendant dissatisfied with the results
of a bench trial, if he elects that course, has an absolute right to a
trial de novo before a jury.
1 26 and 27A. A convicted defendant who has chosen a bench trial
need not allege error at that trial to obtain de novo review. On the
other hand, he may not rely upon error at the bench trial to obtain
reversal of his conviction; his only recourse is a trial de novo.
Respondent Michael Lydon was arrested after breaking into an
automobile in Boston. He was charged with the knowing possession of
implements "adapted and designed for forcing and breaking open a
depository [an automobile] in order to steal therefrom, such money or
other property as might be found therein" with intent "to use and
employ them therefor." Record, Complaint. Lydon elected to undergo a
first-tier bench trial and was convicted. The trial judge rejected
Lydon's claim that the prosecution had introduced no evidence that
Lydon intended to steal from the car and that his actions were as
consistent with activities not covered by the complaint. Lydon was
sentenced to two years in jail.
Lydon requested a trial de novo in the jury session of the Boston
Municipal Court. Pending retrial, he was released
[466 U.S. 294, 298]
on personal recognizance. Before the jury trial commenced,
Lydon moved to dismiss the charge against him on the ground that no
evidence of the element of intent had been presented at the bench
trial. He contended that retrial was therefore barred under the
principles of Burks v. United States,
437 U.S. 1 (1978), which held that the Double Jeopardy Clause bars
a second trial when a reviewing court reverses a conviction on the
ground that the evidence presented at the first trial was legally
insufficient.
After the motion to dismiss was denied, Lydon sought relief in the
single justice session of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.
See Mass. Gen. Laws Ann., ch. 211, 3 (West 1958). The single justice
issued a stay of the de novo trial and reported two questions to the
full bench:
"1. Is it a denial of a defendant's right not to be placed in
double jeopardy to require him to go through a jury trial, requested
by him without waiving his rights, when the evidence at the bench
trial was insufficient to warrant a conviction?
"2. Assuming that a jury trial in such an instance would be a
denial of a defendant's right not to be placed in double jeopardy,
may the issue of the sufficiency of the evidence at the bench trial
be considered again at the trial court level, assuming, of course,
that the judge at the bench trial has denied an appropriate request
for a ruling that the evidence at the bench trial was insufficient?"
The single justice did not report a finding on the sufficiency of
the evidence, although he did state that he was "of the view that the
evidence was not sufficient to warrant guilty findings." Record,
Reservation and Report, at 3. He also noted that the prosecution
conceded that the evidence presented was insufficient to warrant a
finding of guilt on the charges set forth in the complaint. Ibid.
On review by the Supreme Judicial Court, the court initially noted
that the single justice did not sit as a reviewing
[466 U.S. 294, 299]
court in determining the sufficiency of the evidence and that
any conclusion reached by him on that issue "was made for the purpose
of reporting clearly framed questions to the full bench and is not an
adjudication of the rights of the parties in this case." Lydon v.
Commonwealth, 381 Mass. 356, 359, n. 6, 409 N. E. 2d 745, 748, n. 6,
cert. denied,
449 U.S. 1065 (1980). The Massachusetts court then found Lydon's
double jeopardy argument to be without merit. Because no appellate
court had ruled that the evidence was insufficient at Lydon's trial,
and indeed no court ever would have occasion to do so under
Massachusetts law, the court found Burks inapplicable. Burks, the
court observed, did not address the question whether under double
jeopardy principles a defendant convicted on insufficient evidence at
a bench trial has a right to reconsideration of the sufficiency of the
evidence prior to a trial de novo. The court concluded that "[a]
defendant is not placed in double jeopardy merely because his only
avenue of relief from a conviction based on insufficient evidence at a
voluntarily sought bench trial is a trial de novo." 381 Mass., at 367,
409 N. E. 2d, at 752. As to the second reported question, the court
concluded that if there is a valid double jeopardy claim, it should be
dealt with prior to the trial de novo, although it acknowledged that
its conclusion on this question was "rendered largely academic" by its
answer to the first question since any double jeopardy claim presented
to the second-tier court would necessarily be rejected. Id., at 366,
409 N. E. 2d, at 752.
Lydon then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the
United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. First
addressing the question of its jurisdiction, the District Court held
that Lydon was "in custody" for purposes of 28 U.S.C. 2254(b) and that
he had exhausted his state remedies because there was no state remedy
available to him short of submitting to a second trial. 536 F. Supp.
647 (1982). On the merits, the District Court viewed Burks v. United
States, supra, as "bestow[ing] a constitutional right upon defendants
not to be retried when the initial conviction
[466 U.S. 294, 300]
rests on insufficient evidence," 536 F. Supp., at 651, and
thought that this holding foreclosed a second trial if the evidence
against Lydon at the bench trial was insufficient, id., at 652. After
reviewing the transcript of the bench trial, the District Court
concluded that there was insufficient, evidence of intent to support a
conviction and ordered the writ to issue. On appeal, a divided Court
of Appeals for the First Circuit affirmed in all respects. 698 F.2d 1
(1982).
II
A
We first address the Commonwealth's contention that the District
Court lacked jurisdiction to entertain Lydon's habeas corpus action
because he was not in "custody" for purposes of the statute and had
not exhausted his state remedies. Under 28 U.S.C. 2241(c), a "writ of
habeas corpus shall not extend to a prisoner unless . . . (3) He is in
custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the
United States." Similarly, 28 U.S.C. 2254(a) states that a writ of
habeas corpus is available to persons "in custody pursuant to the
judgment of a State court." Petitioners argue that because Lydon's
first conviction had been vacated when he applied for a trial de novo,
and because he had been released on personal recognizance, he was not
in "custody."
Our cases make clear that "the use of habeas corpus has not been
restricted to situations in which the applicant is in actual, physical
custody." Jones v. Cunningham,
371 U.S. 236, 239 (1963). In Hensley v. Municipal Court,
411 U.S. 345 (1973), we held that a petitioner enlarged on his own
recognizance pending execution of sentence was in custody within the
meaning of 28 U.S.C. 2241(c)(3) and 2254(a). Hensley's release on
personal recognizance was subject to the conditions that he would
appear when ordered by the court, that he would waive extradition if
he was apprehended outside the State, and that a court could revoke
the order of release and require that he be returned to confinement or
[466 U.S. 294, 301]
post bail. Although the restraints on Lydon's freedom are not
identical to those imposed on Hensley, we do not think that they are
sufficiently different to require a different result.
The Massachusetts statute under which Lydon was released subjects
him to "restraints not shared by the public generally."
411 U.S., at 351 . He is under an obligation to appear for trial
in the jury session on the scheduled day and also "at any subsequent
time to which the case may be continued . . . and so from time to time
until the final sentence." Mass. Gen. Laws Ann., ch. 278, 18 (West
1981). Failure to appear "without sufficient excuse" constitutes a
criminal offense. Ch. 276, 82A. Also, if Lydon fails to appear in the
jury session, he may be required, without a further trial, to serve
the 2-year sentence originally imposed. Ch. 278, 24. Finally, the
statute requires that he "not depart without leave, and in the
meantime . . . keep the peace and be of good behavior." Ch. 278, 18.
Consequently, we believe that the Court of Appeals correctly held that
Lydon was in custody.
Petitioners contend that a conclusion that a person released on
personal recognizance is in custody for purposes of the federal habeas
corpus statutes will "ope[n] the door to the federal court to all
persons prior to trial." Brief for Petitioners 24. We addressed the
same argument in Hensley:
"Finally, we emphasize that our decision does not open the doors
of the district courts to the habeas corpus petitions of all persons
released on bail or on their own recognizance. We are concerned here
with a petitioner who has been convicted in state court and who has
apparently exhausted all available state court opportunities to have
that conviction set aside. Where a state defendant is released on
bail or on his own recognizance pending trial or pending appeal, he
must still contend with the requirements of the exhaustion doctrine
if he seeks habeas corpus relief in the federal courts. Nothing
[466 U.S. 294, 302]
in today's opinion alters the application of that
doctrine to such a defendant."
411 U.S., at 353 .
2
B
We are also convinced that Lydon had exhausted his state remedies
with respect to his claim that his second trial would violate his
right not to be twice placed in jeopardy unless it is judicially
determined that the evidence at his first trial was sufficient to
sustain his conviction.
3 This precise claim was presented to and rejected by the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts. That court definitively ruled that
Lydon had no right to a review of the sufficiency of the evidence at
the first trial and that his trial de novo without such a
determination would not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause. That Lydon
may ultimately be acquitted at the trial de novo does not alter the
fact that he has taken his claim that he should not be tried again as
far as he can in the state courts.
We should keep in mind in this respect the unique nature of the
double jeopardy right. In Abney v. United States,
431 U.S. 651 (1977), the Court held that denial of a motion to
dismiss an indictment on double jeopardy grounds constitutes a
[466 U.S. 294, 303]
final order for purposes of 28 U.S.C. 1291. That decision was
based upon the special nature of the double jeopardy right and the
recognition that the right cannot be fully vindicated on appeal
following final judgment, since in part the Double Jeopardy Clause
protects "against being twice put to trial for the same offense." Id.,
at 661 (emphasis in original). Because the Clause "protects interests
wholly unrelated to the propriety of any subsequent conviction,"
ibid., a requirement that a defendant run the entire gamut of state
procedures, including retrial, prior to consideration of his claim in
federal court, would require him to sacrifice one of the protections
of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
4
In our view, therefore, Lydon had exhausted his double jeopardy
claim in the state courts, and that precondition to the District
Court's jurisdiction was satisfied. We conclude below, however, that
the District Court and the Court of Appeals erred in sustaining
Lydon's double jeopardy claim: in our view, Lydon could be retried de
novo without any judicial determination of the sufficiency of the
evidence at his prior bench trial.
5 [466 U.S. 294,
304]
III
In Ludwig v. Massachusetts,
427 U.S. 618 (1976), we upheld a prior Massachusetts two-tier
system of trial courts for criminal cases. The present system differs
from the system upheld in Ludwig in only one respect of significance
here. Prior to the Massachusetts Court Reorganization Act of 1978, a
defendant could not elect a jury trial in the first instance; he was
required to participate in the first-tier proceedings. Under the
present system, as noted above, a defendant may avoid the first-tier
trial altogether and proceed directly to the jury trial. In upholding
the prior Massachusetts system, we stated:
"The Massachusetts system presents no danger of prosecution after
an accused has been pardoned; nor is there any doubt that acquittal
at the first tier precludes reprosecution. Instead, the argument
appears to be that because the appellant has been placed once in
jeopardy and convicted, the State may not retry him when
[466 U.S. 294, 305]
he informs the trial court of his decision to `appeal'
and to secure a trial de novo.
"Appellant's argument is without substance. The decision to
secure a new trial rests with the accused alone. A defendant who
elects to be tried de novo in Massachusetts is in no different
position than is a convicted defendant who successfully appeals on
the basis of the trial record and gains a reversal of his conviction
and a remand of his case for a new trial. Under these circumstances,
it long has been clear that the State may reprosecute. United States
v. Ball,
163 U.S. 662 (1896). The only difference between an appeal on
the record and an appeal resulting automatically in a new trial is
that a convicted defendant in Massachusetts may obtain a `reversal'
and a new trial without assignment of error in the proceedings at
his first trial. Nothing in the Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits a
State from affording a defendant two opportunities to avoid
conviction and secure an acquittal." Id., at 631-632.
Our decision in Ludwig, which we think is dispositive of the double
jeopardy issue in this case, was not disturbed by our later decision
in Burks v. United States,
437 U.S. 1 (1978). In Burks, the petitioner's conviction had been
set aside by the Court of Appeals on the ground that there had been
insufficient evidence presented at his trial to support the verdict.
The Court of Appeals then ordered the case remanded to the District
Court for a determination of whether a new trial should be ordered or
a directed verdict of acquittal should be entered. We reversed,
stating:
"In short, reversal for trial error, as distinguished from
evidentiary insufficiency, does not constitute a decision to the
effect that the government has failed to prove its case. As such, it
implies nothing with respect to the guilt or innocence of the
defendant. . . .
"The same cannot be said when a defendant's conviction has been
overturned due to a failure of proof at trial,
[466 U.S. 294, 306]
in which case the prosecution cannot complain of
prejudice, for it has been given one fair opportunity to offer
whatever proof it could assemble. Moreover, such an appellate
reversal means that the government's case was so lacking that it
should not have even been submitted to the jury. Since we
necessarily afford absolute finality to a jury's verdict of
acquittal - no matter how erroneous its decision - it is difficult
to conceive how society has any greater interest in retrying a
defendant when, on review, it is decided as a matter of law that the
jury could not properly have returned a verdict of guilty." Id., at
15-16. (footnote omitted) (emphasis in original).
We summarized our holding in Burks as being "that the Double
Jeopardy Clause precludes a second trial once the reviewing court has
found the evidence legally insufficient." Id., at 18.
Lydon argues, and the Court of Appeals held, that our statement in
Ludwig that a defendant who elects to be tried de novo is in the same
position as a convicted defendant who successfully appeals, combined
with our holding in Burks that the setting aside of a conviction on
the basis of evidentiary insufficiency bars retrial, mandates the
conclusion that a trial de novo is barred by the Double Jeopardy
Clause if the evidence presented at the bench trial was insufficient
to support a finding of guilt. We are unpersuaded.
A
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides that no
person shall "be subject for the same offence to be twice put in
jeopardy of life or limb." In Benton v. Maryland,
395 U.S. 784 (1969), we held that this guarantee is applicable to
the States through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Our cases have recognized three separate guarantees embodied in the
Double Jeopardy Clause: It protects against a second prosecution for
the same offense after acquittal, against a second prosecution for the
same offense after conviction,
[466 U.S. 294, 307] and against multiple
punishments for the same offense. Illinois v. Vitale,
447 U.S. 410, 415 (1980).
6 The primary goal of barring reprosecution after acquittal is to
prevent the State from mounting successive prosecutions and thereby
wearing down the defendant. As was explained in Green v. United
States,
355 U.S. 184, 187 -188 (1957):
"The underlying idea, one that is deeply ingrained in at least
the Anglo-American system of jurisprudence, is that the State with
all its resources and power should not be allowed to make repeated
attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby
subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal and compelling
him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity, as well
as enhancing the possibility that even though innocent he may be
found guilty."
The primary purpose of foreclosing a second prosecution after
conviction, on the other hand, is to prevent a defendant from being
subjected to multiple punishments for the same offense. See United
States v. Wilson,
420 U.S. 332, 343 (1975).
In this case, the Commonwealth is not attempting to impose multiple
punishments for a single offense. Nor is it making another attempt to
convict Lydon after acquittal. It is satisfied with the results of the
bench trial and would have abided the results of a jury trial had
Lydon taken that initial course. The conceptual difficulty for Lydon
is that he has not been acquitted; he simply maintains that he ought
to have been. His claim is that the evidence at the bench trial was
insufficient to convict and that a second trial to a jury will offend
the fundamental rule that a verdict of acquittal may "not be reviewed,
on error or otherwise, without putting [a defendant] twice in
jeopardy." United States v. Ball,
[466 U.S. 294, 308]
163 U.S. 662, 671 (1896); United States v. Martin Linen Supply
Co.,
430 U.S. 564, 571 (1977). Our cases, however, do not take us as
far as Lydon would like.
B
The Double Jeopardy Clause is not an absolute bar to successive
trials. The general rule is that the Clause does not bar reprosecution
of a defendant whose conviction is overturned on appeal. United States
v. Ball, supra. The justification for this rule was explained in
United States v. Tateo,
377 U.S. 463, 466 (1964), as follows:
"While different theories have been advanced to support the
permissibility of retrial, of greater importance than the conceptual
abstractions employed to explain the Ball principle are the
implications of that principle for the sound administration of
justice. Corresponding to the right of an accused to be given a fair
trial is the societal interest in punishing one whose guilt is clear
after he has obtained such a trial. It would be a high price indeed
for society to pay were every accused granted immunity from
punishment because of any defect sufficient to constitute reversible
error in the proceedings leading to conviction."
In Price v. Georgia,
398 U.S. 323, 329 (1970), we recognized that implicit in the Ball
rule permitting retrial after reversal of a conviction is the concept
of "continuing jeopardy." See also Breed v. Jones,
421 U.S. 519, 534 (1975). That principle "has application where
criminal proceedings against an accused have not run their full
course."
398 U.S., at 326 . Interests supporting the continuing jeopardy
principle involve fairness to society, lack of finality, and limited
waiver. Id., at 329, n. 4. Acquittals, unlike convictions, terminate
the initial jeopardy. This is so whether they are "express or implied
by a conviction on a lesser included offense." Id., at 329. In Burks,
437 U.S. 1 (1978), we recognized that an
[466 U.S. 294, 309]
unreversed determination by a reviewing court that the
evidence was legally insufficient likewise served to terminate the
initial jeopardy.
We assume, without deciding, that jeopardy attached at the swearing
of the first witness at Lydon's bench trial. The question then is
whether jeopardy has now terminated. Lydon's double jeopardy argument
requires an affirmative answer to that question, but he fails to
identify any stage of the state proceedings that can be held to have
terminated jeopardy. Unlike Burks, who could rest his claim upon the
appellate court's determination of insufficiency, Lydon is faced with
the unreversed determination of the bench-trial judge, contrary to
Lydon's assertion, that the prosecution had met its burden of proof.
We noted in United States v. Martin Linen Supply Co., supra, at 571,
that an acquittal "represents a resolution, correct or not, of some or
all of the factual elements of the offense charged." (Emphasis added.)
Lydon's claim of evidentiary failure and a legal judgment to that
effect therefore have different consequences under the Double Jeopardy
Clause. We believe that the dissent in the Court of Appeals correctly
described the nature of the de novo hearing as follows:
"While technically [the defendant] is `tried again,' the second
stage proceeding can be regarded as but an enlarged, fact-sensitive
part of a single, continuous course of judicial proceedings during
which, sooner or later, a defendant receives more - rather than less
- of the process normally extended to criminal defendants in this
nation." 698 F.2d, at 12 (Campbell, J., dissenting).
In Burks, the question involved the significance to be attached to
a particular event - an appellate determination that the evidence was
insufficient to support a conviction. Concededly, no such event has
occurred here; but Lydon insists that he is entitled under the Federal
Constitution to a review
[466 U.S. 294, 310] of the evidence
presented at the bench trial before proceeding with the second-tier
trial. Burks does not control this very different issue, and we are
convinced that the Double Jeopardy Clause does not reach so far.
Consequently, we reject the suggestion that Burks modified Ludwig, and
we reaffirm our holding in the latter case.
7
IV
A number of features of the Massachusetts system persuade us that
it does not constitute "governmental oppression of the sort against
which the Double Jeopardy Clause was intended to protect," United
States v. Scott,
437 U.S. 82, 91 (1978), even when a defendant convicted at the
first tier claims insufficiency of the evidence.
We note at the outset that Lydon was in "jeopardy" in only a
theoretical sense. Although technically "jeopardy" under the Double
Jeopardy Clause entails the "potential or risk of trial and
conviction, not punishment," Price v. Georgia, supra, at 329, it is
worthy of note that virtually nothing can happen to a defendant at a
first-tier trial that he cannot avoid. He has an absolute right to
obtain the de novo trial, and he need not allege error at the
first-tier trial to do so. Once the right to a de novo trial is
exercised, the judgment at the bench trial is "wiped out." Mann v.
Commonwealth, 359 Mass. 661, 271 N. E. 2d 331 (1971).
The defendant's right to obtain de novo review without alleging
error is significant in that it ameliorates one of the concerns
underlying our opinion in Burks. In Burks, we recognized the danger of
"affording the prosecution another opportunity to supply evidence
which it failed to muster in the first proceeding."
437 U.S., at 11 . The Court of Appeals in this case stated that "[t]he
process of judicial review
[466 U.S. 294, 311] has conveniently
pinpointed the evidence which was lacking, and retrial simply gives
the prosecutor another opportunity to supply it." 698 F.2d, at 8.
However, the "process of judicial review" that resulted in the
identification of the precise area of insufficiency is not a part of
the ordinary Massachusetts procedure and would not have occurred had
it not been for Lydon's double jeopardy claim and the intervention by
federal courts. In the usual case, there would be no review prior to
the jury trial.
A claim that our decision in this case creates an incentive for a
prosecutor to hold back and learn the defendant's case in the first
trial, in order to hone his presentation in the second, is
unpersuasive. The prosecution has every incentive to put forward its
strongest case at the bench trial, because an acquittal will preclude
reprosecution of the defendant. Although admittedly the Commonwealth
at the de novo trial will have the benefit of having seen the defense,
the defendant likewise will have had the opportunity to assess the
prosecution's case. Because in most cases the judge presiding at the
bench trial can be expected to acquit a defendant when legally
insufficient evidence has been presented, it is clear that the system
provides substantial benefits to defendants, as well as to the
Commonwealth.
8 In fact, as we recognized in Ludwig v. Massachusetts,
427 U.S., at 626 -627, there appears to be nothing to stop a
defendant from choosing a bench trial for the sole purpose of getting
a preview of the Commonwealth's case to enable him to prepare better
for the jury [466 U.S.
294, 312] trial. To put the matter another way, as we
observed in Colten v. Kentucky,
407 U.S. 104, 119 (1972), a defendant's chances in a two-tier
system are "[i]n reality . . . to accept the decision of the judge and
the sentence imposed in the inferior court or to reject what in effect
is no more than an offer in settlement of his case and seek the
judgment of a judge or jury in the superior court, with sentence to be
determined by the full record made in that court."
As the dissent in the Court of Appeals recognized, the two-tier
system affords benefits to defendants that are unavailable in a more
conventional system. 698 F.2d, at 11-12 (Campbell, J., dissenting). In
traditional systems, a convicted defendant may seek reversal only on
matters of law; in the Massachusetts system a defendant is given two
opportunities to be acquitted on the facts. If he is acquitted at the
first trial, he cannot be retried. See Ludwig v. Massachusetts, supra,
at 631. If he is convicted, he may then choose to invoke his right to
a trial de novo and once again put the prosecution to its proof. If
the prosecution fails in the second trial to convince the trier-of-fact
of the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, an acquittal
results. If the prosecution succeeds in obtaining a conviction the
second time, the defendant then has the usual appellate remedies. As
we noted in Ludwig, "[n]othing in the Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits
a State from affording a defendant two opportunities to avoid
conviction and secure an acquittal."
9
427 U.S., at 632 .
[466 U.S. 294, 313]
Although, as Judge Campbell said in dissent below, his colleagues'
opinion reflects "intelligence and logic," we agree with him that
their "relentless application of secondary precepts developed in
other, very different settings" led to a wrong result not required by
the Constitution and destructive of "a useful and fair state
procedure." 698 F.2d, at 10. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of
the Court of Appeals.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] At the second-tier trial, a defendant may waive a
jury and undergo a second bench trial. Mass. Gen. Laws Ann., ch. 218,
27A(g) (West Supp. 1983-1984).
[
Footnote 2 ] We do not carve out a special-purpose jurisdictional
exception for double jeopardy allegations with respect to custody.
Nothing in our discussion of custody is dependent upon the nature of
the claim that is raised. To the extent that double jeopardy claims
are treated differently for habeas purposes, it is because of the
application of the exhaustion principle, not because a different
definition of custody is adopted.
[
Footnote 3 ] The exhaustion requirement is set forth in 28 U.S.C.
2254, which provides in relevant part:
"(b) An application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a
person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall
not be granted unless it appears that the applicant has exhausted
the remedies available in the courts of the State, or that there is
either an absence of available State corrective process or the
existence of circumstances rendering such process ineffective to
protect the rights of the prisoner.
"(c) An applicant shall not be deemed to have exhausted the
remedies available in the courts of the State, within the meaning of
this section, if he has the right under the law of the State to
raise, by any available procedure, the question presented."
[
Footnote 4 ] Section 2254(b) specifically allows for the issuance
of habeas writs when circumstances exist "rendering [state] process
ineffective to protect the rights of the prisoner." In the
circumstances of this case, there are no more state procedures of
which Lydon may avail himself to avoid an allegedly unconstitutional
second trial.
[
Footnote 5 ] If our conclusion were otherwise, a further
exhaustion issue would arise. The District Court and the Court of
Appeals not only held that Lydon was entitled to a determination of
the sufficiency of the evidence at his first trial but also proceeded
to make this evidentiary determination. Yet it seems to us that the
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts held that any double jeopardy
claim Lydon might have should be made prior to the beginning of the
second trial, although it candidly stated that under its opinion no
such claim could succeed. If the Massachusetts court was wrong,
however, in ruling that Lydon was not entitled to a sufficiency
determination, it is apparent that the way would be open for him to
present his claim to the de novo court in precisely the manner that
the Massachusetts court suggested that a double jeopardy claim should
be submitted. In our view, therefore, the federal habeas corpus court
in any event should not itself have ruled on the sufficiency of the
evidence at Lydon's first trial
[466 U.S. 294, 304] but should have stayed
its hand and permitted the state court to make that determination in
the first instance. Otherwise, Lydon could not be said to have
exhausted his state remedies and satisfied the requirements of 2254.
It is for that reason that reliance by Lydon and the courts below
on Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307 (1979), is misplaced. Jackson held that federal
habeas courts must consider a petitioner's federal due process claim
that the evidence in support of his conviction was insufficient to
have led a rational trier of fact to find him guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt. No one has suggested, however, that Jackson in any
way created an exception to the exhaustion requirement.
Because in our view Lydon may be retried and convicted without a
review of the sufficiency of the evidence at his bench trial, there
will never be an occasion for a federal habeas corpus court to deal
with the evidentiary issue at that trial. Since JUSTICE STEVENS
disagrees with our double jeopardy decision, he asserts that the
federal court must perform its Jackson v. Virginia function with
respect to the evidence at the first trial. He would postpone that
task until after the second trial, however. Of course, if Lydon is
convicted at his jury trial, the sufficiency of the evidence at that
trial will concededly be open to review in a federal court, as Jackson
v. Virginia mandates.
[
Footnote 6 ] The Clause also, of course, protects against retrial
after the declaration of a mistrial in certain circumstances. See
United States v. Scott,
437 U.S. 82 (1978).
[
Footnote 7 ] JUSTICE BRENNAN suggests that the voluntary nature of
the two-tier system strongly influences his conclusion. Post, at
325-326, and n. 8. It is not clear why that is so, given that his
reasoning is based upon the defendant's expectations, rather than a
theory of waiver.
[
Footnote 8 ] It appears that defendants recognize the advantages
of two-tier systems. During one period studied, only about 9% of
defendants chose a jury trial in the first instance. Moreover,
thousands of cases were disposed of by convictions at bench trials
because many convicted defendants did not exercise their right to
appeal to the jury trial session. Lydon v. Commonwealth, 381 Mass.
356, 359, n. 5, 409 N. E. 2d 745, 748, n. 5, cert. denied,
449 U.S. 1065 (1980).
We also note the fact that the advantages of two-tier systems have
led almost half of the States to adopt such systems. See 698 F.2d 1, 2
(CA1 1982).
[
Footnote 9 ] Of course, under the present Massachusetts two-tier
system, a defendant can also wholly avoid the consequences of a
first-tier trial by avoiding the trial altogether. A defendant has an
unqualified right to proceed to a jury trial in the first instance. It
thus cannot be said that the Commonwealth required that Lydon submit
to two trials. In this sense, the current Massachusetts system is more
favorable to defendants than was the system we upheld against
constitutional attack in Ludwig v. Massachusetts. There is not the
slightest hint in the record that Lydon, who was represented by
counsel, did not choose the bench trial voluntarily.
JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom JUSTICE MARSHALL joins, concurring in
part and concurring in the judgment.
I agree that, because respondent was "in custody" within the
meaning of 28 U.S.C. 2241(c)(3) and 2254(a) and because he had
exhausted all available state remedies for his constitutional claim,
the District Court had jurisdiction to entertain his habeas corpus
petition. Accordingly, I join Parts I and II of the Court's opinion.
1 I analyze the merits differently than does the Court, however,
and therefore do not join Parts III and IV of its opinion.
I
The Court rejects Lydon's double jeopardy claim by relying on the
absence of "government oppression" and the presence of "continuing
jeopardy." For many of the reasons advanced by the Court, as well as
others, see infra, at 324-326, I completely agree that the two-tier
trial option available to Massachusetts defendants appears eminently
fair and reasonable and that there is therefore no evidence of the
kind of "governmental oppression" that might, apart from other
analytical considerations, provide an independent basis for a double
jeopardy claim. I do not, however, believe - nor do I
[466 U.S. 294, 314]
understand the Court to suggest - that the absence of
"governmental oppression" standing alone would defeat a double
jeopardy claim otherwise valid under our cases.
At first blush, Lydon appears to present such a claim. The Court
assumes, as petitioners concede, "that jeopardy attached at the
swearing of the first witness at Lydon's bench trial," ante, at 309;
the Commonwealth does not claim it lacked "a fair opportunity" to
present its best evidence nor does it challenge the District Court's
determination, based on an application of Massachusetts decisions
directly on point, that "the State had failed as a matter of law to
prove its case" against Lydon, see 698 F.2d 1, 7 (CA1 1982) (opinion
below); and, finally, the Court seems to acknowledge that, as a result
of today's decision, Lydon will undergo two trials, ante, at 309.
Accordingly, Lydon appears to establish that, contrary to the rule we
unanimously reaffirmed just three Terms ago, he will be subjected to
"retrial where the State has failed as a matter of law to prove its
case despite a fair opportunity to do so." Hudson v. Louisiana,
450 U.S. 40, 45 , n. 5 (1981).
2
The Court meets this argument by noting that Lydon has only a
"claim of evidentiary failure . . . [, not] a legal judgment to that
effect . . . ." Ante, at 309. Invoking the concept of "continuing
jeopardy," the Court maintains that such a "legal judgment" is
required before jeopardy is "terminated" and a retrial barred. Nor, in
the Court's view, is it
[466 U.S. 294, 315] enough for these purposes that Lydon
has obtained a "legal judgment" that the evidence was constitutionally
inadequate from a Federal District Court, acting within its
jurisdiction and after the defendant has exhausted state remedies.
Instead, Lydon's claim must be rejected because "he fails to identify
any stage of the state proceedings that can be held to have terminated
jeopardy." Ante, at 309.
I agree that a valid double jeopardy claim presupposes some
identifiable point at which a first trial may be said to have ended.
See infra, at 320. I respectfully suggest, however, that mere
incantation of the phrase "continuing jeopardy," without more,
partakes of the sort of "conceptual abstractions" that our decisions
elaborating the requirements of the Double Jeopardy Clause have
attempted to avoid. See United States v. Tateo,
377 U.S. 463, 466 (1964). For example, although the Court holds
that the Double Jeopardy Clause bars retrial after certain
jeopardy-terminating "legal judgments," its approach sets no apparent
limits on a State's ability to withhold the necessary "legal
judgment," thereby maintaining a state of "continuing jeopardy" and
justifying repeated attempts to gain a conviction. And by ignoring the
realities of Lydon's situation and demanding a state-court "legal
judgment" of acquittal, the Court manages to avoid grappling with the
common-sense intuition that the guilty verdict rendered at the end of
Lydon's first-tier trial constitutes an obvious point at which
proceedings against him "terminated."
3 [466 U.S. 294,
316]
To the best of my knowledge, this is the first occasion on which
the Court has employed the "continuing jeopardy" notion in such a
formalistic fashion. Until today, we have repeatedly emphasized that
the concept of "continuing jeopardy" is, at best, a label that "has
occasionally been used to explain why an accused who has secured the
reversal of a conviction on appeal may be retried for the same
offense." Breed v. Jones,
421 U.S. 519, 534 (1975). See also Burks v. United States,
437 U.S. 1, 15 (1978); Price v. Georgia,
398 U.S. 323, 329 , n. 4 (1970). But as a talismanic substitute
for analysis, the "continuing jeopardy" concept "has `never been
adopted by a majority of this Court,'" Breed v. Jones, supra, at 534,
quoting United States v. Jenkins,
420 U.S. 358, 369 (1975).
In particular, the rule allowing retrials after reversal for trial
error, first announced in United States v. Ball,
163 U.S. 662, 672 (1896), has never rested on the theory that,
notwithstanding a guilty verdict ending trial level proceedings, the
trial never "terminated" and the defendant therefore remained in a
state of "continuing jeopardy." Instead, we have grounded the Ball
rule in "the implications of that principle for the sound
administration of justice." United
[466 U.S. 294, 317] States v. Tateo, supra,
at 466. See also Tibbs v. Florida,
457 U.S. 31, 40 (1982); United States v. DiFrancesco,
449 U.S. 117, 131 (1980); United States v. Scott,
437 U.S. 82, 89 -92 (1978); United States v. Wilson,
420 U.S. 332, 343 -344, n. 11 (1975).
4 The opinion in Burks provided the fullest explanation for the
Ball rule and also explained why that rule does not permit retrials
after reversals based on insufficient evidence:
"[R]eversal for trial error, as distinguished from evidentiary
insufficiency, does not constitute a decision to the effect that the
government has failed to prove its case. As such, it implies nothing
with respect to the guilt or innocence of the defendant. Rather, it
is a determination that a defendant has been convicted through a
judicial process which is defective in some fundamental respect . .
. . When this occurs, the accused has a strong interest in obtaining
a fair readjudication of his guilt free from error, just as society
maintains a valid concern for insuring that the guilty are punished.
. . .
"The same cannot be said when a defendant's conviction has been
overturned due to a failure of proof at trial, in which case the
prosecution cannot complain of prejudice, for it has been given one
fair opportunity to offer whatever proof it could assemble.
Moreover, such an appellate reversal means that the government's
case was [466 U.S.
294, 318] so lacking that it should not have even been
submitted to the jury. Since we necessarily afford absolute finality
to a jury's verdict of acquittal - no matter how erroneous its
decision - it is difficult to conceive how society has any greater
interest in retrying a defendant when, on review, it is decided as a
matter of law that the jury could not properly have returned a
verdict of guilty." Burks v. United States, supra, at 15-16
(emphasis in original) (footnote omitted).
The decision in Burks, therefore, is not merely an application of
an abstract concept of "continuing jeopardy." Instead, Burks derives
from "[p]erhaps the most fundamental rule in the history of double
jeopardy jurisprudence" - that a "`verdict of acquittal . . . [can]not
be reviewed, on error or otherwise, without putting [a defendant]
twice in jeopardy, and thereby violating the Constitution.'" United
States v. Martin Linen Supply Co.,
430 U.S. 564, 571 (1977) (quoting United States v. Ball, supra, at
671). Unlike a reversal for trial error, a reversal for
constitutionally insufficient evidence represents a determination
that, notwithstanding the verdict to the contrary, no "rational trier
of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a
reasonable doubt," Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979), and therefore the defendant was entitled
to a judgment of acquittal as a matter of law. In the eyes of the law,
the defendant is innocent of the charges brought against him. The
policies barring retrial after acquittal are no less applicable to
such a defendant simply because he, unlike a defendant who actually
obtained a judgment of acquittal, was tried before an irrational or
lawless factfinder.
To be sure, the Burks rule is not engaged unless the conviction at
the first trial is reversed and the State seeks a retrial; Burks
forbids a retrial under those circumstances if the evidence at the
first trial was constitutionally insufficient. In that respect, the
Court is quite correct in stating that a prerequisite to a successful
Burks claim is a "legal judgment" rendered at some point that the
evidence was insufficient
[466 U.S. 294, 319] under the standards of
Jackson v. Virginia, supra. But the Court's "continuing jeopardy"
concept begs the questions of whether and when the defendant is
entitled to a judgment barring further proceedings.
5 For all that concept provides, the defendant in Burks was simply
fortunate that the reviewing court chose to provide him with a
judicial "determination that the evidence was insufficient to support
a conviction," ante, at 309, and did not instead rely on an
alternative ground of reversal. In the latter event, Burks, like Lydon,
would have been left with only a "claim of evidentiary failure[, not]
a legal judgment to that effect." Ibid. I cannot agree that the
protections of the Double Jeopardy Clause depend so heavily on the
grace of a reviewing court. See infra, at 320-321.
For these reasons, I do not find invocation of an unadorned
"continuing jeopardy" concept helpful in resolving the issues posed by
this case. Instead, if we are to employ the label "continuing
jeopardy," I would attempt to give it content by turning to the
principles and policies of the Double Jeopardy Clause that this Court
has elaborated in analogous cases.
[466 U.S. 294, 320]
II
In order "to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb" for the same
offense, U.S. Const., Amdt. 5 (emphasis added), a defendant facing a
new trial must have been subjected to a previous proceeding at which
jeopardy attached as a matter of federal constitutional law, Crist v.
Bretz,
437 U.S. 28 (1978), and which has now somehow ended; in the
Court's terminology, former jeopardy must have "terminated." Of
course, it is not sufficient that the defendant claims that one
proceeding has concluded and another has begun. For example, the
second half of a trial does not subject a defendant to double jeopardy
because his motion for a mistrial was denied in the middle of
proceedings - even though the defendant asserts that, as far as he is
concerned, his trial has ended. Instead, every valid double jeopardy
claim presupposes some kind of predicate set of circumstances - such
as those typically attendant to a verdict, judgment, or order
dismissing the case - objectively concluding one trial and giving rise
to the prosecution's effort to begin another.
The question of whether jeopardy has objectively "terminated"
should be analyzed in terms of the policies underlying the Double
Jeopardy Clause, namely, its concern that repeated trials may subject
a defendant "to embarrassment, expense and ordeal and compe[l] him to
live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity, as well as
enhancing the possibility that even though innocent he may be found
guilty." Green v. United States,
355 U.S. 184, 187 -188 (1957). Jeopardy may be said to have
terminated only when the posture of a trial in some objective sense
leaves the defendant in such a position that resumption of proceedings
would implicate those policies.
Hence, although in most instances a "legal judgment" undoubtedly
entails the kind of circumstances under which we may easily conclude
that jeopardy has terminated, it seems obvious that a State may not
evade the strictures of the Clause simply by withholding a legal
judgment and thereby
[466 U.S. 294, 321] subjecting a defendant to retrial on
the theory of "continuing jeopardy." To take two extreme examples, a
trial judge, having received a jury verdict of not guilty, may not
justify an order that the trial be repeated by refusing to enter a
formal judgment on the jury's verdict; nor may a State with a one-tier
system avoid a double jeopardy claim by refusing to acknowledge that
the first trial had in fact begun and ended. These hypothetical
situations, while admittedly unrealistic, nevertheless demonstrate
that the determination of whether a trial has in fact "terminated" for
purposes of the Double Jeopardy Clause - like the question of whether
a trial has begun, Crist v. Bretz, supra - is an issue of federal
constitutional law; it cannot turn solely on whether the State has
entered a "legal judgment" ending the proceedings. Cf. United States
v. Martin Linen Supply Co.,
430 U.S., at 571 ("what constitutes an `acquittal' is not to be
controlled by the form of the judge's action").
The fact that a trial has ended does not, however, complete the
constitutional inquiry; the Court has concluded, most notably in
applying the Ball rule, that strong policy reasons may justify
subjecting a defendant to two trials in certain circumstances
notwithstanding the literal language of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
See n. 5, supra. The issue of whether policy reasons of that kind
justify retrial in a given case is, however, analytically distinct
from the question of whether the challenged proceeding constitutes a
second trial or, instead, a continuation of the first. Cases applying
the Ball rule, for instance, acknowledge that the defendant will be
subjected to two trials but find that fact constitutionally
permissible. E. g., United States v. Tateo,
377 U.S., at 465 -466.
Accordingly, once it has been determined that a trial has ended as
a matter of constitutional law, a court considering a double jeopardy
claim must consider the separate question of whether a second trial
would violate the Constitution. For example, when a defendant
challenging his conviction on appeal
[466 U.S. 294, 322] contends both that the
trial was infected by error and that the evidence was constitutionally
insufficient, the court may not, consistent with the rule of Burks v.
United States,
437 U.S. 1 (1978), ignore the sufficiency claim, reverse on
grounds of trial error, and remand for retrial. Because the first
trial has plainly ended, "retrial is foreclosed by the Double Jeopardy
Clause if the evidence fails to satisfy the [constitutional standard
for sufficiency]. Hence, the [sufficiency] issue cannot be avoided; if
retrial is to be had, the evidence must be found to be legally
sufficient, as a matter of federal law, to sustain the jury verdict."
Tibbs v. Florida,
457 U.S., at 51 (WHITE, J., dissenting). See id., at 45 (majority
opinion) (noting that consideration of evidentiary sufficiency before
ordering retrial is part of state appellate court's "obligations to
enforce applicable state and federal laws").
In short, I believe there are two distinct limitations on a State's
ability to retry a defendant on a claim of "continuing jeopardy."
First, the issue of whether a trial has ended so that a second trial
would constitute double jeopardy is a federal constitutional question,
informed but not controlled by the State's characterization of the
status of the proceedings; resolution of that question turns
essentially on the relationship between the circumstances at issue and
the policies underlying the Double Jeopardy Clause. Second, once it
has been determined that a first trial has in fact ended, terminating
former jeopardy as a matter of federal constitutional law, a State may
not place the defendant in jeopardy a second time if retrial is
constitutionally barred on any grounds properly preserved and
presented.
6 [466 U.S. 294,
323]
III
In this case, the guilty verdict rendered by the first-tier judge
undeniably ended a set of proceedings in that court-room that would be
most naturally understood as a single, completed trial. Arguably,
therefore, that verdict "terminated" jeopardy. If so, and if the
evidence at the first trial was insufficient, then retrial of Lydon at
the second tier would be constitutionally barred under Burks, without
regard to whether the vacating of the guilty verdict, in and of
itself, would otherwise permit a new trial under the Ball rule. And
because Lydon has fully exhausted available state remedies, the
federal habeas court would be fully authorized to vindicate his claim
before trial or after conviction. See ante, at 302-303; Arizona v.
Washington,
434 U.S. 497 (1978).
7 [466 U.S. 294,
324]
In the unique context of the Massachusetts two-tier trial system,
however, I do not believe a guilty verdict at the first tier is
attended by the type of circumstances that can be said to "terminate"
trial-level proceedings against Lydon for purposes of the Double
Jeopardy Clause. In terms of the policies advanced by the Clause, that
verdict has substantially less significance for the defendant than it
would have in a traditional, one-tier system. See generally Colten v.
Kentucky,
407 U.S. 104 (1972). In the latter context, a defendant has no
right to insist on two opportunities to prove his case and rebut the
prosecution's. Although there ultimately may be two trials, as when a
conviction is reversed on appeal for trial error, that eventuality is
largely beyond the defendant's control. A defendant will therefore
ordinarily approach a trial on the assumption that it will be his only
opportunity to influence the factfinder in his favor. That expectation
will presumably result in a maximum dedication of the defendant's
resources to the trial, which in turn will engender a significant
degree of anxiety during the course of proceedings.
In contrast, as the dissenting judge in the Court of Appeals
pointed out, Lydon chose to be tried in a system the defining
characteristic of which is that it provides the defendant "two full
opportunities to be acquitted on the facts." 698 F.2d, at 11
(Campbell, J., dissenting) (emphasis in original). Unlike a defendant
in a traditional trial system, a defendant in Lydon's position knows
from the outset of the first-tier proceeding that, at its conclusion,
he can demand a chance to convince a second factfinder that he is
innocent. This knowledge permits him to adopt in advance a trial
strategy based on that opportunity. He can, for example, withhold some
of his stronger evidence with the intention of introducing it at
[466 U.S. 294, 325]
the second tier after evaluating the prosecution's entire
case; in addition, he can take risks in his presentation, secure in
the knowledge that he can avoid any resulting dangers the second time
around. Perhaps more importantly, the defendant's realization
throughout the first-tier trial that he has an absolute right to a
second chance necessarily mitigates the sense of irrevocability that
normally attends the factfinding stage of criminal proceedings, from
beginning to end. For these reasons, the defendant's prospective
knowledge of his entitlement to a second factfinding opportunity
substantially diminishes the burden imposed by the first proceeding as
well as the significance of a guilty verdict ending that proceeding.
Furthermore, the strategic advantage gained by a defendant who
chooses the two-tier system is enhanced by virtue of the fact that the
prosecution does not share an equivalent advantage. As the Court
notes, the "prosecution has every incentive to put forward its
strongest case at the bench trial, because an acquittal will preclude
reprosecution of the defendant." Ante, at 311. The Court also notes
that "[a]lthough admittedly the Commonwealth at the de novo trial will
have the benefit of having seen the defense, the defendant likewise
will have had the opportunity to assess the prosecution's case." Ibid.
Of course, both of these points could be advanced to justify the
retrial of a defendant who has been convicted in a traditional system
and who has not appealed - a practice prohibited under the Double
Jeopardy Clause. See ante, at 306-307. What distinguishes the
Massachusetts system for me, however, is that it permits but does not
compel a defendant to secure the advantage of knowing in advance that
he, but not the prosecution, may demand a second factfinding
opportunity.
8 That advantage substantially reduces
[466 U.S. 294, 326]
the significance of the circumstances surrounding a guilty
verdict concluding the first-tier to the point that I conclude that
such a verdict does not "terminate" jeopardy.
This conclusion is unaffected by Lydon's claim that earlier
Massachusetts cases led him to believe that he could challenge the
sufficiency of the evidence presented at the first-tier trial through
a motion to dismiss filed at the outset of the second-tier. See Brief
for Respondent 55. Cf. post, at 331-332, n. 2 (STEVENS, J., concurring
in part and concurring in judgment). Assuming the authoritativeness of
those cases and Lydon's reasonable reliance on them, the
Commonwealth's failure to provide a promised avenue of relief might
amount to a violation of due process. The prospect of such a remedy
does not, however, bear on whether the circumstances surrounding a
guilty verdict at the end of the first tier "terminated" proceedings
for purposes of the Double Jeopardy Clause. Faced with a charge for
which he believes the prosecution has constitutionally insufficient
evidence, a defendant in Lydon's position can choose the ordinary
one-tier system in the expectation that, if his sufficiency claim is
sustained, he will never be required to undergo a second trial under
Burks. A decision to select the two-tier system instead necessarily
achieves the advantages flowing from the knowledge that he can demand
a second factfinding opportunity. Even if that choice is made only as
a hedge against the possibility that the insufficiency claim will be
rejected by every court the defendant believes can entertain it,
selection [466 U.S. 294,
327] of the two-tier alternative itself clearly
diminishes both the strategic and emotional significance of the guilty
verdict at the first tier.
For these reasons, I conclude that the guilty verdict rendered at
the end of Lydon's bench trial did not, for purposes of the Double
Jeopardy Clause, "terminate" one trial and thereby permit a claim that
a second trial was barred due to insufficient evidence. Accordingly, I
agree that the federal habeas court erred in sustaining Lydon's claim
on the merits and therefore join the judgment of the Court.
[
Footnote 1 ] Although it appears in Part II in which I otherwise
concur, I do not agree with the implications of footnote 5 of the
Court's opinion. See n. 7, infra.
[
Footnote 2 ] Lydon does not contend that the Commonwealth is
required by the Federal Constitution to afford appellate review of the
evidence presented at the bench trial before proceeding with the
second-tier trial. See Brief for Respondent 85-90. Instead, Lydon
argues that the Commonwealth violated Burks v. United States,
457 U.S. 1 (1978), by ordering him to undergo a second trial,
despite what he claims was insufficient evidence at the first trial.
As the Court appears to recognize, the jurisdiction of a federal
habeas court to entertain such a claim does not depend on the
Common-wealth's failure to provide appellate or indeed any other kind
of review of the sufficiency before the second trial. The habeas court
has jurisdiction as long as the defendant has exhausted whatever state
remedies are in fact available. See ante, at 302-303.
[
Footnote 3 ] Ultimately, the Court's decision rests on an ipse
dixit that "[a]cquittals, unlike convictions, terminate the initial
jeopardy." Ante, at 308. The Court nowhere explains why an acquittal
marks the end of a trial while a conviction or, as in this case, a
judgment that the defendant was entitled to an acquittal, lack that
effect. Cf. Green v. United States,
355 U.S. 184, 187 (1957), quoting Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall. 163,
169 (1974) ("The common law not only prohibited a second punishment
for the same offence, but it went further and forb[ade] a second trial
for the same offence, whether the accused had suffered punishment or
not, and whether in the former trial he had been acquitted or
convicted"). Cf. post, at 329-330 (STEVENS, J., concurring
[466 U.S. 294, 316]
in part and concurring in judgment); infra, at 323-327. In
any event, if in fact convictions do not terminate jeopardy, then
renewed prosecution of a defendant after an unreversed conviction for
the same offense - which the Court acknowledges is barred, ante, at
306-307 - would constitute only "continuing" and not double jeopardy
under the Court's theory. Nor, under the Court's approach, could the
prohibition against such a prosecution be justified by the policy
against subjecting a defendant to multiple punishments for the same
offense. If a guilty verdict does not "terminate" proceedings, a
convicted defendant subjected to further prosecution for the same
offense is simply not "twice put in jeopardy" within the language of
the Double Jeopardy Clause. U.S. Const., Amdt. 5 (emphasis added). See
Missouri v. Hunter,
459 U.S. 359, 366 (1983) ("With respect to cumulative sentences
imposed in a single trial, the Double Jeopardy Clause does no more
than prevent the sentencing court from prescribing greater punishment
than the legislature intended").
[
Footnote 4 ] The Court finds authority for its approach in the
statement in Price v. Georgia,
398 U.S. 323, 329 (1970), that "[t]he concept of continuing
jeopardy [is] implicit in the Ball case." The opinion in Price did
not, however, approve the "broad continuing jeopardy approach," id.,
at 328, n. 3. Indeed, as the Court notes, ante, at 308, Price
suggested that, in light of modern double jeopardy cases, the
conclusion represented by the "continuing jeopardy" label reflects "an
amalgam of interests - e. g., fairness to society, lack of finality,
and limited waiver, among others."
398 U.S., at 329 , n. 4. Like Tateo, Jenkins, Breed, Burks, Scott,
Wilson, DiFrancesco, and Tibbs, therefore, Price eschewed reliance on
the mere shibboleth of "continuing jeopardy."
[
Footnote 5 ] Our modern double jeopardy cases have emphasized
that, absent substantial countervailing state interests such as
ordinarily obtain when a conviction is reversed on grounds of trial
error, "the State with all its resources and power should not be
allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an
alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and
ordeal and compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and
insecurity, as well as enhancing the possibility that even though
innocent he may be found guilty." Green v. United States,
355 U.S. 184, 187 -188 (1957). See also Tibbs v. Florida,
457 U.S. 31, 39 -42 (1982). Although the Court quotes the same
language from Green, ante, at 307, the "continuing jeopardy" concept
on which it relies, as originally set out by Justice Holmes in his
dissenting opinion in Kepner v. United States,
195 U.S. 100, 134 -137 (1904), entails no discernible limit on the
government's ability repeatedly to retry a defendant for "the same
cause":
"[I]t seems to me that logically and rationally a man cannot be
said to be more than once in jeopardy in the same cause, however
often he may be tried. The jeopardy is one continuing jeopardy from
its beginning to the end of the cause."
[
Footnote 6 ] The approach I have proposed is fully consistent with
Ludwig v. Massachusetts,
427 U.S. 618 (1976), and indeed avoids the tension suggested in
the Court's opinion between that case and Burks v. United States,
437 U.S. 1 (1978). See ante, at 305-306 and 309-310. As the Court
notes, the opinion in Ludwig analogized the second-tier of trial
proceedings in Massachusetts to a retrial after reversal of the
conviction permissible under the Ball rule.
427 U.S., at 631 -632. The Court did not rely on the
[466 U.S. 294, 323]
notion that jeopardy continued through both proceedings,
rendering them a single "trial," but rather assumed, as in Ball
itself, that the second tier constituted a "new trial."
427 U.S., at 632 . There was, of course, no suggestion in Ludwig
that such a "new trial" was barred because of the absence of
constitutionally sufficient evidence - the issue presented by this
case - and therefore the Court had no occasion to consider whether the
guilty verdict at Ludwig's first-tier trial "terminated" jeopardy.
[
Footnote 7 ] Contrary to the Court's suggestion, Lydon has
exhausted every available state remedy for each element of his Burks
argument, including that argument's predicate claim that the evidence
at the first trial was insufficient. In implying that the sufficiency
issue is unexhausted because Lydon failed "to present his claim to the
de novo court in precisely the manner that the Massachusetts court
suggested that a double jeopardy claim should be submitted," ante, at
303, n. 5, the Court ignores its own earlier statement that "[b]efore
the jury trial commenced, Lydon moved to dismiss the charge against
him on the ground that no evidence of the element of intent had been
presented at the bench trial," ante, at 298. Indeed, the very opinion
of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court announcing the proper
procedure noted that Lydon had moved to dismiss the case on double
jeopardy grounds before the de novo court, Lydon v. Commonwealth, 381
Mass. 356, 357, 366-367, 409 N. E. 2d 745, 747, 752 (1980), and, on a
petition for review of the jury-trial judge's denial of that motion,
agreed that "the jury trial session is the appropriate forum for
consideration of double jeopardy claims asserted after a bench trial."
Id., at 366-367, 409
[466 U.S. 294, 324] N. E. 2d, at 752. Accordingly, the
Court's effort to avoid the conclusion that Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307 (1979), authorized the federal habeas court to
consider the sufficiency of the evidence at Lydon's first trial is
unavailing.
[
Footnote 8 ] Of course the features of the two-tier system that I
have identified might not be advantageous to every defendant; indeed,
the nature of a case or the strength of the government's evidence may
be such that those characteristics could prove undesirable or unfair
to the defendant. Accordingly,
[466 U.S. 294, 326] I find it significant
that those aspects of the Massachusetts two-tier system that depart
from a traditional trial are not forced on the defendant. Because the
Commonwealth permits a defendant to decide for himself whether to
accept the burdens of the two-tier proceeding in exchange for its
benefits, I need not decide whether a system that allows no such
choice would also survive constitutional scrutiny. Cf. Ludwig v.
Massachusetts,
427 U.S., at 632 (STEVENS, J., dissenting). See also Ward v.
Village of Monroeville,
409 U.S. 57 (1972).
JUSTICE POWELL, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE joins, concurring in
part and concurring in the judgment.
I agree with JUSTICE O'CONNOR that there is no federal habeas
corpus jurisdiction. I continue to believe that Hensley v. Municipal
Court,
411 U.S. 345 (1973), was wrongly decided for the reasons indicated
by the dissent in that case. But accepting Hensley as the law - as I
do - there is no reason to extend it to find that Lydon was in
"custody" when he is free on his own recognizance. As JUSTICE O'CONNOR
explains, Hensley is best understood as interpreting "custody" to
include those cases where a criminal defendant, already convicted and
sentenced, would be imprisoned without further state judicial action
had not the prison sentence been stayed by the federal court on
habeas. The State had "emphatically indicated its determination to put
[Hensley] behind bars," id., at 351-352, and would have done so but
for a stay by the Federal District Court.
Lydon's petition does not present such a case. Until Lydon is
convicted, he is obligated only to appear at trial and to "keep the
peace." If the trial court finds that he has defaulted on his
recognizance, the court may sentence him pursuant to his first
conviction; but Lydon then may seek appellate review, see, e. g.,
Commonwealth v. Bartlett, 374 Mass. 744, 374 N. E. 2d 1203 (1978). It
trivializes habeas [466
U.S. 294, 328] corpus jurisdiction, historically a
protection against governmental oppression, to use it as a remedy
against restraints as petty as those to which Lydon is subject.
However, as the Court chooses a different tack, I address the
merits as well and join Parts I, II-B, III, and IV of JUSTICE WHITE's
opinion.
JUSTICE STEVENS, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
It is necessary to analyze the character of the substantive claim
made by respondent before addressing the more difficult procedural
questions. Properly analyzed, respondent's habeas corpus petition
raises two distinct constitutional claims: First, whether the entry of
a judgment of guilt at the conclusion of his first-tier trial deprived
him of liberty without due process of law because the evidence was
constitutionally insufficient, and second, whether the second-tier
trial, if held before the first question is answered, would violate
Lydon's constitutional right not to be twice placed in jeopardy for
the same offense.
The answer to the first question is easy. If, as respondent alleged
and the District Court found, the Commonwealth's evidence at
respondent's first-tier trial was insufficient to support a finding of
guilt in the first-tier trial, he was entitled to an acquittal. Such
an acquittal would have given respondent his unconditional freedom.
Instead, he was found guilty of a crime and sentenced to two years in
jail. It is true, of course, that Massachusetts has afforded him a
right to have that judgment vacated, but as the Court has
demonstrated, that relief does not terminate his custodial status
Ante, at 300-302. As a matter of federal constitutional law, he had a
right to a judgment of acquittal that would eliminate the restraints
on his liberty. The Due Process Clause does not permit a State to
deprive a person of liberty based on a finding of guilt beyond
reasonable doubt after a proceeding in which it failed to adduce
sufficient evidence to persuade any
[466 U.S. 294, 329] trier of fact of guilt
beyond reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307 (1979). Therefore, respondent's continued custody
constitutes a deprivation of liberty without due process of law.
The answer to the second question is more difficult. Petitioners
concede and the Court assumes that jeopardy attached at the swearing
of the first witness at respondent's first-tier trial. Ante, at 309;
see also ante, at 314 (BRENNAN, J., concurring in part and concurring
in judgment). The question then becomes whether the Commonwealth now
seeks to place respondent in jeopardy a second time. The Court and
JUSTICE BRENNAN seem to state that had respondent been acquitted at
his first-tier, the Constitution would prohibit the second-tier trial.
Ante, at 308; ante, at 318 (BRENNAN, J., concurring in part and
concurring in judgment). There is also common ground on the
proposition that a judgment of acquittal is a necessary precondition
to the success of respondent's double jeopardy claim. The Court says
that an acquittal would "terminate" jeopardy; thus a second trial
would constitute a new and therefore second and unconstitutional
attachment of jeopardy, ante, at 308-309. JUSTICE BRENNAN writes that
once a judgment of acquittal is obtained the Constitution prohibits
retrial, and frames the question as whether respondent was entitled to
such a judgment prior to his second trial, ante, at 317-319.
What makes this case difficult is that the first-tier trial
actually ended with a judgment of conviction. Respondent does not rely
on that judgment as the bar to the second-tier trial. Instead, the
predicate for his double jeopardy claim is a hypothetical judgment
that he contends should have been entered at the end of the first
trial. I agree with JUSTICE BRENNAN that the Court's use of the
concept of "continuing jeopardy" is unhelpful, and that the underlying
issue in this case is whether respondent is constitutionally entitled
to a judgment of acquittal that could form the predicate for his
double jeopardy claim. Ante, at 313-319. To
[466 U.S. 294, 330]
put it another way, until a judgment of acquittal is entered
- or until there is an adjudication establishing his right to such a
judgment - respondent's double jeopardy claim is premature.
The central procedural question the case presents, therefore, is
when, if ever, is respondent entitled to have his first constitutional
claim - that he was denied due process as a result of the first-tier
trial - adjudicated. This Court, like the Supreme Judicial Court of
Massachusetts, answers this question "never." I disagree. If, as I
suggest above, respondent's current custody is in violation of the Due
Process Clause, then respondent has a due process claim cognizable on
federal habeas review under Jackson. If this claim is sustained by the
federal habeas court, as it was here, that judgment would provide the
predicate for respondent's double jeopardy claim. Such a judgment by
the federal habeas court would fall under the rule of Burks v. United
States,
437 U.S. 1 (1978). What we said of an appellate court's reversal
of a jury verdict there would apply equally to a federal habeas
court's judgment that the Commonwealth's evidence at the first-tier
trial was insufficient:
"[A]n appellate reversal means that the government's case was so
lacking that it should not have been even submitted to the jury.
Since we necessarily afford absolute finality to a jury's verdict of
acquittal - no matter how erroneous its decision - it is difficult
to conceive how society has any greater interest in retrying a
defendant when, on review, it is decided as a matter of law that the
jury could not properly have returned a verdict of guilty." Id., at
16 (emphasis in original).
1 [466 U.S. 294,
331]
In short, if Massachusetts affords respondent no remedy, I believe
a federal court must adjudicate respondent's Jackson claim, and, if it
is sustained, provide habeas corpus relief in the form of an order
that requires the State to enter, nunc pro tunc, the judgment of
acquittal to which respondent is constitutionally entitled. If and
when such a judgment of acquittal is entered, that judgment would bar
a second prosecution for the same offense. Or, if the second
prosecution had already been concluded before the judgment of
acquittal was entered, any jeopardy associated with the second
proceeding would be foreclosed; even if the prosecutor had adduced
additional evidence at the second-tier trial, the second judgment
could not survive the preclusive effect of the acquittal even though
it was belatedly entered.
2 [466 U.S. 294,
332]
This reasoning leads me to what I regard as the most difficult
issue in the case - not whether there should be federal review of
Lydon's claim, but rather, when that review should take place. In
answering that question, it is important to keep in mind the precise
issue that the federal court must address. That issue is not, as the
Court suggests, whether "Lydon could be retried de novo without any
judicial determination of the sufficiency of the evidence at his prior
bench trial." Ante, at 303 (footnote omitted). The judge who presided
at the first trial did make such a "judicial determination" that the
evidence was sufficient. Lydon claims that the determination was
erroneous - indeed that the evidence was constitutionally insufficient
- but he cannot deny that there was such a judicial determination.
What is at issue is whether respondent is entitled to review of the
constitutional sufficiency of the prosecutor's evidence under Jackson
v. Virginia prior to his second-tier trial.
I join the judgment because I believe it was inappropriate for the
District Court to entertain respondent's Jackson claim prior to his
second-tier trial. The disruption of orderly state processes attendant
to the exercise of federal habeas jurisdiction when state proceedings
remain pending weighs strongly, and in my view decisively, against the
exercise of jurisdiction.
"This Court has long recognized that in some circumstances
considerations of comity and concerns for the orderly
[466 U.S. 294, 333]
administration of criminal justice require a federal
court to forgo the exercise of its habeas corpus power." Francis v.
Henderson,
425 U.S. 536, 539 (1976). For example, we have held that federal
courts should not exercise habeas jurisdiction when the petitioner
has failed to comply with state simultaneous-objection rules,
because of the weighty state interests underlying enforcement of
such rules. See Engle v. Isaac,
456 U.S. 107 (1982); Wainwright v. Sykes,
433 U.S. 72 (1977).
One of the weightiest of state interests is that favoring speedy,
efficient, and uninterrupted disposition of criminal cases. Because of
this critical state interest, we have held that federal courts should
abstain from exercising their jurisdiction when the effect thereof
would be to disrupt ongoing state proceedings. See, e. g., Hicks v.
Miranda,
422 U.S. 332, 349 (1975); Huffman v. Pursue, Ltd.,
420 U.S. 592, 599 -601 (1975); Perez v. Ledesma,
401 U.S. 82, 84 -85 (1971); Younger v. Harris,
401 U.S. 37, 41 -45 (1971).
Similarly, the statutory exhaustion requirement found in the habeas
statute, 28 U.S.C. 2254, reflects a recognition that federal habeas
courts should not disrupt ongoing state proceedings. See Rose v.
Lundy,
455 U.S. 509, 518 (1982). Indeed, in our leading case concerning
the propriety of pretrial federal habeas intervention under the
exhaustion doctrine, we cautioned that such review would be
inappropriate when it threatens to disrupt pending state proceedings
and orderly state processes. See Braden v. 30th Judicial Circuit Court
of Kentucky,
410 U.S. 484, 490 -493 (1973). Thus, the habeas statute itself
reflects this concern with disrupting ongoing state proceedings.
3 [466 U.S. 294,
334]
The state interest against disruption of ongoing proceedings is
squarely implicated by the exercise of federal habeas jurisdiction
over this case. Respondent was convicted at his first-tier bench trial
on November 20, 1979, and his second-tier jury trial was originally
set for November 29. That trial has been delayed for over four years.
While some of that delay has been attributable to litigation in the
state courts, over three years' worth of delay is attributable to
federal habeas review.
4
If we were to uphold the exercise of federal habeas jurisdiction
here, similar delays could become routine in Massachusetts. Already
there are some 14,000 cases a year taken to the second-tier jury
trial. In virtually all of these cases, the defendant could seek
federal habeas review at the conclusion of the first trial, claiming
that the evidence used to convict him was insufficient. Defendants
have every incentive to seek habeas review, not only to delay eventual
[466 U.S. 294, 335]
punishment, but to obtain leverage in plea negotiations.
5 The speed and efficiency of the process would quickly be eroded
if collateral litigation intervened between the first and second
trials. The wholesale disruption of pending proceedings that would
occur if federal habeas review were available between the first and
second trials to every defendant who thought the evidence of his guilt
was insufficient counsels strongly against the exercise of such
jurisdiction.
6 The state process should be permitted to proceed in an
uninterrupted fashion before federal habeas review comes into play.
The postponement of review in this case would not render
petitioner's double jeopardy claim entirely nugatory. First, if
respondent's claim is meritorious, under my view, he would ultimately
obtain relief from his conviction through federal habeas review after
state proceedings are complete. Moreover, if his claim is meritorious,
respondent will likely be acquitted at his second-tier trial precisely
because of the insufficiency of the Commonwealth's evidence. It is
true, of course, that the prosecutor may supply proof of an element of
the offense that was omitted in the first trial. It is reasonable to
assume, however, that in most of the relatively simple
[466 U.S. 294, 336]
misdemeanor prosecutions that employ this procedure, the same
evidence will again be offered and the same issue will again be
presented to the second judge as to the first. The likelihood that the
substance of respondent's claim will be heard and vindicated at his
impending trial argues all the more strongly against federal
intervention at this point in the proceedings.
7
Second, if my view were to prevail, state prosecutors would be
aware that the sufficiency of the evidence at the first-tier trial
would eventually be reviewed, and they would therefore have a greater
incentive to adduce sufficient evidence at that trial. Thus, the
ultimate availability of federal collateral review would reduce the
likelihood of a constitutional violation.
Finally, as the Court explains, ante, at 310-312, the Massachusetts
two-tier trial system is not an especially harsh one. By voluntarily
electing that procedure, the defendant has accepted the risk of two
trials when he could insist upon only one. While this election cannot
justify a refusal to provide any remedy for a constitutional
violation, it does indicate that the enforcement of the exhaustion
requirement in this case would not place upon respondent an entirely
unavoidable obligation to endure two trials.
On balance I think the principles of comity that underlie the
exhaustion and abstention doctrines make the exercise of federal
habeas jurisdiction in this case premature. The state interest in
avoiding wholesale disruption of its criminal process requires a
federal habeas court to postpone the exercise of its jurisdiction over
this case until after the second-tier trial has been completed. I
would hold that in order to assert his constitutional claims,
respondent must first take advantage of the opportunity the State
provides him for an [466
U.S. 294, 337] acquittal in the second trial. If he is
convicted in that proceeding, I would hold that a federal court may
then review the record of the first trial to determine whether he was
constitutionally entitled to an acquittal. If the record should then
support the claim that respondent has made, I would conclude that he
is entitled to release even if the State adduced enough additional
evidence at the second-tier trial to support a conviction.
Accordingly, I concur in Parts I and II of the Court's opinion and in
the judgment.
[
Footnote 1 ] See also Tibbs v. Florida,
457 U.S. 31, 41 (1982) ("A verdict of not guilty whether rendered
by the jury or directed by the trial judge, absolutely shields the
defendant from retrial. A reversal based on insufficiency of the
evidence has the same effect because it means that no rational
factfinder could have voted to convict the defendant").
[
Footnote 2 ] JUSTICE BRENNAN resists this conclusion in "the
unique context of the Massachusetts two-tier trial system" because
respondent selected this system and received certain tactical
advantages as a result of that decision. Ante, at 324. However, the
tactical advantages JUSTICE BRENNAN discusses would be entirely
illusory if respondent could be convicted even if the Commonwealth
adduced insufficient evidence against him at the first-tier trial. The
Massachusetts system is only fair to defendants if it acquits those
who deserve acquittal. We do not know whether respondent would have
selected this system had he known that he had no right to be acquitted
at his first-tier trial even if the Commonwealth's evidence was
incapable of persuading any rational trier of fact of his guilt.
Surely respondent did not validly waive his right to be acquitted
under those circumstances in the sense of intentionally relinquishing
a known right, which is what the Constitution requires. See Green v.
United States,
355 U.S. 184, 191 -192 (1957). See also Burks v. United States,
437 U.S. 1, 17 (1978). Respondent's right to an acquittal if there
was a failure of proof at the first-tier trial must be enforced if the
quid pro quo which JUSTICE BRENNAN believes validates the
Massachusetts system is to be realized. Moreover, if, as petitioners
concede and the Court and JUSTICE BRENNAN assume, jeopardy attached
when the first witness at respondent's first-tier trial was sworn,
double jeopardy would operate to prevent the second-tier trial under
JUSTICE BRENNAN's own analysis of the case. As he explains, ante, at
315-318, the Double Jeopardy Clause has been construed to permit
jeopardy to "continue" only when there has not been a failure of proof
at the [466 U.S. 294,
332] first trial. See Burks,
437 U.S., at 15 -16. Here there has been a failure of proof, and
hence, as Burks and JUSTICE BRENNAN explain, no legitimate interest in
retrial. Without a valid reason to "continue" jeopardy, the
Commonwealth cannot constitutionally subject respondent to continued
criminal proceedings. Finally, if the Commonwealth convicted
respondent on insufficient evidence at the first-tier trial, that
trial was fundamentally unfair and the continued deprivation of
respondent's liberty is violative of due process. We have refused to
tolerate fundamentally unfair first-tier trials simply because a fair
trial will be provided at the second-tier. See Ward v. Village of
Monroeville,
409 U.S. 57, 61 -62 (1972) (availability of trial de novo does not
cure bias of judge at first-tier trial).
[
Footnote 3 ] I am not suggesting that respondent's double jeopardy
claim has not been exhausted; I agree that it has been for the reasons
stated in Part II-B of the opinion of the Court. However, while that
claim has been exhausted, it would nevertheless be meritless unless
the antecedent Jackson claim may also be entertained by the federal
habeas court. As to that claim it is true that in a technical sense
respondent may well have no state
[466 U.S. 294, 334] remedy to exhaust
inasmuch as the Massachusetts courts have indicated that they will not
review respondent's Jackson claim even after his second-tier trial.
See ante, at 322-323, n. 6 (BRENNAN, J., concurring in part and
concurring in judgment). However, even if there has been exhaustion in
a technical sense here, the more fundamental policies underlying the
exhaustion requirement may be jeopardized if a habeas petition is
entertained while state proceedings remain pending. After all,
exhaustion was originally a judge-made rule designed not as a
technical doctrine but rather to prevent premature and unjustified
interference in state proceedings. See, e. g., Ex parte Hawk,
321 U.S. 114, 116 -118 (1944) (per curiam); United States ex rel.
Kennedy v. Tyler,
269 U.S. 13, 17 -19 (1925); Davis v. Burke,
179 U.S. 399, 402 -403 (1900); Ex parte Royall,
117 U.S. 241, 251 -252 (1886).
[
Footnote 4 ] This case was pending approximately seven months in
the District Court, and in the Court of Appeals about another seven
months. By this observation I intend no criticism of these courts. If
anything, both courts disposed of the case with more than reasonable
promptness. Rather, I make this observation to demonstrate the
inevitable delay whenever federal habeas review is commenced, even if
the case is adjudicated with commendable dispatch.
[
Footnote 5 ] I have no doubt that if we approved the exercise of
habeas jurisdiction in this case, the district judges in Massachusetts
would attempt to minimize disruption by adjudicating habeas cases as
quickly as possible. Nevertheless, the quality of justice in such a
harried process is bound to suffer. Moreover, the district judges in
Massachusetts, as elsewhere, have enough burdens with which they must
cope without the additional time pressure created by "interlocutory"
habeas cases such as this one.
[
Footnote 6 ] Respondent and the Court of Appeals suggest that
habeas review could be limited to cases in which the petitioner could
make a strong initial showing of a likely constitutional violation.
Nevertheless, every defendant could attempt to make such a showing in
the few days between the first-and second-tier trials. Such hurry-up
litigation will burden prosecutors and courts, reduce the quality of
justice, and surely prove impractical (it will certainly take more
than a few days just to obtain the record and transcribe the recording
of the first-tier trial), forcing the state system to delay until the
federal case can be adjudicated.
[
Footnote 7 ] In this case the District Court's findings indicate
that the essential problem with the Commonwealth's case is that
respondent was charged with the wrong offense. That problem cannot be
remedied simply by adducing additional evidence at the second-tier
trial.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR, concurring in the judgment.
I agree that the judgment of the Court of Appeals should be
reversed. Unlike the Court, however, I conclude that the District
Court lacked jurisdiction to hear respondent Lydon's habeas petition
at this stage in the ongoing state-court proceeding.
The Court suggests that federal habeas jurisdiction exists whenever
(i) a state defendant is subject to minimal legal restraints on his
freedom and (ii) the defendant has exhausted state avenues of relief
with respect to the particular federal claim brought to the habeas
court. Then, recognizing that its unadorned test might greatly expand
federal habeas jurisdiction, the Court, ante, at 302, emphasizes "the
unique nature of the double jeopardy right." In my view the Court
first unnecessarily expands the holding in Hensley v. Municipal Court,
411 U.S. 345 (1973), and then limits the damage by restricting its
exhaustion analysis to double jeopardy claims. I would prefer to
search for a more principled understanding of the statutory term
"custody."
Under Massachusetts law, as I read it, Lydon is no longer in
custody "pursuant" to the judgment entered at his first trial. Lydon
has invoked his right to a second trial and appeared at the second
proceeding. Under Massachusetts law, therefore, the results of the
first trial - together with any incidental "custody" imposed in
consequence of that trial - have already been eliminated. The
restraints on Lydon's freedom now derive not from the prior
conviction, but from the fact
[466 U.S. 294, 338] that a new criminal
proceeding is in progress. Every state defendant who fails to attend a
criminal trial risks punitive sanctions not dissimilar to those to
which Lydon is currently exposed.
Federal habeas jurisdiction plainly does not attach merely because
a state criminal defendant, whose freedom to come and go as he pleases
is limited in some way in connection with a criminal proceeding, has
exhausted state interlocutory review of a particular federal claim.
Federal habeas jurisdiction is absent because "custody" in connection
with an ongoing trial is usually not "in violation of the Constitution
or laws or treaties of the United States," 28 U.S.C. 2241(c)(3),
2254(a), even when the proceedings themselves or the underlying charge
are constitutionally defective. Most constitutional rights exist to
protect a criminal defendant from conviction - not from the process of
trial itself.
In this regard, however, I agree with the Court that double
jeopardy is different. Here, custody incident to a trial may violate
the Constitution because the trial itself, regardless of its outcome,
is unconstitutional. For this reason I agree that a prisoner who is
incarcerated in connection with a criminal proceeding is "in custody
in violation of the Constitution," 28 U.S.C. 2254(a), when the
proceeding violates his double jeopardy rights. Cf. Arizona v.
Washington,
434 U.S. 497 (1978). But I do not agree that the minor restraints
on Lydon's freedom, incurred in connection with an ongoing state
trial, satisfy the jurisdictional requirements of the habeas statute.
Nor do I believe that Hensley dictates a different result.
In Hensley the Court made it quite clear that a relaxed definition
of "custody" was accepted only because incarceration was imminent and,
absent federal intervention, inevitable. The habeas petitioner in
Hensley had exhausted "all available state court opportunities to have
[his] conviction set aside,"
411 U.S., at 353 ; see also id., at 346, 347, and n. 4, 351, 352,
not merely all available court opportunities to review the particular
[466 U.S. 294, 339]
claim in question. Hensley emphasized that the typical
restrictions on freedom attending a release on personal recognizance
would not, standing alone, constitute "custody" within the meaning of
the habeas statute. Such restraints amount to "custody" only when
state judicial proceedings have been completed and incarceration has
become a purely executory decision. Hensley accepted a liberal
definition of "custody" only in conjunction with an unusual
requirement of absolute exhaustion - exhaustion not of the particular
claim in question, cf. 28 U.S.C. 2254(b), but of all possible state
avenues of relief from the conviction.
My reading of Hensley thus leads me to conclude that a state
criminal defendant should be considered "in custody pursuant to the
judgment of a State court," 28 U.S.C. 2254(a), only when he is under
physical restraint, cf. Arizona v. Washington, supra, or under a legal
restraint that can be converted into physical restraint without a
further judicial hearing.
* The latter situation will normally arise only when state
judicial proceedings (as distinguished from particular claims raised
in those proceedings) have been entirely exhausted.
Lydon's condition clearly does not meet the Hensley test as I
understand it. Lydon has not come close to exhausting state
opportunities to have the conviction set aside. Lydon cannot be
incarcerated without a further judicial hearing. His position is thus
functionally indistinguishable from that of a defendant pressing an
interlocutory appeal. One claim may have been exhausted, but others
have not. In these circumstances, incarceration is far from
inevitable, and the minor constraints that attend a release on
personal recognizance are much less significant. If Massachusetts
stood ready to incarcerate Lydon on the basis of the conviction at the
first trial my view of the case would be different.
[466 U.S. 294, 340]
The Court makes clear, ante, at 302-303, its view that double
jeopardy claims are "unique" for federal habeas purposes. This might
be sufficient reason to bring such a claim within Hensley's rationale
even when only the specific claim has been exhausted. Cf. Abney v.
United States,
431 U.S. 651 (1977); Arizona v. Washington, supra; Braden v. 30th
Judicial Circuit Court of Kentucky,
410 U.S. 484 (1973). For my part, I would prefer to avoid relaxing
Hensley's clear holding that the minimal constraints of a release on
personal recognizance constitute "custody" only when the State stands
ready to incarcerate the habeas petitioner without further judicial
hearing. A special purpose jurisdictional exception for double
jeopardy allegations seems inadvisable simply because the habeas
statute contains no license for such an exception. "Custody" is the
touchstone relied on by 2254; of all the possible unconstitutional
infringements on personal freedom, only unlawful "custody" has been
identified as providing a sufficient basis for federal intervention. I
would therefore hold that a state criminal defendant is not "in
custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court" while he remains
free from physical restraint and the State remains unable to impose
such restraint without a further judicial hearing.
[
Footnote * ] Even if the habeas petitioner is in physical custody,
it may well be appropriate for a federal court to abstain from
deciding the petition until state-court proceedings have been
completed. [466 U.S.
294, 341]
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