Boles v. Warden, Chillicothe Correctional Institution
Filing
48
DECISION AND ORDER ON PETITIONER'S SECOND MOTION TO EXPAND THE RECORD 42 signed by Magistrate Judge Michael R. Merz on 7/18/2018. (kpf)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
WESTERN DIVISION AT CINCINNATI
PATRICK BOLES,
Petitioner,
:
- vs -
Case No. 1:14-cv-903
District Judge Michael R. Barrett
Magistrate Judge Michael R. Merz
CHARLOTTE JENKINS, Warden,
Chillicothe Correctional Institution
:
Respondent.
DECISION AND ORDER ON PETITIONER’S SECOND MOTION TO
EXPAND THE RECORD
This habeas corpus case is before the Court on Petitioner’s Motion to Expand the Record
(ECF No. 42) which Respondent opposes in part (ECF No. 46).
Petitioner’s counsel believe is that both Rule 5 of the Rules Governing § 2254 Cases
(“Habeas Rules”) and Judge Litkovitz’s Order for Answer (ECF No. 3) require that Respondent
file
the entire state court record (those docket entries, orders, motions,
etc.) that comprise the docket of a given court for appellate purposes,
needs to be completely furnished, and those matters that have been
transcribed need to be included, as well as the additional materials
(appellate briefs and decisions) mandated by the 2004 Amendments
to the Rule.
(ECF No. 42, PageID 2049). Respondent’s counsel disagrees and believes the Court expects here
to exercise her judgment as to what should be submitted.” (ECF No. 46).
Habeas Rule 5 speaks to the answer as a pleading and requires that it respond to the
allegations in the petition and raise affirmative defenses such as procedural default or the bar of
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the statute of limitations. It also requires that the Respondent attach parts of the “transcript that
the respondent considers relevant” as well any appellate briefing and decisions.
Habeas Rule 4 requires a preliminary screening of habeas petitions by the Court and
Habeas Rule 5(a) excuses a respondent from answering unless ordered to do so. The Magistrate
Judges of the Western Division employ a standard form of order for answer which has been
adjusted over time to produce a state court record that is efficient to use for all parties to the
litigation. Magistrate Judge Litkovitz followed that form in the Order for Answer in this case.
Having made the Rule 4 determination, she ordered an answer which was expressly required to
include the matters mentioned in Habeas Rule 5(b)(Order, ECF No. 3, PageID 47).
As to the State Court Record, the Order requires the Respondent to file “those portions of
the state court record needed to adjudicate this case. . .” Id. at PageID 47-48. By inference, that
language leaves the content of the state court record as filed to the sound judgment of Respondent’s
counsel in the first instance.
The Magistrate Judge believes this is a sound reading of Habeas Rule 5. Petitioner’s
reading would impose on the Respondent’s counsel the duty to file materials which will almost
never be needed to adjudicate the case, e.g., the bindover order from municipal court or the order
to the sheriff to transport. Respondents in habeas cases are always represented by the Attorney
General’s Office, which does not have custody of the state court record and must obtain it from a
local court to file it in the first instance.
Because the Court has used electronic filing for over fifteen years and has the capacity to
accept state court records electronically, the form order for answer requires that the Respondent
provide an index which is done by “bookmarking” pages electronically in the format in which they
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are filed. All parties are then required to reference the record by citing the specific PageID, a
practice which facilitates consideration of the record.
When the answer and state court record are filed, Fed. R. Civ. P. 5 requires that a copy be
served on the Petitioner. A reminder of this obligation is included in the form order. This gives
the Petitioner, who is most often proceeding pro se, the tools he or she needs to comply with the
Court’s record reference requirement.
Respondent’s counsel’s judgment on what to include in the record is not conclusive on the
Court which can order the record expanded under Habeas Rule 7. However, a relatively small
cadre of experienced assistant attorneys general represent Respondents in these cases and have
come to know what the Court will usually need.
Turning from the general to the particular, the Court finds that Respondent’s counsel’s
initial determination of what to include in the State Court Record was sound. Petitioner has not
demonstrated a need to add the entire file from the dismissed case to the record in this case. The
particular items listed at PageID 2049-50 appear to be relevant to the claims on which the Court
has granted discovery. The Respondent will therefore supplement the record by adding those items
not later than August 1, 2018.
Habeas Rule 7 speaks of expanding the record to include items that would not be in the
state court records for a case. However, Rule 7 must be read in the context of Cullen v. Pinholster,
563 U.S. 170 (2011), which severely limits the materials a habeas court may consider in making a
determination under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). The fact that a court has allowed the record to be
expanded under Rule 7 does not amount to a ruling that anything added to the record by motion
can be considered on the merits.
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IT IS SO ORDERED.
July 18, 2018.
s/ Michael R. Merz
United States Magistrate Judge
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