Brewer v. Stephens, Director TDCJ-CID
Filing
76
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER TO STAY PROCEEDINGS - The recommendation of the United States magistrate judge is ADOPTED, and these proceedings are STAYED while Brewer pursues his state habeas remedies in accordance with the recommendation and this mem orandum opinion and order. The other pending motions, Brewer's motion for leave to supplement his amended petition and his motion for discovery and an evidentiary hearing, are DENIED as moot. Accordingly, Brewer is ORDERED to file an applicati on for post-conviction relief in the state court on these claims within 60 days of the date of this memorandum opinion and order, and, unless he obtains the sought relief in state court, to return to this court within 45 days after he exhausts his s tate court remedies. (See Order for Specifics) Motions terminated: 57 MOTION for Leave to File Supplement to Amended Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, 53 MOTION to Stay and Hold in Abeyance Federal Habeas Proceedings, 67 Findings and Recommendations, 54 MOTION for Discovery and Evidentiary Hearing filed by Brent Ray Brewer. (Ordered by Senior Judge Sidney A Fitzwater on 9/25/2018) (vls)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
AMARILLO DIVISION
BRENT RAY BREWER,
Petitioner,
V.
LORIE DAVIS, Director,
Texas Department of Criminal Justice
Correctional Institutions Division,
Respondent.
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Civil Action No. 2:15-CV-50-D-BR
(Death Penalty Case)
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER TO STAY PROCEEDINGS
On August 7, 2018, the United States Magistrate Judge entered findings and conclusions
recommending a stay of these proceedings. For the reasons set out below, the court ADOPTS the
recommendation and STAYS these proceedings.
I
Petitioner Brent Ray Brewer has filed a motion to stay these proceedings to exhaust claims
in state court, including a claim that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate prior bad
acts that were presented by the State as evidence of petitioner’s future dangerousness. (Motion, doc.
53, at 9-10; Petition, doc. 28, at 63-75.) Finding this claim not plainly meritless, the magistrate judge
recommended that the motion be granted, these proceedings stayed for exhaustion, and Brewer’s
other motions denied as moot. (Recommendation, doc. 67.) On August 20, 2018, respondent filed
her objections to the recommendation to stay these proceedings. (Objections, doc. 68.) On
September 21, Brewer filed his response to the objections. This court has conducted a de novo
review of the motion to stay these proceedings and those parts of the recommendation to which
objection was made.
II
Respondent objects that the magistrate judge recommended a stay for a claim that was
partially exhausted, plainly meritless, and procedurally barred. Respondent also complains that the
magistrate judge erred in holding that Brewer had not engaged in abusive litigation tactics and in
finding good cause to stay these proceedings. (Objections, doc. 68.) Brewer responds that the
magistrate judge’s recommendation is correct, that respondent has waived any objection regarding
exhaustion, that the claim is not plainly meritless, that there was no dilatory intent, and that good
cause exists for a stay of these proceedings. (Response, doc. 75.)
III
The district court has discretion to stay its proceedings and allow a petitioner to exhaust a
claim in state court if it finds good cause for the petitioner’s failure to exhaust a claim that is not
plainly meritless and where the petitioner has not “engaged in intentionally dilatory litigation
tactics.” Rhines v. Weber, 544 U.S. 269, 277-78 (2005).
Regarding the fourth claim in Brewer’s amended petition, the magistrate judge found that
Brewer showed good cause in that state habeas counsel admitted that he failed to perform an
adequate investigation into those bad acts presented by the state in the punishment phase of Brewer’s
trial to prove future dangerousness. (Rec. at 8-9.) The magistrate judge also concluded that the
claim was not plainly meritless, pointing out that the missed evidence had some mitigation value and
that federal habeas counsel obtained proof from trial counsel that he also did not perform an adequate
investigation without any strategic reason. (Rec. at 9-11.) The magistrate judge also found that
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respondent had not rebutted the explanation of the timing of the motion to stay that was provided
by federal habeas counsel–that a new state court opinion gave rise to an argument that the state court
may consider the claim in a subsequent state habeas petition. Therefore, the magistrate judge
concluded that respondent had not shown dilatory intent. (Rec. at 12-13.)
Brewer complains that respondent presents new arguments in opposition to the stay that were
not presented to the magistrate judge. Brewer asserts that respondent’s attempt to parse out his
fourth claim into separate claims in arguing that some of them were exhausted in the state court is
waived. (Resp. at 1-2.) Although Brewer’s argument has some purchase, even considering
respondent’s argument it is clear that the claim is unexhausted. Regarding those portions of the
claim that respondent now asserts were exhausted, the recommendation notes significant new
evidence apparently obtained after the state court denied Brewer’s claims resulting in new allegations
before this court.
Respondent asserts that Brewer presented his allegation regarding trial counsel’s failure to
interview Aimee Long (“Long”) to the state court. (Obj. at 3 (citing 2 SHCR 291-92).) The version
presented to the state court, however, did not mention what Long would have said, including that she
did not know him to be a violent person, he was not dangerous, she never saw him argue or fight
with anyone at school, the incident was out of character for Brewer, and she believes he did not
intend to hurt her. (Handwritten Statement of Long, doc. 19-5, at pp. 35-37.) The declaration is
dated June 16, 2015, after the state court denied relief on September 17, 2014. Therefore, such
allegations and evidence appear to have not been part of what was presented to the state court.
Regarding Brewer’s claim that his trial counsel did not present evidence from his father’s
other wives and children, respondent also asserts that this identical claim was presented to the state
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court (Obj. at 3 (citing 2 SHCR 292-93, 296, 298-99, 306-18, 328-31, 335-38)) and “the issue arose
at the state habeas evidentiary hearing.” (Obj. at 3 (citing 2 SHRR 107-09, 236-37; 3 SHRR 79).)
Respondent has not pointed this court to any place in the state court record where the details of
Albert Brewer’s violent abuse of his wife Pat or her daughter Corrie we presented. The only portion
referencing violence in that marriage stated generally that “Pat and Albert ultimately split in part due
to Albert’s violence and in part because he believed Pat was cheating on him.” (2 SHCR at 306.)
Brewer’s federal habeas counsel has indeed presented “chilling stories of unprovoked and
unpredictable violence” by Brewer’s father against his ex-wife Pat and their daughter, Corrie Brewer.
(Obj. at 9 (citing Rec. at 10).)
This includes the affidavit of Corrie Brewer stating, “[o]n the day I was born in 1974, Albert
stabbed me in the chest with an ice pick while I was still in the hospital because I was a girl and he
wanted a boy. I still have a scar.” (Decl. of Corrie Brewer, doc. 19-5, at 21.) The declaration dated
July 30, 2015, also references daily beatings of her mother, Pat, of Albert’s throwing a dinner at Pat
that she cooked for him and his friends, Corrie’s learning to dodge unopened beer cans Albert would
throw at her in anger, and Albert’s stabbing in the chest the horse he bought for Corrie. (Decl. of
Corrie Brewer at 21.) The declaration also includes details of the emotional impact on both of them
because of Albert’s abuse including running scared from Albert, hiding and constantly moving for
years, flashbacks about the beatings and abuse, learning to protect themselves, storing guns and
knives all over the house, nightmares, waking up screaming, living as a recluse afraid of people,
diagnosed with agoraphobia and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and sleeping with “a Russian
Rueger under my pillow” to this day. (Decl. of Corrie Brewer at 21-22.) None of these allegations
was mentioned in the portions of the state court record cited by respondent despite their potential
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corroboration of the pattern of abuse inflicted by Albert that resulted in Brewer’s attack on him.
The recommendation also referenced affidavits from Brewer’s trial counsel admitting to the
failure to conduct an adequate investigation into these bad acts without any strategic reason. (Rec.
at 11.) This is significant new evidence that federal habeas counsel apparently obtained on July 31,
2015, after the state court denied relief. (Decl. of Anthony Ordione, Esq., doc. 19-4, at 66-71; Decl.
of Rob Cowie, doc. 19-5, at 1-3.) Had this evidence been presented to the state court, it may well
have led to a different outcome. The magistrate judge correctly determined that Claim IV has not
been fairly presented to the state court and that is it not plainly meritless.
Respondent also objects to the finding that the ineffective assistance of Brewer’s state habeas
counsel in failing to properly investigate the mitigation evidence to counter the bad acts presented
by the prosecution establishes good cause for a stay of these proceedings for exhaustion. (Obj. at
22-24.) Respondent argues that the only evidence to show ineffective assistance of state habeas
counsel came from state habeas counsel. (Obj. at 23-24.) This argument overlooks the independent
record that reveals that such allegations and evidence were not obtained and presented to the state
court. While respondent correctly points out that state habeas counsel presented other claims,
obtained other evidence, and was granted an evidentiary hearing, this does not mean that counsel
could not be ineffective in failing to investigate this claim. Counsel may well be effective in some
respects and not others. Counsel’s own admission can form the basis of a finding of some merit to
the claim. See Canales v. Stephens, 765 F.3d 551, 569 (5th Cir. 2014).
Respondent also criticizes the recommendation for failing to address an unpublished opinion
that respondent did not present to the magistrate judge that the ineffectiveness of state habeas
counsel could not constitute good cause for a Rhines stay. (Obj. at 22-23 (citing Hall v. Thaler, 504
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Fed. Appx. 269, 284 (5th Cir. 2012).) Before the magistrate judge, however, respondent argued that
“the ineffectiveness of state habeas counsel cannot operate as cause to excuse Brewer’s failure to
exhaust with regard to any claim other than the ineffectiveness of trial counsel.” (Response in
Opposition to Stay, doc. 61, at 7) (citing Martinez v. Ryan, 566 U.S. 1 (2012)) (emphasis added).
The recommendation relied on this position in holding that “[b]oth parties appear to acknowledge
that the ineffectiveness of state habeas counsel under Martinez could establish ‘good cause’ to
excuse Brewer’s failure to exhaust claims of ineffectiveness of trial counsel under Rhines.” (Rec.
at 6 (citing doc. 61 at 7).) Hall, however, is not binding precedent, but even if it were, respondent
has waived any reliance upon it by her briefing before the magistrate judge and has not shown that
the reasoning of Hall would apply to this case.
Relying on Ex parte Medina, 361 S.W.3d 633 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011), Hall requested a stay
of the federal proceedings to return to state court to exhaust claims that his state habeas counsel did
not present to the state court. Hall argued that the same counsel found ineffective in Ex parte
Medina was also his state habeas counsel and engaged in the same ineffective conduct that the state
court found sufficient to allow Medina to file a new habeas petition. The Court of Appeals rejected
this argument, finding that “[a]ttorney ignorance or inadvertence is not ‘cause’ because the attorney
is the petitioner’s agent when acting, or failing to act, in furtherance of the litigation, and the
petitioner must bear the risk of attorney error.” Hall, 504 Fed. Appx. at 284 (quoting Coleman v.
Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 753 (1991).) The agency rule in Coleman was modified by Martinez v.
Ryan, 566 U.S. 1 (2012), however, to allow inmates to raise the ineffectiveness of their state habeas
counsel in failing to present claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel to the state court. Even
so, Hall does provide some authority for the proposition that the state court would not have
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considered a new claim in a subsequent habeas petition based on the ineffectiveness of state habeas
counsel, at least before Ex Parte Ruiz, 543 S.W.3d 805 (Tex. Crim. App. Nov. 9, 2016).
Respondent also argues that Brewer engaged in “abusive litigation tactics” rather than the
dilatory intent that she asserted before the magistrate judge. (Obj. at 16-22.) While this appears
intended to overcome the finding that respondent had not rebutted the explanation provided by
Brewer’s counsel for the timing of the motion to stay these proceedings, the outcome is the same.
Such “intentionally dilatory litigation tactics,” Rhines, 544 U.S. at 278, would require the same
showing of intent that respondent failed to make to the magistrate judge.
In explaining the timing of the motion to stay these proceedings, Brewer’s counsel explained
that prior to Ex Parte Ruiz, a motion for a stay would have been futile. (Reply, doc. 62, at 1.) In her
objections, respondent argues that Ruiz changed nothing and that the exception to the procedural bar
set out in Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Article 11.071, Section 5(a)(3) was always available
to Brewer. (Obj. at 18-19.) Respondent also argues, however, that his claim does not fall within any
exception to the state’s procedural bar of subsequent habeas applications. (Obj. at 14-15.)
Therefore, it appears reasonable that Brewers’ counsel would not have considered a stay for
exhaustion to be an option, at least prior to Ruiz. Even so, federal courts in post-conviction
habeas-corpus proceedings do not generally sit to determine questions of state law. See Bradshaw
v. Richey, 546 U.S. 74, 76 (2005); Engle v. Isaac, 456 U.S. 107, 119 (1982). Whether Ruiz opens
the door as wide as Brewer argues appears to be a matter for the state court, rather than this court,
to decide. See, e.g., Wilder v. Cockrell, 274 F.3d 255, 262-63 (5th Cir. 2001) (holding that because
it was not entirely clear to the federal court, the state court should be allowed to make the procedural
bar, vel non, determination.)
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Respondent also complains that the magistrate judge found persuasive “Brewer’s second
delayed filing excuse” that the motion for stay was filed a few days after Davila v. Davis, 137 S. Ct.
2058 (2017), that “casts some doubt” on whether federal courts should find claims to be procedurally
barred by state court determinations that were never made. (Obj. at 20 (citing Rec. at 12).) Whether
or not the referenced footnote in Davila casts doubt on the practice does not show any dilatory intent
or abusive tactic by Brewer’s counsel. Although there was a delay of several months between the
Ruiz decision and Davila, this court agrees with the magistrate judge’s conclusion that respondent
had not shown dilatory intent in the timing of the motion to stay these proceedings.
This court adopts the magistrate judge’s recommendation to stay these proceedings to allow
Brewer to develop and present his fourth claim to the state court. The court also agrees with the
recommendation that during the stay of these proceedings, Brewer should present any unexhausted
claims to the state court that he may have. Brewer’s other pending motions are denied without
prejudice as moot because of the stay of these proceedings.
ORDER
The recommendation of the United States magistrate judge is ADOPTED, and these
proceedings are STAYED while Brewer pursues his state habeas remedies in accordance with the
recommendation and this memorandum opinion and order. The other pending motions, Brewer’s
motion for leave to supplement his amended petition and his motion for discovery and an evidentiary
hearing, are DENIED as moot.
Accordingly, Brewer is ORDERED to file an application for post-conviction relief in the
state court on these claims within 60 days of the date of this memorandum opinion and order, and,
unless he obtains the sought relief in state court, to return to this court within 45 days after he
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exhausts his state court remedies. If relief is granted by the state court, respondent must promptly
notify this court and if such grant of relief causes the remaining claims to become moot, then these
proceedings shall be dismissed. If Brewer fails to comply with this memorandum opinion and order,
these proceedings shall be dismissed.
The clerk of court is directed to administratively close this case for statistical purposes, but
nothing in this memorandum opinion and order shall be considered a final dismissal or disposition
of this case. This case shall be reopened upon proper motion filed in accordance with the provisions
of this memorandum opinion and order.
SO ORDERED.
DATED September 25, 2018.
___________________________________
SIDNEY A. FITZWATER
SENIOR JUDGE
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