| SooperKanoon Citation | sooperkanoon.com/108269 |
| Court | US Supreme Court |
| Decided On | Jun-24-2004 |
| Case Number | 02-1603 |
| Appellant | Beard |
| Respondent | Banks |
Excerpt:
beard v. banks - 02-1603 (2004)
syllabus
october term, 2003
beard v. banks
supreme court of the united states
beard, secretary, pennsylvania department of corrections, et al.
v.
banks
certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
no. 02–1603. argued february 24, 2004—decided june 24, 2004
after respondent’s murder conviction and death sentence were upheld by the pennsylvania supreme court, this court decided
mills
v.
maryland,
486 u. s. 367
, and
mckoy
v.
north carolina,
494 u. s. 433
, in which it held invalid capital sentencing schemes requiring juries to disregard mitigating factors not found unanimously. after respondent’s state postconviction
mills
claim was rejected by the state supreme court on the merits, he turned to the federal courts. ultimately, the third circuit applied the analytical framework set forth in
teague
v.
lane,
489 u. s. 288
, under which federal habeas petitioners may not avail themselves of new rules of constitutional criminal procedure outside two narrow exceptions; concluded that
mills
did not announce a new rule and therefore could be applied retroactively; and granted respondent relief.
held:
because
mills
announced a new rule of constitutional criminal procedure that does not fall within either
teague
exception, its rule cannot be applied retroactively. pp. 4–14.
(a)
teague
analysis involves a three-step process requiring a court to determine when a defendant’s conviction became final; whether, given the legal landscape at the time the conviction became final, the rule sought to be applied is actually new; and, if so, whether it falls within either of two exceptions to nonretroactivity. p. 4.
(b) respondent’s conviction became final before
mills
was decided. the normal rule for determining a state conviction’s finality for retroactivity review—when the availability of direct appeal to the state courts has been exhausted and the time for filing a certiorari petition has elapsed or a timely petition has been finally denied—applies here. that the pennsylvania supreme court considered the merits of respondent’s
mills
claim on collateral review does change his conviction’s finality to a date subsequent to
mills
. pp. 4–6.
(c)
mills
announced a new rule. in reaching its conclusion in
mills
and
mckoy
, this court relied on a line of cases beginning with
lockett
v.
ohio,
438 u. s. 586
.
lockett
’s general rule that the sentencer must be allowed to consider any mitigating evidence could be thought to support the conclusion in
mills
and
mckoy
that
capital sentencing schemes cannot require juries to disregard mitigating factors not found unanimously
,
but it did not mandate the
mills
rule. each of the cases relied on by
mills
(and
mckoy
) considered only obstructions to the sentencer’s ability to consider mitigating evidence.
mills’
innovation rests with its shift in focus to individual jurors. moreover, there is no need to guess whether reasonable jurists could have differed as to whether the
lockett
line of cases compelled
mills.
four dissenting justices in
mills
reasoned that because nothing prevented the jury from hearing the mitigating evidence,
lockett
did not control; and three dissenting justices in
mckoy
concluded that
lockett
did not remotely support the new focus on individual jurors. because the
mills
rule broke new ground, it applies to respondent on collateral review only if it falls under a
teague
exception. pp. 6–10.
(d) the
mills
rule does not fall within either exception. there is no argument that the first exception applies here. and this court has repeatedly emphasized the limited scope of the second exception—“ ‘for watershed rules of criminal procedure implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding,’ ”
o’dell
v.
netherland,
521 u. s. 151
, 157—which “ ‘is clearly meant to apply only to a small core of rules requiring observance of those procedures that … are implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,’ ”
ibid.
this court has yet to find a new rule that falls under this exception. in providing guidance as to what might do so, the court has repeatedly, and only, referred to the right-to-counsel rule of
gideon
v.
wainwright,
372 u. s. 335
, which “altered [the court’s] understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
essential to the fairness of a proceeding,”
sawyer
v.
smith,
497 u. s. 227
, 242. the court has not hesitated to hold less sweeping and fundamental rules outside the exception. see,
e.g.,
o’dell
v.
netherland,
supra.
while
mills
and
mckoy
were decided to avoid potentially arbitrary impositions of the death sentence, the
mills
rule has “none of the primacy and centrality of the rule adopted in
gideon,” saffle
v.
parks,
494 u. s. 484
, 495. it applies narrowly and works no fundamental shift in the court’s “ ‘understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
’ ”essential to fundamental fairnes
s,
o’dell, supra,
at 167. pp. 10–13.
316 f. 3d 228, reversed and remanded.
thomas, j., delivered the opinion of the court, in which rehnquist, c. j., and o’connor, scalia, and kennedy, jj., joined. stevens, j., filed a dissenting opinion, in which souter, ginsburg, and breyer, jj., joined. souter, j., filed a dissenting opinion, in which ginsburg, j., joined.
beard v. banks - 02-1603 (2004)
opinion of the court
beard v. banks
542 u. s. ____ (2004)
supreme court of the united states
no. 02-1603
jeffrey a. beard, secretary, pennsylvania
department of corrections, et al.,
petitioners
v.
george e. banks
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
[june 24, 2004]
justice thomas delivered the opinion of the court.
in
mills
v.
maryland,
486 u. s. 367
(1988), and
mckoy
v.
north carolina,
494 u. s. 433
(1990), this court held invalid capital sentencing schemes that require juries to disregard mitigating factors not found unanimously. in this case, we must determine whether the rule announced in
mills
and
mckoy
can be applied on federal habeas corpus review to a defendant whose conviction became final in 1987. under our retroactivity analysis as set forth in
teague
v.
lane,
489 u. s. 288
(1989), federal habeas corpus petitioners may not avail themselves of new rules of criminal procedure outside two narrow exceptions. we conclude that
mills
announced a new rule that does not fall within either of
teague
’s exceptions.
i
more than 20 years ago, a jury convicted respondent, george banks, of 12 counts of first-degree murder, and the trial court sentenced him to death. the facts of this case are set forth in detail in the pennsylvania supreme court’s decision affirming respondent’s conviction and sentence on direct review. see
commonwealth
v.
banks
, 513 pa. 318, 521 a. 2d 1 (1987). direct review ended when this court denied certiorari on october 5, 1987.
banks
v.
pennsylvania
,
484 u. s. 873
. approximately eight months later, this court handed down its decision in
mills
,
supra,
which announced that the constitution forbids states from imposing a requirement that the jury find a potential mitigating factor unanimously before that factor may be considered in the sentencing decision.
respondent pursued state postconviction relief on the theory that the instructions and verdict form given to the jury in his case violated the
mills
principle, but the pennsylvania supreme court rejected this claim on the merits. see
commonwealth
v.
banks
, 540 pa. 143, 656 a. 2d 467 (1995). respondent then turned to the federal courts. although the district court denied relief,
banks
v.
horn,
63 f. supp. 2d 525 (md pa. 1999), the court of appeals for the third circuit reversed respondent’s death sentence,
banks
v.
horn,
271 f. 3d 527 (2001). in reaching its decision, the court of appeals declined to apply the retroactivity analysis set forth in
teague
v.
lane, supra
, to the question whether
mills
applied retroactively to respondent. this was not necessary, in the court of appeals’ view, because the pennsylvania supreme court had itself applied
mills
. 271 f. 3d, at 543. we summarily reversed, holding that “in addition to performing any analysis required by aedpa, a federal court considering a habeas petition must conduct a threshold
teague
analysis when the issue is properly raised by the state.”
horn
v.
banks,
536 u. s. 266
, 272 (2002)
(per curiam)
(banks i)
.
on remand, the court of appeals considered the retroactive application of
mills
.
banks
v.
horn,
316 f. 3d 228 (ca3 2003). the court recognized that its primary task was to determine whether
mills
announced a new rule, and that this, in turn, required it to ascertain whether the precedent existing at the time respondent’s conviction became final dictated or compelled the rule in
mills
. 316 f. 3d, at 233–235. from this court’s decisions in
lockett
v.
ohio,
438 u. s. 586
(1978),
eddings
v.
oklahoma,
455 u. s. 104
(1982), and their direct progeny, the court of appeals distilled the rule that the “eighth amendment prohibits any barrier to the sentencer’s consideration of mitigating evidence.” 316 f. 3d, at 239. the court of appeals characterized this court’s decision in
mills
as “merely recogniz[ing] that the perceived need for unanimity could constitute one such unconstitutional barrier,” and concluded that the existing legal landscape compelled the decision in
mills
. 316 f. 3d, at 240. accordingly, the court held that
mills
applied retroactively to respondent and reinstated the remainder of its previous opinion, again granting respondent relief from his death sentence.[
footnote 1
]
we granted the commonwealth’s second petition for certiorari in this case to decide whether
mills
applies retroactively to respondent and, if so, whether the pennsylvania supreme court unreasonably applied federal law in holding that there was no
mills
error in respondent’s case.
539 u. s. 987
(2003). although the
lockett
/
eddings
line of cases supports the court’s decision in
mills
, it does not compel that decision.
mills
therefore announced a new rule. we are also unable to conclude that the
mills
rule falls under either
teague
exception. in particular,
mills
did not announce a “watershed rul[e] of criminal procedure implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.”
saffle
v.
parks,
494 u. s. 484
, 495 (1990) (internal quotation marks omitted). accordingly, we again reverse the judgment of the court of appeals.[
footnote 2
]
ii
under
teague
, the determination whether a constitutional rule of criminal procedure applies to a case on collateral review involves a three-step process. see,
e.g.,
lambrix
v.
singletary,
520 u. s. 518
, 527 (1997). first, the court must determine when the defendant’s conviction became final. second, it must ascertain the “legal landscape as it then existed,”
graham
v.
collins,
506 u. s. 461
, 468 (1993), and ask whether the constitution, as interpreted by the precedent then existing, compels the rule.
saffle
,
supra
, at 488. that is, the court must decide whether the rule is actually “new.” finally, if the rule is new, the court must consider whether it falls within either of the two exceptions to nonretroactivity.
lambrix
,
supra
, at 527.[
footnote 3
]
a
ordinarily, ascertaining the date on which a defendant’s conviction becomes final poses no difficulties: state convictions are final “for purposes of retroactivity analysis when the availability of direct appeal to the state courts has been exhausted and the time for filing a petition for a writ of certiorari has elapsed or a timely filed petition has been finally denied.”
caspari
v.
bohlen,
510 u. s. 383
, 390 (1994). see also
clay
v.
united states,
537 u. s. 522
, 527 (2003). respondent, however, urges a different rule. he argues that, in view of the pennsylvania supreme court’s unique “relaxed waiver rule”—pursuant to which that court considered his
mills
claim on the merits—his conviction became final for
teague
purposes in 1995 when the state supreme court decided the
mills
claim against him. brief for respondent 25–31. because of the pennsylvania supreme court’s practice of considering forfeited claims in capital cases, respondent insists, “conventional notions of ‘finality,’ ” do not apply.
id.,
at 27.
in the past, the pennsylvania supreme court did, in fact, apply a “relaxed waiver rule” in death penalty cases. see,
e.g.,
commonwealth
v.
dehart
, 539 pa. 5, 25, 650 a. 2d 38, 48 (1994);
commonwealth
v.
billa
, 521 pa. 168, 181, 555 a. 2d 835, 842 (1989). but this practice, which the court has abandoned, see
commonwealth
v.
albretcht
, 554 pa. 31, 44–46, 720 a. 2d 693, 700 (1999), “was not absolute, but discretionary,”
commonwealth
v.
freeman
, 573 pa. 532, 557, n. 9, 827 a. 2d 385, 400, n. 9 (2003) (describing past practice). notably, the pennsylvania supreme court has expressly stated, in a capital case, that it would decline to apply
mills
retroactively.
commonwealth
v.
peterkin
, 538 pa. 455, 465, n. 4, 649 a. 2d 121, 126, n. 4 (1994).
a state court’s past discretionary “ ‘practice’ [of] declin[ing] to apply ordinary waiver principles in capital cases,”
albretcht
,
supra
, at 44, 720 a. 2d, at 700, does not render convictions and sentences that are no longer subject to direct review nonfinal for
teague
purposes. such a judgment is “final” despite the possibility that a state court might, in its discretion, decline to enforce an available procedural bar and choose to apply a new rule of law. cf.
wainwright
v.
sykes,
433 u. s. 72
, 81–91 (1977).
respondent’s argument reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of
teague
.
teague
’s nonretroactivity principle acts as a limitation on the power of federal courts to grant “habeas corpus relief to … state prisoner[s].”
caspari
, 510 u. s., at 389. that is why federal habeas corpus courts “
must
apply
teague
before considering the merits of [a] claim,”
ibid.
, whenever
the state
raises the question, a point we explained in
banks i
, see 536 u. s., at 271. see also
id.,
at 271–272 (explaining that the court of appeals had erred by focusing only on the pennsylvania supreme court’s treatment of respondent’s
mills
claim).
this should make clear that the
teague
principle protects not only the reasonable judgments of state courts but also the states’ interest in finality quite apart from their courts. as
teague
explained:
“in many ways the application of new rules to cases on collateral review may be more intrusive than the enjoining of criminal prosecutions, cf.
younger
v.
harris,
401 u. s. 37
, 43–54 (1971), for it
continually
forces the states to marshal resources in order to keep in prison defendants whose trials and appeals conformed to then-existing constitutional standards.” 489 u. s., at 310.
in short, our rule for determining when a state conviction becomes final applies to this case without modification, and we agree with the court of appeals that respondent’s conviction became final in 1987. see 316 f. 3d, at 235.
b
we must therefore assay the legal landscape as of 1987 and ask “whether the rule later announced in
[mills]
was
dictated
by then-existing precedent—whether, that is, the unlawfulness of [respondent’s] conviction was apparent to all reasonable jurists.”
lambrix,
supra,
at 527–528. in
mills
, the court held that the constitution prohibits states from requiring jurors to find mitigating factors unanimously.
mckoy
, 494 u. s., at 444;
mills
, 486 u. s., at 374–375;
id.,
at 384 (vacating death sentence because the jury instructions gave rise to a “substantial probability that reasonable jurors … may have thought they were precluded from considering any mitigating evidence” not found unanimously).[
footnote 4
]
in reaching its conclusion, the court in
mills
and
mckoy
relied on a line of cases beginning with
lockett
v.
ohio,
438 u. s. 586
(1978) (plurality opinion), and
eddings
v.
oklahoma,
455 u. s. 104
(1982). in
lockett
, a plurality of the court struck down ohio’s death penalty statute because it prevented the sentencer from “considering,
as a mitigating factor
,” certain “aspect[s] of a defendant’s character or record and [certain] circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffer[ed] as a basis for a sentence less than death.” 438 u. s., at 604. a majority of the court first embraced this principle in
eddings
. there, the court confronted a situation in which the sentencer had found, “
as a matter of law
[that it] was unable even to consider [potentially mitigating] evidence.” 455 u. s., at 113. the court held that this limitation violated the
lockett
rule.
id.,
at 113–115. see also
skipper
v.
south carolina,
476 u. s. 1
, 4, 8–9 (1986) (holding that states cannot, through evidentiary rules, exclude relevant mitigating evidence from the sentencer’s consideration).
in
mills
, the court noted that its previous cases did not depend on the source of the potential barrier to the sentencer’s ability to consider mitigating evidence. 486 u. s., at 375. the court then asserted that “[t]he same [rule must apply] with respect to a single juror’s holdout vote against finding the presence of a mitigating circumstance.”
ibid.
see also
mckoy
,
supra
, at 441–443 (quoting
mills
and performing the same analysis).
the generalized
lockett
rule (that the sentencer must be allowed to consider any mitigating evidence) could be thought to support the court’s conclusion in
mills
and
mckoy
. but what is essential here is that it does not mandate the
mills
rule. each of the cases relied on by
mills
(and
mckoy
) specifically considered only obstructions to the
sentencer’s
ability to consider mitigating evidence.
mills
’ innovation rests with its shift in focus to individual jurors. we think it clear that reasonable jurists could have differed as to whether the
lockett
principle compelled
mills
. see
lambrix
, 520 u. s., at 527–528.
but there is no need to guess. in
mills
, four justices dissented, reasoning that because nothing prevented the jurors from hearing any mitigating evidence that the defendant proffered, the
lockett
principle did not control. 486 u. s., at 394 (opinion of rehnquist, c. j.). in
mckoy
, three justices dissented, explaining that “ ‘the principle established in
lockett
’ does not remotely support” the new focus on individual jurors. 494 u. s., at 464 (opinion of scalia, j.); see
id.,
at 466 (“in short,
lockett
and
eddings
are quite simply irrelevant to the question before us …”); see also
id.,
at 452–453 (kennedy, j., concurring in judgment) (noting that the court “stretche[d]” the
lockett
cases “beyond their proper bounds”). the dissent in
mckoy
stressed the court’s move from jury to juror. see 494 u. s., at 465–466 (opinion of scalia, j.). indeed, prior to
mills
,
none
of the court’s relevant cases addressed individual jurors, see,
e.g.,
hitchcock
v.
dugger,
481 u. s. 393
(1987), a trend that continued even after
mills
, see,
e.g.,
saffle
v.
parks,
494 u. s. 484
(1990);
penry
v.
lynaugh,
492 u. s. 302
(1989);
franklin
v.
lynaugh,
487 u. s. 164
(1988).
the
mckoy
dissent also explained that the
mills
rule governs how the sentencer considers evidence, not what evidence it considers. in the dissent’s view, the
lockett
line governed the latter but not the former. see 494 u. s., at 465–466 (opinion of scalia, j.). for this distinction, the dissent relied on
saffle
v.
parks
,
supra
, decided the same day. there, the court held that the
lockett
line of cases did not compel (assuming it informed) the sought-for rule that states may not “instruct the sentencer to render its decision on the evidence without sympathy.” 494 u. s., at 490. the court observed:
“parks asks us to create a rule relating, not to
what
mitigating evidence the jury must be permitted to consider in making its sentencing decision, but to
how
it must consider the mitigating evidence. there is a simple and logical difference between rules that govern what factors the jury must be permitted to consider in making its sentencing decision and rules that govern how the state may guide the jury in considering and weighing those factors in reaching a decision.”
ibid.
thus, although the lockett principle—conceived of at a high level of generality—could be thought to support the
mills
rule, reasonable jurists differed even as to this point. it follows
a fortiori
that reasonable jurists could have concluded that the
lockett
line of cases did not compel
mills
.[
footnote 5
] given the brand new attention
mills
paid to individual jurors and the relevance of the what/how distinction drawn in
saffle
(which again distinguishes
mills
from the
lockett
line), we must conclude that the
mills
rule “br[o]k[e] new ground,”
teague
, 489 u. s., at 301.[
footnote 6
] accordingly,
mills
announced a new rule, which does not apply to respondent on collateral review, unless, of course, it falls under one of
teague
’s exceptions.
c
teague
’s bar on retroactive application of new rules of constitutional criminal procedure has two exceptions. first, the bar does not apply to rules forbidding punishment “of certain primary conduct [or to] rules prohibiting a certain category of punishment for a class of defendants because of their status or offense.”
penry
,
supra
, at 330; see also
o’dell
v.
netherland,
521 u. s. 151
, 157 (1997).[
footnote 7
] there is no argument that this exception applies here. the second exception is for “ ‘watershed rules of criminal procedure implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.’ ”
ibid.
(quoting
graham
, 506 u. s., at 478).
we have repeatedly emphasized the limited scope of the second
teague
exception, explaining that “ ‘it is clearly meant to apply only to a small core of rules requiring observance of those procedures that … are implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.’ ”
o’dell
,
supra
, at 157 (quoting
graham
,
supra
, at 478). and, because any qualifying rule “would be so central to an accurate determination of innocence or guilt [that it is] unlikely that many such components of basic due process have yet to emerge,”
graham
,
supra
, at 478 (quoting
teague
,
supra
, at 313), it should come as no surprise that we have yet to find a new rule that falls under the second
teague
exception. perhaps for this reason, respondent does not even attempt to argue that
mills
qualifies or to rebut petitioners’ argument that it does not, brief for petitioners 23–26.
in providing guidance as to what might fall within this exception, we have repeatedly referred to the rule of
gideon
v.
wainwright,
372 u. s. 335
(1963) (right to counsel), and only to this rule. see,
e.g.,
saffle
,
supra
, at 495; cf.
gilmore
v.
taylor,
508 u. s. 333
, 364 (1993) (blackmun, j., dissenting).
gideon
overruled
betts
v.
brady,
316 u. s. 455
(1942), noting that
betts
itself had “made an abrupt break with [the court’s] well-considered precedents.” 372 u. s., at 344. the court continued:
“lawyers to prosecute are everywhere deemed essential to protect the public’s interest in an orderly society. similarly, there are few defendants charged with crime, few indeed, who fail to hire the best lawyers they can get to prepare and present their defenses. that government hires lawyers to prosecute and defendants who have the money hire lawyers to defend are the strongest indications of the widespread belief that lawyers in criminal courts are necessities, not luxuries.
the right of one charged with crime to counsel may not be deemed fundamental and essential to fair trials in some countries, but it is in ours. from the very beginning, our state and national constitutions and laws have laid great emphasis on procedural and substantive safeguards designed to assure fair trials before impartial tribunals in which every defendant stands equal before the law. this noble ideal cannot be realized if the poor man charged with crime has to face his accusers without a lawyer to assist him
.”
ibid.
(emphasis added).
see also
id.,
at 344–345 (quoting
powell
v.
alabama,
287 u. s. 45
, 68–69 (1932)).
gideon
, it is fair to say, “alter[ed] our understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
essential to the fairness of a proceeding.”
sawyer
v.
smith,
497 u. s. 227
, 242 (1990) (internal quotation marks omitted).
by contrast, we have not hesitated to hold that less sweeping and fundamental rules do not fall within
teague
’s second exception. in
o’dell
v.
netherland
,
supra
, for example, we considered the retroactivity of the rule announced in
simmons
v.
south carolina,
512 u. s. 154
(1994).
simmons
held that a capital defendant must be allowed to inform the sentencer that he would be ineligible for parole if the prosecution argues future dangerousness. we rejected the petitioner’s argument that the
simmons
rule was “ ‘on par’ with
gideon
v.
wainwright,
372 u. s. 335
(1963),” emphasizing “the sweeping [nature] of
gideon
, which established an affirmative right to counsel in all felony cases.”
o’dell
,
supra
, at 167.
and, in
sawyer
v.
smith,
supra
, we considered whether a habeas petitioner could make use of the rule announced in
caldwell
v.
mississippi,
472 u. s. 320
, 323 (1985) (holding that the eighth amendment bars imposition of the death penalty by a jury that had been led to believe that responsibility for the ultimate decision rested elsewhere). there too we declined to give retroactive effect to a rule that effectively withheld relevant information from the sentencer. see
sawyer
,
supra
, at 242–245. we acknowledged that the
caldwell
rule was intended to enhance “the accuracy of capital sentencing.” 497 u. s., at 244. but because it affected an incremental change, we could not conclude that “this systemic rule enhancing reliability is an ‘absolute prerequisite to fundamental fairness.’ ”
ibid.
(quoting
teague
,
supra
, at 314). see also
graham
,
supra
, at 478 (concluding that the rule announced in
penry
v.
lynaugh,
492 u. s. 302
(1989), does not fall within the second
teague
exception).
we recognize that avoidance of potentially arbitrary impositions of the death sentence motivated the court in
mills
and
mckoy
.
mills
described two troubling situations that could theoretically occur absent the
mills
rule. eleven of 12 jurors, could, for example, agree that six mitigating circumstances existed, but one holdout juror could nevertheless force the death sentence. similarly, all 12 jurors could agree that some mitigating circumstances existed and that these outweighed any aggravators, but because they did not agree on which mitigating circumstances were present, they would again have to return a death sentence. see
mills
, 486 u. s., at 373–374; see
also
mckoy
, 494 u. s., at 439–440 (describing these examples). imposition of the death penalty in these circumstances, the court reasoned, “would be the ‘height of arbitrariness.’ ”
id.,
at 440 (quoting
mills
,
supra
, at 374). see also
mckoy
,
supra
, at 454 (kennedy, j., concurring in judgment).
quite obviously, the court decided
mills
and
mckoy
as it did to avoid this possibility. but because “[a]ll of our eighth amendment jurisprudence concerning capital sentencing is directed toward the enhancement of reliability and accuracy in some sense,” the fact that a new rule removes some remote possibility of arbitrary infliction of the death sentence does not suffice to bring it within
teague
’s second exception.
sawyer
,
supra
, at 243.
however laudable the
mills
rule might be, “it has none of the primacy and centrality of the rule adopted in
gideon
.”
saffle
, 494 u. s., at 495. the
mills
rule applies fairly narrowly and works no fundamental shift in “our understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
” essential to fundamental fairness.
o’dell
, 521 u. s., at 167 (internal quotation marks omitted). we therefore conclude that the
mills
rule does not fall within the second
teague
exception.
iii
we hold that
mills
announced a new rule of constitutional criminal procedure that falls within neither
teague
exception. accordingly, that rule cannot be applied retroactively to respondent. the judgment of the court of appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
it is so ordered.
footnote 1
judge sloviter wrote separately to express her view that
mills
v.
maryland,
486 u. s. 367
(1988), established a new rule that qualified for neither
teague
v.
lane,
489 u. s. 288
(1989), exception. 316 f. 3d 228, 253–254 (ca3 2003) (opinion concurring in judgment). judge sloviter nevertheless posited that
mills
could be applied to respondent because of pennsylvania’s “unique relaxed waiver doctrine in capital cases.”
id.,
at 256.
footnote 2
given our determination that the court of appeals erred in holding that
mills
applied retroactively to respondent, we do not reach the question whether the court of appeals also erred in concluding that the pennsylvania supreme court unreasonably applied
mills
.
footnote 3
rules that fall within what we have referred to as
teague
’s first exception “are more accurately characterized as substantive rules not subject to [
teague
’s] bar.”
schriro
v.
summerlin
,
ante,
at __ (slip op., at 3, n. 4). see also
infra,
at 10, and n. 7.
footnote 4
although nothing in this case turns on it, we note that it is arguable that the “
mills
rule” did not fully emerge until the court issued
mckoy
v.
north carolina,
494 u. s. 433
(1990). see
id.,
at 459–463 (scalia, j., dissenting).
footnote 5
because the focus of the inquiry is whether
reasonable
jurists could differ as to whether precedent compels the sought-for rule, we do not suggest that the mere existence of a dissent suffices to show that the rule is new.
footnote 6
the court of appeals erred by drawing from
lockett
v.
ohio,
438 u. s. 586
(1978), and
eddings
v.
oklahoma,
455 u. s. 104
(1982), the general rule that “the constitution prohibited any barrier to the
jury’s
consideration of mitigating evidence,” 316 f. 3d, at 241–243 (emphasis added), without also acknowledging that the rule, for purposes of the
teague
analysis, did not automatically extend to arguably analogous contexts. it is with respect to this last point that reasonable jurists did in fact differ.
footnote 7
as noted above, these rules are more properly viewed as substantive and therefore not subject to
teague
’s bar. see n. 3,
supra
.
beard v. banks - 02-1603 (2004)
stevens, j., dissenting
beard v. banks
542 u. s. ____ (2004)
supreme court of the united states
no. 02-1603
jeffrey a. beard, secretary, pennsylvania
department of corrections, et al.,
petitioners
v.
george e. banks
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
[june 24, 2004]
justice stevens, with whom justice souter, justice ginsburg, and justice breyer join, dissenting.
a capital sentencing procedure that required the jury to return a death sentence if even a single juror supported that outcome would be the “ ’ “height of arbitrariness.” ’ ”
ante
, at 13 (opinion of the court). the use of such a procedure is unquestionably unconstitutional today, and i believe it was equally so in 1987 when respondent’s death sentence became final. the court reaches a different conclusion because it reads
mills
v.
maryland,
486 u. s. 367
(1988), to announce a “new rule” of criminal procedure that may not be applied on federal habeas review to defendants whose convictions became final before
mills
was decided.
ante
, at 1. in my opinion, however,
mills
simply represented a straightforward application of our longstanding view that “the eighth and fourteenth amendments cannot tolerate the infliction of a sentence of death under [a] legal syste[m] that permit[s] this unique penalty to be … wantonly and … freakishly imposed.”
furman
v.
georgia,
408 u. s. 238
, 310 (1972)
(per curiam)
(stewart, j., concurring).
the dispute in
mills
concerned jury instructions and a verdict form that the majority read to create a “substantial probability that reasonable jurors . . . well may have thought they were precluded from considering any mitigating evidence unless all 12 jurors agreed on the existence of a particular such circumstance. ” 486 u. s., at 384. the resulting unanimity requirement, the majority concluded, violated the constitution in that it “allow[ed] a ‘holdout’ juror to prevent the other jurors from considering mitigating evidence.”
mckoy
v.
north carolina,
494 u. s. 433
, 438 (1990) (quoting
mills
, 486 u. s., at 375). when
mills
was decided, there was nothing novel about acknowledging that permitting one death-prone juror to control the entire jury’s sentencing decision would be arbitrary. that acknowledgment was a natural outgrowth of our cases condemning mandatory imposition of the death penalty,
roberts
v.
louisiana,
431 u. s. 633
(1977)
(per curiam);
woodson
v.
north carolina,
428 u. s. 280
(1976) (plurality opinion), recognizing that arbitrary imposition of that penalty violates the eighth amendment,[
footnote 1
]
e.g.
,
zant
v.
stephens,
462 u. s. 862
, 874 (1983);
gregg
v.
georgia,
428 u. s. 153
, 189 (1976);
furman
,
supra;
and mandating procedures that guarantee full consideration of mitigating evidence,
e.g.
,
eddings
v.
oklahoma,
455 u. s. 104
(1982);
lockett
v.
ohio,
438 u. s. 586
(1978) (plurality opinion). indeed, in my judgment, the kind of arbitrariness that would enable 1 vote in favor of death to outweigh 11 in favor of forbearance would violate the bedrock fairness principles that have governed our trial proceedings for centuries. rejecting such a manifestly unfair procedural innovation does not announce a “new rule” covered by
teague
v.
lane,
489 u. s. 288
, 301–302 (1989), but simply affirms that our fairness principles do not permit blatant exceptions.[
footnote 2
]
this leaves only the question whether reasonable jurors could have read pennsylvania’s jury instructions and verdict form to impose a unanimity requirement with respect to mitigating circumstances. for the reasons identified by the third circuit,
banks
v.
horn
,
271 f. 3d 527, 543–551 (2001); see also
banks
v.
horn
, 316 f. 3d 228, 247 (2003) (leaving in place the relevant portions of the court’s earlier opinion), particularly with respect to the verdict form, 271 f. 3d, at 549–550, i answer this question in the affirmative.
i would affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
footnote 1
justice kennedy made precisely this point in his concurrence in
mckoy
v.
north carolina,
494 u. s. 433
, 454 (1990):
“application of the death penalty on the basis of a single juror’s vote is ‘intuitively disturbing.’ … more important, it represents imposition of capital punishment through a system that can be described as arbitrary or capricious. the court in
mills
described such a result as the ‘height of arbitrariness.’ … given this description, it is apparent that the result in
mills
fits within our line of cases forbidding the imposition of capital punishment on the basis of ‘caprice,’ in ‘an arbitrary and unpredictable fashion,’ or through ‘arbitrary’ or ‘freakish’ means.”
footnote 2
supporting this reading, even the dissenting justices in
mills
v.
maryland,
486 u. s. 367
(1988), did not challenge the majority’s assumption that instructions unambiguously requiring unanimity on the existence of any mitigating factor would be unconstitutional; they argued only that reasonable jurors would have understood that in order “to mark ‘
no
’ to each mitigating factor on the sentencing form, all 12 jurors [had to] agree.”
id.
, at 394 (rehnquist, c. j., dissenting) (emphasis added). i recognize that some justices believe the
mills
court had no occasion to consider the constitutionality of a unanimity requirement because the state had conceded the point. see
mckoy
, 494 u. s., at 459 (scalia, j., dissenting) (“although there is language in
mills
. . . suggesting that a unanimity requirement would contravene this court’s decisions . . . , that issue plainly was not presented in
mills
, and can therefore not have been decided”).
mills
’ author, justice blackmun, disagreed with this view, however: “[t]he maryland instructions [at issue in
mills
] were held to be invalid because they were susceptible of two plausible interpretations,
and under one of those interpretations the instructions were unconstitutional
.”
mckoy
, 486 u. s., at 445 (emphasis in original).
i think justice blackmun had the better of this argument, but even if one assumes the
mills
dissenters failed to defend the constitutionality of unanimity requirements because they did not think the issue properly before the court rather than because they, too, condemned such requirements, my overall point remains the same: executing a defendant when only 1 of his 12 jurors believes that to be the appropriate penalty would be “so wanto[n] and so freakis[h]” as to violate the eighth and fourteenth amendments,
furman
v.
georgia,
408 u. s. 238
, 310 (1972)
(per curiam)
(stewart, j., concurring), and that violation would have been as clear in 1987 as today.
beard v. banks - 02-1603 (2004)
souter, j., dissenting
beard v. banks
542 u. s. ____ (2004)
supreme court of the united states
no. 02-1603
jeffrey a. beard, secretary, pennsylvania
department of corrections, et al.,
petitioners
v.
george e. banks
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
[june 24, 2004]
justice souter, with whom justice ginsburg joins, dissenting.
i join justice stevens’s dissenting opinion in this case. i add this word about the way i see its relation to justice breyer’s dissenting opinion in
schriro
v.
summerlin
,
ante
, at ___, and to other cases in the line that began with
teague
v.
lane,
489 u. s. 288
(1989).
in determining whether
mills
v.
maryland,
486 u. s. 367
(1988), states a new rule of constitutional law for purpose of
teague
’s general bar to applying such rules on collateral review, the court invokes the perspective of “ ‘all reasonable jurists,’ ”
ante
, at 6 (quoting
lambrix
v.
singletary,
520 u. s. 518
, 528 (1997)); see also
ante
, at 8, 9. it acknowledges, however, that this standard is objective, so that the presence of actual disagreement among jurists and even among members of this court does not conclusively establish a rule’s novelty.
ante
, at 9, n. 5; cf.
wright
v.
west,
505 u. s. 277
, 304 (1992) (o’connor, j., concurring in judgment). this objectively reasonable jurist is a cousin to the common law’s reasonable person, whose job is to impose a judicially determined standard of conduct on litigants who come before the court. similarly, the function of
teague
’s reasonable-jurist standard is to distinguish those developments in this court’s jurisprudence that state judges should have anticipated from those they could not have been expected to foresee.
in applying
teague
, this court engages in an ongoing process of defining the characteristics of a reasonable jurist, by identifying arguments that reasonable jurists would or would not accept. the particular characteristic at stake here is the degree to which a reasonable jurist would avoid the risk of a certain kind of erroneous outcome in a capital case.
mills
’s rule protects against essentially the same kind of error that justice breyer discusses in
summerlin:
a death sentence that is arbitrary because it is inaccurate as a putative expression of “ ‘the conscience of the community on the ultimate question of life or death,’ ”
ante
, at 2 (quoting
witherspoon
v.
illinois,
391 u. s. 510
, 519 (1968)). justice breyer has explained in his
summerlin
opinion why some new rules demanding that kind of accuracy should be applied through a
teague
exception, and our longstanding espousal of accurate expression of community conscience should also inform our judgment, in any debatable case, about the newness of a rule.
as justice stevens says, a death sentence based upon a verdict by 11 jurors who would have relied on a given mitigating circumstance to spare a defendant’s life, and a single holdout who blocked them from doing so, would surely be an egregious failure to express the public conscience accurately.
ante
, at 1 (dissenting opinion). the question presented by this case is ultimately whether the court should deem reasonable, and thus immunize from collateral attack, at least at the first
teague
stage, a reading of its pre-
mills
precedents that accepts the risk of such errors that maryland’s or pennsylvania’s jury instructions and verdict form would have produced.
the court concludes that, as compared to
eddings
v.
oklahoma,
455 u. s. 104
(1982),
mills
“shift[ed] … focus” from “obstructions to the
sentencer’s
ability to consider mitigating evidence” to the abilities of “individual jurors” to do so, and that a reasonable jurist could have drawn a distinction on this basis.
ante
, at 8. this approach gives considerable weight to a reasonable jurist’s analytical capacity to pick out arguably material differences between sets of facts, and relatively less to the jurist’s understanding of the substance of the principles underlying our eighth amendment cases that follow
furman
v.
georgia,
408 u. s. 238
(1972)
(per curiam)
. although the court’s view of the reasonable jurist is not inconsistent with some of
teague
’s progeny,*
for the reasons given in justice breyer’s dissent in
summerlin
,
ante
, at 5–7, 8–9, i am now convinced that this reading of
teague
gives too much importance to the finality of capital sentences and not enough to their accuracy. i would affirm the judgment of the court of appeals, and respectfully dissent.
* see,
e.g.,
o’dell
v.
netherland
,
521 u. s. 151
, 157–166 (1997) (holding new the rule of
simmons
v.
south carolina
,
512 u. s. 154
(1994), that a jury may not be misled about defendant’s parole eligiblity when prosecutor argues future dangerousness);
lambrix
v.
singletary
,
520 u. s. 518
, 527–539 (1997) (holding new the rule of
espinosa
v.
florida
,
505 u. s. 1079
(1992)
(per curiam)
, that a florida jury’s consideration of a vague aggravating factor taints a judge’s later death sentence); see also
stringer
v.
black
,
503 u. s. 222
, 243–247 (1992) (souter, j., dissenting) (arguing that the rule of
maynard
v.
cartwright,
486 u. s. 356
(1988), that sentencer’s weighing among others of a vague aggravating factor taints a death sentence, was new).
Judgment:
Beard v. Banks - 02-1603 (2004)
SYLLABUS
OCTOBER TERM, 2003
BEARD V. BANKS
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
BEARD, SECRETARY, PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, et al.
v.
BANKS
certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
No. 02–1603. Argued February 24, 2004—Decided June 24, 2004
After respondent’s murder conviction and death sentence were upheld by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, this Court decided
Mills
v.
Maryland,
486 U. S. 367
, and
McKoy
v.
North Carolina,
494 U. S. 433
, in which it held invalid capital sentencing schemes requiring juries to disregard mitigating factors not found unanimously. After respondent’s state postconviction
Mills
claim was rejected by the State Supreme Court on the merits, he turned to the federal courts. Ultimately, the Third Circuit applied the analytical framework set forth in
Teague
v.
Lane,
489 U. S. 288
, under which federal habeas petitioners may not avail themselves of new rules of constitutional criminal procedure outside two narrow exceptions; concluded that
Mills
did not announce a new rule and therefore could be applied retroactively; and granted respondent relief.
Held:
Because
Mills
announced a new rule of constitutional criminal procedure that does not fall within either
Teague
exception, its rule cannot be applied retroactively. Pp. 4–14.
(a)
Teague
analysis involves a three-step process requiring a court to determine when a defendant’s conviction became final; whether, given the legal landscape at the time the conviction became final, the rule sought to be applied is actually new; and, if so, whether it falls within either of two exceptions to nonretroactivity. P. 4.
(b) Respondent’s conviction became final before
Mills
was decided. The normal rule for determining a state conviction’s finality for retroactivity review—when the availability of direct appeal to the state courts has been exhausted and the time for filing a certiorari petition has elapsed or a timely petition has been finally denied—applies here. That the Pennsylvania Supreme Court considered the merits of respondent’s
Mills
claim on collateral review does change his conviction’s finality to a date subsequent to
Mills
. Pp. 4–6.
(c)
Mills
announced a new rule. In reaching its conclusion in
Mills
and
McKoy
, this Court relied on a line of cases beginning with
Lockett
v.
Ohio,
438 U. S. 586
.
Lockett
’s general rule that the sentencer must be allowed to consider any mitigating evidence could be thought to support the conclusion in
Mills
and
McKoy
that
capital sentencing schemes cannot require juries to disregard mitigating factors not found unanimously
,
but it did not mandate the
Mills
rule. Each of the cases relied on by
Mills
(and
McKoy
) considered only obstructions to the sentencer’s ability to consider mitigating evidence.
Mills’
innovation rests with its shift in focus to individual jurors. Moreover, there is no need to guess whether reasonable jurists could have differed as to whether the
Lockett
line of cases compelled
Mills.
Four dissenting Justices in
Mills
reasoned that because nothing prevented the jury from hearing the mitigating evidence,
Lockett
did not control; and three dissenting Justices in
McKoy
concluded that
Lockett
did not remotely support the new focus on individual jurors. Because the
Mills
rule broke new ground, it applies to respondent on collateral review only if it falls under a
Teague
exception. Pp. 6–10.
(d) The
Mills
rule does not fall within either exception. There is no argument that the first exception applies here. And this Court has repeatedly emphasized the limited scope of the second exception—“ ‘for watershed rules of criminal procedure implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding,’ ”
O’Dell
v.
Netherland,
521 U. S. 151
, 157—which “ ‘is clearly meant to apply only to a small core of rules requiring observance of those procedures that … are implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,’ ”
ibid.
This Court has yet to find a new rule that falls under this exception. In providing guidance as to what might do so, the Court has repeatedly, and only, referred to the right-to-counsel rule of
Gideon
v.
Wainwright,
372 U. S. 335
, which “altered [the Court’s] understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
essential to the fairness of a proceeding,”
Sawyer
v.
Smith,
497 U. S. 227
, 242. The Court has not hesitated to hold less sweeping and fundamental rules outside the exception. See,
e.g.,
O’Dell
v.
Netherland,
supra.
While
Mills
and
McKoy
were decided to avoid potentially arbitrary impositions of the death sentence, the
Mills
rule has “none of the primacy and centrality of the rule adopted in
Gideon,” Saffle
v.
Parks,
494 U. S. 484
, 495. It applies narrowly and works no fundamental shift in the Court’s “ ‘understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
’ ”essential to fundamental fairnes
s,
O’Dell, supra,
at 167. Pp. 10–13.
316 F. 3d 228, reversed and remanded.
Thomas, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Rehnquist, C. J., and O’Connor, Scalia, and Kennedy, JJ., joined. Stevens, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer, JJ., joined. Souter, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Ginsburg, J., joined.
Beard v. Banks - 02-1603 (2004)
OPINION OF THE COURT
BEARD V. BANKS
542 U. S. ____ (2004)
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
NO. 02-1603
JEFFREY A. BEARD, SECRETARY, PENNSYLVANIA
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, et al.,
PETITIONERS
v.
GEORGE E. BANKS
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
[June 24, 2004]
Justice Thomas delivered the opinion of the Court.
In
Mills
v.
Maryland,
486 U. S. 367
(1988), and
McKoy
v.
North Carolina,
494 U. S. 433
(1990), this Court held invalid capital sentencing schemes that require juries to disregard mitigating factors not found unanimously. In this case, we must determine whether the rule announced in
Mills
and
McKoy
can be applied on federal habeas corpus review to a defendant whose conviction became final in 1987. Under our retroactivity analysis as set forth in
Teague
v.
Lane,
489 U. S. 288
(1989), federal habeas corpus petitioners may not avail themselves of new rules of criminal procedure outside two narrow exceptions. We conclude that
Mills
announced a new rule that does not fall within either of
Teague
’s exceptions.
I
More than 20 years ago, a jury convicted respondent, George Banks, of 12 counts of first-degree murder, and the trial court sentenced him to death. The facts of this case are set forth in detail in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision affirming respondent’s conviction and sentence on direct review. See
Commonwealth
v.
Banks
, 513 Pa. 318, 521 A. 2d 1 (1987). Direct review ended when this Court denied certiorari on October 5, 1987.
Banks
v.
Pennsylvania
,
484 U. S. 873
. Approximately eight months later, this Court handed down its decision in
Mills
,
supra,
which announced that the Constitution forbids States from imposing a requirement that the jury find a potential mitigating factor unanimously before that factor may be considered in the sentencing decision.
Respondent pursued state postconviction relief on the theory that the instructions and verdict form given to the jury in his case violated the
Mills
principle, but the Pennsylvania Supreme Court rejected this claim on the merits. See
Commonwealth
v.
Banks
, 540 Pa. 143, 656 A. 2d 467 (1995). Respondent then turned to the federal courts. Although the District Court denied relief,
Banks
v.
Horn,
63 F. Supp. 2d 525 (MD Pa. 1999), the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit reversed respondent’s death sentence,
Banks
v.
Horn,
271 F. 3d 527 (2001). In reaching its decision, the Court of Appeals declined to apply the retroactivity analysis set forth in
Teague
v.
Lane, supra
, to the question whether
Mills
applied retroactively to respondent. This was not necessary, in the Court of Appeals’ view, because the Pennsylvania Supreme Court had itself applied
Mills
. 271 F. 3d, at 543. We summarily reversed, holding that “in addition to performing any analysis required by AEDPA, a federal court considering a habeas petition must conduct a threshold
Teague
analysis when the issue is properly raised by the state.”
Horn
v.
Banks,
536 U. S. 266
, 272 (2002)
(per curiam)
(Banks I)
.
On remand, the Court of Appeals considered the retroactive application of
Mills
.
Banks
v.
Horn,
316 F. 3d 228 (CA3 2003). The court recognized that its primary task was to determine whether
Mills
announced a new rule, and that this, in turn, required it to ascertain whether the precedent existing at the time respondent’s conviction became final dictated or compelled the rule in
Mills
. 316 F. 3d, at 233–235. From this Court’s decisions in
Lockett
v.
Ohio,
438 U. S. 586
(1978),
Eddings
v.
Oklahoma,
455 U. S. 104
(1982), and their direct progeny, the Court of Appeals distilled the rule that the “Eighth Amendment prohibits any barrier to the sentencer’s consideration of mitigating evidence.” 316 F. 3d, at 239. The Court of Appeals characterized this Court’s decision in
Mills
as “merely recogniz[ing] that the perceived need for unanimity could constitute one such unconstitutional barrier,” and concluded that the existing legal landscape compelled the decision in
Mills
. 316 F. 3d, at 240. Accordingly, the court held that
Mills
applied retroactively to respondent and reinstated the remainder of its previous opinion, again granting respondent relief from his death sentence.[
Footnote 1
]
We granted the Commonwealth’s second petition for certiorari in this case to decide whether
Mills
applies retroactively to respondent and, if so, whether the Pennsylvania Supreme Court unreasonably applied federal law in holding that there was no
Mills
error in respondent’s case.
539 U. S. 987
(2003). Although the
Lockett
/
Eddings
line of cases supports the Court’s decision in
Mills
, it does not compel that decision.
Mills
therefore announced a new rule. We are also unable to conclude that the
Mills
rule falls under either
Teague
exception. In particular,
Mills
did not announce a “watershed rul[e] of criminal procedure implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.”
Saffle
v.
Parks,
494 U. S. 484
, 495 (1990) (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, we again reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals.[
Footnote 2
]
II
Under
Teague
, the determination whether a constitutional rule of criminal procedure applies to a case on collateral review involves a three-step process. See,
e.g.,
Lambrix
v.
Singletary,
520 U. S. 518
, 527 (1997). First, the court must determine when the defendant’s conviction became final. Second, it must ascertain the “legal landscape as it then existed,”
Graham
v.
Collins,
506 U. S. 461
, 468 (1993), and ask whether the Constitution, as interpreted by the precedent then existing, compels the rule.
Saffle
,
supra
, at 488. That is, the court must decide whether the rule is actually “new.” Finally, if the rule is new, the court must consider whether it falls within either of the two exceptions to nonretroactivity.
Lambrix
,
supra
, at 527.[
Footnote 3
]
A
Ordinarily, ascertaining the date on which a defendant’s conviction becomes final poses no difficulties: State convictions are final “for purposes of retroactivity analysis when the availability of direct appeal to the state courts has been exhausted and the time for filing a petition for a writ of certiorari has elapsed or a timely filed petition has been finally denied.”
Caspari
v.
Bohlen,
510 U. S. 383
, 390 (1994). See also
Clay
v.
United States,
537 U. S. 522
, 527 (2003). Respondent, however, urges a different rule. He argues that, in view of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s unique “relaxed waiver rule”—pursuant to which that court considered his
Mills
claim on the merits—his conviction became final for
Teague
purposes in 1995 when the State Supreme Court decided the
Mills
claim against him. Brief for Respondent 25–31. Because of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s practice of considering forfeited claims in capital cases, respondent insists, “conventional notions of ‘finality,’ ” do not apply.
Id.,
at 27.
In the past, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court did, in fact, apply a “relaxed waiver rule” in death penalty cases. See,
e.g.,
Commonwealth
v.
DeHart
, 539 Pa. 5, 25, 650 A. 2d 38, 48 (1994);
Commonwealth
v.
Billa
, 521 Pa. 168, 181, 555 A. 2d 835, 842 (1989). But this practice, which the court has abandoned, see
Commonwealth
v.
Albretcht
, 554 Pa. 31, 44–46, 720 A. 2d 693, 700 (1999), “was not absolute, but discretionary,”
Commonwealth
v.
Freeman
, 573 Pa. 532, 557, n. 9, 827 A. 2d 385, 400, n. 9 (2003) (describing past practice). Notably, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has expressly stated, in a capital case, that it would decline to apply
Mills
retroactively.
Commonwealth
v.
Peterkin
, 538 Pa. 455, 465, n. 4, 649 A. 2d 121, 126, n. 4 (1994).
A state court’s past discretionary “ ‘practice’ [of] declin[ing] to apply ordinary waiver principles in capital cases,”
Albretcht
,
supra
, at 44, 720 A. 2d, at 700, does not render convictions and sentences that are no longer subject to direct review nonfinal for
Teague
purposes. Such a judgment is “final” despite the possibility that a state court might, in its discretion, decline to enforce an available procedural bar and choose to apply a new rule of law. Cf.
Wainwright
v.
Sykes,
433 U. S. 72
, 81–91 (1977).
Respondent’s argument reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of
Teague
.
Teague
’s nonretroactivity principle acts as a limitation on the power of federal courts to grant “habeas corpus relief to … state prisoner[s].”
Caspari
, 510 U. S., at 389. That is why federal habeas corpus courts “
must
apply
Teague
before considering the merits of [a] claim,”
ibid.
, whenever
the State
raises the question, a point we explained in
Banks I
, see 536 U. S., at 271. See also
id.,
at 271–272 (explaining that the Court of Appeals had erred by focusing only on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s treatment of respondent’s
Mills
claim).
This should make clear that the
Teague
principle protects not only the reasonable judgments of state courts but also the States’ interest in finality quite apart from their courts. As
Teague
explained:
“In many ways the application of new rules to cases on collateral review may be more intrusive than the enjoining of criminal prosecutions, cf.
Younger
v.
Harris,
401 U. S. 37
, 43–54 (1971), for it
continually
forces the States to marshal resources in order to keep in prison defendants whose trials and appeals conformed to then-existing constitutional standards.” 489 U. S., at 310.
In short, our rule for determining when a state conviction becomes final applies to this case without modification, and we agree with the Court of Appeals that respondent’s conviction became final in 1987. See 316 F. 3d, at 235.
B
We must therefore assay the legal landscape as of 1987 and ask “whether the rule later announced in
[Mills]
was
dictated
by then-existing precedent—whether, that is, the unlawfulness of [respondent’s] conviction was apparent to all reasonable jurists.”
Lambrix,
supra,
at 527–528. In
Mills
, the Court held that the Constitution prohibits States from requiring jurors to find mitigating factors unanimously.
McKoy
, 494 U. S., at 444;
Mills
, 486 U. S., at 374–375;
id.,
at 384 (vacating death sentence because the jury instructions gave rise to a “substantial probability that reasonable jurors … may have thought they were precluded from considering any mitigating evidence” not found unanimously).[
Footnote 4
]
In reaching its conclusion, the Court in
Mills
and
McKoy
relied on a line of cases beginning with
Lockett
v.
Ohio,
438 U. S. 586
(1978) (plurality opinion), and
Eddings
v.
Oklahoma,
455 U. S. 104
(1982). In
Lockett
, a plurality of the Court struck down Ohio’s death penalty statute because it prevented the sentencer from “considering,
as a mitigating factor
,” certain “aspect[s] of a defendant’s character or record and [certain] circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffer[ed] as a basis for a sentence less than death.” 438 U. S., at 604. A majority of the Court first embraced this principle in
Eddings
. There, the Court confronted a situation in which the sentencer had found, “
as a matter of law
[that it] was unable even to consider [potentially mitigating] evidence.” 455 U. S., at 113. The Court held that this limitation violated the
Lockett
rule.
Id.,
at 113–115. See also
Skipper
v.
South Carolina,
476 U. S. 1
, 4, 8–9 (1986) (holding that States cannot, through evidentiary rules, exclude relevant mitigating evidence from the sentencer’s consideration).
In
Mills
, the Court noted that its previous cases did not depend on the source of the potential barrier to the sentencer’s ability to consider mitigating evidence. 486 U. S., at 375. The Court then asserted that “[t]he same [rule must apply] with respect to a single juror’s holdout vote against finding the presence of a mitigating circumstance.”
Ibid.
See also
McKoy
,
supra
, at 441–443 (quoting
Mills
and performing the same analysis).
The generalized
Lockett
rule (that the sentencer must be allowed to consider any mitigating evidence) could be thought to support the Court’s conclusion in
Mills
and
McKoy
. But what is essential here is that it does not mandate the
Mills
rule. Each of the cases relied on by
Mills
(and
McKoy
) specifically considered only obstructions to the
sentencer’s
ability to consider mitigating evidence.
Mills
’ innovation rests with its shift in focus to individual jurors. We think it clear that reasonable jurists could have differed as to whether the
Lockett
principle compelled
Mills
. See
Lambrix
, 520 U. S., at 527–528.
But there is no need to guess. In
Mills
, four justices dissented, reasoning that because nothing prevented the jurors from hearing any mitigating evidence that the defendant proffered, the
Lockett
principle did not control. 486 U. S., at 394 (opinion of Rehnquist, C. J.). In
McKoy
, three justices dissented, explaining that “ ‘the principle established in
Lockett
’ does not remotely support” the new focus on individual jurors. 494 U. S., at 464 (opinion of Scalia, J.); see
id.,
at 466 (“In short,
Lockett
and
Eddings
are quite simply irrelevant to the question before us …”); see also
id.,
at 452–453 (Kennedy, J., concurring in judgment) (noting that the Court “stretche[d]” the
Lockett
cases “beyond their proper bounds”). The dissent in
McKoy
stressed the Court’s move from jury to juror. See 494 U. S., at 465–466 (opinion of Scalia, J.). Indeed, prior to
Mills
,
none
of the Court’s relevant cases addressed individual jurors, see,
e.g.,
Hitchcock
v.
Dugger,
481 U. S. 393
(1987), a trend that continued even after
Mills
, see,
e.g.,
Saffle
v.
Parks,
494 U. S. 484
(1990);
Penry
v.
Lynaugh,
492 U. S. 302
(1989);
Franklin
v.
Lynaugh,
487 U. S. 164
(1988).
The
McKoy
dissent also explained that the
Mills
rule governs how the sentencer considers evidence, not what evidence it considers. In the dissent’s view, the
Lockett
line governed the latter but not the former. See 494 U. S., at 465–466 (opinion of Scalia, J.). For this distinction, the dissent relied on
Saffle
v.
Parks
,
supra
, decided the same day. There, the Court held that the
Lockett
line of cases did not compel (assuming it informed) the sought-for rule that States may not “instruct the sentencer to render its decision on the evidence without sympathy.” 494 U. S., at 490. The Court observed:
“Parks asks us to create a rule relating, not to
what
mitigating evidence the jury must be permitted to consider in making its sentencing decision, but to
how
it must consider the mitigating evidence. There is a simple and logical difference between rules that govern what factors the jury must be permitted to consider in making its sentencing decision and rules that govern how the State may guide the jury in considering and weighing those factors in reaching a decision.”
Ibid.
Thus, although the Lockett principle—conceived of at a high level of generality—could be thought to support the
Mills
rule, reasonable jurists differed even as to this point. It follows
a fortiori
that reasonable jurists could have concluded that the
Lockett
line of cases did not compel
Mills
.[
Footnote 5
] Given the brand new attention
Mills
paid to individual jurors and the relevance of the what/how distinction drawn in
Saffle
(which again distinguishes
Mills
from the
Lockett
line), we must conclude that the
Mills
rule “br[o]k[e] new ground,”
Teague
, 489 U. S., at 301.[
Footnote 6
] Accordingly,
Mills
announced a new rule, which does not apply to respondent on collateral review, unless, of course, it falls under one of
Teague
’s exceptions.
C
Teague
’s bar on retroactive application of new rules of constitutional criminal procedure has two exceptions. First, the bar does not apply to rules forbidding punishment “of certain primary conduct [or to] rules prohibiting a certain category of punishment for a class of defendants because of their status or offense.”
Penry
,
supra
, at 330; see also
O’Dell
v.
Netherland,
521 U. S. 151
, 157 (1997).[
Footnote 7
] There is no argument that this exception applies here. The second exception is for “ ‘watershed rules of criminal procedure implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.’ ”
Ibid.
(quoting
Graham
, 506 U. S., at 478).
We have repeatedly emphasized the limited scope of the second
Teague
exception, explaining that “ ‘it is clearly meant to apply only to a small core of rules requiring observance of those procedures that … are implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.’ ”
O’Dell
,
supra
, at 157 (quoting
Graham
,
supra
, at 478). And, because any qualifying rule “would be so central to an accurate determination of innocence or guilt [that it is] unlikely that many such components of basic due process have yet to emerge,”
Graham
,
supra
, at 478 (quoting
Teague
,
supra
, at 313), it should come as no surprise that we have yet to find a new rule that falls under the second
Teague
exception. Perhaps for this reason, respondent does not even attempt to argue that
Mills
qualifies or to rebut petitioners’ argument that it does not, Brief for Petitioners 23–26.
In providing guidance as to what might fall within this exception, we have repeatedly referred to the rule of
Gideon
v.
Wainwright,
372 U. S. 335
(1963) (right to counsel), and only to this rule. See,
e.g.,
Saffle
,
supra
, at 495; cf.
Gilmore
v.
Taylor,
508 U. S. 333
, 364 (1993) (Blackmun, J., dissenting).
Gideon
overruled
Betts
v.
Brady,
316 U. S. 455
(1942), noting that
Betts
itself had “made an abrupt break with [the Court’s] well-considered precedents.” 372 U. S., at 344. The Court continued:
“Lawyers to prosecute are everywhere deemed essential to protect the public’s interest in an orderly society. Similarly, there are few defendants charged with crime, few indeed, who fail to hire the best lawyers they can get to prepare and present their defenses. That government hires lawyers to prosecute and defendants who have the money hire lawyers to defend are the strongest indications of the widespread belief that lawyers in criminal courts are necessities, not luxuries.
The right of one charged with crime to counsel may not be deemed fundamental and essential to fair trials in some countries, but it is in ours. From the very beginning, our state and national constitutions and laws have laid great emphasis on procedural and substantive safeguards designed to assure fair trials before impartial tribunals in which every defendant stands equal before the law. This noble ideal cannot be realized if the poor man charged with crime has to face his accusers without a lawyer to assist him
.”
Ibid.
(emphasis added).
See also
id.,
at 344–345 (quoting
Powell
v.
Alabama,
287 U. S. 45
, 68–69 (1932)).
Gideon
, it is fair to say, “alter[ed] our understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
essential to the fairness of a proceeding.”
Sawyer
v.
Smith,
497 U. S. 227
, 242 (1990) (internal quotation marks omitted).
By contrast, we have not hesitated to hold that less sweeping and fundamental rules do not fall within
Teague
’s second exception. In
O’Dell
v.
Netherland
,
supra
, for example, we considered the retroactivity of the rule announced in
Simmons
v.
South Carolina,
512 U. S. 154
(1994).
Simmons
held that a capital defendant must be allowed to inform the sentencer that he would be ineligible for parole if the prosecution argues future dangerousness. We rejected the petitioner’s argument that the
Simmons
rule was “ ‘on par’ with
Gideon
v.
Wainwright,
372 U. S. 335
(1963),” emphasizing “the sweeping [nature] of
Gideon
, which established an affirmative right to counsel in all felony cases.”
O’Dell
,
supra
, at 167.
And, in
Sawyer
v.
Smith,
supra
, we considered whether a habeas petitioner could make use of the rule announced in
Caldwell
v.
Mississippi,
472 U. S. 320
, 323 (1985) (holding that the Eighth Amendment bars imposition of the death penalty by a jury that had been led to believe that responsibility for the ultimate decision rested elsewhere). There too we declined to give retroactive effect to a rule that effectively withheld relevant information from the sentencer. See
Sawyer
,
supra
, at 242–245. We acknowledged that the
Caldwell
rule was intended to enhance “the accuracy of capital sentencing.” 497 U. S., at 244. But because it affected an incremental change, we could not conclude that “this systemic rule enhancing reliability is an ‘absolute prerequisite to fundamental fairness.’ ”
Ibid.
(quoting
Teague
,
supra
, at 314). See also
Graham
,
supra
, at 478 (concluding that the rule announced in
Penry
v.
Lynaugh,
492 U. S. 302
(1989), does not fall within the second
Teague
exception).
We recognize that avoidance of potentially arbitrary impositions of the death sentence motivated the Court in
Mills
and
McKoy
.
Mills
described two troubling situations that could theoretically occur absent the
Mills
rule. Eleven of 12 jurors, could, for example, agree that six mitigating circumstances existed, but one holdout juror could nevertheless force the death sentence. Similarly, all 12 jurors could agree that some mitigating circumstances existed and that these outweighed any aggravators, but because they did not agree on which mitigating circumstances were present, they would again have to return a death sentence. See
Mills
, 486 U. S., at 373–374; see
also
McKoy
, 494 U. S., at 439–440 (describing these examples). Imposition of the death penalty in these circumstances, the Court reasoned, “would be the ‘height of arbitrariness.’ ”
Id.,
at 440 (quoting
Mills
,
supra
, at 374). See also
McKoy
,
supra
, at 454 (Kennedy, J., concurring in judgment).
Quite obviously, the Court decided
Mills
and
McKoy
as it did to avoid this possibility. But because “[a]ll of our Eighth Amendment jurisprudence concerning capital sentencing is directed toward the enhancement of reliability and accuracy in some sense,” the fact that a new rule removes some remote possibility of arbitrary infliction of the death sentence does not suffice to bring it within
Teague
’s second exception.
Sawyer
,
supra
, at 243.
However laudable the
Mills
rule might be, “it has none of the primacy and centrality of the rule adopted in
Gideon
.”
Saffle
, 494 U. S., at 495. The
Mills
rule applies fairly narrowly and works no fundamental shift in “our understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
” essential to fundamental fairness.
O’Dell
, 521 U. S., at 167 (internal quotation marks omitted). We therefore conclude that the
Mills
rule does not fall within the second
Teague
exception.
III
We hold that
Mills
announced a new rule of constitutional criminal procedure that falls within neither
Teague
exception. Accordingly, that rule cannot be applied retroactively to respondent. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Footnote 1
Judge Sloviter wrote separately to express her view that
Mills
v.
Maryland,
486 U. S. 367
(1988), established a new rule that qualified for neither
Teague
v.
Lane,
489 U. S. 288
(1989), exception. 316 F. 3d 228, 253–254 (CA3 2003) (opinion concurring in judgment). Judge Sloviter nevertheless posited that
Mills
could be applied to respondent because of Pennsylvania’s “unique relaxed waiver doctrine in capital cases.”
Id.,
at 256.
Footnote 2
Given our determination that the Court of Appeals erred in holding that
Mills
applied retroactively to respondent, we do not reach the question whether the Court of Appeals also erred in concluding that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court unreasonably applied
Mills
.
Footnote 3
Rules that fall within what we have referred to as
Teague
’s first exception “are more accurately characterized as substantive rules not subject to [
Teague
’s] bar.”
Schriro
v.
Summerlin
,
ante,
at __ (slip op., at 3, n. 4). See also
infra,
at 10, and n. 7.
Footnote 4
Although nothing in this case turns on it, we note that it is arguable that the “
Mills
rule” did not fully emerge until the Court issued
McKoy
v.
North Carolina,
494 U. S. 433
(1990). See
id.,
at 459–463 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
Footnote 5
Because the focus of the inquiry is whether
reasonable
jurists could differ as to whether precedent compels the sought-for rule, we do not suggest that the mere existence of a dissent suffices to show that the rule is new.
Footnote 6
The Court of Appeals erred by drawing from
Lockett
v.
Ohio,
438 U. S. 586
(1978), and
Eddings
v.
Oklahoma,
455 U. S. 104
(1982), the general rule that “the Constitution prohibited any barrier to the
jury’s
consideration of mitigating evidence,” 316 F. 3d, at 241–243 (emphasis added), without also acknowledging that the rule, for purposes of the
Teague
analysis, did not automatically extend to arguably analogous contexts. It is with respect to this last point that reasonable jurists did in fact differ.
Footnote 7
As noted above, these rules are more properly viewed as substantive and therefore not subject to
Teague
’s bar. See n. 3,
supra
.
Beard v. Banks - 02-1603 (2004)
STEVENS, J., DISSENTING
BEARD V. BANKS
542 U. S. ____ (2004)
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
NO. 02-1603
JEFFREY A. BEARD, SECRETARY, PENNSYLVANIA
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, et al.,
PETITIONERS
v.
GEORGE E. BANKS
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
[June 24, 2004]
Justice Stevens, with whom Justice Souter, Justice Ginsburg, and Justice Breyer join, dissenting.
A capital sentencing procedure that required the jury to return a death sentence if even a single juror supported that outcome would be the “ ’ “height of arbitrariness.” ’ ”
Ante
, at 13 (opinion of the Court). The use of such a procedure is unquestionably unconstitutional today, and I believe it was equally so in 1987 when respondent’s death sentence became final. The Court reaches a different conclusion because it reads
Mills
v.
Maryland,
486 U. S. 367
(1988), to announce a “new rule” of criminal procedure that may not be applied on federal habeas review to defendants whose convictions became final before
Mills
was decided.
Ante
, at 1. In my opinion, however,
Mills
simply represented a straightforward application of our longstanding view that “the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments cannot tolerate the infliction of a sentence of death under [a] legal syste[m] that permit[s] this unique penalty to be … wantonly and … freakishly imposed.”
Furman
v.
Georgia,
408 U. S. 238
, 310 (1972)
(per curiam)
(Stewart, J., concurring).
The dispute in
Mills
concerned jury instructions and a verdict form that the majority read to create a “substantial probability that reasonable jurors . . . well may have thought they were precluded from considering any mitigating evidence unless all 12 jurors agreed on the existence of a particular such circumstance. ” 486 U. S., at 384. The resulting unanimity requirement, the majority concluded, violated the Constitution in that it “allow[ed] a ‘holdout’ juror to prevent the other jurors from considering mitigating evidence.”
McKoy
v.
North Carolina,
494 U. S. 433
, 438 (1990) (quoting
Mills
, 486 U. S., at 375). When
Mills
was decided, there was nothing novel about acknowledging that permitting one death-prone juror to control the entire jury’s sentencing decision would be arbitrary. That acknowledgment was a natural outgrowth of our cases condemning mandatory imposition of the death penalty,
Roberts
v.
Louisiana,
431 U. S. 633
(1977)
(per curiam);
Woodson
v.
North Carolina,
428 U. S. 280
(1976) (plurality opinion), recognizing that arbitrary imposition of that penalty violates the Eighth Amendment,[
Footnote 1
]
e.g.
,
Zant
v.
Stephens,
462 U. S. 862
, 874 (1983);
Gregg
v.
Georgia,
428 U. S. 153
, 189 (1976);
Furman
,
supra;
and mandating procedures that guarantee full consideration of mitigating evidence,
e.g.
,
Eddings
v.
Oklahoma,
455 U. S. 104
(1982);
Lockett
v.
Ohio,
438 U. S. 586
(1978) (plurality opinion). Indeed, in my judgment, the kind of arbitrariness that would enable 1 vote in favor of death to outweigh 11 in favor of forbearance would violate the bedrock fairness principles that have governed our trial proceedings for centuries. Rejecting such a manifestly unfair procedural innovation does not announce a “new rule” covered by
Teague
v.
Lane,
489 U. S. 288
, 301–302 (1989), but simply affirms that our fairness principles do not permit blatant exceptions.[
Footnote 2
]
This leaves only the question whether reasonable jurors could have read Pennsylvania’s jury instructions and verdict form to impose a unanimity requirement with respect to mitigating circumstances. For the reasons identified by the Third Circuit,
Banks
v.
Horn
,
271 F. 3d 527, 543–551 (2001); see also
Banks
v.
Horn
, 316 F. 3d 228, 247 (2003) (leaving in place the relevant portions of the court’s earlier opinion), particularly with respect to the verdict form, 271 F. 3d, at 549–550, I answer this question in the affirmative.
I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
Footnote 1
Justice Kennedy made precisely this point in his concurrence in
McKoy
v.
North Carolina,
494 U. S. 433
, 454 (1990):
“Application of the death penalty on the basis of a single juror’s vote is ‘intuitively disturbing.’ … More important, it represents imposition of capital punishment through a system that can be described as arbitrary or capricious. The Court in
Mills
described such a result as the ‘height of arbitrariness.’ … Given this description, it is apparent that the result in
Mills
fits within our line of cases forbidding the imposition of capital punishment on the basis of ‘caprice,’ in ‘an arbitrary and unpredictable fashion,’ or through ‘arbitrary’ or ‘freakish’ means.”
Footnote 2
Supporting this reading, even the dissenting Justices in
Mills
v.
Maryland,
486 U. S. 367
(1988), did not challenge the majority’s assumption that instructions unambiguously requiring unanimity on the existence of any mitigating factor would be unconstitutional; they argued only that reasonable jurors would have understood that in order “to mark ‘
no
’ to each mitigating factor on the sentencing form, all 12 jurors [had to] agree.”
Id.
, at 394 (Rehnquist, C. J., dissenting) (emphasis added). I recognize that some Justices believe the
Mills
Court had no occasion to consider the constitutionality of a unanimity requirement because the State had conceded the point. See
McKoy
, 494 U. S., at 459 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (“Although there is language in
Mills
. . . suggesting that a unanimity requirement would contravene this Court’s decisions . . . , that issue plainly was not presented in
Mills
, and can therefore not have been decided”).
Mills
’ author, Justice Blackmun, disagreed with this view, however: “[T]he Maryland instructions [at issue in
Mills
] were held to be invalid because they were susceptible of two plausible interpretations,
and under one of those interpretations the instructions were unconstitutional
.”
McKoy
, 486 U. S., at 445 (emphasis in original).
I think Justice Blackmun had the better of this argument, but even if one assumes the
Mills
dissenters failed to defend the constitutionality of unanimity requirements because they did not think the issue properly before the Court rather than because they, too, condemned such requirements, my overall point remains the same: executing a defendant when only 1 of his 12 jurors believes that to be the appropriate penalty would be “so wanto[n] and so freakis[h]” as to violate the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments,
Furman
v.
Georgia,
408 U. S. 238
, 310 (1972)
(per curiam)
(Stewart, J., concurring), and that violation would have been as clear in 1987 as today.
Beard v. Banks - 02-1603 (2004)
SOUTER, J., DISSENTING
BEARD V. BANKS
542 U. S. ____ (2004)
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
NO. 02-1603
JEFFREY A. BEARD, SECRETARY, PENNSYLVANIA
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, et al.,
PETITIONERS
v.
GEORGE E. BANKS
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
[June 24, 2004]
Justice Souter, with whom Justice Ginsburg joins, dissenting.
I join Justice Stevens’s dissenting opinion in this case. I add this word about the way I see its relation to Justice Breyer’s dissenting opinion in
Schriro
v.
Summerlin
,
ante
, at ___, and to other cases in the line that began with
Teague
v.
Lane,
489 U. S. 288
(1989).
In determining whether
Mills
v.
Maryland,
486 U. S. 367
(1988), states a new rule of constitutional law for purpose of
Teague
’s general bar to applying such rules on collateral review, the Court invokes the perspective of “ ‘all reasonable jurists,’ ”
ante
, at 6 (quoting
Lambrix
v.
Singletary,
520 U. S. 518
, 528 (1997)); see also
ante
, at 8, 9. It acknowledges, however, that this standard is objective, so that the presence of actual disagreement among jurists and even among Members of this Court does not conclusively establish a rule’s novelty.
Ante
, at 9, n. 5; cf.
Wright
v.
West,
505 U. S. 277
, 304 (1992) (O’Connor, J., concurring in judgment). This objectively reasonable jurist is a cousin to the common law’s reasonable person, whose job is to impose a judicially determined standard of conduct on litigants who come before the court. Similarly, the function of
Teague
’s reasonable-jurist standard is to distinguish those developments in this Court’s jurisprudence that state judges should have anticipated from those they could not have been expected to foresee.
In applying
Teague
, this Court engages in an ongoing process of defining the characteristics of a reasonable jurist, by identifying arguments that reasonable jurists would or would not accept. The particular characteristic at stake here is the degree to which a reasonable jurist would avoid the risk of a certain kind of erroneous outcome in a capital case.
Mills
’s rule protects against essentially the same kind of error that Justice Breyer discusses in
Summerlin:
a death sentence that is arbitrary because it is inaccurate as a putative expression of “ ‘the conscience of the community on the ultimate question of life or death,’ ”
ante
, at 2 (quoting
Witherspoon
v.
Illinois,
391 U. S. 510
, 519 (1968)). Justice Breyer has explained in his
Summerlin
opinion why some new rules demanding that kind of accuracy should be applied through a
Teague
exception, and our longstanding espousal of accurate expression of community conscience should also inform our judgment, in any debatable case, about the newness of a rule.
As Justice Stevens says, a death sentence based upon a verdict by 11 jurors who would have relied on a given mitigating circumstance to spare a defendant’s life, and a single holdout who blocked them from doing so, would surely be an egregious failure to express the public conscience accurately.
Ante
, at 1 (dissenting opinion). The question presented by this case is ultimately whether the Court should deem reasonable, and thus immunize from collateral attack, at least at the first
Teague
stage, a reading of its pre-
Mills
precedents that accepts the risk of such errors that Maryland’s or Pennsylvania’s jury instructions and verdict form would have produced.
The Court concludes that, as compared to
Eddings
v.
Oklahoma,
455 U. S. 104
(1982),
Mills
“shift[ed] … focus” from “obstructions to the
sentencer’s
ability to consider mitigating evidence” to the abilities of “individual jurors” to do so, and that a reasonable jurist could have drawn a distinction on this basis.
Ante
, at 8. This approach gives considerable weight to a reasonable jurist’s analytical capacity to pick out arguably material differences between sets of facts, and relatively less to the jurist’s understanding of the substance of the principles underlying our Eighth Amendment cases that follow
Furman
v.
Georgia,
408 U. S. 238
(1972)
(per curiam)
. Although the Court’s view of the reasonable jurist is not inconsistent with some of
Teague
’s progeny,*
for the reasons given in Justice Breyer’s dissent in
Summerlin
,
ante
, at 5–7, 8–9, I am now convinced that this reading of
Teague
gives too much importance to the finality of capital sentences and not enough to their accuracy. I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals, and respectfully dissent.
* See,
e.g.,
O’Dell
v.
Netherland
,
521 U. S. 151
, 157–166 (1997) (holding new the rule of
Simmons
v.
South Carolina
,
512 U. S. 154
(1994), that a jury may not be misled about defendant’s parole eligiblity when prosecutor argues future dangerousness);
Lambrix
v.
Singletary
,
520 U. S. 518
, 527–539 (1997) (holding new the rule of
Espinosa
v.
Florida
,
505 U. S. 1079
(1992)
(per curiam)
, that a Florida jury’s consideration of a vague aggravating factor taints a judge’s later death sentence); see also
Stringer
v.
Black
,
503 U. S. 222
, 243–247 (1992) (Souter, J., dissenting) (arguing that the rule of
Maynard
v.
Cartwright,
486 U. S. 356
(1988), that sentencer’s weighing among others of a vague aggravating factor taints a death sentence, was new).