Court Opinion

ID: 9372179
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-02-18 21:00:18.814171+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:33.430192
License: Public Domain

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                                              PUBLISHED

                              UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                  FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

                                              No. 21-7161

        THOMAS J. TORRENCE,

                    Petitioner - Appellant,

        v.

        WARDEN SCOTT LEWIS,

                    Respondent - Appellee.

        Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at
        Orangeburg. R. Bryan Harwell, Chief District Judge. (5:05-cv-00893-RBH)

        Argued: January 26, 2023                                  Decided: February 17, 2023

        Before WILKINSON, AGEE, and WYNN, Circuit Judges.

        Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Wynn wrote the opinion, in which Judge Wilkinson
        and Judge Agee joined.

        Allison Krause Elder, ROOT & REBOUND, Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellant.
        Matthew C. Buchanan, SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PROBATION,
        PAROLE, AND PARDON SERVICES, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee.
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        WYNN, Circuit Judge:

               In 1992, habeas petitioner Thomas Torrence was sentenced to life without the

        possibility of parole for thirty years in South Carolina state court for a number of crimes

        he committed in 1987, including two murders. But in 2004, the South Carolina Department

        of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services (“Department”) notified Torrence that he would

        never be eligible to seek parole because of an earlier armed-robbery conviction. Torrence

        contends that, in reaching this conclusion, the Department violated his federal due-process

        rights because, in his view, a temporary change in South Carolina parole-eligibility law in

        1994 permanently “vested” his parole eligibility, such that the Department could not legally

        determine him ineligible to ever seek parole.

               The district court rejected Torrence’s contention. We granted a certificate of

        appealability, and now affirm.

                                                      I.

               The facts in this case stretch back over more than four decades. In 1979, Torrence

        was convicted of armed robbery. At the time, neither armed robbery nor any other crime

        was classified as a statutorily violent offense in South Carolina. State v. Tucker, 464 S.E.2d

        105, 109 (S.C. 1995) (“[N]o violent crimes were defined for purposes of parole prior to

        [June 1986].”). But in 1986, the South Carolina legislature enumerated armed robbery as a

        violent offense. Omnibus Criminal Justice Improvements Act, 1986 S.C. Acts 2955, 2992,

        § 33 (codified as amended at S.C. Code § 16-1-60). In the same Act (“the 1986 Act”), the

        legislature provided that “any prisoner serving a sentence for a second or subsequent

        conviction, following a separate sentencing for a prior conviction, for violent crimes as

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        defined in Section 16-1-60” was ineligible for parole. Id. at 2990, § 30 (codified as

        amended at S.C. Code § 24-21-640). 1

               Torrence was released on parole from his armed-robbery sentence in 1985. In 1987,

        he was indicted alongside his brother, Michael Torrence, for several serious offenses

        related to the February 1987 murders of Charles Alan Bush and Dennis Lollis. The charges

        included two counts of murder. Michael Torrence was tried first and ultimately sentenced

        to death. State v. Torrence, 473 S.E.2d 703, 704–06 (S.C. 1996).

               Torrence was tried by a jury in 1992 and convicted on all counts. At the time, the

        sentence for murder was either death or life imprisonment without eligibility for parole for

        twenty years; without eligibility for parole for thirty years if there were aggravating

        circumstances; or without eligibility for parole at all if the prisoner had a prior conviction

        for a violent offense. See S.C. Code § 16-3-20(A) (1987); id. § 24-21-640 (1987). Although

        Torrence had previously been convicted of armed robbery—which at this point had been

        statutorily defined as a violent offense—for some reason unexplained in the record, the

        court imposed a total effective sentence of life without eligibility for parole for thirty years.

               During the pendency of Torrence’s direct appeal, in 1993, South Carolina amended

        section 16-1-60 to add subsection (B), which stated that “[f]or a person to be considered

        guilty of a violent crime, the offense must be defined as a violent crime pursuant to

        subsection (A) at the time of the commission of the crime” (“the 1993 Act”). Sentencing

               1
                 “[W]here more than one included offense” is “committed within a one-day period
        or pursuant to one continuous course of conduct,” those offenses are counted as one
        offense. 1986 S.C. Acts at 2990, § 30.

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        Guidelines, 1993 S.C. Acts 3229, 3239, § 8 (codified as amended at S.C. Code § 16-1-60).

        Critical to Torrence’s argument in this case, the 1993 Act also added a “savings clause” to

        section 16-1-60, which stated in part that “[a]ll proceedings pending and all rights and

        liabilities existing, acquired, or incurred at the time this act takes effect are saved. . . . The

        provisions of [subsection (B)] apply retroactively to all persons convicted under the laws

        of this State.” Id. at 3397, § 266.

               The 1993 Act took effect on January 1, 1994. Acts: 1993 Session, S.C. Legislature,

        https://www.scstatehouse.gov/sess110_1993-1994/bills/93acts.php (last visited Feb. 14,

        2023) (saved as ECF opinion attachment) (describing Act No. 184). But soon thereafter,

        South Carolina removed subsection (B) and the related portion of the savings clause from

        section 16-1-60, effective January 12, 1995. Act to Amend Section 16-1-20, 1995 S.C.

        Acts 43, 50, § 3 (codified as amended at S.C. Code § 16-1-60); see id. at 60, § 19; id. at

        102. Nevertheless, Torrence contends that under the savings clause, his right to seek parole

        permanently vested when the 1993 Act took effect in 1994, notwithstanding its later repeal.

        In his view, the savings clause preserved his right to the application of subsection (B),

        under which he could not be considered guilty of a violent crime for the 1979 armed

        robbery because at the time of commission, armed robbery was not statutorily defined as a

        violent crime.

               Torrence’s direct appeal was finalized in March 1995, and he began post-conviction

        relief (“PCR”) proceedings in state court. Torrence v. Ozmint, No. 3:05-cv-0893, 2008 WL

        628604, at *2 (D.S.C. Mar. 5, 2008). Once those proceedings concluded in April 2004, he

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        moved to federal court, filing a timely, pro se § 2254 petition in March 2005. In re

        Torrence, 828 F. App’x 877, 878 (4th Cir. 2020) (per curiam).

               Meanwhile, in June 2004, the Department sent Torrence a letter advising him that

        he was not eligible for parole because of his 1979 armed-robbery conviction. Torrence

        began administrative-appeals proceedings as well as PCR proceedings related to the parole-

        eligibility decision. And in the § 2254 petition he filed in 2005, Torrence included ten

        exhausted arguments, plus an eleventh related to the parole-eligibility determination. He

        filed a motion for abeyance to have a chance to exhaust the parole-eligibility claim in state

        court. The district court denied the motion, and Torrence proceeded with his other,

        exhausted habeas claims in federal court while pursuing the parole-eligibility claim in state

        court. The district court ultimately denied relief on Torrence’s other habeas claims, and

        this Court denied a certificate of appealability. See Torrence, 2008 WL 628604, at *14;

        Torrence v. Ozmint, 305 F. App’x 55, 56 (4th Cir. 2008) (per curiam).

               Torrence received a final denial of the parole-eligibility claim from the Supreme

        Court of South Carolina in May 2018, and in November 2019 he filed a pro se request for

        permission from this Court to file a second or successive habeas petition. In re Torrence,

        828 F. App’x at 879. In 2020, applying abuse-of-the-writ principles, we held that Torrence

        did not need such permission because the petition was not second or successive. Id. at 881–

        82.

               Torrence then returned to district court, where he filed a pro se motion to reopen his

        § 2254 petition to pursue the parole-eligibility claim. The district court granted the motion.

        Respondent Warden Scott Lewis moved for summary judgment, arguing that the parole-

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        eligibility determination was not cognizable in a federal habeas proceeding. The district

        court agreed and granted summary judgment to Respondent. Torrence v. Lewis, No. 5:05-

        CV-00893-RBH, 2021 WL 3053380, at *1, *3–4 (D.S.C. July 20, 2021).

               We granted a partial certificate of appealability on the question of “whether

        Torrence has a vested right in the [1979] conviction being deemed ‘nonviolent’ such that

        the [Department] violated due process in ruling that . . . Torrence was statutorily ineligible

        for parole as a subsequent violent offender.” Order at 1–2, Torrence v. Lewis, No. 21-7161

        (4th Cir. July 21, 2022).

                                                     II.

              “We review de novo the district court’s assessment . . . under § 2254(d).” Valentino

        v. Clarke, 972 F.3d 560, 579 (4th Cir. 2020). To the extent we reach the merits of

        Torrence’s claim that his right to parole vested in 1994 and therefore the denial of parole

        eligibility deprives him of due process, our review is de novo because the state court did

        not adjudicate that claim on the merits. 2

               2
                 “[T]he scrutiny and scope of our review of [Torrence]’s petition turns on whether
        the state [PCR] court previously ‘adjudicated’ his ‘claim[]’ ‘on the merits.’ If so, AEDPA
        requires us to apply § 2254(d)’s limitation on relief.” Valentino, 972 F.3d at 576 (citation
        omitted) (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)). By contrast, where the state court failed to
        adjudicate a claim on the merits, our review is de novo, Winston v. Pearson, 683 F.3d 489,
        496 (4th Cir. 2012)—“unless the state court found the claim procedurally defaulted,”
        Richardson v. Kornegay, 3 F.4th 687, 695 (4th Cir. 2021) (emphasis added), in which case
        “we will not review its merits under any standard unless the petitioner establishes both
        cause for the default and prejudice,” Plymail v. Mirandy, 8 F.4th 308, 316 (4th Cir. 2021)
        (emphasis added).
                Torrence raised the vesting issue before the state court in 2009. The state court
        rejected it on procedural grounds, concluding the claim was untimely. The court thus
        arguably relied on procedural default. But Respondent waived the procedural-default

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               Torrence claims that he was deprived of due process when the Department found

        him ineligible for parole in 2004, allegedly in contradiction of a South Carolina statute

        establishing that his right to parole eligibility permanently vested in 1994. But “[a] federal

        court may grant habeas relief ‘only on the ground that [the petitioner] is in custody in

        violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.’ Therefore, when a

        petitioner’s claim rests solely upon an interpretation of state case law and statutes, it is not

        cognizable on federal habeas review.” Weeks v. Angelone, 176 F.3d 249, 262 (4th Cir.

        1999) (citation omitted) (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a)), aff’d, 528 U.S. 225 (2000). So we

        must determine the extent to which Torrence’s claims rest solely on state law.

               A line of cases from the Supreme Court and this Court binds our analysis. In the

        Supreme Court’s 1991 decision in Estelle v. McGuire, the petitioner had been convicted of

        murder for killing his infant daughter. Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U.S. 62, 64 (1991). During

        trial, the prosecution introduced evidence of prior injuries to the infant. Id. at 65. The jury

        convicted the petitioner, and the state courts affirmed on direct appeal, including as to the

        introduction of this evidence to prove “battered child syndrome.” Id. at 66.

               On federal habeas review, the petitioner challenged the introduction of the evidence

        of prior injuries as a due-process violation. Id. at 67. The Ninth Circuit agreed, in part

        because it concluded that the evidence was incorrectly admitted under California law. Id.

        But the Supreme Court reversed, noting that “[s]uch an inquiry . . . is no part of a federal

        argument by failing to raise it below. Procedural default is an affirmative defense that must
        be raised before the district court, and where it is not, “we review [the] claim de novo”—
        even in “a clear case of procedural default.” Plymail, 8 F.4th at 316–17. So our review of
        the merits, to the extent we reach them, is de novo.

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        court’s habeas review of a state conviction” because, as the Court “ha[d] stated many

        times[,] . . . ‘federal habeas corpus relief does not lie for errors of state law.’” Id. (quoting

        Lewis v. Jeffers, 497 U.S. 764, 780 (1990)). This meant that habeas relief could only lie if

        “the admission of the evidence violated [the petitioner]’s federal constitutional rights,” and

        the Supreme Court concluded it did not. Id. at 68 (emphasis added); see id. at 70; cf. Wilson

        v. Corcoran, 562 U.S. 1, 5 (2010) (per curiam) (“[I]t is only noncompliance

        with federal law that renders a State’s criminal judgment susceptible to collateral attack in

        the federal courts.”).

               More recently, in Swarthout v. Cooke, the Supreme Court applied these principles

        in the parole context. Swarthout v. Cooke, 562 U.S. 216 (2011) (per curiam). In that

        consolidated case, two petitioners challenged the decisions of state actors—a parole board

        and the Governor, respectively—to deny them parole based on California’s rule that an

        inmate is ineligible for parole if “some evidence” supports that they are currently

        dangerous. Id. at 217; see id. at 218. In each case, the state courts affirmed the denial of

        parole. Id. at 217–18. But the Ninth Circuit found that both petitioners were entitled to

        federal habeas relief because, in its view, the state courts made unreasonable

        determinations of fact that the petitioners were dangerous. Id. at 218–19. In a per curiam

        reversal, the Supreme Court noted that, “[i]n granting habeas relief based on its conclusion

        that the state courts had misapplied California’s ‘some evidence’ rule, the Ninth Circuit

        must have assumed either that federal habeas relief is available for an error of state law, or

        that correct application of the State’s ‘some evidence’ standard is required by the federal

        Due Process Clause. Neither assumption is correct.” Id. at 219.

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               So Torrence cannot receive federal habeas relief solely for an error of state law,

        even if one exists. Rather, federal habeas relief may be based only on a violation of federal

        law—in this case, due process.

               As Swarthout explained, in analyzing a due-process challenge, “[w]e first ask

        whether there exists a liberty or property interest of which a person has been deprived, and

        if so we ask whether the procedures followed by the State were constitutionally sufficient.”

        Id. As to the first step, “[t]here is no right under the Federal Constitution to be conditionally

        released before the expiration of a valid sentence.” Id. at 220. However, the Supreme Court

        agreed that the notion “that California law creates a liberty interest in parole” was

        “a reasonable application of [the Court’s] cases.” Id. at 219–20. And here, Respondent

        concedes that South Carolina has created a liberty interest in parole eligibility. Response

        Br. at 8–9; see Furtick v. S.C. Dep’t of Prob., Parole & Pardon Servs., 576 S.E.2d 146,

        149 (S.C. 2003) (“In our opinion, the permanent denial of parole eligibility implicates a

        liberty interest sufficient to require at least minimal due process.”).

               When a State creates such a liberty interest, “the Due Process Clause requires fair

        procedures for its vindication—and federal courts will review the application of those

        constitutionally required procedures.” Swarthout, 562 U.S. at 220. But this review is

        strictly confined. After all, as the Supreme Court put it in Swarthout, “[i]t [would] not do

        to pronounce California’s ‘some evidence’ rule to be ‘a component’ of the [federally

        protected] liberty interest,” because “[s]uch reasoning would subject to federal-court merits

        review the application of all state-prescribed procedures in cases involving liberty or

        property interests, including (of course) those in criminal prosecutions,” which “has never

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        been the law.” Id. at 221–22. “‘[A] mere error of state law is not a denial of due process’”

        under the Federal Constitution that can support federal habeas intervention; rather, “the

        responsibility for ensuring that the constitutionally adequate procedures governing

        California’s parole system are properly applied rests with California courts.” Id. at 222

        (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Engle v. Isaac, 456 U.S. 107, 121 n.21 (1982)).

               Further, “[b]ecause the only federal right at issue is procedural, the relevant inquiry

        is what process [the petitioner] received, not whether the state court decided the case

        correctly.” Id. And “[i]n the context of parole,” the Supreme Court “ha[s] held that the

        procedures required are minimal.” Id. at 220 (emphasis added). Under the Constitution,

        all that is required when a prisoner eligible for parole consideration is denied release on

        parole is that the prisoner be “allowed an opportunity to be heard and [be] provided a

        statement of the reasons why parole was denied.” Id. (citing Greenholtz v. Inmates of Neb.

        Penal & Corr. Complex, 442 U.S. 1, 16 (1979)). In Swarthout, that standard was readily

        satisfied: the two petitioners “were allowed to speak at their parole hearings and to contest

        the evidence against them, were afforded access to their records in advance, and were

        notified as to the reasons why parole was denied.” Id.

               Our 1996 decision in Vann v. Angelone is even more directly on-point than

        Swarthout because, unlike Swarthout—but like the case at hand—it involved not a parole-

        release decision but a “state decision[] with respect to an inmate’s initial eligibility for

        parole consideration.” Vann v. Angelone, 73 F.3d 519, 522 (4th Cir. 1996) (emphasis

        added). In Vann, as here, the State Department of Corrections had found the petitioner

        ineligible for parole under state law, and had informed him by letter of his ineligibility and

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        the reason for it. Id. at 521. The petitioner claimed this was error. “In short, [he] invite[d]

        us to construe the meaning of [a particular provision] of the Virginia Code as well as to

        judge the adequacy of the [Department of Corrections]’s decision.” Id. at 522. We rejected

        that invitation as being beyond our role as a court sitting in federal habeas review. Id. at

        522–23. As we put the point bluntly a few years later in Ramdass v. Angelone, “parole

        eligibility is a question of state law and therefore is not cognizable on federal habeas

        review.” 3 Ramdass v. Angelone, 187 F.3d 396, 407 (4th Cir. 1999).

               Vann is indistinguishable from this case. And because we cannot consider whether

        a State’s parole-eligibility decision was made properly in accordance with state law, we

        are left to review only whether the procedures afforded the petitioner accorded with his

               3
                  Torrence attempts to distinguish Vann and Ramdass because “the Virginia
        Supreme Court had a clear record of interpreting” the Virginia statute at issue in those
        cases, whereas “the South Carolina courts have not interpreted the savings clause.” Reply
        Br. at 8. We reject this argument for two reasons. First, Torrence does not explain how the
        lack of a state-court interpretation creates a loophole to the fact that we may “entertain” a
        federal habeas petition from a state prisoner “only on the ground that he is in custody in
        violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.” 28 U.S.C.
        § 2254(a) (emphasis added). Second, Torrence’s premise is at least partially flawed. While
        neither party has located a case evaluating the savings clause specifically, the Supreme
        Court of South Carolina has held that a prisoner in a situation factually similar to
        Torrence’s was ineligible for parole. Tucker, 464 S.E.2d at 109 (holding that appellant was
        ineligible for parole on his conviction for a post-1986 Act, pre-1993 Act murder because
        he had a prior (pre-1986 Act) rape conviction); cf. Phillips v. State, 504 S.E.2d 111, 112
        n.2 (S.C. 1998) (noting in the context of an ex post facto challenge “that between 1993 and
        1995, § 16-1-60 was amended to provide it had prospective effect only”); Deborah Drucker
        Deutschmann & Stephen K. Benjamin, Feature: Accurately Advising Clients on Parole
        Eligibility, 12 S.C. Law. 26, 28 (2000) (guidance from the Department interpreting Phillips
        to mean that, during the year that the 1993 Act was in effect, “both the prior and the
        subsequent crime had to have been defined as violent [at the time of commission] for the
        person to be considered ineligible for parole,” whereas before its effective date and after
        its repeal, “only the subsequent crime must have been committed after June 3, 1986 and
        have been defined as violent at the time of the commission of the crime”).

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        federal due-process rights. See Vann, 73 F.3d at 523 (“Whether a federal court would have

        reached the same conclusion [as to the meaning of a state law implicating parole eligibility]

        in the first instance is beside the point. The point is that [the State] reached that conclusion,

        and its decision must be sustained.”). In Vann, we concluded that, “[a]ssuming, arguendo,

        that a liberty interest . . . exist[ed], the procedures mandated by the due process clause were

        satisfied” because the petitioner received a letter explaining the parole-eligibility decision. 4

        Id. (citing Bloodgood v. Garraghty, 783 F.2d 470, 473 (4th Cir. 1986); Franklin v. Shields,

        569 F.2d 784, 801 (4th Cir. 1977) (en banc) (per curiam)).

               There is no dispute that Torrence received a statement of reasons why he was not

        eligible for parole. The 2004 letter from the Department makes clear that Torrence is

        ineligible because his 1992 murder convictions followed a 1979 armed-robbery conviction,

        and pursuant to S.C. Code § 24-21-640, a defendant convicted of a violent crime who has

        previously been convicted of another violent crime is not eligible for parole. Accordingly,

               4
                 More recently, Swarthout stated in the context of parole-release decisions that the
        prisoner must be “allowed an opportunity to be heard” in addition to receiving “a statement
        of the reasons why parole was denied.” Swarthout, 562 U.S. at 220. We have no occasion
        to consider whether an opportunity to be heard before a parole-eligibility decision is
        required by Swarthout because Torrence has not made such an argument here.
        Accordingly, for purposes of this case, we adhere to our precedent establishing that for
        parole-eligibility decisions, the State need only “furnish to the prisoner a statement of its
        reasons for denial of parole” in order to satisfy federal due-process requirements. Vann, 73
        F.3d at 522 (quoting Franklin v. Shields, 569 F.2d 784, 801 (4th Cir. 1977) (en banc) (per
        curiam)); cf. Burnette v. Fahey, 687 F.3d 171, 181–82 (4th Cir. 2012) (also adhering to this
        precedent after Swarthout). We note, however, that Torrence received ample opportunities
        to be heard after receiving the Department’s letter, including in proceedings before the
        South Carolina Administrative Law Court and in State PCR proceedings.

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        Torrence received the limited process required by the Federal Constitution for a parole-

        eligibility determination.

                                                     III.

               For the reasons stated, we affirm the decision of the district court.

                                                                                       AFFIRMED

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