Jimmie Burden, JR. v. Walter Zant, Warden (510 U.S. 132)

U.S. Supreme Court · decided January 10, 1994 · Supreme Court Database (Spaeth)

Citation
510 U.S. 132 · 114 S. Ct. 654
Decided
January 10, 1994
Term
October Term 1993
Vote
9–0
Issue area
Criminal Procedure
Disposition
Reversed and remanded
Outcome
Petitioning party won
Ideological direction
Liberal

Opinion excerpt

Per Curiam. In Burden v. Zant, 498 U. S. 433 (1991) (per curiam), we reversed a judgment of the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, which had upheld denial of habeas relief on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel due to conflict of interest. The case is before us again on a petition seeking review of the decision rendered on remand, 975 F. 2d 771 (1992), in which the Court of Appeals once again rejected Burden’s claim that he had been deprived of the right to be represented by counsel free of conflict of interest. In our earlier unanimous per curiam opinion, we held that the courts below had failed to accord the presumption of correctness apparently due a state-court determination bearing on the conflict claim (i. e., that Dixon, the key prosecution witness allegedly represented by Burden’s pretrial counsel, “ ‘was granted immunity from prosecution,’ ” 498 U. S., at 436). See 28 U. S. C. § 2254(d). We directed the Court of Appeals on remand to evaluate Burden’s conflict-of-interest claim “free from” the “erroneous failure to credit the state trial court’s finding .. . .” 498 U. S., at 438. In the decision now before us, the Eleventh Circuit majority first held that there was no need for a federal habeas court to presume the correctness of the immunity finding, because it had not been “adequately developed” in the state trial court proceeding. See 28 U. S. C. §…

Excerpt of a 3,000-character opinion. The full text and citation network load in the interactive viewer above.

← Back to the decisions database