            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                        OF TEXAS
                                       NO. PD-0462-07

                                 THE STATE OF TEXAS

                                               v.

                              DAVID MORALES, Appellant

            ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
                 FROM THE EIGHTH COURT OF APPEALS
                            EL PASO COUNTY

      P RICE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which K ELLER, P.J., and M EYERS,
J OHNSON, K EASLER, H ERVEY, H OLCOMB and C OCHRAN, JJ., joined. W OMACK, J., filed
a concurring opinion.

                                        OPINION

       The appellant was indicted for the offenses of aggravated sexual assault of a child and

indecency with a child. In a single trial, a jury found the appellant guilty of both offenses and

assessed his punishment at thirty-five years’ confinement for the aggravated sexual assault

offense and twenty years’ confinement for the indecency offense. The appellant appealed

his conviction based on the trial court’s refusal to grant a challenge for cause against
                                                                                          Morales — 2

prospective juror Robyn Wyatt, an El Paso County assistant district attorney, and, secondly,

he makes a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on the part of his trial attorneys for

failing to preserve the challenge for cause for appeal.1 The Eighth Court of Appeals reversed

the trial court’s judgment of conviction based on the appellant’s ineffective assistance of

counsel claim, and remanded the cause for a new trial.2

        We granted the State Prosecuting Attorney’s [SPA] petition for discretionary review

to determine whether an assistant district attorney who has not been shown to be disqualified

to serve on the jury because of actual bias is nevertheless disqualified to serve because of an

implied bias. Alternatively, we granted discretionary review to determine whether the court

of appeals erred in failing to consider whether trial counsel’s failure to use a peremptory

challenge against Wyatt was a strategic decision.3 Without reaching the first question, we

hold that the court of appeals erred in holding, at least on the basis that it did, that counsel



        1

          The appellant raised three points of error on appeal. First, he asserted that the trial court
erred in denying the appellant’s challenge for cause against Wyatt. Second, the appellant claimed
that the trial court erred in denying his motion for new trial alleging ineffective assistance of counsel
on the grounds that trial counsel failed to exercise a peremptory challenge on Wyatt and thereby
failed to preserve the trial court’s denial of the challenge for cause for appeal. Finally, the appellant
claimed ineffective assistance of counsel based on his trial counsel’s failure, among other things, to
use a peremptory challenge against Wyatt because trial counsel failed to read her juror questionnaire
which, the appellant claimed, contained information that should have alerted trial counsel (for
reasons apart from her employment as an assistant district attorney) that it would be appropriate to
exercise a peremptory challenge to keep Wyatt off of the jury.
        2

        Morales v. State, 217 S.W.3d 731 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2007).
        3

        TEX . R. APP . P. Rule 66.3(c).
                                                                                 Morales — 3

rendered ineffective assistance of counsel.

                       FACTS AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE

                                             At Trial

       One of the prospective jurors summoned for the jury trial in this case was Robyn

Wyatt, who was a prosecutor in the El Paso County District Attorney’s Office, the same

office that was prosecuting the appellant. During voir dire, Wyatt maintained without

contradiction that she could be fair and impartial despite her employment and her

acquaintance with the State’s prosecutors, investigators, law enforcement personnel, the

judge, and defense counsel. Additionally, Wyatt stated that she had not worked on the

appellant’s case. The appellant, however, challenged Wyatt for cause, arguing that she was

an actual party to the case because she was a member of the district attorney’s office. The

trial judge denied the appellant’s challenge, noting that Wyatt was not shown to be biased

and that Article 35.16 of the Code of Criminal Procedure does not make her subject to a

challenge for cause based solely upon her occupation as an assistant district attorney.4 As

the court of appeals noted, the appellant did not properly preserve error, if any, because his

trial counsel did not exercise a peremptory challenge on Wyatt.5 Wyatt subsequently served

as the presiding juror on the jury that convicted the appellant.



       4

       TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 35.16.
       5

       Allen v. State, 108 S.W.3d 281, 282 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003); Feldman v. State 71 S.W.3d
738, 744 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
                                                                                   Morales — 4

       The appellant filed a motion for new trial in which he alleged, inter alia, that trial

counsel were ineffective in failing to preserve the trial court’s error in denying his challenge

for cause against Wyatt. Attached to the motion were affidavits from both of the appellant’s

trial attorneys in which they said that they “left [Wyatt] on the jury without looking at” her

juror questionnaire. Lead counsel explained in his affidavit that he failed to examine Wyatt’s

questionnaire before trial because he assumed that she would “automatically” be struck

because of her status as an assistant district attorney but that they “were confronted with

several bad choices when [they] had to make the strikes” at the end of voir dire, and they

made the choice to retain her on the jury—again, without first examining her questionnaire.

He maintained that had he read Wyatt’s questionnaire, he would have exercised one of his

peremptory challenges against her because of the “magnitude” of her connections to law

enforcement (her father had been a police officer for 33 years, and she had “many, many

friends” in law enforcement, according to her questionnaire), and because of the fact (also

contained in Wyatt’s questionnaire) “that she was repeatedly the victim of numerous crimes

(including sex crimes)[.]” Both attorneys said in their affidavits that their failure to strike

Wyatt had amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel.

       The trial court held a hearing on the motion for new trial. Both of the appellant’s trial

attorneys testified. Lead counsel testified that he understood the process of preserving a

challenge for cause for appeal well and could easily have preserved the denial of his

challenge for cause against Wyatt by peremptorily challenging her, exhausting his
                                                                                  Morales — 5

peremptories, and identifying several jurors whom he found objectionable. He could not

explain his failure to peremptorily challenge Wyatt: “It was a decision that I kind of made

in a vacuum. * * * [B]ecause I had decided that she would be struck anyway, I never—I

made the mistake of never, ever looking at her sheet.” He assumed his co-counsel had

examined Wyatt’s questionnaire. He denied that the decision to retain Wyatt on the jury had

been a “strategic” one, though he readily admitted on cross-examination that he “did make

a decision that day, clearly, to not strike her.” “I just—I can’t really understand how we left

her on the jury.” He opined that for any defense counsel to leave “a lawyer for the State” on

a criminal jury was “per se, ineffective assistance of counsel.”

       For her part, co-counsel testified that she had not looked at Wyatt’s questionnaire

either and had simply deferred to lead counsel’s impromptu decision not to exercise a

peremptory challenge against her.      She also denied that there had been any strategic

justification for retaining Wyatt on the jury. Even without having looked at Wyatt’s juror

questionnaire, co-counsel first asserted, she should have “insisted” that they peremptorily

challenge her, and she believed that she had rendered ineffective assistance of counsel in

failing to do so. But she conceded on cross-examination that Wyatt’s retention on the jury

had not been a product of accident or inadvertence, but a conscious choice. And it was in

failing to read the questionnaire, she maintained on cross-examination, that they had erred.

“My error was that I did not point out to [lead counsel]—because I had not read the

[questionnaire], I did not point out to him that we were leaving a person on the panel who
                                                                                        Morales — 6

had experience with sex offenses.”

       The State called Judge Sam Medrano, Jr. to the stand.6 Medrano testified that while

the jury was deliberating at the guilt phase of the appellant’s trial, lead counsel came into his

chambers and struck up a conversation, wondering why the jury was deliberating for so long.

Medrano replied that “when a prosecutor is the presiding juror, I would assume it’s going to

take a while before they come back with questions or a verdict[.]” Medrano then testified:

              A. He indicated to me that it was a decision on their part to leave
       [Wyatt] on the jury. There were certain factors that were taken into account.
       He indicated, and I don’t know the name of the juror that he’s talking about,
       but that there was a male juror who was college-educated from Louisiana and
       was a Republican, and that was a person that they felt they needed to strike
       more than Robyn Wyatt, and that Ms. Wyatt was a prosecutor that they had
       dealt with in the office who was as fair a prosecutor as they’ve ever dealt with,
       and that they felt comfortable with her being a juror in this case because of
       their working relationship with her as a prosecutor.

              Q. So he told you that he had taken into account the fact that she was
       a prosecutor and made a decision to leave her on as a juror?

               A. Yes.

                                                ***

              A. He indicated that she was one of the few prosecutors that he’s dealt
       with that he considered to be fair-minded.

On cross-examination, Medrano acknowledged that, were he acting in the capacity of a

defense lawyer, “the only reason I would leave someone with [Wyatt’s] questionnaire on [a


       6

        Judge Medrano was actually the elected judge of the 409th Judicial District Court, in which
the appellant was tried. However, he did not actually preside over the appellant’s trial. Instead, the
Honorable Judge Peter S. Peca, Jr., presided.
                                                                                     Morales — 7

criminal jury] is if I had some personal insight into that person that’s not included in the

questionnaire.”

       Recalled to the stand, lead counsel admitted that he had made the explanation to Judge

Medrano. But he elaborated:

              A. I honestly do not know why we did not strike [Wyatt]. I just don’t
       know. I still, to this day—[co-counsel] and I have sat down and talked about
       it. There were other people we struck instead, including, perhaps, the person
       that Judge Medrano was mentioning who I cannot even remember now.

               But the thing is, is that we did make a decision not to strike her, but I
       do not believe, between [co-counsel] and I, there was any extended discussion
       or anything about it. We’re just there right in front of the Court, and I think
       I said to [co-counsel], “Let’s strike someone else, this other guy, I guess,” and
       that’s what—she said okay and that’s what happened.

               I think I was less than candid to Judge Medrano because I wasn’t
       testifying and I wasn’t—I was just trying to put the best face on it that I could.

After hearing argument, the trial court denied the appellant’s motion for new trial without

comment.7

                                           On Appeal

       For the first time on appeal, the appellant began to argue that the trial court should

have granted the challenge for cause against Wyatt because her status as an assistant district

attorney rendered her biased as a matter of law and that her inclusion on the jury deprived


       7

         As of the time of the hearing, May 12, 2005, a trial court was not permitted to summarize,
discuss, or comment on the evidence in ruling on a motion for new trial. See former TEX . R. APP .
P. Rule 21.8(b) (“In ruling on a motion for new trial, the court must not summarize, discuss, or
comment on evidence.”). The rule has since been amended, effective January 1, 2007, to allow the
trial court to make oral or written findings of fact.
                                                                                      Morales — 8

the appellant of his right to an impartial jury as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment and

Article I, Sections 10 and 15 of the Texas Constitution.8 The court of appeals rejected the

appellant’s contention that the trial court’s denial of the challenge for cause was itself

reversible error because trial counsel failed to preserve that error by peremptorily striking

Wyatt.9 But the court of appeals proceeded to hold that Wyatt was, in fact, impliedly biased

as a matter of law, and that trial counsel rendered deficient performance “by failing to

preserve the error of the denial of his challenge for cause.” 10 Because that deficient

performance “resulted in a trial before a partial jury,” the appellant suffered prejudice.11 In

coming to this result, the court of appeals did not expressly address the merits of the

appellant’s third point of error, in which he argued that his trial counsel were also ineffective

in failing to use a peremptory challenge to strike Wyatt, not just because of her status as a

prosecutor, but also because of the information contained on her juror questionnaire, about

which trial counsel were ignorant.12


       8

         Neither during voir dire nor in his motion for new trial did the appellant expressly invoke
either of these constitutional provisions as authority for his challenge for cause against Wyatt.
       9

        Morales v. State, supra, at 733.
       10

        Id. at 736.
       11

        Id.
       12

         Nominally, the court of appeals sustained both the appellant’s second and third points of
error, inasmuch as each raised a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Id. But the court of
appeals simply did not address the appellant’s further contention, made as a part of his third point
                                                                                         Morales — 9

       In holding that trial counsel performed deficiently by allowing Wyatt to serve on the

jury when her status as a prosecutor rendered her biased as a matter of law under the implied

bias doctrine, the court of appeals relied heavily upon Justice O’Connor’s concurring opinion

in Smith v. Phillips.13 There, Justice O’Connor noted that, even though a hearing will usually

satisfy the dictates of due process in ferreting out biased jurors, she believed “some extreme

situations . . . would justify a finding of implied bias.” 14 In that event, no showing of actual

bias would be required to justify the exercise of a challenge for cause. One such example

that Justice O’Connor gave of an implied bias was a juror who is an employee of the

prosecuting agency.15 Under the doctrine of implied bias, a prospective juror must be

excused from jury service even if he consistently maintains that he could be fair and

impartial, as Wyatt did.

       In its petition for discretionary review, the SPA now argues that the court of appeals

erred to hold that Wyatt was challengeable for cause under the implied bias doctrine. The




of error, that trial counsel would have peremptorily challenged Wyatt, quite independently of her
status as a prosecutor, on the basis of her ties to law enforcement and her criminal victimization, had
they known about those circumstances from reviewing her questionnaire, and that failing to read that
questionnaire was itself a manifestation of ineffective assistance of counsel. Indeed, it was mainly
in support of this latter contention that the appellant proffered his affidavits and testimony in his
motion for new trial. He did not begin expressly to argue the doctrine of “implied bias” until appeal.
       13

        455 U.S. 209 (1982).
       14

        Id. at 222.
       15

        Id.
                                                                                    Morales — 10

SPA argues in the alternative that, even accepting the implied bias doctrine, the court of

appeals erred to hold that trial counsel could not have made a legitimate strategic decision

to forego an appellate claim stemming from the denial of his challenge for cause in the

interest of obtaining an overall jury more to his liking. We agree with the SPA’s latter

argument; therefore, we reverse and remand.

                                          ANALYSIS

                     The Sixth Amendment Doctrine of Implied Bias

       Article 35.16 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure permits challenges for cause

to the parties in a criminal prosecution under certain, specified circumstances. Either party

may challenge a prospective juror for cause, for example, if “the juror has a bias or prejudice

in favor of or against the defendant[.]” 16 The appellant made no showing in this case that

Wyatt was actually biased against him. Any bias on her part would therefore have to be

presumed by virtue of her relation to the prosecuting entity. Article 35.16 does recognize

some categories of presumed or implied bias as a basis for a challenge for cause. For

instance, the defense may challenge a prospective juror for cause who “is related within the

third degree of consanguinity or affinity . . . to any prosecutor in the case[.]” 17 As the trial


       16

         TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 35.16(a)(9) (“A challenge for cause may be made by either the
state or the defense for any one of the following reasons: * * * 9. That the juror has a bias or
prejudice in favor of or against the defendant.”).
       17

        Id. art. 35.16(c)(1) (“A challenge for cause may be made by the defense for any of the
following reasons: 1. That he is related within the third degree of consanguinity or affinity, as
determined under Chapter 573, Government Code, to the person injured by the commission of the
                                                                                        Morales — 11

judge noted here, however, nothing in Article 35.16 expressly requires a trial court to grant

a challenge for cause against a prospective juror who is an assistant district attorney in the

same office that is prosecuting the defendant, but who has no personal involvement in that

prosecution.18 Nor was Wyatt even arguably shown to be challengeable for cause on the

basis of any other provision of Article 35.16. So, while it could perhaps be argued that the

trial court could have exercised its discretion to grant the appellant’s challenge for cause

against Wyatt, it does not appear that the trial court abused its discretion in any way to deny


offense, or to any prosecutory in the case[.]”).
       18

         In his concurring opinion, Judge Womack disagrees. In his view, prospective juror Wyatt
was challengeable for cause under Article 35.16(c)(1). See note 17, ante. Wyatt was, in Judge
Womack’s view, “related in the zero degree of consanguinity to a prosecutor in the case—she was
a prosecutor in the case, as was every other prosecutor in the District Attorney’s office.” We do not
read the statutory provision this way. In our view the provision refers to the elected District Attorney
and any assistant district attorneys actively involved in prosecuting “the case” at trial. If the
Legislature had intended to make all assistant district attorneys challengeable for cause, we do not
think it would have chosen to do so in such an indirect way—in a provision that refers to family
relationships of prospective jurors to the parties on trial.

          We note that, up until the 1965 Code of Criminal Procedure, a defendant could challenge for
cause any prospective juror who was “related within the third degree of consanguinity or affinity .
. . to the private prosecutor, if there be one.”See Art. 616 (1925 Code of Criminal Procedure); Art.
692 (1911 Code of Criminal Procedure); Art. 673 (1895 Code of Criminal Procedure); Art. 636
(1879 Code of Criminal Procedure); Art. 576 (1857 “Old Code” of Criminal Procedure). Effective
January 1, 1966, Article 35.16(c)(1) was amended to read as it currently does. See Acts 1965, 59th
Leg., ch. 722, p. 449, eff. Jan. 1, 1966. Thus, up until 1966, no prospective juror who was related
to a prosecutor who was regularly employed by the district attorney (as opposed to a “private
prosecutor”) was made expressly challengeable for cause under the statute. If we were now to
construe the 1966 amendment to cover every prosecutor in a district attorney’s office, then the
defendant could successfully challenge for cause as impliedly biased, for example, the nephew of
the wife of a brand-new attorney in the appellate section of the El Paso County District Attorney’s
office—an attorney who would have no conceivable involvement in the trial of “the case” at all. See
TEX . GOV ’T CODE §§ 573.025 and 573.023(c). Given the history of the provision, we do not think
the Legislature could have intended such a broad sweep.
                                                                                        Morales — 12

such a challenge—at least as a statutory matter.19

       But that is not the last word. The Sixth Amendment promise of “an impartial jury”

applies to the states.20 Regardless of what Article 35.16 provides, a state court would be

bound to grant a challenge for cause if the failure to do so would result in a biased jury. If

the Sixth Amendment dictates that the service of a prospective juror in a criminal case who

is an assistant district attorney working in the same office as the prosecutor in the case would

necessarily cause the jury to be biased, then a challenge for cause on that basis ought to be

granted whether the statute would require it or not.

       For this reason, the court of appeals focused on the Sixth Amendment doctrine of

“implied bias,” to ask whether Wyatt’s status as assistant district attorney automatically

rendered the appellant’s jury impartial. And, more particularly, the court of appeals zeroed

in on Justice O’Connor’s separate concurring opinion in Smith v. Phillips.21 In that case, a


       19

         It has been debated whether Article 35.16 provides an exclusive list. Compare Moore v.
State, 542 S.W.2d 664, 669 (Tex. Crim. App. 1976), and Mason v. State, 905 S.W.2d 570, 577 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1995) (contending that Article 35.16 is not an exclusive list), with Butler v. State, 830
S.W.2d 125, 130 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992) (declaring that Article 35.16 is an exclusive list). The
instant writer has expressed the view that Article 35.16 is not an exclusive list. See Maldonado v.
State, 998 S.W.2d 239, 251 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (Price, J., concurring). In any event, we have
held that a trial court is not required to grant a challenge for cause that is not enumerated in Article
35.16. Id. at 248. See also Mason v. State, 905 S.W.2d 570, 577 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995) (citing
Allridge v. State, 850 S.W.2d 471, 484-85 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991); Nichols v. State, 754 S.W.2d
185, 193 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988)) (“Challenges which are not based upon any ground specifically
enumerated in the statutes are ordinarily addressed to the sound discretion of the trial judge.”).
       20

        U.S. CONST . amend. VI & XIV, § 1; Duncan v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 145 (1968).
       21

        455 U.S. 209 (1982).
                                                                                      Morales — 13

juror in a criminal trial applied for a job as an investigator with the District Attorney’s Office

that was prosecuting the case.22 The prosecutors discovered this fact during trial, but did not

disclose it to Phillips’s attorneys until after the jury had returned a verdict.23 Phillips argued

that his conviction should be reversed, notwithstanding the prospective juror’s assurances

during voir dire that he could be fair and impartial. According to Phillips, when the

prospective juror subsequently applied for employment in the prosecutor’s office, his

assurances could no longer be trusted, and he should be presumed biased.24 The Supreme

Court held that, at least as a matter of the Due Process Clause’s guarantee of a fair trial, it

was not necessary to presume that the prospective juror had been partial.25 All that was

necessary to satisfy due process was an opportunity, after the fact, for Phillips to demonstrate

that the prospective juror had actually been biased on account of his application for

employment.26

       Justice O’Connor joined the majority opinion in Smith v. Phillips, but wrote separately

to express her view that the due-process holding contained therein did not “foreclose”


       22

        Id. at 212.
       23

        Id. at 212-13.
       24

        Id. at 215.
       25

        Id. at 215-17.
       26

        Id. at 215 (“This Court has long held that the remedy for allegations of juror partiality is a
hearing in which the defendant has the opportunity to prove actual bias.”).
                                                                                        Morales — 14

application of the Sixth Amendment doctrine “of ‘implied bias’ under appropriate

circumstances.” 27 She pointed out that sometimes a prospective juror’s own ability to

objectively gauge his impartiality may be impaired, or he may even have a motive not to

disclose it.28 She continued:

       While each case must turn on its own facts, there are some extreme situations
       that would justify a finding of implied bias. Some examples might include a
       revelation that the juror is an actual employee of the prosecuting agency, that
       the juror is a close relative of one of the participants in the trial or the criminal
       transaction, or that the juror was a witness or somehow involved in the
       criminal transaction. Whether or not the state proceedings result in a finding
       of “no bias,” the Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury should not allow
       a verdict to stand under such circumstances.29

Justice O’Connor’s view that the Sixth Amendment doctrine of implied bias survived the

majority’s due-process analysis in Smith v. Phillips was later endorsed by five members of

the Court, albeit in separate opinions, in McDonough Power Equipment, Inc. v. Greenwood.30

       Indeed, the Sixth Amendment doctrine can be traced back at least as far as 1936, when

       27

        Id. at 221.
       28

        Id. at 222.
       29

        Id.
       30

          464 U.S. 548, 556-57 (1984) (Blackmun, J., joined by Stevens and O’Connor, JJ.,
concurring) (“it remains within a trial court’s option, in determining whether a jury was biased, to
order a post-trial hearing at which the movant has the opportunity to demonstrate actual bias or, in
exceptional circumstances, that the facts are such that bias is to be inferred.”); id. at 558 (Brennan,
J., joined by Marshall, J., concurring) (“for a court to determine properly whether bias exists, it must
consider at least two questions: are there any facts in the case suggesting that bias should be
conclusively presumed; and, if not, is it more probable than not that the juror was actually biased
against the litigant.”).
                                                                                       Morales — 15

the Supreme Court observed that “[t]he [Sixth] Amendment prescribes no specific tests. The

bias of a prospective juror may be actual or implied; that is, it may be bias in fact or bias

conclusively presumed as a matter of law.” 31 Some have traced its genesis to Chief Justice

Marshall’s 1807 seminal opinion as a circuit judge in the Aaron Burr treason trial in United

States v. Burr.32 Whatever its provenance, the doctrine of implied bias has been recognized

and applied by many of the federal circuit courts of appeals,33 and by some of the courts of


       31

        United States v. Wood, 299 U.S. 123, 133 (1936). See Franklin v. State, 138 S.W.3d 351,
363-64 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) (Cochran, J., dissenting).
       32

        See United States v. Haynes, 398 F.2d 980, 983-984 (2nd Cir. 1968), citing United States v.
Burr, 25 Fed.Cas. 49 (C.C.Va. 1807). Without expressly invoking the Sixth Amendment, Chief
Justice Marshall observed in Burr, supra, at 50:

       The end to be obtained is an impartial jury; to secure this end, a man is prohibited
       from serving on it whose connexion with a party is such as to induce suspicion of his
       partiality. The relationship may be remote; the person may never have seen the party;
       he may declare that he feels no prejudice in the case; and yet the law cautiously
       incapacitates him from serving on the jury because it suspects prejudice, because in
       general persons in a similar situation would feel prejudice.
       33

         The Second, Fifth, Seventh, Ninth and Tenth Circuits seem to have accepted the Sixth
Amendment implied bias doctrine without qualification. E.g., United States v. Torres, 128 F.3d 38,
45-6 (2nd Cir. 1997); Brooks v. Dretke, 444 F.3d 328 (5th Cir. 2006) (Opinion on rehearing); Solis
v. Cockrell, 342 F.3d 392, 395 (5th Cir. 2003); United States v. Scott, 854 F.2d 697, 700 (5th Cir.
1988); United States v. Nell, 526 F.2d 1223, 1229 (5th Cir. 1976); United States v. Polichemi, 219
F.3d 698, 704-05 (7th Cir. 2000); Hunley v. Godinez, 975 F.2d 316, 318-19 (7th Cir. 1992); Fields
v. Brown, 503 F.3d 755, 770 (9th Cir. 2007), cert. denied __ U.S. __, No. 07-8724 (April 14, 2008);
United States v. Gonzalez, 214 F.3d 1109, 1112 (9th Cir. 2000); Dyer v. Calderon, 151 F.3d 970,
981-82 (9th Cir. 1998); Tinsley v. Borg, 895 F.2d 520, 526-29 (9th Cir. 1990); United States v.
Eubanks, 591 F.2d 513, 517 (9th Cir. 1979); United States v. Allsup, 566 F.2d 68, 71-72 (9th Cir.
1977); United States v. Cerrato-Reyes, 176 F.3d 1253, 1260-61 (10th Cir. 1999); Gonzales v.
Thomas, 99 F.3d 978, 987 (10th Cir. 1996); Burton v. Johnson, 948 F.2d 1150, 1158 (10th Cir. 1991).
In one of these cases, observing that “[t]he concept of implied bias is well-established in the law[,]”
the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that a 15-year employee of the United States Attorneys
                                                                                      Morales — 16

appeals in Texas.34 A few of the federal circuit courts have pointed out that the Supreme

Court has never actually reversed a conviction on the basis of implied bias and have

questioned whether the doctrine survived Smith v. Phillips, notwithstanding Justice

O’Connor’s concurring opinion. Those courts have nevertheless assumed (without deciding)

that the doctrine remains viable, but have held that it did not apply to establish a Sixth

Amendment violation on the particular facts presented.35

       Ultimately, we need not decide whether the Sixth Amendment embraces the doctrine

of implied bias; nor do we need to decide whether, as Justice O’Connor believes, the implied

bias doctrine would require the exclusion from jury service of a prospective juror who is an

employee of the prosecuting agency, as Wyatt was. In our view, even assuming that the

answer to both questions were affirmative, that does not mean that the appellant’s trial

counsel could not have made a legitimate tactical decision not to exercise a peremptory

challenge in order to preserve the trial court’s error in overruling his challenge for cause for



Office was biased as a matter of law notwithstanding her assertions that she could be fair and
impartial. United States v. Polichemi, supra, at 705.
       34

         Ruckman v. State, 109 S.W.3d 524, 528 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2000, pet. ref’d); Harvey v.
State, 123 S.W.3d 623, 631 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2003, pet. ref’d).
       35

         The Fourth and Sixth Circuits have tentatively suggested that the implied bias doctrine might
have been abrogated, but they have avoided resolving the issue by holding that it would not apply
in any event to the facts presented in any of the cases before them. E.g., Connor v. Polk, 407 F.3d
198, 206 n.4 (4th Cir. 2005); Jones v. Cooper, 311 F.3d 306, 312-13 (4th Cir. 2002); Fitzgerald v.
Greene, 150 F.3d 357, 365 (4th Cir. 1998); Person v. Miller, 854 F.2d 656, 664 (4th Cir. 1988);
Johnson v. Luoma, 425 F.3d 318, 326-27 (6th Cir. 2005); United States v. Frost, 125 F.3d 346, 380
(6th Cir. 1997).
                                                                               Morales — 17

appeal. We hold that, if the exigencies of trial call upon trial counsel to make a difficult

choice between exercising a scarce peremptory challenge to preserve such an error for

appeal, on the one hand, and exercising that peremptory challenge for some other purpose

in order to secure a perceived advantage at trial, on the other, it does not violate the

defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel for trial counsel to

opt for the latter.

                             Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

       A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel entails two components.36 The appellant

must establish both that his trial counsel performed deficiently and that the deficiency

operated to prejudice him.37 In evaluating the first component, reviewing courts must not

second-guess legitimate strategic or tactical decisions made by trial counsel in the midst of

trial, but instead “must indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the

wide range of reasonable professional assistance[.]” 38 This means that unless there is a

record sufficient to demonstrate that counsel’s conduct was not the product of a strategic or

tactical decision, a reviewing court should presume that trial counsel’s performance was

constitutionally adequate “unless the challenged conduct was so outrageous that no



       36

        Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984).
       37

        Id.
       38

        Id. at 689.
                                                                                      Morales — 18

competent attorney would have engaged in it.” 39 We do not regard the record in this case as

sufficient to show that, in failing to exercise a peremptory challenge against Wyatt in order

to preserve error for appeal, trial counsel acted outside the bounds of what any competent

attorney would have done.

       For purposes of argument, we will assume that Wyatt was challengeable for cause

under the implied bias doctrine. Moreover, we recognize that when a constitutional claim

of juror partiality is properly preserved for appeal and borne out by the appellate record, the

service of even “a single partial juror will vitiate a conviction.” 40 Even so, the Sixth

Amendment right to an impartial jury is just that—a right. We have held that the right to trial

by impartial jury, like any other right, is subject to waiver (or even forfeiture) by the

defendant in the interest of overall trial strategy.41 Indeed, the Legislature has expressly

made a defendant’s right to challenge a prospective juror for cause on the basis of an actual

bias subject to waiver.42 It is not to be regarded, therefore, within the rubric of Marin v.

       39

       Goodspeed v. State, 187 S.W.3d 390, 392 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
       40

        Delrio v. State, 840 S.W.2d 443, 445 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992).
       41

        Id. (“we have recognized [the constitutional guarantee of an impartial jury] to be a right of
the accused, which must be pressed in some fashion at trial before reversal of his conviction may be
predicated on its breach. Were this not the case, the court of appeals could simply have reversed the
conviction in the cause because a juror served who was not fair and impartial, irrespective of whether
counsel took positive steps to prevent it.”).
       42

       Id. at 446, n.4, citing TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 35.16(9) and (11) (“No juror shall be
impaneled when it appears that the juror is subject to the second, third or fourth grounds for
                                                                                    Morales — 19

State,43 as a fundamental feature of the system which is not optional with the parties.44 And

because it is a right which is to be exercised at the option of the defendant, it is also subject

to the legitimate strategic or tactical decision-making processes of defense counsel during

the course of trial.

       Accordingly, in Delrio v. State, we said:

       Waiver of [trial counsel’s] client’s right to insist that every juror in the case be
       in all things fair and impartial may in counsel’s best professional judgment
       have been an acceptable gamble. Consistent with Strickland, we must presume
       that counsel is better positioned than the appellate court to judge the
       pragmatism of the particular case, and that he made all significant decisions
       in the exercise of reasonable professional judgment.45

Of course, in Delrio, the prospective juror who was not challenged for cause admitted during

voir dire to an actual bias.46 His bias did not have to be presumed or implied, as does

Wyatt’s in this case. Yet we held that Delrio’s defense attorney could legitimately make a


challenge for cause set forth above, although both parties may consent. All other grounds for
challenge may be waived by the party or parties in whose favor such grounds of challenge exist.”).
       43

        851 S.W.2d 275, 279 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993).
       44

        Id. at 280 (“Of course, the system also includes a number of requirements and prohibitions
which are essentially independent of the litigant’s wishes. Implementation of these requirements is
not optional and cannot, therefore, be waived or forfeited by the parties. * * * Finally, absolute
requirements and prohibitions, like rights which are waivable only, are to be observed without
partisan request. But unlike waivable rights, they can’t lawfully be avoided even with partisan
consent.”).
       45

       840 S.W.2d at 447 (internal quotation marks omitted). See also Jackson v. State, 877
S.W.2d 768, 771 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994).
       46

        Id. at 444-45.
                                                                                      Morales — 20

tactical decision, consistent with the Sixth Amendment guarantee of effective assistance of

counsel, not to challenge a prospective juror for cause who was actually biased against his

client. If it is permissible for trial counsel to retain a juror who is actually biased for strategic

or tactical reasons, then a fortiori, trial counsel must be permitted to make a strategic or

tactical decision to retain a juror who is only presumably biased by virtue of her status as an

assistant district attorney.

       Here, unlike in Delrio, the appellant’s trial counsel initially challenged Wyatt for

cause. It was only later, when it came to exercising his peremptory challenges, that he was

put to the choice whether to preserve the error (if any) in the trial court’s denial of that

challenge for cause by peremptorily striking her, or instead to exhaust all of his peremptory

challenges against other prospective jurors whom he deemed, for whatever reasons, more

objectionable. Even so, the decision to retain Wyatt in spite of the earlier challenge for cause

could well have been a reasonable tactical choice, albeit a difficult one. The record does not

show otherwise. The appellant’s lead trial counsel admitted that he was well aware of the

procedure for preserving a denial of a challenge or cause for appeal and that he had made a

“decision” (however deliberate) not to peremptorily challenge Wyatt. According to Judge

Medrano’s testimony, lead trial counsel admitted to him that they had left Wyatt on the jury

because they believed she was preferable to at least one other prospective juror and that they

were “comfortable” with her remaining on the jury because she was “as fair a prosecutor as

they’ve ever dealt with.”
                                                                                           Morales — 21

        From this testimony, the trial court could rationally infer that the appellant’s trial

attorneys made a difficult tactical decision to leave Wyatt on the jury because, even though

she was an assistant district attorney, she was still preferable to the other prospective jurors

against whom they exercised their allotted peremptory challenges.47 Even though lead

counsel denied the strategic nature of his decision to retain Wyatt and tried to discount the

significance of his comments to Judge Medrano, the trial court could have rejected trial

counsel’s denials and credited Judge Medrano’s account. Reviewing courts are bound to

defer to such implicit findings of fact.48

                                           CONCLUSION

        We therefore reject the court of appeals’s conclusion that, because the appellant’s trial

attorneys failed to exercise a peremptory challenge against Wyatt and thereby failed to

preserve their challenge for cause against her for appeal, they necessarily performed

deficiently in contemplation of Strickland. Even if it is appropriate to regard Wyatt as

impliedly biased under the Sixth Amendment, that does not ipso facto establish that trial



        47

          It is not completely beside the point to remember in this context that, regardless of whether
a prosecutor is or ought to be subject to the Sixth Amendment doctrine of implied bias, in Texas it
is, after all, “the primary duty of all prosecuting attorneys . . . not to convict, but to see that justice
is done.” TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 2.01.
        48

        It should be recalled that, at the time of the hearing on the motion for new trial, trial courts
were prohibited from commenting on the facts. See note 7, ante. Under these circumstances, we
have held, “appellate courts must defer to any reasonable implied factual findings that the trial court
might have made in denying a motion for new trial.” Charles v. State, 146 S.W.3d 204, 211 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2004).
                                                                                       Morales — 22

counsel could not make a legitimate tactical decision to keep her on the appellant’s jury. We

therefore reverse the court of appeals’s judgment. We remand the cause to the court of

appeals to address whether the trial court erred to reject the appellant’s claim in his motion

for new trial that his trial attorneys were ineffective in making the decision not to

peremptorily strike Wyatt without first having reviewed her juror questionnaire.49




Delivered:     May 14, 2008
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       49

        This issue was raised in the appellant’s third point of error on appeal. Although the court
of appeals nominally granted relief on the basis of both the appellant’s second and third points, it
never addressed the appellant’s argument that counsel was ineffective in retaining Wyatt without
discovering the information (beyond the mere fact of her status as an assistant district attorney) that
was contained in her juror questionnaire, viz., her own victimization and her extensive contacts with
law enforcement. See note 12, ante. Moreover, in that third point of error, the appellant also alleged
other instances of ineffectiveness of his trial counsel that the court of appeals did not address.
