Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Pеtitioner’s three-day murder trial ended in a mistrial when the jury reported a hopeless deadlock. A retrial was scheduled for the following month. In the interim, petitioner filed a motion alleging that he was indigent, and asking for a free transcript of the first trial. The trial court denied his motion, and the North
Griffin v. Illinois and its progeny establish the principle that the State must, as a matter of equal protection, provide indigent prisoners with the basic tools of an adequate defense or appeal, when those tools are available for a price to other prisoners. While the outer limits of that principle are not clear, there can be no doubt that the State must provide an indigent defendant with a transcript of prior proceedings when that transcript is needed for an effective defense or appeal.
In prior cases involving an indigent defendant’s claim of right to a free transcript, this Court has identified two factors that are relevant to the determination of need: (1) the value of the transcript to the defendant in connection with the appeal or trial for which it is sought, and (2) the availability of alternative devices that would fulfill the same functions as a transcript.
We agree with the dissenters that there would be serious doubts about the decision below if it rested on petitioner’s failure to specify how the transcript might have been useful to him. Our cases have consistently recognized the value to a defendant of a transcript of prior proceedings, without requiring a showing of need tailored to the facts of the particulаr case.
But the court below did not use the language of “particularized need.” It rested thé decision instead on the second factor in the determination of need, that is, the availability of adequate alternatives to a transcript. The second trial was before the same judge, with the same counsel and the same court reporter, and the two trials were only a month apart. In these circumstances, the court suggested that petitioner’s memory and that of his counsel should have furnished an adequate substitute for a transcript. In addition, the court pointed to the
We have repeatedly rejected the suggestion that in order to render effective assistance, counsel must have a perfect memory or keep exhaustive notes of the testimony given at trial.
For these reasons the judgment is Affirmed.
Notes
Williams v. Oklahoma City,
See Draper v. Washington, supra, at 495-496, and other cases cited n. 1, supra.
In Griffin, the Court was able to rely on a concession of need by the State,
While trial notes might well provide an adequate substitute for a transcript, the failure to make such notes does not bar an indigent prisoner from claiming the right to a free transcript, Eskridge, supra, at 215. As for requiring a prisoner to rely on his memory, this Court rejected that as an alternative to a transcript in Gardner, supra, at 369-370, and Williams, supra, at 459. Indeed, in Long we refused to consider any alternatives suggested by the State, on the ground that in that case a transcript wаs in fact available and could easily have been furnished.
Tr. of Oral Arg. 12. Cf. Avery v. Alabama,
Cf. Wade v. Wilson,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
After the State's first murder prosecution of the petitioner ended in a hung jury in November 1969, Britt was retried, convicted, and sentenced to 30 years’ imprisonment. During the interim between the two trials, the petitioner made a showing of indigency and asked that the State provide him with a free transcript of the mistrial. The trial court denied his motion despite Britt’s contention that because a more affluent defendant could purchase such a transcript as a matter of right a denial of his request would offend the principle of Griffin v. Illinois,
I
Griffin v. Illinois, supra, at 19, established the now familiar principle that “[t]here can be no equal justice where the kind of trial a man gets dеpends on the amount of money he has.” While Griffin involved only the provision of a free transcript to an indigent on direct appeal, its underlying principle has achieved broader usage. We have witnessed a steady growth of its applications to other transcript cases,
Here the request was for a mistrial transcript, whereas in Roberts a motion had been made for a preliminary hearing transcript. In the ways in which either might be used I can perceive no differences. In both sets of circumstances it would seem that defendants would be interested in better trial preparation and in better positions from which tо challenge discrepancies in government witnesses’ stories.
The North Carolina Court of Appeals, however, has rejected the Griffin-Roberts-Wilson cases and sought refuge in the pre-Roberts authority of Nickens v. United States, 116 U. S. App. D. C. 338,
II
The primary rationale offered to support the holding below is that the petitioner failed to make a showing of a particularized need for a mistrial transcript. Presum
“As any effective appellate advocate will attest, the most basic and fundamental tool of his profession is the complete trial transcript, through which his trained fingers may leaf and his trained eyes may roam in search of an error, a lead to an error, or even a basis upon which to urge a change in an established and hitherto accepted principle of law. . . .
“. . . No responsible retained lawyer who rеpresents a defendant at trial will rely exclusively on his memory (even as supplemented by trial notes) in composing a list of possible trial errors which delimit his appeal.” Hardy v. United States, supra, at 288 (Goldberg, J., concurring).
Similarly, while counsel is studying mistrial minutes, the precise words used by a witness might trigger mental
It is unnecessary, however, to speculate as to how often helpful subtleties in mistrial transcripts might actually be found because, as a more general matter, at least two compelling interests would be routinely served by providing paupers with free transcripts, even in cases where counsel were unable to specify the precise nature of the benefits of such discovery. As mentioned earlier, one such interest is that of effective trial preparation by counsel (who may realize that his counterpart, the prosecutor, will employ a similar document supplied at the State’s expense during his own trial preparation). The other interest is that of anticipating possible discrepanciеs in prosecution witnesses’ statements and in being prepared immediately to challenge such contradictions. See Wilson, supra, at 897. Because wealthier defendants tend to purchase transcripts as a matter of course simply on the strength of these recurring interests, it would appear that these benefits are ordinarily worth the fiscal burden of providing the documents regardless of how the cost of reproducing minutes may be distributed.
When viewed in the broader context of a defendant’s complete lack of criminal discovery procedures, the importance of a mistrial transcript becomes even clearer. Many commentators have criticized the persistent common-law prohibition against discovery by criminal de
“ 'In criminal proceedings long experience has taught the courts that often discovery will lead not to honest fact-finding, but on the contrary to perjury and the suppression of evidence. Thus the criminal who is aware of the whole case against him will often procure perjured testimony in order to set up a false defense. . . . Another result of full discovery would be that the criminal defendant who is informed of the names of all the State’s witnesses may take steps to bribe or frighten them into giving perjured testimony or into absenting themselves so that they are unavailable to testify. Moreover, many witnesses, if they know that the defendant will have knowledge of their names prior to trial, will be reluсtant to come forward with information during the investigation of the crime. ... All these dangers are more inherent in criminal proceedings where the defendant has much more at stake, often his own life, than in civil proceedings. The presence of perjury in criminal proceedings today is extensive despite the efforts of the courts to eradicate it and constitutes a very serious threat to the administration of criminal justice and thus to the welfare of the country as a whole. ... To permit unqualified disclosure of all statements and information in the hands of the State would go far beyond what is required in civil cases; it would defeat the very ends of justice,’ ”*239 State v. Goldberg, supra, at 192,134 S. E. 2d, at 341 .11
North Carolina’s presentation of an anti-discovery policy is evidenced not only in its reluctance to enact a modern code to permit such procedures but also in its occasional one-sided legislation concerning related matters. For example, while a local prosecutor has an absolute right to inspect the files of the State Bureau of Investigation which pertain to one of his local inquiries, an accused may inspect such evidence only upon court order procured for good cause. See N. C. Gen. Stat. § 114-15 (1966). Even a common-law request for a bill of particulars to clarify an indictment normally does not require a prosecutor to divulge names of his witnesses or the nature of his physical or documentary evidence.
This Court has been sensitive to the persuasive arguments for more liberal rules of criminal discovery.
The provision in North Carolina permitting defendants to purchase mistrial minutes is obviously an important exception to the common-law prohibition. A mistrial transcript contains not only prosecution witnesses’ names and addresses but their stories under oath and it contains the entire theory of the government’s case. Such a document is a complete dossier of the opposing case for which even the most liberalized rules of civil discovery have no equivalent. While this exception endures, the State may not condition its availability upon financial considerations which effectively deprive the poor of this valuable tool.
III
The lower court’s opinion suggests that whatever legitimate uses generally might be made of mistrial minutes could alternatively be accomplished by counsel’s calling as a witness the court reporter of the previous prosecution. See also Nickens v. United States, 116 U. S. App. D. C., at 341,
Moreover, the procedure of calling a court reporter to verify hostile witnesses’ contradictions has been discredited by trial commentators, including Professor Robert Kеeton:
“If you have caught the witness in a contradiction,*242 it is the more clearly shown if the exact words previously used by the witness are brought to the jury’s attention. The effect may extend beyond the bearing of the contradiction on its own subject matter, for the witness may be ‘broken down’ so that he makes other admissions or the jury disbelieves other parts of his testimony. Calling upon the reporter to read such prior testimony during the examination, however, is rarely a practicable method of confronting the witness with such contradiction. Many trial judges will decline to permit the practice because of the great delay usually involved, while the reporter is seaching through his notes in an effort to find the part of the testimony to which you refer. Even if the judge will permit the practice, the wisdom of its use is questionable. The jury and court may grow impatient, and the witness will have been afforded a considerable period of time to think about the matter and be prepared with an explanation or excuse.” R. Keeton, Trial Tactics and Methods 103 (1954). (Emphasis added.)
Indeed these hazards were painfully present in United States ex rel. Wilson v. McMann, supra, in which Wilson’s attorney erroneously believed he remembered an inconsistent statement of a prosecution witness who had testified at the prior mistrial. At the second trial the lawyer quizzed the witness concerning this prior remark but the witness denied having ever made it. The judge decided to delay the trial until the reporter of the mistrial could read back the precise words used by the witness. After “considerable delay and perhaps some inconvenience to the jurors” counsel learned that he had been mistaken and that no contradiction, at least on the suspected issue, had existed. Id., at 898.
I would reverse the judgment below.
Wade v. Wilson,
Boddie v. Connecticut,
Anders v. California,
These two reasons were offered by the Second Circuit to explain why a mistrial transcript might be useful. United States ex rel. Wilson v. McMann,
Nickens v. United States, 116 U. S. App. D. C. 338,
Professor Robert Keeton notes that in civil cases involving large amounts of money it is standard practice for lawyers to place “a standing order with the reporter for ‘daily copy’ of the trial proceedings.” R. Keeton, Trial Tactics and Methods 104 (1954). Presumably when wealthy clients are haled before criminal courts rather than before civil ones, their attorneys likewise place such standing orders.
The excessive disparity between the State and the accused in their respective investigative resources, and the common law’s prohibition against discovery have been summarized as follows by one commentator:
“[T]he law enforcement agency is often at the scene of the crime shortly after its commission. While at the scene, the police have better access to witnesses with fresher recollections. They are authorized to confiscate removable evidence. In addition, the financial and investigatory resources of law enforcement agencies permit an extensive analysis of all relevant evidence.
“The defendant has the option of hiring a private investigator. However, the investigator will probably get to the scene long after the occurrence of the crime and after the police have made their investigation and removed all relevant physical evidence. The defendant’s investigator may have difficulty viewing the scene if it is on private property. Witnesses may be less accessible; their recollections will probably be less precise. Indeed they may choose not to cooperate at all with the defendant’s investigator. However, it may all be irrelevant if, as is often the case, the defendant is unable to afford an investigator or is incarcerated pending trial.
“The defendant is helpless to cope with the uncooperative witness while the prosecutor has numerous means to compel testimony. First, there is the possibility of [a] coroner’s inquest or a preliminary hearing. And if the prosecution prefers not to have the defense present, some jurisdictions allow the prosecution to take testimony while the defendant and his attorney are excluded. The uncooperative witness can be subpoenaed to appear before the grand jury and required to testify, again without the presence of the defense. The defense cannot, usually, discover the grand jury minutes.
“Many states require that the defendant give notice of intended alibi or insanity defenses. The prosecution’s burden, in bringing a charge, in contrast, has been substantially lessened. Mere recitation of the statute may be a sufficient pleading of the charge. Amendments to the indictment or information are liberally allowed; duplicity and variances are no longer serious defects. Liberal*237 pleading rules deprive the defendant of effective notice of the circumstances of the offense.” Norton, Discоvery in the Criminal Process, 61 J. Crim. L. C. & P. S. 11, 13-14 (1970).
See generally Handzel, Criminal Law: Pre-Trial Discovery — The Right of an Indigent’s Counsel to Inspect Police Reports, 14 St. Louis IT. L. J. 310 (1969); Moore, Criminal Discovery, 19 Hastings L. J. 865 (1968); A State Statute to Liberalize Criminal Discovery, 4 Harv. J. Legis. 105 (1967). Comment, Disclosure and Discovery in Criminal Cases: Where Are We Headed?, 6 Duquesne U. L. Rev. 41 (1967); Golden & Palik, Bibliography: Criminal Discovery, 5 Tulsa L. J. 207 (1968); Symposium: Discovery in Federal Criminal Cases, 33 F. R. D. 47 (1963); Brennan, Criminal Prosecution: Sporting Event or Quest For Truth?, 1963 Wash. U. L. Q. 279.
See Fed. Rules Crim. Proc. 15-17. See also Note, Discovery Procedures Under New York’s New Criminal Procedure Law, 38 Brooklyn L. Rev. 164 (1971); Right of Accused in State Courts to Inspectiоn or Disclosure of Evidence in Possession of Prosecution, 7 A. L. R. 3d 8 (1966).
Statutory exceptions to the common-law ban in North Carolina may be found at N. C. Gen. Stat. § 8-74 (1969) (depositions of witnesses unable to attend trial); and at § 15-155.4 (Supp. 1969). The latter provision was enacted in 1967 and permits limited discovery of prosecution evidence where (a) good cause is shown for discovery, (b) the prosecution intends to use the evidence at trial. The latter condition would effectively prevent defendants’ discovery of evidence which might be favorable. The only reported decisions considering this addition are those in State v. Macon,
N. C. Gen. Stat. c. 1A (1969).
The celebrated opinions in State v. Tune, 13 N. J. 203,
In another North Carolina retrial situation considered in State v. Overman,
The most comprehensive and recent statement of criminal discovery in North Carolina is A Look At North Carolina’s Criminal Discovery System Prepared for North Carolina Governor’s Committee on Law and Order, Task Force on Arrest and Apprehension, A. Pye, Chmn. (1970): “Very little use is being made of the new (1967) criminal discovery statute (G. S. 15-155) which is resulting in a paucity of cases dealing with the extent to which it allows discovery. It is unclear whether the attorneys are not aware of
“There is a strong possibility that solicitors (consciously or unconsciously) withhold evidence favorable to the defendant. . . .” Id., at 16.
In addition to the discussion of such procedures in State v. Goldberg ,
See Pyle v. Kansas,
The majority does not disagree that under ordinary circumstances Britt would have been denied equal protection of the laws. The majority, however, distinguishes Britt’s case from the routine case because he was tried in a small town where defense counsel was well acquainted with the court reporter. Counsel, reasons the Court, ought to have prevailed upon the reporter between trials to assist in his making notes of the first trial. I believe that these kinds of fortuities ought not to be determinative of constitutional guarantees, especially where it may be difficult afterwards to establish the nature of such alleged relationships.
