Lead Opinion
OPINION
Joseph R. Browning was charged with driving while intoxicated, refusal to submit to a breathalyzer, and resisting arrest. At his trial on April 9, 1984, he took the stand and testified, inter alia, that he noticed a police car behind his vehicle, and for this reason was driving with some care. The following exchange then occurred.
Defense counsel: The officer has given a description here saying that you were essentially all over the road.... Browning: Well, that’s not the way it was.
Defense counsel: Okay and you were watching him back behind you. Was there any other reason why you were driving very carefully under the circumstances?
Browning: Well, yes. I can’t, I can’t afford too many tickets. I sure can’t afford to get pulled over for another DWI, ‘cause I could lose my license for ten years, and I’m a truck driver.
Defense counsel: Okay.
District Attorney: Your honor, I have an objection to make. I wonder if the jury could step out.
After the jury left the courtroom, the district attorney moved for a mistrial on the grounds that defense counsel had elicited entirely inappropriate and prejudicial testimony from the defendant. Defense counsel argued that the testimony was perfectly admissible, in that it showed the defendant’s state of mind at the time he was driving, which made it more likely that he was driving carefully. Magistrate Brigitte McBride granted the motion for mistrial over defense counsel’s objection.
Browning subsequently moved to dismiss the charges against him on double jeopardy grounds. Magistrate McBride issued an order denying the motion on June 27, 1984. The order stated in part:
In the instant case the court finds that defendant’s double-barrelled appeal to the jury’s pity, by improperly testifying to an expected penalty and to the fact that such penalty would, in effect, ruin his livelihood as a truck driver, was serious misconduct on the part of the accused, or his counsel. The court further considers the only possible alternate remedy to declaring a mistrial, namely instructing the jury to disregard the above-cited testimony, to be insufficient and ineffective to assure this state of a fair trial.
The reference to “serious misconduct” is from the Alaska Supreme Court’s opinion in Lewis v. State,
On the other hand, there are instances of serious misconduct on the part of an accused, or his counsel, which make permissible both granting of a mistrial and a reprosecution.
Browning’s counsel requested an eviden-tiary hearing on the matter, in order to establish that there had been no misconduct. Browning took the stand at the evi-dentiary hearing, and testified that, although he and his attorney had discussed the fact that Browning had been driving carefully because of concern about his livelihood, they had not discussed using that fact at trial. Browning also testified that his attorney had never told him that it was improper to testify to anything, including the penalties he was facing if convicted. The magistrate remained convinced that there had been some misconduct, so she refused to change her order. Browning petitioned for review of the magistrate’s order, and we accepted jurisdiction.
Browning argues that the testimony was not improper, and that there was no basis for the court’s finding of misconduct, or if there was misconduct, it was so minor that it did not justify declaration of a mistrial.
Under the Alaska and United States Constitutions, jeopardy attaches when a defendant is placed on trial before a court of competent jurisdiction and a jury sworn. If the court discharges the jury without a verdict being reached, the defendant cannot be retried unless he consented to the discharge or “manifest necessity” required it.
Koehler v. State,
Lewis also involved a mistrial declared during the direct examination of the accused. Lewis was a licensed guide charged with violation of game laws. When asked why the hunter who was with him at the time of the offense was not going to be a witness, Lewis testified that “we tried to get a deposition, but the district attorney wouldn’t allow it.”
this record does not disclose a situation which presented a “manifest necessity” for the declaration of a mistrial. Nor can we find that the trial court’s premature discharge of the jury was necessitated by “very extraordinary and striking circumstances.” In our view any prejudice to the prosecution’s case resulting from appellant’s questioned explanation of [the hunter’s] absence could have been cured by a prompt admonition on the court’s part to disregard such testimony.
After holding that the trial court abused its discretion in granting a mistrial, the court stated:
One facet of the double jeopardy prohibition as it relates to this case remains for disposition. The prosecution argues that since it was appellant himself who created the situation requiring the declaration of a mistrial, he thereby removed himself from jeopardy in the first trial.
In this case, the magistrate appears to have focused on the misconduct portion of the court’s opinion in Lewis. She never used the phrase “manifest necessity,” and the only portion of Lewis cited in her order was the section on misconduct. There is no requirement that courts make an explicit
We hold that the record in this case would not support a finding of “manifest necessity.” The “double-barrelled” prejudice suffered by the state when Browning testified about the penalty and its potential impact on his ability to earn a living was certainly clear enough to justify exclusion under Evidence Rule 403, had Browning’s attorney applied for a ruling before eliciting the testimony. Yet the prejudice may have been counterbalanced by Browning’s admission that he had previously been convicted of DWI. As for Browning’s livelihood, the jurors already knew that Browning was a truck driver, and they could easily have drawn the inference made plain by Browning without his help.
The magistrate concluded in her subsequent written order that instructing the jury to disregard Browning’s testimony would have been insufficient to assure the state of a fair trial. Yet this conclusion was not reached with the “manifest necessity” standard in mind, nor was it even stated when the court declared the mistrial.
The state relies upon the United States Supreme Court's decision in Arizona v. Washington,
We view the prejudice suffered by the state of Arizona in Washington, to be significantly greater than the prejudice suffered by the state of Alaska in Browning’s case. Washington’s attorney successfully painted a picture of a vindictive and overzealous prosecutor’s office, committed to prosecuting his client despite having its hand slapped by an appellate court for trying to hide evidence. The attorney’s words were calculated to instill in the jury hostility towards the prosecutor, as well as to create speculation that the prosecution may have continued to withhold evidence. When contrasted with the potential for prejudice created by a DWI, defendant’s reference to his possible loss of livelihood, in an era of tremendous concern about drunk driving, it is clear that the prosecution in Washington would have been laboring at a much greater disadvantage.
We conclude that the state’s interest in a fair trial was not so impaired that Browning’s “valued right to have his trial completed by a particular tribunal, which he might believe to be favorably disposed to his fate,” (Koehler v. State,
Of course, under the trial court’s reading of Lewis, there remains the possibility that Browning waived his double jeopardy claim through his own misconduct or that of his attorney. “[T]he constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy should not be construed so as to permit intentional misconduct on the part of an accused or his counsel to become the basis of a bar to reprosecution.” Lewis v. State,
The order of the trial court is REVERSED.
Notes
. We do not suggest that the magistrate was under a duty to make a ritualistic finding of manifest necessity before her decision to grant a mistrial could be upheld against a claim of double jeopardy. Far from making such a suggestion, we recognize that there are many situations in which the existence of manifest necessity to terminate a trial will be apparent from the record, without any explicit finding by the trial court.
The point of our holding is that, in this case, the contemporaneous record of the trial court's initial, verbal ruling granting a mistrial does not give rise to fair inference that the mistrial was declared out of manifest necessity. In this regard, we view the post hoc conclusions of the magistrate concerning manifest necessity to be of little assistance, since they were made well after the mistrial had been declared, when the matter was fait accompli.
Moreover, even if it were clear that the correct standard had been applied at the outset, the record would not support a finding of manifest necessity, particularly because Browning’s remark was potentially as prejudicial to himself as it was to the state. To permit a retrial under the circumstances of this case would open the door to a retrial any time a defendant or his counsel made a routine, good faith, but obvious mistake in conducting examination or presenting evidence at trial. In particular, the view espoused by the dissent would render trial court rulings granting mistrials to the state virtually unre-viewable.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Whether to grant or deny a motion for mistrial is a matter committed to the trial court’s sound discretion. Lewis v. State,
. See, e.g., Johnson v. Fairbanks,
