Lead Opinion
By this proceeding in prohibition petitioners Clinton Curry and Lionel Pete McCoy seek to prevent their trial on a charge of murder, contending they have been once in jeopardy for this offense. We conclude that the plea is justified and the relief prayed for should be granted.
Petitioners were brought to trial on an indictment charging them with the murder of Jimmy Carney. A jury was duly sworn, and several witnesses for the prosecution were examined. On the afternoon of the second day of trial, the prosecution called Christine Patterson to the witness stand. On direct examination, Miss Patterson testified that at 8 p.m. on the day of the shooting she went out for a walk. Carney, whom she had known about a year, called to her to stop and fired a gun twice into the air to attract her attention. He put the gun in his pocket, and the two walked on together. In due course they stopped at a service station while Carney made a telephone call. A car drove up, and petitioners Curry and McCoy got out. Curry accused Carney of “cussing out his mother,” and an altercation ensued. Miss Patterson testified that McCoy handed Curry a gun; that some blows were struck, and Carney started to run; that McCoy shouted, “Shoot him,” and Curry fired once, the bullet striking Carney in the head.
Miss Patterson, a teenager, as were the other participants in this tragedy, underwent a vigorous cross-examination. She was the sole eyewitness to the shooting, and the defense made a major issue of her ability to identify the alleged murder weapon. She testified she could not describe the weapon, knew nothing about guns, and had never had a gun in her possession. Yet when defense counsel asked her if she had ever fired a gun, she answered in the affirmative. She testified she had talked with one Louis Lee about this case, and had fired a gun at him when he refused to leave her house. Counsel then asked her if she had ever been under psychiatric care, and she replied that she had. She also acknowledged that shortly after the shooting of Carney she attempted suicide by an overdose of sleeping pills. The prosecutor voiced no objection to any of the foregoing testimony.
On the third day of trial the prosecutor took Miss Patterson on redirect examination and inquired into her motive in firing a shot at Louis Lee. She testified that she did so because he threatened “to have some of Pete and Clinton’s [i.e., petitioners’] friends shoot me.” Defense counsel then requested that the jury be instructed that such statements made by a third party “cannot be attributed” to petitioners, and the court asked for argument on the point.
In chambers outside the presence of the jury, counsel reiterated, “Your
Upon reconvening, the court ruled as follows: “Gentlemen, after some reflection I have reached the conclusion that under the present state of this record it’s impossible to have a fair trial either from the point of view of the People or the defendants, so I am with some reluctance, of course, declaring this to be a mistrial and transferring the matter to Department 23 for trial. . . .’’In response to an inquiry by the prosecutor, the court specified that the grounds for its ruling were “The present state of the record with respect to the alleged firing of a hand gun at some third person, a man by the name of Lee,” and “the question . . . that’s been asked as to the alleged mental illness of the People’s witness.” The court discharged the jury on these same grounds, and petitioners thereafter entered pleas of once in jeopardy. (Pen. Code, § 1016, subd. 5.)
Prohibition is a proper remedy to prevent retrial when a defendant has been once in jeopardy. (Paulson v. Superior Court (1962)
Article I, section 13, of the California Constitution declares that “No person shall be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense. . . .” Implementing this constitutional command, the decisions of this court have settled the now familiar rules that (1) jeopardy attaches when a defendant is placed on trial in a court of competent jurisdiction, on a valid accusatory pleading, before a jury duly impaneled and sworn, and (2) a discharge of that jury without a verdict is equivalent in law to an acquittal and bars a retrial, unless the defendant consented thereto or legal necessity required it. (Paulson v. Superior Court (1962) supra,
In the case at bar the record demonstrates that at the time the court declared a mistrial and discharged the jury, jeopardy had attached pursuant to the foregoing rules; the sole remaining issues, therefore, are consent and legal necessity.
At no time did petitioners, in person or through counsel, expressly consent to the granting of the mistrial or the discharge of the jury. The People maintain that petitioners impliedly gave such consent, but the contention does not withstand analysis. When a trial court proposes to discharge a jury without legal necessity therefor, the defendant is under no; duty to object in order to claim the protection of the constitutional guarantee, and his mere silence in the face of an ensuing discharge cannot be deemed a waiver. (Mitchell v. Superior Court (1962)
No such motion, however, was made in the case at bar. When the record is fairly read, it is clear that defense counsel requested no more than a cautionary instruction advising the jury that the alleged threats of Louis Lee, reported in the testimony of Miss Patterson, were hearsay as to these petitioners. Counsel neither objected to this testimony as such, nor moved to strike it; indeed, he expressly represented to the court that he had no quarrel with it. In these circumstances, petitioners’ simple request for an admonition on an evidentiary matter cannot be magnified into a waiver of their constitutional protection against double jeopardy.
Secondly, there was no “legal necessity”—as that concept has been limited in our decisions—for the court to declare a mistrial and discharge the jury without petitioners’ consent. In California, legal necessity for a mistrial typically arises from an inability of the jury to agree (Pen. Code, § 1140; Paulson v. Superior Court (1962) supra, 58
Thus in People v. Valenti (1957) supra,
Again, in Jackson v. Superior Court (1937) supra,
In the case at bar the trial court declared a mistrial sua sponte on the ground that certain [ testimony had been erroneously admitted which assertedly made it “impossible to have a fair trial either from the point of view of the People or the defendants. . . .” Even if it'had been clearly improper to admit the testimony, the ruling would not have constituted legal necessity for a mistrial under the foregoing principles. The court could have completed the trial of the cause and, in the event of a conviction, subsequently granted a motion for a new trial.'
Even less doubt surrounds the admissibility of Miss Patterson’s testimony concerning her shooting at Louis Lee: given her denial of familiarity with or possession of firearms, defense counsel’s reference to the Lee incident was proper impeachment by means of contradiction. (Evid. Code, § 780, subd. (f).) The prosecutor’s subsequent inquiry on redirect examination into her motive for thus shooting at Lee exceeded the scope of permissible rehabilitation of an impeached witness, but as we have seen, defense counsel chose not to object to the admission of that testimony.
Finally, the People urge us to reconsider our decision in Cardenas v. Superior Court (1961) supra,
Even under Gori, however, the mistrial declared in the case at bar would invoke the prohibition against double jeopardy. The high court carefully limited the rule of that decision to cases “where it clearly appears that a mistrial has been granted in the sole interest of the defendant” (
In any event, we adhere to our decision in Cardenas not to adopt the Gori rule in applying the double jeopardy provision of the California Constitution. Benton requires only that the states accord their citizens at least as much protection against double jeopardy as is provided under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution;
A defendant may choose not to move for or consent to a mistrial for many reasons. He may be of the opinion that no error in fact occurred, or if it occurred, that it was not prejudicial. He may believe that any error in admitting improper evidence can be cured by a motion to strike or a request for admonition, or can be refuted by impeachment of the witness or contrary defense evidence. Indeed, even when a palpably prejudicial error has been committed a defendant may have valid personal reasons to prefer going ahead with the trial rather than beginning the entire process anew, such as a desire to minimize the embarrassment, expense, and anxiety mentioned above. These considerations are peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant, not the judge, and the latter must avoid depriving the defendant of his constitutionally protected freedom of choice in the name of a paternalistic concern for his welfare.
Accordingly, except in the limited instances of “legal necessity,” the policy underlying the prohibition against double jeopardy will best be
We are not unmindful of the apparent irony in denying the trial court jurisdiction to proceed because of a ruling made, at least in part, ostensibly for the benefit of these petitioners. But we do not deal here with a mere technicality of the law: as the Locklear court explained (at p. 442 of 108 A.2d), also in the context of a murder prosecution, “Assuming a failure of justice in the instant case, it is outweighed by the general personal security afforded by the great principle of freedom from double jeopardy. Such misadventures are the price of individual protection against arbitrary power.”
Let a peremptory writ of prohibition issue as prayed.
Wright, C. J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Burke, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
A case on all fours with ours is State' v. Stankevicius (1966) 3 Conn. Cir. 580 [
Thus the court in Benton stressed that its recent decisions had rejected the principle of Palko v. Connecticut (1937)
A not dissimilar situation was presented in State v. Locklear (1954)
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. I would deny the writ.
