In this habeas corpus proceeding the issue is whether certain actions of the Dallas County, Texas, Assistant District Attorney constitute prosecutorial overreaching sufficient to bar, on double jeopardy grounds, the retrial of defendants whose first prosecution ended in a mistrial. Petitioners-ap-pellees, Baker and Humphrey, were tried along with two other defendants, Bowie and Freeman, in Texas state court, but the proceedings against the defendants terminated when the state trial judge, Judge Metcalfe, declared a mistrial. Baker and Humphrey then filed Special Pleas of Double Jeopardy in the Texas trial court which were denied. Judge Metcalfe set a new trial date for petitioners. After seeking relief in the state appellate court, Baker and Humphrey filed this Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus and for a Stay of State Court Proceedings in federal district court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241 and 2254. The district court granted the writ and responden ts-appellants, Judge Metcalfe and Texas Attorney General Mark White, appealed. We reverse.
I. FACTS
Baker, Humphrey, Bowie and Freeman were indicted for the January 6, 1979, rape of complainant. Joint trial of the four defendants began on October 10, 1979. The Dallas County Assistant District Attorney called the complainant to testify and, after her testimony was given, rested his case.
The jury was then dismissed for the day, and the court directed the prosecutor to give the defense attorneys all the information he had concerning the whereabouts of *1200 Phyllis Johnson, 1 a person known by the defense to be an eyewitness to the January 6, 1979, incident. The Assistant District Attorney stated that he knew only what the complainant’s testimony disclosed about Johnson’s address. As the facts were later developed, Johnson had moved to another address in Dallas, and an investigator on the staff of the Dallas County District Attorney’s office who was aware of the court’s directive to the prosecutor also knew Johnson’s new address.
At the trial the next day defendant Freeman’s counsel called Freeman and other witnesses to the stand in his defense. Rec., vol. 2 at 17. Baker and Humphrey’s attorney called one witness, Larry Black-Washington. After counsel for all the defendants had rested, the State closed without presenting any rebuttal testimony. The attorneys for Freeman and Bowie then closed. Plaintiff’s Ex. 2 at 3. Counsel for petitioners Baker and Humphrey asked to approach the bench, and a conference among all attorneys concerning the jury charges ensued. During the conference, counsel for Baker and Humphrey stated his intention to close immediately after the conference. The Assistant District Attorney then stated that he wished to reopen the case to call another witness. When the trial resumed, Baker and Humphrey’s counsel did close, and the prosecutor asked to reopen. Over defense objection, the prosecutor called Phyllis Johnson to the stand to corroborate the complainant’s testimony. After Johnson testified and was thoroughly cross-examined by defense counsel, Plaintiff’s Ex. 6 at 171-212, all defendants moved for a mistrial which Judge Metcalfe granted. Thereafter, on December 14, 1979, Judge Metcalfe overruled Baker and Humphrey’s Special Pleas of Double Jeopardy, and set their new trial for January 14,1980. Baker and Humphrey then filed their federal ha-beas petition. The federal district court stayed the state proceedings and ultimately granted their writ.
II. JURISDICTION
The State challenges the federal court’s jurisdiction to entertain this habeas corpus petition and contends that petitioners Baker and. Humphrey have had a full and fair adjudication in Texas state court of their constitutional plea of double jeopardy.
2
Therefore, under Stone v.
Powell,
*1201 III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This case involves both the general standard of review that appellate courts must exercise in federal habeas petitions and the particular legal standards by which we determine whether the double jeopardy clause bars retrial of petitioners Baker and Humphrey.
It is settled that findings of fact by the district court in federal habeas corpus cases will not be set aside unless clearly erroneous. Wade v.
Mayo,
Next we turn to the appropriate legal standards to apply in determining whether the double jeopardy clause bars reprosecution after a mistrial has been declared at defendants’ request. For over 150 years,
United States v. Perez
has stood for the legal principle that in most situations the purposes of the double jeopardy clause are not threatened by retrial after the granting of a mistrial.
The Double Jeopardy Clause does protect a defendant against governmental actions intended to provoke mistrial requests and thereby to subject defendants to the substantial burdens imposed by multiple prosecutions. It bars retrials where “bad-faith conduct by judge or prosecutor,” United States v. Jorn, [400 U.S.] at 485,91 S.Ct. 547 at 557,27 L.Ed.2d 543 , threatens the “[h]arassment of an accused by successive prosecutions or declaration of a mistrial so as to afford the prosecution a more favorable opportunity to convict” the defendant. Downum v. United States, 372 U.S. [734] at 736,83 S.Ct. 1033 at 1034 [10 L.Ed.2d 100 ].
IV. THE MERITS
The federal district court based its grant of the writ, first, on the Assistant District
*1202
Attorney’s “springing this material, second witness [Phyllis Johnson] on [petitioners] after they had chosen to remain silent” by reopening the case for additional evidence,
A. Reopening
Article 36.02 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides as follows:
The court shall allow testimony to be introduced at any time before the argument of a cause is concluded, if it appears that it is necessary to a due administration of justice.
(Vernon 1966). The district court and Baker and Humphrey’s counsel construe article 36.02 to require a showing of necessity before a case is reopened. However, whether or not to reopen is peculiarly left to the discretion of the trial judge, although this discretion is not unlimited. In certain instances, the judge must reopen the case.
If the evidence was admissible (irrespective of its weight, its probative value, or its cumulative character), and if it was offered before the charge was read, it will be reversible error to refuse the request to reopen for its receipt, unless it appears its introduction would have impeded the trial ....
Tucker v. State,
In
Holifield v. State,
*1203 Since the jury had not yet been charged, the State’s actions do not amount to prosecutorial overreaching. Judge Metcalfe did not abuse his discretion in reopening the case, nor did the Assistant District Attorney thereby commit any misconduct; therefore, Baker and Humphrey’s further prosecution will not be barred on this ground.
B. Failure to Disclose Witness' Whereabouts
The second ground for the district court’s determination that the double jeopardy clause barred reprosecution of petitioners Baker and Humphrey was the failure of the Assistant District Attorney to disclose Johnson’s new address to the defense after the trial judge had directed him to do so. He stated that the only address he had for Johnson was the one the complainant had given on the stand. However, as we have pointed out, an investigator from the District Attorney’s office was aware of the court’s directive and knew Johnson’s correct address. The district court held that under
Giglio
v.
United States,
It is not clear that the holdings in
Giglio,
or in another case cited by petitioners at oral argument,
Santobello v. New York,
Under this court’s recent decision in
United States v. Opager,
The government’s arguments for not complying with defense counsel’s disclosure request, while lacking in merit, are not frivolous and while the failure to obey the court’s order is inexcusable, there is no evidence that it was done in bad faith or that it constitutes prosecuto-rial overreaching.
Id. at 237. In the instant case, the fact that the prosecutor did not actually know Johnson’s new address is not disputed and is not a frivolous reason for failing to comply with the request. Like the court in Opager, we find on these facts that the prosecutor did not act in bad faith.
Although the investigator for the State should have provided defense counsel with the witness Johnson’s new address, it is clear that the failure to disclose Johnson’s whereabouts did not prejudice Baker and Humphrey. As we have indicated with record references, their counsel fully cross-examined Johnson and challenged her testimony. As the request for her address shows, Baker and Humphrey’s counsel knew of Johnson and knew that she was an important witness. Her testimony could not have come as a surprise.
V. CONCLUSION
Reopening the case before the charge was read to the jury was authorized by Texas *1204 statutory law and did not constitute an abuse of discretion by Judge Metcalfe; nor was there any prosecutorial misconduct or prejudice in the circumstances. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
REVERSED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs Ex. 1 at 2.
. The fifth amendment provides, in pertinent part, “nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb . .. . ”
Benton v. Maryland,
. It appears that in the district court the State also argued that since, under Texas law, the criminal prosecution of Baker and Humphrey was still pending, the doctrine of
Younger v. Harris,
. In the federal court hearing, Mr. Jackson, chief counsel for Baker and Humphrey, questioned Miss Cox, his co-counsel, concerning the charging conference, who responded in pertinent part as follows:
[Miss Cox] We were all in the chambers and the question of consent defense came up. The judge indicated that he denied [sic] to give it. Then I left the chambers and went into the courtroom and got your McCIung’s, which are patterned jury charges, out of your briefcase, took it back to chambers, and together, Mr. Bastas, the court reporter, standing behind the judge, and the judge went over the charges.
There was considerable debate on the issue of whether or not consent would be submitted to the jury because the State’s attorneys were of the position that since the Defendants Baker and Humphrey had not testified, we were not entitled to the consent defense charge.
[Mr. Jackson] All right. Did Judge Met-calfe announce that he was going to charge on the defense of consent regarding all the Defendants in this case?
A. He said most definitely he would.
Q. And Mr. Prospere [the prosecutor] at that time, what did he say?
A. Well, he got up and as he was walking out of the room, as I recall, he said, “I intend to re-open.”
Rec., vol. 2 at 20-21.
Q. (By Mr. Jackson) Miss Cox, would you-is there any portion of that record, or have you been able to locate in that-in that transcript anything regarding Mr. Prospere-Mr. Prospere’s motion in re-opening or moving on closing?
A. Yes. On Page 8 of Petitioners’ Exhibit Number 1, Mr. Prospere stated, “I rested my case, knowing that [Miss Johnson] was in the courthouse, knowing that I was not going to allow testimony [sic] in the charge to be read before I had an opportunity to call her. I rested and closed, then, to see whether you would have additional testimony, you all.”
Rec., vol. 2 at 26-27.
. Plaintiffs Ex. 6 at 150-213.
