598 S.W.2d 582 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1980
Time-inspired misgivings as to pleas of guilty to robbery in the first degree by means of a dangerous and deadly weapon (Sections 560.120 and 560.135, RSMo 1969) and kidnapping (Section 559.240, RSMo 1969) resulting in concurrent sentences of fifteen years and four years respectively obviously prompted Robert Carlton Davis to seek post-conviction relief by way of a Rule 27.26 motion. The trial court, partially in a summary manner and partially after benefit of an evidentiary hearing, denied post-conviction relief to Davis.
On appeal, the first of seven points relied on by Davis relates to a ground for relief which was denied without an evidentiary hearing, the second relates to a procedural
Davis’s second point will be adverted to at the outset because if the trial judge erred in not disqualifying himself in response to Davis’s motion that he do so because he was a necessary witness regarding Davis’s claim appertaining to the transcript of the guilty plea proceeding, such error, in varying degrees, so permeated all aspects of the proceedings below that it can only be excised by reversing the judgment in its entirety and remanding the cause for an evidentiary hearing on all grounds before a different judge.
A more definitive and detailed statement of facts bevels the edges of this somewhat anomalous issue. Count I of a two count information charged Davis with robbery in the first degree by means of a dangerous and deadly weapon and Count II thereof charged him with kidnapping. The cause was styled State of Missouri v. Robert C. Davis and assigned case number 77100417. The transcript of the guilty plea proceeding shows that Davis appeared in Division II of the Circuit Court of Boone County, the Honorable Frank Conley, presiding, on September 6, 1977, and advised that he wished to enter pleas of guilty to the charges of robbery in the first degree and kidnapping. The court then noted that pleas of guilty were entered by Davis “to Counts One and Two”. The transcript then reveals that the following occurred immediately thereafter:
“Having been duly sworn by Sharon Isaacson, Deputy Circuit Clerk, Mr. Davis testified as follows:
THE COURT: This is Cause Number 407. Nolle prosequi by State as to Count Two. Defendant and sureties discharged as to Count Two.” (Emphasis added.)
“EXAMINATION
BY THE COURT:
Q Will you for the record state your full name?
A Robbert Carlton Davis. . . . ”
The trial judge, among other things, thereafter separately and specifically informed Davis as to the range of punishment for each offense, asked Davis if he had committed each of the two offenses to which Davis separately and specifically responded in the affirmative, and, as to each of the two crimes, asked Davis why he was pleading guilty to which Davis separately and specifically responded that he was pleading guilty because he committed each crime.
On the same day that Davis pleaded guilty, September 6, 1977, there was also pending in Division II of the Circuit Court of Boone County a cause styled “State of Missouri v. Russell Dean Curry”, same bearing case number 77100407. with respect to which on September 6, 1977, the following docket entry was made:
“COURT ROOM — DIVISION II (06-Sep-77)
*584 F & D PRE-TRL MOT NOLLE PROSE-QUI ENTERED BY STATE AS TO COUNT(S) 2 REGARDING DEFENDANT RUSSELL DEAN CURRY. SAID COUNT(S) DISMISSED AND DEFENDANT AND SURETIES DISCHARGED THEREFROM.”
The marked similarity in case numbers, 77100417 in the Davis case and 77100407 in the Curry case, has served to becloud all issues directly or indirectly associated with the guilty plea transcript.
Reverting momentarily to Davis’s Rule 27.26motion, he charged therein, among other things, that the transcript of the guilty plea proceeding was defective because it first disclosed that a nolle prosequi was entered as to Count II (kidnapping) and then disclosed that he entered a plea of guilty to the kidnapping charge. Davis then elaborated upon the paradoxical situation reflected by the transcript by alternately asserting that the trial court had lost jurisdiction over Count II or that he was so confused at the time as to render his pleas of guilty to robbery and kidnapping involuntary. The trial judge, movant, counsel for the state and counsel for movant were all listed as witnesses for this aspect of the Rule 27.26 motion.
When Davis filed his Rule 27.26 motion he concurrently filed a motion to disqualify the Honorable John Cave, Judge of Division I of the Circuit Court of Boone County, Missouri, on grounds of “bias and prejudice”, which was sustained. Thereafter Davis filed a motion asking that the Honorable Frank Conley, Judge of Division II of the Circuit Court of Boone County, Missouri, voluntarily disqualify himself because of his status as an essential witness at the Rule 27.26motion hearing regarding the patent inconsistencies mirrored by the transcript of the guilty plea proceeding. The trial judge refused to honor Davis’s motion suggesting that he disqualify himself on the ground that Davis had already obtained one change of judge pursuant to Rule 51.05 and was not entitled to a second change of judge. In doing so, the trial judge failed to distinguish between a motion for change of judge pursuant to Rule 51.05 and a motion requesting that he disqualify himself because of his status as an essential witness in a matter pending before him.
As previously noted, the trial judge refused to grant an evidentiary hearing on the ground involving the incongruous nature of the transcript of the guilty plea proceeding, and, acting in the triune capacity of witness, judge and jury, summarily denied any relief to Davis. The only light cast on the summary treatment given the ground associated with the transcript of the guilty plea proceeding is found in the “Memorandum Decision” entered by the trial judge: “It should be noted that the reference to the Court indicating that Count II was being dismissed and that Movant was mislead thereby is inaccurate. The reference in the transcript to the case being dismissed makes specific reference to a case number, not the subject of this hearing.” Clearly, the matter was resolved solely on the trial judge’s present recollection as to what occurred at the guilty plea proceeding.
The real issue on appeal, albeit in a sense collateral in nature, is whether the trial judge should have heeded Davis’s suggestion and voluntarily disqualified himself in view of his status as an essential witness to a matter in issue before him. Resolution of this issue on appeal does not address or reach the principal issue of whether Davis was, in fact, so confused by the “nolle pros-equi by [the] State as to Count Two” as to render his pleas of guilty involuntary. Appellate resolution thereof, as well as all other grounds asserted by Davis in his Rule 27.26motion, must await another day in view of disposition of the collateral issue just mentioned.
In reality the trial judge presumed that Davis was not confused by the anomalous occurrence mirrored by the transcript of the guilty plea proceeding because he, the trial judge, was not confused. On appeal the state adopts a cavalier attitude toward the entire matter by variously arguing that (a) the trial judge’s action was not “clearly erroneous”, that (b) it was “clear beyond dispute that the court’s reference during
The vice of witness, judge and jury being rolled into one was fully explicated in Tyler v. Swenson, 421 F.2d 412 (8th Cir.1970). There the principal issue was whether the trial judge in a Missouri Rule 27.26 proceeding improperly relied upon his own recollection as an evidentiary basis for denying movant’s claim. The rationale for holding that the trial judge improperly did so is aptly summed up in the following excerpt, 427 F.2d at 415: “It has long been recognized under similar circumstances that a judge cannot serve as a material witness as well as the trier of fact. United States v. Halley, 240 F.2d 418 (2 Cir.1957); Terrell v. United States, 6 F.2d 498 (4 Cir.1925); Maitland v. Zanga, 14 Wash. 92, 44 P. 117 (1896); 28 Harv.L.Rev. 115 (1914). Cf. Hale v. Wyatt, 78 N.H. 214, 98 A. 379 (1916). As was stated in Lepper v. United States, 233 F. 227, 230 (4 Cir. 1916) (concurring opinion): ‘Indeed, a judge presiding at a trial is not a competent witness, for the duties of a judge and a witness are incompatible. If he testifies he would have to pass upon the competency of his own testimony; and as a witness he might be regarded a partisan, and would be subject to embarrassing conflicts with counsel. The danger to the dignity of the bench, of subjecting its impartiality to doubt and of placing the defendant at an unfair disadvantage by admitting the presiding judge as a witness is very obvious.’ ” The Supreme Court of Missouri recently had occasion to observe in Jackson v. State, 585 S.W.2d 495, 497 (Mo. banc 1979), that “when the total lack of a record is coupled with allegations challenging the propriety of past actions of a presently sitting judge, we believe that basic fairness dictates that the latter disqualify in the cause and request assignment of another judge . . . ”. When Tyler and Jackson are read in concert, this court is constrained to hold that the trial judge erred in not disqualifying himself and requesting assign
In closing, this court fully concurs with the following admonition laid down in Tyler v. Swenson, supra, 427 F.2d at 417: “To avoid misunderstanding, we note that it is not our intention by this decision to retreat from the federal and state decisions which accurately point up the recognition that the trial court, familiar with the prior proceedings, generally represents the better and more expeditious forum for post-conviction proceedings, [cases cited] . . . We thus make clear, as do the above cases, that a trial judge is not to be disqualified simply because he is familiar with the proceedings and supplements the record with observations. ... In the instant case it is particularly significant that the trial judge’s recollection was the only testimony which refuted petitioner’s claim . . . ”.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
All concur.