Judge Learned Hand once wrote, “Prosecution and judgment are two quite separate functions; they must not merge.”
United States v. Marzano,
I
On the evening of June 11, 1986, Gail Weathers parked her 1985 black Toyota convertible in front of her apartment in Forestville, Maryland, just outside the District of Columbia. She locked the car doors
In the early morning hours of June 14, shortly before 1:00 a.m., Metropolitan Police Officer Gregory Wells was driving his scout car on Alabama Avenue, S.E., in the District of Columbia, when he saw a black Toyota convertible ahead of him occupied by four young men. The convertible top was down, and the two passengers in the rear were sitting on top of the seat while the car was in motion. Because this was a dangerous way to ride, Officer Wells decided to pull the car over and warn its occupants of the danger. Before doing so, however, Wells radioed the car’s license number to the police dispatcher to check on the validity of its registration and to find out if it had been reported stolen. When the dispatcher radioed back that the car had indeed been reported stolen, Wells turned on his flashing red light and siren to signal the driver of the convertible — appellant— that he should pull over. Instead of stopping, however, appellant speeded up, and a chase ensued with both cars traveling at more than double the posted speed limit.
Officer William Hope was riding his motorcycle near the 3000 block of Alabama Avenue when he heard a report over his police radio of a high-speed chase in progress. Hope headed for the vicinity of the chase and fell in behind a scout ear that was also responding to the call. When Hope first caught sight of the Toyota, it was headed directly toward that scout car (and Hope’s motorcycle) at about forty to fifty miles per hour. When the scout car was unsuccessful in blocking the Toyota, Hope found himself directly in its path. Hope jumped off his motorcycle and ran for the curb, leaving the cycle in the middle of the street. As appellant hit the brakes to avoid running into the cycle, the Toyota skidded toward Hope.
Believing his life was in danger, Officer Hope pulled his service revolver and walked toward the Toyota, which by that time had almost come to a stop. Hope ordered appellant to shut off the engine and put the car in park. Having said that, Hope started walking over to the driver’s side of the car, but as he approached, the car suddenly started up again. Hope tried to grab appellant, but appellant ducked, and Hope found himself clinging to the side of the car. He held on as long as he could, but when the car turned onto Alabama Avenue, Hope was thrown to the ground by centrifugal force. He suffered minor injuries. During the time Officer Hope was hanging onto the side of the car, he got a very good look at appellant, staring him practically in the eye. They were no more than two feet apart, and the street was well-lit. Hope’s attention was focused on appellant because, he testified, “I was trying to grab hold of him to ... keep myself from falling off.” Both at the scene of appellant’s arrest and again in court, Officer Hope identified appellant as the driver of the black Toyota.
Although Officer Hope could not continue the pursuit, Officer Wells could and did, following the Toyota to the vicinity of Southern Avenue and Chesapeake Street, S.E., where it was abandoned after hitting a fence. The occupants of the car all fled on foot. The three passengers got away. Appellant, however, ran across Southern Avenue into Maryland, hotly pursued by Officer Wells, and was eventually apprehended by an off-duty Prince George’s County police officer. 4 When Officer Wells went back to examine the Toyota, he discovered that the steering column had been punched, i.e., the plastic ring around the turn signal had been broken so that the car could be started without an ignition key. In addition, the window on the driver’s side was broken, and there were dents and scratches on the hood and the right side.
Appellant admitted being in the Toyota, but only as a rear-seat passenger, not as the driver. He testified that he was walk
Appellant recalled seeing Officer Hope approach the car after Bernis slowed down to avoid hitting the motorcycle, but he said that Hope pointed a revolver at him from behind and reached over another back-seat passenger in an attempt to grab him (appellant) when the car took off. Appellant testified that he was the last one to get out of the car when it hit the fence and that he ran because he was scared. On direct examination appellant said that he turned himself in to the Prince George’s County police officer, but on cross-examination he admitted that he was still running when the officer caught him. Appellant not only denied driving the Toyota at any time that evening; he testified that he did not drive at all and did not even possess a driver’s license.
At the conclusion of the defense case, the court called counsel to the bench and suggested that one of them ask appellant if he ever drove a car, observing that “[i]f somebody establishes that he has a driver’s license, the defense would look pretty flimsy.” The court said it would not ask the question “because I don’t know what he might say.” The prosecutor declined to ask it, and defense counsel said she was satisfied that appellant did not drive; consequently, the question was not asked.
The prosecutor then called a Prince George’s County police officer as a rebuttal witness, apparently to refute appellant’s testimony that he had surrendered to the police, rather than being apprehended while fleeing. It quickly became clear, however, that this officer had no direct knowledge of the arrest. As a result his entire testimony was stricken by the court, and the jury was instructed to disregard it. The trial then recessed for lunch.
The first order of business after the recess was a discussion about jury instructions. Then, before the jury was brought back into the courtroom, the court asked the prosecutor if she had any more rebuttal witnesses, and she replied that she did not. The court then said, “Something has come to my attention, which I want to take a short break and look into....” When the proceedings resumed, the court asked appellant if he ever went by the name Tyrone Lewis or Ronnie Tyrone Lewis. Appellant denied using either name. The court then asked appellant’s mother, who was in the courtroom but unsworn, whether her son sometimes used the name of Lewis; she said that he did. Appellant thereupon admitted (not under oath) that he knew how to drive.
After these exchanges, the trial judge informed counsel that over the lunch hour he had asked his law clerk to have his (the judge’s) secretary make a telephone call to find out whether appellant had a driver’s license. As a result of this call, the judge learned that a person by the name of Ronnie Tyrone Lewis had a District of Columbia driver’s license and that Lewis’ address, social security number, and date of birth were identical to appellant’s. Defense counsel said that appellant had told her he had lost his license, implying that he was telling the truth when he said he did not have one. Nevertheless, the judge said he was inclined to allow the prosecutor to recall appellant for additional cross-examination in order to “get this thing straightened out.” Defense counsel immediately objected on the ground that the information about the driver’s license had been gathered by the court,
5
and that the court was now allowing the government to re
On the reopened cross-examination and again on redirect, appellant admitted going by the name of Ronnie Tyrone Lewis, Lewis being his father’s surname. He also admitted obtaining a driver’s license under that name. He testified that he knew how to drive and that he had driven his uncle’s car four or five times. He also said that he considered himself not to have a driver’s license because he had lost his license. 7 Appellant then stepped down from the stand, and the trial proceeded to closing argument, instructions, and verdict.
A few days later appellant’s counsel filed a motion for a new trial, arguing inter alia that appellant was prejudiced by the testimony about his driving and his once having possessed a driver’s license, and that this prejudice was a direct result of the court’s independent investigation into the question of whether appellant was a licensed driver. The trial court denied the motion. Appellant makes the same argument on appeal; we find it meritorious and reverse the judgment of conviction.
II
Appellant argues that the trial judge went beyond his proper role of impartial magistrate when he initiated an investigation to find out whether appellant had ever had a driver’s license. The government, on the other hand, maintains that the trial judge acted permissibly to prevent perjury. We agree with appellant.
A fair trial demands an impartial judge and an unbiased jury.
Rose v. Clark,
A trial judge, of course, has “not only the right but the duty ... to participate directly in the trial, including the propounding of questions when it becomes essential to the development of the facts of the case.”
Womack v. United States,
In
Kennedy v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.,
[I]t was unacceptable that the most damaging evidence against the defendants in this case was brought about by the intervention of a court official in the accumulation of evidence.... It was the [law clerk’s] duty as much as that of the trial judge to avoid any contacts outside the record that might affect the outcome of the litigation.
Id. at 596. Citing Canon 3(A)(4) of the Code of Conduct for United States Judges, the court held that the law clerk’s “private view of an accident in litigation” was a prohibited ex parte communication. Id. at 597. 8
In
Price Brothers Co. v. Philadelphia Gear Corp.,
Even though a judge may intervene, to a limited extent, in order to correct
When the judge reported to both counsel the results of his secretary’s call, he told them that what he discovered could have helped either side. In this he was clearly mistaken. If the secretary had found out that appellant did not have a driver’s license, nothing would have come of that information because it merely confirmed appellant’s testimony. If, on the other hand, as happened, the secretary or law clerk discovered that appellant did have a driver’s license, that discovery, if made known to the jury through the government’s reopened cross-examination, would both impeach appellant’s credibility and undermine a critical part of his defense,
viz.,
his claim that he was not the driver of the car because he could not drive.
10
Because the judge’s intervention substantially prejudiced the defense, we cannot find it harmless.
See Shannon v. United States, supra,
The government relies heavily on our decision in
Greenhow v. United States, supra,
to support its contention that if there was error, appellant was not prejudiced. We find
Greenhow
distinguishable. The defendant in that case, in response to a question from the court on direct examination, said that he had been employed for four or five years. In the court’s file, however, was a statement given to a court intake officer by the defendant, under oath, in which he said he was unemployed. At the conclusion of his direct testimony, the court called counsel to the bench and informed the prosecutor of the defendant’s prior statement, which the court said the prosecutor could use “for whatever purposes he may wish to use it in cross-examination.”
There are three significant differences between
Greenhow
and this case. First, in
Whether to allow the government to reopen its case and present additional evidence is a decision entrusted to the discretion of the trial court; it is not a matter of right.
See In re E.R.E.,
We do not deny that a trial judge has a duty to expose perjurious testimony whenever possible.
See Greenhow v. United States, supra,
Appellant’s convictions are therefore reversed. The ease is remanded for a new trial or for other proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. D.C.Code § 22-3815(b) (1989).
. D.C.Code § 22-403 (1989).
.D.C.Code § 22-505(b) (1989). The weapon in this case was the vehicle.
. In that area Southern Avenue forms the border between the District of Columbia and Prince George’s County, Maryland.
. The prosecutor told the court that the only surname she had for appellant was Davis, so that she “didn’t have any other name to check."
. Defense counsel also objected on self-incrimination grounds, and on the ground that the issue of the driver's license was a collateral matter.
. It is unclear from the record whether appellant meant that he had merely misplaced the license or that it had been suspended or revoked.
. The judges of the District of Columbia courts, both trial and appellate, are governed by the American Bar Association’s Code of Judicial Conduct.
See Scott v. United States,
. On remand it was established that the trial judge had indeed sent his law clerk from Ohio, where the court sat, to the plaintiffs factory in New York. After reviewing the record of the remand hearing, conducted before a different judge, a majority of the court concluded that reversal was not warranted because "the presumption of prejudice arising from the law clerk’s report of off-the-record observations has been overcome.”
. The trial judge apparently recognized this when he said to defense counsel, “If somebody establishes that [appellant] has a driver’s license, the defense would look pretty flimsy.” At sentencing the judge remarked that if his action was error, it was probably not harmless, since there was “a reasonably good chance” that the reopened cross-examination contributed to the guilty verdict.
. For this important ruling, involving evidence which the trial court itself thought might have been determinative, see note 10,
supra,
appellant was entitled to a judge unaffected by improper participation in the events that made the ruling necessary. Obviously, the evidence was as readily available to the prosecutor before or during trial as it was to the court. It would not have been an abuse of discretion for a trial court to rule that the belated discovery of such evidence by the prosecutor did not warrant the reopening of the case.
See In re E.R.E., supra,
