Sylvester Elder (hereinafter referred to as the defendant) was charged with four counts of statutory rape of a child. Trial was had, without jury, to a Superior Court judge, who took the case under advisement. Subsequently the trial judge declared a mistrial. The defendant is before this court on a complaint seeking either declaratory relief, or relief under this court’s general superintendence power (G. L. c. 211, § 3), contending that principles of double jeopardy prohibit his retrial on these charges. A single justice of this court denied relief and the defendant appealed to the full court.
We conclude that there was no sufficient reason for the declaration of a mistrial, and consequently the case should now be decided by the trial judge and he should order the entry of appropriate judgments. We do not reach the double jeopardy argument of the defendant.
We summarize the facts as, for the most part, included in the findings and rulings of a second Superior Court judge (hereinafter referred to as the motion judge) who, after the mistrial was declared, denied, after hearing, the defendant’s motion to dismiss the charges.
The defendant went to trial, jury-waived, on March 13, 1981. He was and is represented by an experienced trial lawyer. The evidence and final arguments concluded on Thursday, March 19, 1981. The trial judge took the case under advisement indicating that a decision would be announced on Monday, March 23, 1981. The trial was briefly interrupted on March 19, 1981, in order that the judge might dispose of an unrelated criminal matter (sentencing after jury verdict in an assault and battery case). The district attorney for the county of Hampden was present during that sentencing.
Later, on the same day, the district attorney stated to the press his opinion “ (a) that the particular judge favors defendants over prosecutors, (b) that defense lawyers who come before the particular judge should advise clients to
On Monday, March 23, 1981, in a recorded lobby conference, counsel for the defendant, after expressing his personal and professional confidence in the ability of the judge to decide the case impartially, stated that his client “definitely feels that we ought to request a mistrial.” Shortly thereafter in open court, after renewing his expression of personal confidence in the court, the defendant’s counsel moved for a mistrial. The written motion expressly stated that the defendant did not waive double jeopardy rights secured to him by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. The defendant asserted as grounds for the motion that the government’s “conduct at issue can fairly be construed as an effort to be afforded a more favorable opportunity to convict the Defendant, whether or not a mistrial is declared”; that “serious questions may now be raised regarding the propriety of any verdict returned by the Court”; that the trial judge “is no longer in a position to carry out the twofold mandate of the judicial system: that justice not only be done, but that it also appear to be done”; and that the government “by its conduct has deprived the defendant of his right to an impartial decision.”
The trial judge then conducted a hearing to determine “among other matters whether the declaration of a mistrial is a manifest necessity.” Evidence was taken from the re
A second Superior Court judge subsequently denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss. In doing so, the motion judge found: (1) “The public utterances [of the district attorney] were capable of causing a reasonable apprehension on the part of the trial judge that whatever his decision in the Elder case it could and perhaps would be seen by a significant number of people as having been influenced by the District Attorney’s statements”; (2) “The defendant Elder is totally blameless for the incident which precipitated the declaration of mistrial”; (3) “Elder has been inconvenienced, and has been caused to suffer the continuing mental hardship associated with an unresolved case. His finances have been exhausted. He is indigent. Extraordinary circumstances exist which permit the appointment of counsel under Superior Court Rule 53”; (4) “The defendant made a tactical choice to move for a mistrial”; (5) “The affidavit, news releases, and transcript do not warrant a finding that the published statement of the District Attorney were motivated by a desire to influence the Judge’s decision in the Elder case, nor to cause a mistrial in order to obtain a different forum”; and (6) “A retrial of the defendant is not barred by the Double Jeopardy principle.”
1. The Commonwealth argues, preliminarily, that review by the full court of the single justice’s ruling denying relief is not available to the defendant. We disagree. The defendant, at the very least, is properly before us because he addresses to the full court a claim for relief pursuant to this court’s powers under G. L. c. 211, § 3, which grants to this court general superintendence power over all inferior courts. See
Commonwealth
v.
Dunigan,
The Commonwealth further argues that, even if the case is properly here, we should not grant relief, because our extraordinary superintendence powers will not ordinarily be exercised to review interlocutory rulings in criminal cases, since the rights of criminal defendants generally are fully protected through the regular appellate process. See
Rosenberg
v.
Commonwealth,
2. We turn now to the issue whether the trial judge could appropriately declare a mistrial in this case. We conclude that there was no sufficient reason for the declaration of a mistrial.
The defendant is entitled to pursue his trial to completion before the original trier of fact.
United States
v.
Dinitz,
Although a procedural error that would lead inevitably to reversal of a conviction on appeal may sometimes justify a mistrial (compare
Illinois
v.
Somerville, supra
at 469, 471, with
Downum
v.
United States,
The defendant’s motion for a mistrial relied upon the same grounds of public perception which the judge recited in his order and which we have concluded to be inadequate. Thus, the defendant stated in his motion that “serious questions may now be raised as to the propriety of any verdict returned by the Court” and “that [justice must] appear to be done.” However, the defendant also stated that he had been “deprived of his right to an impartial decision.” Beyond doubt, if the judge was not capable of bringing impartial judgment to the case, a mistrial would be justified, even required, in the circumstances shown here. However, the judge, in his order for a mistrial, expressly disclaimed that he had such a state of mind (“the Court knows that insofar as is humanly possible the decision reached would be a true judgment on the law and the evidence”). Thus the defendant’s motion offers us no adequate basis for the declaration of the mistrial.
It appears clear to us that the trial judge declared the mistrial upon the motion of the defendant, and not sua sponte. In the circumstances here this fact is immaterial since, in any event, there was no adequate ground for the declaration of a mistrial, and particularly since there is no reason why this jury-waived proceeding should not now be completed. 1
3. Finally, we comment, not upon the content of the district attorney’s remarks, or his privilege to make them, but upon the timing of his statements. His choice, as to the time to speak, impeded the interests of the court and the defendant, as well as the very public interest which, presumably, he would now assert his comments were intended to promote. Prosecutors, like all lawyers, must have careful regard for the Canons of Ethics and Disciplinary Rules Regulating the Practice of Law, particularly as shown in S.J.C. Rule 3:07, DR7-107(D), as appearing in
The trial judge, as a result of the district attorney’s public statements, was confronted with a unique and perhaps unprecedented circumstance. Nevertheless, as we read his findings, his impartiality was not affected, and therefore his obligation was to deny the motion for mistrial and go forward to a decision of the case.
4. We agree with the conclusion of the single justice of this court that relief in the precise form sought by the defendant should be denied. The judgment in the county court is to be amended to direct the trial judge to decide the case and order the entry of appropriate judgments.
So ordered.
Notes
If it were a jury trial that had been thus interrupted, its completion would now, of course, be impossible. In that event, our inquiry here as to
