On this appeal from a conviction of petit larceny, three claims of error are made.
*442 First, it is claimed the evidence was not sufficient to support the conviction. The record clearly demonstrates this claim has no merit.
Second, it is claimed that appellant was denied a fair trial by the frequent questioning of appellant by the trial judge. We have carefully read the entire transcript of trial and are not convinced that the trial judge’s questions, extensive as they were, constituted prejudicial error so as to deny appellant a fair trial before the jury which, after proper instructions, found appellant guilty.
The third claim of error requires a more extended discussion. After the prosecutor’s opening statement to the jury the following occurred.
MR. ROSEN : We reserve opening statement.
THE COURT: You make it or waive it.
MR. ROSEN: Very well. I stated my position.
THE COURT: You make it or waive it. Which do you do?
MR. ROSEN: Well, then we’ll have to waive it.
THE COURT: Very well.
The claim is made that it was error not to permit appellant’s counsel to make an opening statement to the jury at the close of the Government’s case in chief. It has often been said that the trial court has a broad power to regulate the conduct and timing of the trial, hut we do not think the question here presented can he disposed of on such general grounds. Our first question is whether a defendant in a criminal trial has the right to make an opening statement.
We have found very little direct authority on the subject. In many jurisdictions the time for making an opening statement is provided for by statute or rule of court. Cases on the subject are collected in the annotation in
Our research has found only one jurisdiction in which it is held a defendant may be denied the right to make an opening statement. See Burns v. State,
Despite the absence of a statute or rule of court in this jurisdiction and the lack of any local case authority directly holding that a defendant has the right to make an opening statement, we take judicial notice that for many years both trial and appellate courts in this jurisdiction have assumed the right of both the prosecutor and defense counsel to make opening statements to the jury. 2 We are aware of no *443 instance in this jurisdiction in which the right to make an opening statement to the jury has been denied to either side in a criminal case.
Our conclusion is, and we so hold, that in a criminal case tried to a jury, defense counsel has the right to make an opening statement. This brings us to the question of the power of the trial judge to regulate the time at which that right might be exercised. More specifically the question is whether the trial judge may require that the defense opening immediately follow the prosecution opening, or does the defense have the right to reserve its opening until the completion of the government’s case?
To answer this question, we first consider the nature and purpose of an opening statement. In Best v. District of Columbia,
Best
was a civil case, but whether the case be civil or criminal, the opening statement serves the same purpose. In Webb v. United States,
In many cases defense counsel may not know what evidence, if any, he will present until he has heard and evaluated the government’s evidence. At that time he may decide to offer no evidence, resting his case on the presumption of innocence of his client and the government’s burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Whether defendant himself will take the stand may not be decided until the government’s case is closed or even until after other witnesses for the defense have testified. 3 Should a defendant be required to make his opening before the government puts on its case, and should he make an opening outlining his defense and what he expects to prove, and then when the government rests decides to offer no testimony, a jury conceivably might conclude that his failure to offer any evidence was an admission of guilt, or at least draw an adverse inference from his failure to prove what he had said he would prove.
In Karikas v. United States, 111 U.S. App.D.C. 312, 316,
Our conclusion is, and we so hold, that in a criminal case tried to a jury the defendant has the right to make an opening statement, and that the effective exercise of that right requires that he be allowed the right to withhold making his opening until the close of the government’s case. 5
*444 Accordingly it was error in the present case to require defendant to make his opening immediately following the Government’s opening or to waive his right to make an opening. But we are not convinced that the error requires reversal. Appellant took the stand and testified at length in his own behalf, and was his only witness. It is difficult to see how an opening statement outlining his testimony would have aided his defense or how the lack of it was prejudicial to his defense.
Affirmed.
Notes
. In 23A C.J.S. Crim.Law § 1086, the headnote states: “It is generally recognized that the accused has the right through his attorney to state the nature of his defense and the evidence he intends to offer to sustain it.”
. In Lichtenwalter v. United States,
.See
Nassif v. District of Columbia, D.C. App.,
.
See also
the opinion of this court in Thompson v. United States, D.C.App.,
. We fully realize that our holding is contrary to some very respected authority.
See, e. g.,
United States v. Conti,
