OPINION OF THE COURT BY
A рetition for writs of prohibition and of mandamus has been filed seeking (1) to prohibit the respondent district judge from enforcing his order sealing and preventing the dissemination of the transcript of the preliminary hearing involving respondent Wilbur Moyd аnd (2) to mandate the respondent Pauline Ishii, a district court reporter, to deliver to the petitioners a copy of the transcript of the preliminary hearing upon the payment of statutory fees.
I
We need not concern ourselves with the request for a writ of mandamus, inasmuch as the record shows that respondent Ishii had prepared a copy of the transcript at the petitioners’ request and was prevented from delivering it to them only because of the order of respondent Takao. We are also not here concerned with the public’s right to be present and to attend judicial proceedings as we were in
Gannett v. Richardson,
HRS § 606-12 provides that the court reporter “may furnish a transcript of any of his notes, wherе the same is not intended for purposes of appeal to the Supreme Court, upon the request of any party, without the order of the judge therefor first obtained. ” We construe the phrase “any party” to mean any person who seeks the transcript for a legitimate and proper purpose.
See New York Post Corporation v. Leibowitz,
Every court has supervisory power over its own records and files. And while the public does generally have the right, established by the common law, to inspect and copy public records and documents, including judicial records, State v. O’Connell, supra; Craemer v. Superior Court, supra, this right of access is not absolute, and the determination of whether and to what extent access is to be permitted “is one best left to the sound discrеtion of the trial court, a discretion to be exercised in the light of the relevant facts and circumstances of the particular case.” Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc., supra, at 1312. In this regard, the right of the news media to inspect and copy is no greater than that of the general public. Id.
In granting respondent Moyd’s motion, which was joined in by the prosecution, the respondent district judge stated:
“[T]he Court has heard arguments of counsel and has examined the evidence concerning the prеliminary hearing and the oncoming trial of the Defendant Moyd. The Court has seen clippings of the newspaper articles and is also aware of the fact that the other media, such as radio and television, has also given wide-spread publicity to Defendant Moyd’s criminal charges.
“The Court feels that the right of the press and public to access to public records is not unqualified and that must be weighed against the right of defendant to a fair trial. It also feеls that under the Hawaii Revised Statutes, the courts have control over the records. The Court has taken all of this into consideration and has weighed this publicity in terms of the right of access to public records of the press and mеmbers of the public.
“The Court is aware of the fact that May 1st, 1978 has been set for the date of defendant’s trial and feels that any publicity with respect to the transcript will of necessity contain reference to whether or not Judge Richardson had a basis for his ruling in discharging the rape charge against the Defendant Moyd.
“The Court has considered other alternatives of insuring a fair trial, including the change of venue and delay of trial, and so on.
“It is this Court’s opinion that the movant, which in this case is defendant, and joined in by the prosecutor agreeing to the proposition that if the transcript isreleased it is not sure whether the defendant will have a fair trial, defendant has sustained her burden of showing thаt there is substantial likelihood that if the transcript is released, it will be prejudicial to the defendant and that the prejudice is immediate and sufficiently grave to justify continuing the order sealing the transcript until after the trial of the Defendаnt Moyd.”
Whether or not we would have decided the motion to seal any differently is not the issue. The matter was addressed to the sound discretion of the respondent district judge,
Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc., supra; State v. O’Connell, supra; Crаemer v. Superior Court, supra,
and we do not find his determination to have been capriciously and arbitrarily made.
Cf. United States v. Gurney, supra.
Neither was it clearly and as a matter of law erroneous.
Compare, New York Post Corporation v. Leibowitz, supra.
1
The respondent had
ample cause for concern over the right of the defendant to a fair trial by an impartial jury. Not only was there extensive publicity regarding the commission of the crime, but there was also wide media coverage given to public reaction against Judge Richardson’s decision at the preliminary hearing, sustaining the sоdomy complaint against respondent Moyd but dismissing the rape change against him. Some 23,000 persons signed petitions protesting the dismissal of the rape charge, and questioning the presiding judge’s fitness to continue to serve in that caрacity. In the midst of all of this publicity, a grand jury was convened which returned an indictment against the accused, not only for the offense of sodomy but also for the crime of rape. The district judge was obviously concerned that further pretrial publicity of this nature might render it difficult for respondent Moyd to obtain a fair and impartial jury at his forthcoming trial. The right of an accused to a fair trial by an impartial jury is fundamental to our system of jurisprudence,
see In re Oliver,
II
The writ of prohibition is an extraordinary remedy, the object of which is not to cure a mere legal error or to serve as a substitute for appeal, but to restrain a judgе of an inferior court from acting beyond or in excess of his jurisdiction.
Chung v. Ogata,
We do not doubt the well-intentioned nature of the request for a transcript. In the words of reportеr Adamski: “I felt the transcript was necessary as a balance for the actions and statements which had come forth from Women Against Rape in the meantime — including a March 5, 1978 rally at Iolani Grounds. ’ ’ But it was precisely the nature and еffect of the publicity engendered by the actions of concerned Women Against Rape that raised grave doubts in respondent Takao’s mind regarding the advisability of releasing the transcript at that point in time. The order was оbviously designed to avert the re-escalation of the controversy on the eve of trial. The complaint of Women Against Rape against Judge Richardson will be decided in another forum and ought not to be injected into the State’s criminal prosecution of respondent Moyd.
Members of the public do have a right to be concerned — and it is their duty and responsibility to be concerned—about the growing incidence of crime within their midst. And they must be willing to voice their concern. At the same time, they must continually guard against the erosion of fundamental rights, prominent among which is the right to a fair trial. None, it has been said, is more fundamental than this right,
see Estes v.
Texas,
The petition for the writs is denied. 2
Notes
The situation faced by the rеspondent district judge was unlike that faced by the court in Leibowitz where the New York court held that the petitioner before it was entitled to a transcript of the court’s charge to the jury in a criminal prosecution. The distinction is apparent from the New York court’s own statement:
“In this case, on the other hand, there is no possible conflict between the position asserted by the petitioners and the rights of the defendant. Indeed, the trial had been cоncluded, and neither the defendant nor the people could in any way be prejudiced by allowing the petitioner or any other member of the public to have a copy of the charge.”163 N.Y.S.2d at 417 ,143 N.E.2d at 262 .
The petitioners also complain of therespondent district judge’s refusal to allow them to participate in the determination of the defendant’s motion to seal the transcript. In Gannett v. Richardson, supra, we held that a third party has no standing to intervene in a criminal prosecution. Cf. United States v. Gurney, supra.
