HOUSTON CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY аnd Nene Foxhall, and The Houston Post Company, Channel Two Television Company, and KPRC Radio Company, Petitioners, v. Honorable I. D. McMASTER, Judge, 179th Judicial District Court, Harris County.
No. 64751.
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, En Banc.
May 14, 1980.
598 S.W.2d 864
James E. Crowther, Charles B. Holm and Richard A. Sheehy, Houston, for The Houston Post Co., Channel Two Television Co. & KPRC Radio Co.
Mark Vela and Stanley G. Schneider, Houston, for McManus.
Donald W. Rogers, Jr., Houston, for respondent.
Robert Huttash, State‘s Atty., Austin, for the State.
OPINION
CLINTON, Judge.
These are two, formerly three,1 aсtions for extraordinary relief which we have consolidated for hearing and determination of
The controversy underlying the flurry of activity toward this Court is satisfactorily described in portions of the response from Respondent that follows:
“The Relators herein are seeking relief in the form of a writ of mandamus or alternatively a writ of prohibition directed against Respondent as the result of Respondent‘s action in entering an Order barring the attendance of the public and the press3 at a hearing in connection with a postconviction petition for writ of habeas corpus filed by Vernon Eugene McManus arising from his conviction for the offense of capital murder and attendant death sentence [sic] in connection with Cause No. 249,771 in the 179th District Court of Harris County . . . Petitioner . . . challenge[s] the validity of his conviction . . . on several theories, including (1) that he was denied effective assistance of counsel at his trial as a result of a conflict of interest with his retained trial lawyer . . . because [his lawyer] was having an affair with Petitioner‘s wife during the trial аnd subsequently married her; and (2) that one of the prosecutors at his trial . . . was having an affair with a key State‘s witness during the trial and suborned perjury through the testimony of said witness. . . . Respondent, acting within the discretion conferred upon him by virtue of the provisions of
Art. 11.07, C.C.P. , elected to conduct a hearing to determine the validity of the allegatiоns made by Petitioner, and acting within the scope of his discretion in habeas corpus matters, elected to close said hearing to the public because of the lewd, lascivious, and sexual nature of the allegations made by Petitioner and the effect that the same could have on the reputations of the witnesses who would be required to give testimony at said hearing, namely by entering the Order heretofore referred to . . .”4
To resolve the contrоversy thus presented, fortunately, we need not labor in search of the common law nor pontificate federal and state constitutional principles in an effort to relieve facial tensions between freedom of the press, the public right to know, and right of an accused to a fair public trial.6 Indeed, we do not address constitutional provisions at all, for the Legislature of Texas has provided the standard to be applied in the unusual circumstances of the causes before us.
“The proceedings and trials in all courts shall be public.”
Whatever else may be argued about its nature and class, that an application for writ of habeas corpus generally7 and post-conviction8 initiates a “proceeding” cannot be gainsaid. Manifestly, the prospective order rendered and entered by Respondent is contrary to positive statutory imperative.
Without endorsing all its sentiments, we borrow, as a fair statement of one аspect of public policy considerations backing the command, from Shiras v. Britt, 589 S.W.2d 18, 20 (Ark.S.Ct. 1979):
“Furthermore, the handling of the public‘s business in secret and behind closed doors not only causes the public to view the results with distrust, but it deprives the public of sufficient knowledge to make adjustment or reform in the law or the judiciary.”
Nevertheless, at this juncture relief sought will not be granted for Respondent is without power to hold the hearing in the first place. The issue of closure has been addressed here in the interest of judicial economy, anticipating that at the appropriate time McManus will request and Respondent will grant a hearing on the applications for writ of habeas corpus. It is to that timeliness that we now turn.
May 20, 1977 the trial court entered judgment that McManus is guilty of the offense of capital murder and аssessed the death penalty. That judgment of conviction was affirmed by this Court and on January 16, 1980, denying motion for leave to file motion for rehearing, the Court entered but stayed issuance of its mandate for thirty days. By order dated February 14, 1980 Mr. Justice Lewis F. Powell further stayed our mandate pending timely filing by McManus of his petition for writ of certiorari and, if so filed, disposition of the writ by the Supreme Court of the United States.9 April 3, 1980, so we are advised, time for filing the petition was extended to and including June 15, 1980. Though entered, our own mandate has not yet issued.
Accordingly, on paper at least, McManus is pursuing his right to have the Supreme Court of the United States review the judgment of this Court affirming the judgment of conviction rendered by and entered in the trial court. The consequence of his endeavor is that the special suspension and notification procedure attending a capital case has not been effectuated.10 Pursuant to
The extraordinary relief sought by the Petitioners is denied.12
DALLY, Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
McManus’ conviction is not final. Therefore, he is not now entitled to seek post-conviction relief under the provisions of
It will now be difficult to predict when, contrary to precedent and without constitutional or statutory authority, this Court will undertake to render advisory opinions and declaratory judgments. The Court‘s action here invites others to seek advisory opinions and declaratory judgments in important cases, and what case is not important to the parties involved? This invitation for petitions for advisory opinions and declaratory judgments will not result in judicial economy.
The majority says that these issues with which the declaratory judgment deals were clearly raised and determined in the trial court. It must be remembered as the majority also holds that the trial court was without authority to decide any issues presented in the proceeding before it.
I conсur in the result reached by the majority, but I dissent to the rendering of the declaratory judgment.
ONION, P. J., and DOUGLAS, J., join in this opinion.
Notes
“The Court having heard arguments and brief filed by counsel for the defense, counsel for the new [sic] media and counsel for the state, and because of the potential damage to the reputation of the witnesses due to the nature of the allegations contained in both of the post-conviction writs, the Court is of the opinion that, for the protection of the witnesses, the Court is ordering closed to the public and press and all parties not in interest the hearing on the post-conviсtion writs filed by the defense in the above styled and numbered cause.”
As to the continuing vitality of the first sentence, see Hughes v. State, 562 S.W.2d 857, 859 (Tex.Cr.App. 1978). The latter requirement is also imposed generally by“When an appeal is taken from a death penalty, sentence shall not be pronounced, but shall be suspended until the decision of the Court of Criminal Appeals has been received. * * * Upon the affirmance of the judgment by the appellate court, the clerk shall at once send its mandate to the clerk of the Court from which the appeal was taken, there to be duly recorded.”
