Bryant and King, attorneys, appeal the contempt citation issued to them by Judge Lott, before whom appellants were trying a criminal case. The allegedly contumacious conduct occurred during voir dire of a prospective juror. As a result of the verbal exchange between appellants and the trial court, at the conclusion of the trial the attorneys were cited for contempt, required to pay $100 each, and reprimanded by the court. Appellants contend that the trial court erred in holding them in contempt of court without a due process hearing before another judge, and that the trial court erred in its holding that the conduct of either of the attorneys was contumacious. After reviewing the proceedings, we concluded that reversal of the judgment is required.
1. To resolve the first issue, whether appellants’ due process rights were protected by the trial court proceedings, we rely on
Dowdy v. Palmour,
Applying the due process requirements stated in Dowdy to the facts as shown in the record before us, we find that the trial judge delayed the announcement of punishment until the conclusion of trial; that the allegedly contumacious conduct of the attorneys was directed toward the judge; and that, thereafter, the judge reacted to the conduct in such a manner as to become involved in the controversy. Therefore, under the applicable portion of the test set out above, due process required that appellants’ contempt hearing should have been conducted by another judge. Id. at 142.
2. The other enumeration raised addresses the sufficiency of the evidence of appellants’ allegedly contumacious conduct. “At the outset we note that the evidence in any criminal contempt case must show that the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. [Cits.]”
Garland v. State,
The record shows that during voir dire of individual prospective jurors, attorney King, representing the defendant in a criminal case, questioned one of the jurors about his impression of media accounts regarding the defendant’s alleged criminal activity. King asked the question, “Based on everything that you know about this case, and bringing us right up into the present, do you presently believe that [the defendant] did something wrong?” The court responded that that was not a proper question, because it questioned what the jury would have to decide. The prosecuting attorney then stated that he had “objected several times” because King was really asking how the juror would vote. The trial court reiterated that the question was improper. When King said, “We take the position —” the court interrupted, saying, “I don’t care what your position is. I am telling you the law is. You cannot ask one whether he thinks a guy is guilty, and that is the law.” King responded, “Well, your honor —” and the court interrupted him again, saying, “I don’t want to hear any more. I have ruled and I have told you.” King tried three more times to have the court clarify its position as to what King would be allowed to ask or not ask, but the trial court would not allow him to finish making his inquiries. After the third incomplete attempt, the court had the juror removed from the courtroom and said, “Mr. King, both of you I have warned repeatedly, last week, too. You do not argue with the Court. Now, do you understand that?” Appellant Bryant, King’s co-counsel, apparently speaking for the first time on the portion of the record before us, responded, “We understand that we are not to argue with the Court.” The trial court then said, “I am going to hold you in contempt, because I have told you that you do not argue with the Court — When I make a ruling, that is it.” King requested and the court granted him an opportunity to explain for the record that counsel did nothing intentionally to disrespect the honor of the court, and that counsel was attempting to elicit from the venireman “whether he had a bias insofar as viewing my client as having done something wrong, versus whether he is guilty. They are two separate issues.” King went on to explain that he was not asking the questions to be argumentative, but was doing so in the zealous representation of his client’s interests and rights under the Constitution. The court responded that it had “explained to the attorneys repeatedly . . . [that] no attorney shall ever attempt to argue or to explain a case on pain of being considered in contempt.” King and Bryant went on to discuss with the trial court their ability to pursue their line of questioning, and the court took the position that the answers the venireman had *386 given were sufficient responses to the questions that King had posed, and that the question that King sought to ask was not permissible, in the form in which it was asked. When King appeared to disagree, the court said, “I heard the answer. You are arguing with the Court again. I heard the answer. Now, do you understand what is going on here now? I am going to hold you in contempt now ... for these questions. I am going to do it every time that you do it, too . . . When I say that I have ruled on a case I don’t want to hear any argument about it.”
We find that the evidence was not sufficient to hold appellants in contempt of court. The trial court was apparently relying on Rule 23 of the former Rules of the Superior Court, which stated that “ ‘[n]o attorney shall ever attempt to argue or explain a case,
after having been fully heard,
and the opinion of the court has been pronounced, on pain of being considered in contempt.’ ” (Emphasis supplied.)
Farmer v. Holton,
Judgment reversed.
