This appeal is from a conviction for assault. The defendant’s counsel had asked the trial judge to put this question to prospective jurors on voir dire: “ ‘Would any member of the jury be prejudiced by the fact that the complaining witness is white and the defendants are Negro?”’ The judge replied: “I shall never ask that question. We do not draw any color line in this courtroom. Now if you are going to start drawing the color line, before we swear the jury — of course once jeopardy commences I cannot do anything about it— but I am going to continue the case and have other counsel appointed if you gentlemen intend to make a color issue here. You know, I believe in equal rights but I do not believe in preferential rights.” Thus admonished, counsel said “All right, Your Honor, if you object to that question, we withdraw it.”
Counsel could not be expected to stand on his request despite the judge’s attitude. Moreover, the judge’s refusal to put counsel’s question to the jurors was plain error affecting substantial rights. Such errors may be noticed although they were not brought to the attention of the court. Rule 52(b), F.R. Crim.P.
This court sustained, in 1931, the District Court’s refusal to allow counsel "to inquire of the prospective jurors on their voir dire whether they entertained racial prejudice in a case wherein the defendant is a negro and the deceased a white man.” Aldridge v. United States,
The Supreme Court pointed out that “The practice of permitting questions as to racial prejudice is not confined to any section of the country, and this fact attests the widespread sentiment that fairness demands that such inquiries be allowed.”
This principle is not limited to capital crimes or even to crimes of violence. In reversing a conviction for making false statements, the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit said: “we are bound by the broad rule set forth in Aldridge v. United States, 1931,
Accordingly the judgment must be reversed.
Another point calls for comment. Appellant was indicted for robbery. The jury was charged that they could find him “guilty of robbery as charged; or guilty of simple assault, which is a lesser offense; or not guilty.” When asked for the jury’s verdict, the foreman announced: “King not guilty of robbery.” When the deputy clerk forthwith repeated the verdict he stated, simply: “Not guilty.” The court then dismissed the *970 jury, and they left the courtroom. In a bench conference that followed the prosecutor raised the possibility that the verdict of “not guilty of robbery” was an incomplete one. The court indicated that it had relied on the clerk’s statement of the verdict as “not guilty” and was surprised to learn what the foreman had actually said. The jury was then called back into the courtroom, and the foreman was asked to repeat the verdict. The following ensued:
The Foreman : The verdict on robbery on King, not guilty of robbery. * * *
The Court: Well, the difficulty is that the Court submitted to you an alternative, namely, that you had a right to find — well, the Court told you that you had a right to find any one of three verdicts: Either guilty of robbery, or guilty of simple assault, or not guilty.
Now, your verdict isn’t just not guilty, it is not guilty of robbery. What about the simple assault?
The Foreman: But guilty of the simple assault, Your Honor.
In view of the likelihood that appellant will not be retried for assault,
1
we find it unnecessary to decide whether this procedure would in itself require reversal of this case. Compare Melton v. Commonwealth,
Reversed.
Notes
. Appellant was given a suspended sentence and placed on probation for one year on May 24, 1965. In the unlikely event of a new trial appellant would be free to reargue this point as a basis for a contention of double jeopardy — a contention on which we express no opinion,
