Lead Opinion
James Walter Cherry was convicted of robbery in the superior court of Fulton County, Georgia on November 6, 1963 and was sentenced to life imprisonment. On March 17, 1978 Cherry petitioned the district court for writ of habeas corpus alleging among other grounds that his retrial following a mistrial unconstitutionally placed him twice in jeopardy for the same offense. The district court denied relief but a panel of this court reversed.
I. THE TRIAL AND REVIEW
Armed and wearing a mask, Cherry and two accomplices abducted William Strickland at gunpoint and ordered him into a stolen automobile as Strickland left his job for the evening. They took him back to his place of employment and forced him to open its door and safe. They then stole over $11,000 in cash and left Strickland tied up by the safe. Although he could not positively identify Cherry’s face because of the ski mask Strickland made a positive identification of his shoes and voice and testified that Cherry’s build and facial shape were identical to that of one of the robbers. An eyewitness positively identified Cherry as a passenger in the stolen getaway vehicle. Cherry’s fingerprints
During Cherry’s first trial in October 1963 the trial judge received information that a juror’s mother had just died.
When he was retried in November 1963, Cherry was convicted of armed robbery on the basis of overwhelming evidence. He appealed to the Supreme Court of Georgia which held that he had not sufficiently presented the issue of double jeopardy to require review. It rejected Cherry’s various other contentions and affirmed his conviction. Cherry v. State,
Cherry currently is incarcerated in Texas under a life sentence for a state conviction there. Georgia has lodged a detainer for his challenged sentence to commence upon his release by Texas. See Braden v. Thirtieth Judicial Circuit Court,
Cherry filed this federal habeas petition in 1978 challenging his conviction on the basis of double jeopardy and claiming errors involving a police officer’s testimony, prose-cutorial misconduct, the disqualification of jurors, and the state’s failure to disclose a plea bargain with his cellmate in violation of Giglio v. United States,
Cherry produced no transcript of the proceedings leading up to the mistrial in his first ease. When his petition was filed in district court, the magistrate issued a routine order directing respondent to file a transcript. Six weeks later the magistrate issued a second order specifically requiring that the transcript of the October 1963 proceedings which ended in a mistrial be furnished. Because of the passage of fifteen years, deaths and changes in personnel, neither a transcript nor the court reporter’s notes could be located. When the case reached the district judge, he issued a further order requiring that an exhaustive search be conducted. The search was accomplished but produced no results. At this point respondent urged that the petition be dismissed under Rule 9(a) of the Rules Governing § 2254 Cases because the lapse of time obviously had prejudiced his
We adopt that portion of the panel decision which holds that because Cherry had not exhausted his state remedies as to the Giglio issue it was not necessary to consider the bypass question. The panel majority also correctly concluded that this court is not foreclosed from considering Cherry’s double jeopardy claim since the district court reached the merits of an exhausted claim in this mixed petition, Galtieri v. Wainwright,
II. MISTRIAL ORDER
Cherry relies on an application of the constitutional principle that the Supreme Court explicated over 150 years ago in United States v. Perez,
We think, that in all cases of this nature, the law has invested courts of justice with the authority to discharge a jury from giving any verdict, whenever, in their opinion, taking all the circumstances into consideration, there is a manifest necessity for the act, or the ends of public justice would otherwise be defeated. They are to exercise a sound discretion on the subject; and it is impossible to define all the circumstances, which would render it proper to interfere. To be sure, the power ought to be used with the greatest caution, under urgent circumstances, and for very plain and obvious causes ....
Absent prosecutorial or judicial overreaching, a defendant’s motion or consent to mistrial ordinarily is assumed to remove any barrier to reprosecution. Where, as here, the mistrial does not result from defendant’s motion, the Perez doctrine of manifest necessity controls. United States v. Jorn,
At the critical moment during Cherry’s first trial there was a manifest necessity that the trial judge do something. Common experience teaches that the sudden death of a juror’s parent would so emotionally incapacitate the juror as to make his uninterrupted service impractical. It is unlikely that he could continue to serve in a manner that would insure a fair trial to either party. The question on which our attention focuses, therefore, is not that the trial judge took some action, but on the
The necessity for some action does not automatically justify the granting of a mistrial. United States v. Jorn and Illinois v. Somerville,
[I]t seems abundantly apparent that the trial judge made no effort to exercise a sound discretion to assure that, taking all the circumstances into account, there was a manifest necessity for the sua sponte declaration of this mistrial.
United States v. Jorn,
Recent amplification of the controlling principles is found in Arizona v. Washington,
The state trial judge’s mistrial declaration is not subject to collateral attack in a federal court simply because he failed ... to articulate on the record all the factors which informed the deliberate exercise of his discretion.
Id. at 517,
Even though other trial judges might have used cautionary instructions or other measures short of a mistrial to correct prejudice to the jury, a judge need not expressly consider these alternatives to satisfy the fifth amendment.
Id. at 346. While Jorn requires that alternatives to a mistrial be considered, we think it also clear that the Constitution does not require canvassing of specific alternatives or articulation of their inadequacies.
Manifest necessity does not mean absolute necessity that a judge declare a mistrial; “we assume that there are degrees of necessity and we require a ‘high degree’ before concluding that a mistrial is appropriate.” Arizona v. Washington,
We do not have here a situation like Jorn, “with action by a trial judge that can fairly be described as erratic.” Illinois v. Somerville,
In short, we are faced with a trial judge who discussed the matter with the attorneys, confirmed the information regarding the death, and ruled in accordance with a proposition voiced by both federal and state courts. There is no indication of judicial or prosecutorial overreaching, nor even any evidence that the prosecution profited at all by the declaration of mistrial.
Although another judge may have granted a continuance when faced with the emergency which arose in Cherry’s first trial, a reasonable judge might have ordered a mistrial, see Smith v. Mississippi,
AFFIRMED.
APPENDIX
The following is the full text of the mistrial order:
THE STATE OF GEORGIA ) ) vs. ) ) JAMES WALTER CHERRY ) _)
No. 84458
FULTON SUPERIOR COURT
(ROBBERY)
ORDER OF MISTRIAL
At approximately 4:30 P.M. yesterday afternoon while on a recess in the trial of this case, the Court received a message from the Clerk of this Court informing it that the mother of one of our jurors [had died], the juror being Mr. Royce Terry, and having been selected in the trial of this case and actually serving on the jury, two witnesses having been examined on the witness stand and the third witness being on the witness stand at the time of the recess. The Court made a preliminary telephonic investigation confirming the tragedy during the recess to determine the veracity of the message relating to the death of the juror’s mother, and the Court concluded at that time that Mrs. Terry, the mother of the juror had passed away in Fulton County, the same being in the jurisdiction of this Court, a short time prior to the calling of the recess and during the trial of this case.
In coming back into the courtroom, the Court informed counsel for the defendant and counsel for the State about the death of the mother of one of the jurors, at which time the Court asked counsel for the defendant as to whether or not he would waive the presence of the juror; namely,
Counsel for the defendant did not make any motion in the presence of the jury or objection in the presence of jury to their being dispersed and since the jury was dispersed yesterday afternoon, the Court has definitely confirmed that the mother of Mr. Royce Terry did pass away at the previously stated time during the trial of this case.
This Court at the present time feels that it would be inhuman, indecent, inappropriate, cruel and an injustice to require Mr. Royce Terry to have been in Court this morning. Therefore, after absolute confirmation by the Court, the Court has excused Mr. Terry from further jury service in this case.
It is the opinion of this Court that this is a providential cause and that this case should not proceed further at this time, and, therefore, at this time, before any further examination of witnesses, or any further action in this case, this Court hereby declares a mistrial in this case.
This the 24th day of October, 1963.
/s/ Luther Alverson
JUDGE, S.C.A.J.C.
Notes
. The information was received by the trial judge at around 4:30 p. m. on the first day of trial while the third witness was testifying.
. Cherry’s petitions for habeas corpus reflect that at this point there was some discussion between court and counsel.
. The record before us does not indicate that Cherry’s counsel offered any suggestion, proposal or motion, and, except for his objection to proceeding with eleven jurors, it does not indicate that he made any objection. The Order of Mistrial discloses that his counsel was given an opportunity to make a motion before the jury was dispersed on October 23, 1963.
. Although the district court did not rule on the state’s motion, we note that Cherry’s petition may well have been subject to dismissal under Rule 9(a). There are two requirements for 9(a) dismissal: the petitioner must have unreasonably delayed filing his petition, without good justification or excuse, and the state must demonstrate that it has suffered actual prejudice from the delay. Mayola v. Alabama,
The petitioner . .. may at some date, perhaps ten or fifteen years after conviction, decide to challenge the state court judgment.... When [claims] are asserted after the passage of many years, both the attorney for the defendant and the state have difficulty in ascertaining what the facts are .... The court reporter’s notes may have been lost or destroyed, thus eliminating any exact record of what transpired.... As a consequence, there is obvious difficulty in investigating petitioner’s allegations. The interest of both the petitioner and the government can best be served if claims are raised while, the evidence is still fresh.
. Although not required, it is probably desirable for the trial judge to make as complete a record as possible. The desirability of such practice, however, could not have been fully appreciated by the judge who presided over Cherry’s first trial which predated Jorn by eight years and Arizona by fifteen. Indeed, at the time of the trial the fifth amendment guarantee against double jeopardy had not yet been held applicable to the states under the fourteenth amendment. Compare Palko v. Connecticut,
. This circuit ruled in Grooms,
*419 Because the trial judge is familiar with the events at trial and the factors leading to the mistrial order, appellate courts should give the judge’s mistrial order the “highest degree of respect,” ... and commit the mistrial decision to the judge’s “sound discretion.”
The trial judge’s disposition, however, should be given “strictest scrutiny” when the prosecutor brings about the mistrial in bad faith for tactical reasons. Arizona v. Washington,
. The Supreme Court said, for example, in Townsend.
[T]he district judge may, in the ordinary case in which there has been no articulation [of the relevant constitutional standard], properly assume that the state trier of fact applied correct standards of federal law to the facts, in the absence of evidence .. . that there is reason to suspect that an incorrect standard was in fact applied.
. We are, of course, aware of occasional cases to the contrary, such as Baker v. Commonwealth,
. Jom and Downum are not to the contrary. Even read “expansively,” they hold “that ‘manifest necessity’ cannot be created by errors on the part of the prosecutor or judge; it must arise from some source outside their control.” Illinois v. Somerville,
Under Fed.R.Crim.P. 23(b), a federal judge, presented with a situation such as occurred here, might ascertain whether all parties are willing to proceed with eleven jurors, Whitfield v. Warden of Maryland House of Correction,
. We do not read the record before us to support the holding of the panel majority that “the trial judge apparently did not canvass the alternatives such as continuance .... But, none of these steps was taken .... Instead, the trial court acted unilaterally.”
Concurrence Opinion
with whom ALVIN B. RUBIN and KRAVITCH, Circuit Judges, join, concurring:
In 1978, the petitioner Cherry sought federal habeas review of a 1963 state conviction. In my opinion, our original panel opinion,
My chief reservations as to the majority’s articulation are (a) that, in terms, it does not restrict its justification of the mistrial to those that occurred pre-Jorn, nor (b) does it in terms restrict its standard of double-jeopardy review of sua sponte mistrials to those collaterally attacked by post-conviction petition.
I
The petitioner Cherry was convicted of robbery in 1963. The conviction resulted after a second trial, the trial judge having declared a mistrial after the first day .of the first trial. The basis of the trial judge’s declaration of a mistrial was the death of a juror’s mother. On the morning of the trial’s second day, the judge dismissed the juror from the trial because it would have been inhumane and inappropriate to require that juror to be present in court that morning. Under the record before us, the judge did so ex parte and without giving counsel for the defendant an opportunity to suggest an alternative to mistrial, such as a recess for the day.
Given the circumstance that the trial occurred in 1963, the trial judge’s ex parte grant of a mistrial for such reason, without consulting the defendant’s counsel, was in accord with the usual practice, Gori v. United States,
stands as a command to trial judges not to foreclose the defendant’s option until a scrupulous exercise of judicial discretion [is made].
If that right to go to a particular tribunal is valued, it is because, independent of the threat of bad-faith conduct by judge of prosecutor, the defendant has a significant interest in the decision whether or not to take the case from the jury when circumstances occur which might be thought to warrant a declaration of mistrial.
Id.
Had the present ex parte grant of mistrial happened after Jorn, in my opinion, it would constitute an unquestionable violation of the accused’s double jeopardy rights as articulated by Jorn. That decision qualified the former view (see Gori, supra) that a constitutional issue arose as to the exercise of the broad discretion only if there was an abuse in the exercise of that discretion. Unless restricted to the present factual context, the majority’s methodology of review (as to whether a sua sponte declaration of mistrial offends the accused’s double jeopardy rights) in effect reinstates Gorí and disregards Jorn.
As I read Jorn, before a defendant may be deprived of his constitutional right under the double jeopardy clause to have his trial completed by the particular tribunal first seated, the district judge must take into consideration the defendant’s significant interests by affording him an opportunity to suggest consideration of consequences less severe to him than a mistrial. Only where, after that, “a scrupulous exercise of judicial discretion leads to the conclusion that the ends of public justice would not be served by a continuation of the proceedings”, Jorn,
In United States v. Starling,
[a]ppellant’s trial was terminated and the jury dismissed after only a brief and confusing exchange between the court and jury. The court did not give counsel for either side an opportunity to address the possibility of bias or the need for a mistrial. No alternatives to a mistrial were considered. Indeed, “had . . . the defendant [been disposed] to object to the discharge of the jury, there would have been no opportunity to do so.” United States v. Jorn,400 U.S. at 487 ,91 S.Ct. at 558 . The record reflects a total lack of awareness of the double-jeopardy consequences of the court’s action and of the manifest necessity standard. Moreover, it shows a crucial failure to consider the appellant’s protected interest in having the trial concluded in a single proceeding. Under these circumstances, the very basis for appellate deference to the court’s determination that a mistrial was required is diminished beyond the point of significance. See Arizona v. Washington, 435 U.S. [497] at 510 and n. 28,98 S.Ct. 824 [at 832,54 L.Ed.2d 717 ].
I assume the majority’s opinion is not intended to modify Starling’s interpretation of the controlling Supreme Court jurisprudence, because this leading circuit authority on the issue is not cited in its opinion.
II
My difficulty with the majority opinion is that its language (viewed outside of its limited factual context) seems to justify a sua sponte declaration of mistrial by a trial judge under present circumstances, not only in the present pre-Jorn 1963 trial, but also in post-Jorn trials, including those conducted after we hand down this opinion. Here, because we determine the trial judge might reasonably have dismissed the juror and have therefore declared a mistrial, we conclude that the defendant’s constitutional protection against double jeopardy was not offended — even though the record does not show that the trial court seriously considered alternatives to a mistrial (other than attempting to secure the defendant’s consent to continuance of the trial before eleven jurors), or that he articulated reasons for foregoing these alternatives; and even though (so far as the record shows) defense counsel did not have an opportunity to object to the mistrial before it was granted, or to suggest alternatives.
With respect, I think the majority paints too broadly. As articulated, its rationale is contrary to Jorn, if applied outside of the present factual context. If applied as the criteria for constitutional violation in mistrials for manifest necessity granted in the present day, the majority’s rationale has effectively eroded the Jorn -mandated requirement that the defendant’s interest be consulted before the trial judge declares a mistrial because of an alleged manifest necessity to do so.
I do not read Arizona v. Washington,
The holding that no Jorn mistrial violation occurred under its facts in Arizona v. Washington is not dispositive of the present
The majority may well not have intended its articulation and holding to extend beyond the present facts of a post-Jorn federal habeas attack upon a pre-Jorn state conviction. If so, I can live with the opinion as articulated. Nevertheless, the broad language of the majority opinion may later be urged as applying to decision of double-jeopardy mistrial issues beyond the scope of the narrow issue before us. The writer must therefore respectfully note these reservations to the majority’s articulation of its rationale.
. As to the latter (or (b) objection), 1 do not read Arizona v. Washington,
. Grooms v. Wainwright,
