39818. LAW v. THE STATE. 39832. WHITFIELD v. THE STATE.
39818, 39832
Supreme Court of Georgia
OCTOBER 7, 1983
251 Ga. 525 | 307 S.E.2d 904
The Judicial Qualifications Commission found the facts to be as alleged in the complaint and that the actions of Judge Noland were in violation of the Canons of Judicial Conduct. We agree with this finding; however, we cannot agree with the penalty recommended by the Commission. The Commission recommended that Judge Noland be suspended from his office as Judge of the Superior Courts of the Douglas Judicial Circuit for a period of sixty days, without pay, and that he not be permitted to occupy his office physically during the period of such suspension. We conclude that a sixty day suspension without pay is too severe under the facts of this case.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that effective November 1, 1983, Judge Robert J. Noland be suspended from office without pay for a period of fifteen (15) days and that during said period he physically remain away from his chambers.
All the Justices concur.
DECIDED OCTOBER 7, 1983.
Robert E. Hall, for Judicial Qualifications Commission.
Warren C. Fortson, William C. Tinsley II, for Noland.
39818. LAW v. THE STATE.
39832. WHITFIELD v. THE STATE.
GREGORY, Justice.
Eddie Law, Jake Whitfield and two others were convicted in Decatur Superior Court of the offense of possession of cocaine, a controlled substance. Law and Whitfield each appealed to the Court of Appeals. The judgment of the trial court was affirmed in a single opinion which addressed both appeals. Law v. State, 165 Ga. App. 687 (302 SE2d 570) (1983). We granted certiorari to consider Division 3 of the opinion of the Court of Appeals. That division construes a Code section governing discovery of scientific reports.
The defendants were arrested in a motel room in Decatur County on October 9, 1981. A powdery substance was seized which the sheriff‘s deputies believed to be cocaine. It was transported to the State Crime Laboratory in Moultrie and later to the laboratory in Atlanta. The defendants were indicted on November 2, 1981, arraigned November 6, 1981 and tried November 11, 1981. At arraignment on November 6, the defendants made written requests or demands for scientific reports. No reports were furnished. At trial an expert from the Atlanta Crime Laboratory was called by the State as a witness for the purpose of identifying the substance seized by the deputies. He testified that he had only received the case on November 3. At that time the district attorney requested a rush job because of the forthcoming trial. The witness then moved the case ahead of its normal sequence and tested the substance on November 9, two days before trial. Because of the brief time interval, no written report was prepared. The witness also testified that another expert examined the substance on behalf of the defendants on the same day as did the witness. The defendants’ expert did not testify at trial. Defendants moved to suppress the testimony of the State‘s expert witness identifying the substance as cocaine because no copy of a report on the laboratory analysis had been furnished. The trial court overruled the objection and the two issues we now address were created.
(1) We deal first with the issue of the timeliness of the request. For the convenience of the reader we set out
“(a) As used in this Code section, the term ‘written scientific reports’ includes, but is not limited to, reports from the Division of Forensic Sciences of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation; autopsy report by the coroner of a county or by a private pathologist; blood alcohol test results done by a law enforcement agency or a private physician; and similar type reports that would be used as scientific
evidence by the prosecution in its case-in-chief or in rebuttal against the defendant. “(b) In all criminal trials, felony and misdemeanor, the defendant shall be entitled to have a complete copy of any written scientific reports in the possession of the prosecution which will be introduced in whole or in part against the defendant by the prosecution in its case-in-chief or in rebuttal. The request for a copy of any written scientific reports shall be made by the defendant in writing at arraignment or within any reasonable time prior to trial. If such written request is not made at arraignment, it shall be within the sound discretion of the trial judge to determine in each case what constitutes a reasonable time prior to trial. If the scientific report is in the possession of or available to the prosecuting attorney, he must comply with this Code section at least ten days prior to the trial of the case.
“(c) Failure by the prosecution to furnish the defendant with a copy of any written scientific report, when a proper and timely written demand has been made by the defendant, shall result in such report being excluded and suppressed from evidence in the prosecution‘s case-in-chief or in rebuttal.”
The code section has two objectives apparent from its plain language. First, it makes certain reports subject to discovery by a defendant in a criminal case. Second, it provides a procedure to be followed. To accomplish the first objective, the reports are described by their nature and function. Then, two limitations are applied. Not every described report is discoverable, but only those (1) in the possession of or available to the prosecution (2) which will be introduced against the defendant. As to the second objective, the procedure, the time frames and mechanics of conducting the discovery are provided. The defendant initiates discovery by filing a written request for the report. He does this at arraignment or within any reasonable time prior to trial. What is reasonable is in the sound discretion of the trial judge. If the request is timely made, defendant is then given at least ten days access to the report before trial, in order to prepare. That is, a copy of the report must be furnished by the prosecuting attorney at least ten days prior to trial. Nothing in the statute indicates the report becomes non-discoverable solely because a request is untimely. Obviously, the ten day time period may be reduced if ten days are not available either because the defendant delays the request, or because indictment or arraignment occur within ten days of trial. The defendant is nonetheless entitled to production within such time as is reasonable. If the prosecuting attorney furnishes a copy but not in the time frame specified, there is nothing in the statute to require exclusion of the document from
In this case, only nine days intervened between indictment and trial, and only five days from arraignment to trial. The request was filed at arraignment. Even if a written report had existed, a copy could not have been furnished at least ten days before trial. But, it would have been necessary to furnish a copy within a reasonable time under the circumstances. Perhaps then the question of a continuance or recess would have been presented. Only if no copy at all had been furnished by the district attorney would the exclusionary rule have applied. Any contrary construction of this statute in State v. Meminger, 249 Ga. 561 (292 SE2d 681) (1982) or State v. Madigan, 249 Ga. 571 (292 SE2d 406) (1982) will not be followed.
(2)
In State v. Madigan, supra, we faced a situation where written reports existed. In order to circumvent the exclusionary rule of
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. All the
DECIDED OCTOBER 7, 1983.
Lambert & Floyd, George C. Floyd, for appellant (case no. 39818).
Conger & Conger, Leonard H. Conger, for appellant (case no. 39832).
J. Brown Moseley, District Attorney, W. Paul Fryer, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
HILL, Chief Justice, concurring in the judgment.
I concur in the judgment but not all that is said in the opinion. Specifically, where the majority say, in dicta, that if the defendant does not receive the scientific report at least ten days prior to trial, the defendant “may be entitled to a continuance or recess as the trial judge shall determine,” I would say that the defendant would be entitled to a continuance unless the state is able to show that the continuance is sought solely for purpose of delay.
Here the state showed that defendant‘s expert had been permitted to examine the substance in question prior to trial and thus there was no reason to continue the case. Moreover, the examination by defendant‘s expert rendered harmless the state‘s failure to produce a written report. I therefore concur in the judgment.
SMITH, Justice, dissenting.
As in the majority opinion, this dissent first addresses the question of the timeliness of the request, and then the meaning and intent of the statute.
1. I disagree with the construction of
I am aware of the potential for abuse that may follow from this reading of the statute. In State v. Meminger, 249 Ga. 561 (292 SE2d 681) (1982), we speculated that the construction I propose could be used by a defendant for purposes of delay when he knew far in
2. The majority opinion not only disregards the clear language of
A basic principle of scientific testing is that careful records of test procedure and results are to be scrupulously maintained. A scientific test without an accompanying report of the testing environment, number of trials, raw results and analyzed data is in reality no test at all. The majority opinion condones the performance and use of haphazard, hasty, inaccurate, unreliable and undocumented tests by the state where a man‘s liberty is at stake. A plain common sense view of right and wrong dictates an opposite result. Even if the same evidence can be presented either orally or in a written report by the expert, the statute implicitly recognizes the complexity of scientific evidence and helps to moderate the difficulty a defendant without laboratory resources may have in controvert-
The purpose of the statute is to give the defendant an opportunity to examine and respond to complicated information dealing with topics not ordinarily encountered or understood by laymen. The opportunity to examine combines two elements: (1) a ten-day period to make a thorough examination and evaluation; and (2) an accessible, tangible form, such as a writing. Without both of these parts the opportunity to examine does not exist.
In the present case no written report was prepared, allegedly because of the rushed trial schedule. But the rights of the defendant should not depend on the state‘s hurry to try him. I can only suppose that the trial court felt impelled by the adage that justice delayed is justice denied, as its action can be characterized as nothing less than “expeditious.” It is gratifying to know that one court has its calendar in such good order that it cannot give a defendant the time required by law to prepare his defense. Obviously there is no foot dragging in this circuit. In effect the defendant is told that since there was not time to prepare a report, he is not entitled to the benefits of the statute. This is fundamentally unfair and it was just such antics as this that created a compelling need for the statute in the first place.
Any interpretation of
WELTNER, Justice, dissenting.
I dissent because I am concerned that the reasoning of the majority might in some other case result in an intentional frustration of the plain purpose of
It may be that the present case included exigent circumstances which made it unfeasible to grant a continuance for the purpose of providing to the defendant a written report and the statutory period of time for its examination. The record is silent as to that possibility.
