OLIVER v. THE STATE.
A94A2160
Court of Appeals of Georgia
JANUARY 13, 1995.
453 SE2d 746
BIRDSONG, Presiding Judge.
Bruce Oliver appealed to the Georgia Supreme Court the trial court‘s order denying his plea of double jeopardy, asserting the appeal involved a constitutional question; the Supreme Court transferred the casе to this court. Appellant asserts the trial court erred in denying his double jeopardy plea.
Accusations were filed against appellant for three counts of misdemeanor offenses of abusive telephone calls tо certain victims and their families. Appellant filed two pretrial motions in limine which the State elected not to oppose. One of these motions was to suppress all evidence of obscene phone calls and also to prohibit adults from testifying as to what children told them had been said on the phone. It appears that during the hearing on these motions the State represented that apparently no one could remember or was available to testify to any obscene phone calls, and therefore the State had no objection to the motions in limine. Both motions were granted. Trial commenced and based on the pretrial position taken by the Statе, appellant‘s counsel made an opening statement in which she informed the jury that appellant “is charged with making harassing phone calls to three different households . . . and those are hang up calls, except for one call, which is an innocuous call and not obscene, not argumentative or anything like that. All the other calls were hang up calls.” During the course of trial the State learned that one child was now willing to testify to an unrecorded phone call and commenced to lay the foundation for the introduction of such evidence. Appellant‘s counsel interposed a timely objection to the State‘s conduct. Appellant‘s counsel affirmatively stated оn the record how appellant‘s case would be prejudiced as counsel had relied on both the prior statements of the State and the prior rulings on the motion in limine, and had commenced the defense‘s whole trial stratеgy in one particular way. Thereafter the following colloquy occurred: “THE COURT: Well, I am a little troubled switching over in the middle of the stream because I understood earlier that the case was going to involve hang up phone calls and we had the records for those. Do you insist on using this witness? [SOLICITOR]: Yes, sir. I think so. [DEFENSE]: We would be vehemently opposed. We may have to move for a mistrial if they insist on using that. As I said again, the obscene phone calls are not relevant. It‘s something used solely to inflame the jury because this is not a charge of obscene phone calls. This is a charge of harassing phone calls. THE COURT: I would be inclined to grant your motion for a mistrial because I do remember your opening statemеnt telling them that it was hang up phone calls and for them to use something else would be, I would think, highly prejudicial. . . . By
“Jeopardy attached in this case. Once the jury has been impaneled and sworn, jeopardy attaches. [Cit.] ‘Retrial is permissible only if a manifest necessity existed for the declaratiоn of the mistrial lest otherwise the ends of public justice be defeated; the existence of manifest necessity is to be determined by weighing the defendant‘s right to have his trial completed before the particular tribunal against the interest of the public in having fair trials designed to end in just judgments; and the decision must take into consideration all the surrounding circumstances.’ ” Dotson v. State, 213 Ga. App. 7, 8 (1) (443 SE2d 650). In this case, appellant moved for mistrial; the record affirmatively establishes that, as the State intended to introduce the testimony of at least one child which it had not known was available when it elected not to oppose appellant‘s pretrial motion in limine, manifest necessity existed within the meaning of Dotson, supra, for the granting of apрellant‘s pretrial motion. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting appellant‘s mistrial motion.
Judgment affirmed. Blackburn, J., concurs. Ruffin, J., concurs specially.
RUFFIN, Judge, concurring specially.
While I agree that the judgment below should be affirmed, I write separately because the record demonstrates there was no prosecutorial misconduct in the presence of the jury; therefore, there was no manifest necessity for the declaration of a mistrial. Appellant‘s retrial is not barred because the requirement that there be intentional prosecutorial misconduct “intended to subvert the protections afforded by the Double Jeopardy Clause” was not met. See Williams v. State, 258 Ga. 305, 312 (1) (A) (369 SE2d 232) (1988). Moreover, the terminаtion of the trial resulted from appellant‘s premature mistrial motion. “[S]elf-induced error is not grounds for reversal. [Cit.]” Sullens v. State, 239 Ga. 766, 767 (2) (238 SE2d 864) (1977).
The trial court is authorized to declare a mistrial when prejudicial conduct on the part of counsel in the prеsence of the jury “makes it impossible to proceed with the trial without injustice to the defendant.”
I also do not agree that the prosecutor‘s mere expression of his intention to subsequently introduce such evidence, in and of itself, was prejudicial. “It is the trial court and not counsel who is given responsibility and powеr by law to exercise discretion in the admission of evidence and the control of the trial proceedings and of the parties before it. [Cits.]” Garcia v. State, 207 Ga. App. 653, 658 (2c) (428 SE2d 666) (1993). Rather than inviting appellant to move for a
DECIDED JANUARY 13, 1995.
Amy A. Petulla, for appellant.
Clements & Clements, Patrick R. Clements, for appellee.
