Opinion
Walter Gibbs and Velma Hogan were jointly tried for felony offenses arising out of a jewelry store robbery. A pretrial motion to sever their trials was denied. During trial, Hogan surprised Gibbs by testifying *765 she committed the offenses under duress from Gibbs and his confederates. Gibbs sought a mistrial because Hogan’s defense was inconsistent with his alibi. To complicate matters, Gibbs’ counsel developed a conflict of interest during trial and sought to be relieved. Gibbs’ motions were denied but his trial was stayed while he sought appellate relief. Hogan’s jury trial proceeded and concluded with guilty verdicts.
Eighteen months later, the Supreme Court issued a writ of mandate directing the trial court to grant Gibbs’ counsel’s motion to be relieved.
(Leversen
v.
Superior Court
(1983)
Gibbs contends the court erred in denying his mistrial motions, and alternatively, in not declaring a mistrial sua sponte. He posits several complaints within this general topic: (1) a mistrial was required after counsel was relieved; (2) he was denied the effective assistance of counsel because his attorney was not present for all proceedings; (3) he was denied his constitutional right to be present for all proceedings because his jury heard evidence in Hogan’s trial after his case had been severed and while he was not present; (4) the resultant procedural morass denied him an impartial jury; and (5) any waiver of his right to a mistrial was neither knowing, voluntary, nor intelligent, and therefore not effective.
The Attorney General contends Gibbs relinquished his right to litigate all of these complaints when he waived his right to a mistrial before the jury had been reconstituted. He also argues that waiver was knowing, voluntary and intelligent. While the waiver question is thought-provoking, we are more concerned with the effect of Gibbs’ renewed motion for mistrial thereafter. Three months after Gibbs had “waived” his right to a mistrial, he affirmatively moved for a mistrial. The court denied that motion as untimely. Therein lies the error.
A criminal defendant has both a state and federal constitutional right not to be placed twice in jeopardy for the same offense. (U.S. Const., 5th Amend.; Cal. Const., art. I, § 15.) Discharging a jury after jeopardy has attached but before a verdict has been reached is the legal equivalent of an acquittal, and bars retrial unless the accused consented to the mistrial or legal necessity required it.
(Larios
v.
Superior Court
(1979)
Federal cases interpreting the federal constitutional bar to double jeopardy are instructive, even though the Fifth Amendment protection only creates minimum standards and the California Constitution affords greater protection
(Curry
v.
Superior Court
(1970)
There is no debate the substitution of counsel before closing argument entitled Gibbs to a mistrial.
(People
v.
Manson
(1976)
Gibbs’ “waiver” of his right to a mistrial was made in October. The court conducted lengthy inquiry before concluding Gibbs had “voluntarily, *767 knowingly and intelligently made the personal election not to make such a motion.” In January, counsel requested a special hearing three days before the trial was scheduled to resume. Counsel indicated to the court Gibbs had only recently changed his mind, and now desired a mistrial and a new jury. The court concluded this change of heart was “clearly untimely” and “not sufficient grounds to set aside the clear express waiver of the right to make a motion for a mistrial that [Gibbs] made on October 13, 1983. . . . And Mr. Gibbs, in this court’s opinion, did waive the right to do so, and he is bound by that waiyer, in absence of good cause, to set that waiver aside. No good cause being shown, the court is going to deny any motion if it is made to set it aside, and therefore, the court is denying the late, tardy motion for a mistrial.”
The trial court appears to have applied a standard similar to Penal Code section 1018, which outlines the defendant’s obligation to show good cause before withdrawing a guilty plea. A guilty plea involves the waiver of constitutional rights and ordinarily leads directly to judgment. Thus, the court, the prosecution, counsel and the defendant all proceed on the assumption no trial will be necessary. The “waiver” of Gibbs’ right to move for a mistrial is an entirely different creature. It is not a “waiver;” it is more correctly a refusal to waive double jeopardy protection. In that sense, the declination of an invitation to discharge the jury and waive the constitutional bar of double jeopardy is more akin to a plea of
not
guilty. In pleading
not
guilty and in refusing to move for a mistrial the defendant refuses to waive constitutional rights and demands full constitutional protection. A defendant need not show good cause to withdraw a not guilty plea and enter a guilty plea. (See
People
v.
Reza
(1984)
It is settled a defendant can change his mind after a motion for mistrial if he expresses that change of heart before the judge acts on it and actually discharges the jury.
(Cardenas
v.
Superior Court
(1961)
We agree the situation might be different had Gibbs’ change of heart caused some prejudice. But it caused none here. Even though the court
*768
described Gibbs’ conduct as a “delaying tactic,” in nearly the same breath the court offered counsel the opportunity to recall any witnesses, an offer, in terms of time-consumption, akin to starting the trial anew but for selecting a new jury. We know of no authority requiring the defendant justify his change of heart in any situation remotely similar to this. Moreover, recent authority from our Supreme Court suggests the contrary. (See
People
v.
Courts
(1985)
Gibbs’ motion for a mistrial on the eve of resuming the trial was not coupled with a motion for continuance or any other condition making “timeliness” an issue. While perhaps it seems unfair the court cannot hold a defendant to his previous decision, the paramount concern is the defendant’s peculiarly personal freedom of choice in asserting a constitutional double jeopardy claim. It is solely the defendant’s decision to proceed with a jury perhaps prejudicially tainted and an attorney perhaps ill-prepared; and the defendant’s decision not to go forward but instead undergo a second prosecution free of that taint.
Finally, we are especially confident of our ruling when viewed in full context: the “taint” here went to the very heart of Gibbs’ constitutional rights to a fair trial with the effective assistance of counsel because the denial of the mistrial motion denied him “continuity of representation.”
(People
v.
Manson, supra,
Gibbs requests we order the disqualification of the trial judge in future proceedings in this case, citing
People
v.
Kaanehe
(1977)
Based on the foregoing, we need not discuss Gibbs’ other contentions of error as they are unlikely to recur on retrial.
*769 The judgment is reversed.
Crosby, Acting P. J., and Sonenshine, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 6, 1986, and respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 8, 1986.
