Pеtitioner Mitchell, who is facing trial for vehicular homicide in a state court in Tennessee, here appeals from a federal district court order denying his application for a writ of habeas corpus. Having already been tried on a lesser charge in connection with the motor vehicle accident that ultimately led to his being indicted for homicide, Mr. Mitchell argues that if Tеnnessee were to try him again it would violate the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy. Finding that this case comes within the “necessary facts” exception to the generаl rule prohibiting successive prosecutions for a lesser offense and an offense that includes it, we affirm the denial of a writ of habeas corpus.
I
The accident occurred on February 20, 1982, when Mr. Mitchell, who had been drinking, drove his pickup truck through a stop sign and hit an automobile driven by a Mr. Pleasants. Mr. Pleasants was badly injured. Mr. Mitchell was found to have a blood alcohol level of .12, and valium was discovered in his possession.
A state warrant was issued, and two days after the accident Mr. Mitchell appeared in the Municipal Court of Memphis and pleaded guilty to chargеs of driving while intoxicated, possession of a controlled substance, and disregarding a stop sign. A charge of reckless driving was dismissed. Mr. Mitchell was found guilty, fined, and given a 60 day jail sentence, with 58 days suspended.
Ten days later Mr. Pleasants died.
Mr. Mitchell was thereafter indicted by a Tennessee grand jury for unlawfully and feloniously killing Mr. Pleasants by the operation of a motor vehicle, in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated § 39-2-231(b). Mr. Mitchеll moved to quash the indictment on the ground that because he had pleaded guilty to charges arising out of the February 20 accident it would be a violation of the double jeopardy clausеs of the federal and state constitutions to try him again.
The trial court denied the motion to quash, and Mr. Mitchell perfected an interlocutory appeal to the Tennessee Court of Criminаl Appeals. That court reversed, by a vote of two to one, and the state appealed to the Tennessee Supreme Court. The Supreme Court reversed the decision of thе Court of Criminal Appeals, affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of the double jeopardy plea, and remanded the case for trial. Mr. Mitchell then sought and was denied federal habeas corрus relief.
II
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, which is now held to bind the states by reason of the Fourteenth Amendment, says that no person shall be subject to be рut in jeopardy of life or limb twice “for the same offence.” The statutory definition of the offense for which Mr. Mitchell has been indicted, vehicular homicide, is couched in terms of “the killing of anоther by the operation of an automobile____” The “killing of another” is not an element of the offenses of which Mr. Mitchell was convicted on February 22, 1982. Mr. Mitchell could not have been chargеd with vehicular homicide on or before February 22, 1982, because Mr. Pleasants was still alive at that time. As the United States Supreme Court recently reiterated, “[s]ueeessive prosecutions arе barred by the Fifth Amendment only if the two offenses for which the defendant is prosecuted are the ‘same’____”
Heath v. Alabama,
474
Mr. Mitchell’s plea of double jeopardy would doubtless have been well taken if Mr. Pleasants had died before February 22, because the charges to which guilty pleas were interposed would have constituted lesser offenses included within the offense of vehicular homicide. The Double Jeopardy Clause generally forbids prosecution for a greater offense after prosecution for a lesser included offense.
Brown v. Ohio,
There is, however, a well recognized exception to the general prohibition against prosecuting a defendant for a greater offense after he has already been tried for a lesser included offense. As the Supreme Court of Tennessee explained in the case at bar, speaking in a unanimous decision written by the Chief Justice, the exception to the general rule applies, and proseсution for the greater offense is allowed, “when an element of the greater offense has not occurred at the time of the prosecution for the lesser offense____”
Tennessee v. Mitchell,
“The death of the injured person was the principal element of the homicide, but was no part of the assault and battery. At thе time of the trial for the latter the death had not ensued, and not until it did ensue was the homicide committed. Then, and not before, was it possible to put the accused in jeopardy for that offense.”
471 U.S. at -,
There is nothing inconsistent with this in
New Mexico v. Fugate,
“The State had nothing to lose by filing ‘great-bodily-injury’ charges in district court at the time of the accident upon the facts ... known [at the time Mr. Fugate was charged in municipal court]. Under those circumstances, no reliance on the ‘necessary facts’ exception of Diaz, upon which rests excuse from filing the death-by-vehicle charges at the time, would have been required. Sufficient facts already were known to permit the filing of the alternative offense of great-bodily-injury-by-vehicle under the same statute;that charge would have borne the same fеlony conviction and the same felony penalty as would conviction of the alternative statutory, offense of death-by-vehiele.”
Stated otherwise, the Court of Appeals conсluded “there was no absence of ‘necessary facts’ which would have preserved the charge of death-by-vehicle from the prohibition of double jeopardy.” Id.
On appeal tо the Supreme Court of New Mexico, the decision of the Court of Appeals was reversed under the “jurisdictional” exception to the general rule on double jeopardy. The New Mеxico Supreme Court thus did not reach the “necessary facts” question, but observed by way of dictum that “[t]he Court of Appeals opinion in
Fugate
concerning the necessary facts exceptiоn is ... proper and correct.”
New Mexico v. Padilla,
Unlike the New Mexico criminal code, the Tennessee Code deals with vehicular homicide in isolation, designating it as a singular offense that cannot be charged without the actual killing of another. Fugate is thus inapposite here.
The Tennessee Court of Appeals held in this ease that the “necessary facts” exception did not apply because “the applicability of this exception is conditioned on prosecutorial exercise of due diligence
before the first trial.
[Citing
Jeffers v. United States,
In rejecting this conclusion, the Tennessee Supreme Court declared that the “necessary facts” exception “does not require a showing of due diligence.” In this context, at least, we fully agree. Althоugh nothing is so certain as death, nothing is so uncertain as the hour thereof. Mr. Mitchell was entitled to a speedy trial on the original charges, and we know of no constitutional requirement that the triаl on those charges be delayed for some indeterminate period while the authorities conduct a deathwatch at the bedside of the victim.
It may well be true, as counsel for Mr. Mitchell hаs earnestly submitted, that it will be difficult successfully to defend Mr. Mitchell at his vehicular homicide trial, given Mr. Mitchell’s plea of guilty on the earlier charges. The Constitution has not yet been interpreted to mean that every defendant is entitled to a successful defense, however, and any problems Mr. Mitchell’s counsel may have at the homicide trial will not be the result of a violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause. That clause does not apply here, and the judgment of the United States District Court is therefore AFFIRMED.
