OPINION
FACTS
Defendant Mark Baker was charged with raping and sodomizing his stepdaughter, H.H., from July through October, 1987. She was five to six years old at the time.
At trial, in response to the court’s inquiry during voir dire, Juror No. 19 related that his sister had been raped and sodomized when she was eight years old. He then indicated that he would be unable to remain impartial to evidence involving sexual abuse of a child. Upon being asked essentially the same question, he withdrew his admission of bias. Defendant moved to remove Juror No. 19 for cause and the motion was denied.
The jury found defendant guilty of rape of a child and sodomy on a child, both first-degree felony offenses, and he was sentenced to two concurrent fifteen-year-to-life terms. On appeal, defendant claims, inter alia, he is entitled to reversal because he was tried by a biased jury. We agree defendant’s jury was biased and reverse on that basis. 1
I. JURY BIAS
The right to trial by an impartial jury .is guaranteed in Article I, section 12 of the Utah Constitution. Whether to dismiss a prospective juror for cause is within the sound discretion of the trial court. “When reviewing such a ruling, we reverse only if the trial court has abused its discretion.”
State v. Woolley,
Rule 18(e)(14) of the Utah Code of Criminal Procedure permits for-cause challenges to prospective jurors when “a state of mind exists on the part of the juror with reference to the cause, or to either party, which will prevent him from acting impartially and without prejudice to the substantial rights of the party challenging.” Utah
*1282
R.Crim.P. 18(e)(14). Whether a prospective juror’s state of mind mandates that the court dismiss the juror for cause depends on whether that juror has formed “ ‘strong and deep impressions which will close the mind against the testimony that may be offered in opposition to them; which will combat that testimony and resist its force.’”
State v. Hewitt,
We recently outlined the procedure trial judges must employ to identify partial jurors in
State v. Woolley.
In the first instance, the trial judge must conduct voir dire to probe for potential bids.
Woolley,
In the instant ease, the trial judge probed the prospective jurors for potential bias by asking whether they personally, or anyone within their immediate family, had been the victim of a sexual crime. In response to the judge’s inquiry, Juror No. 19 indicated that his sister had been raped and sodomized when she was eight years old. The trial judge then asked Juror No. 19, and the two other jurors who had responded affirmatively to the judge’s initial probe, whether they could be “fair and impartial and set those things aside and give the State and the defendant a fair and impartial trial.” All three jurors indicated they could not. 2
Juror No. 19 affirmatively indicated his inability to remain impartial in light of his sister’s experience as a victim of a sexual crime. He thus demonstrated actual bias rather than merely acknowledging circumstances from which the court could infer bias.
Cf. Woolley,
Utah law requires trial courts to expend significant effort in rehabilitating a potential juror to whom even an inference of bias has attached.
See, e.g., State v. Julian,
After Juror No. 19 and two other jurors indicated they could not be impartial, the trial court did not address them individually, but addressed them en masse, saying:
Now, let me again indicate to the three of you — and of course we don’t know what yours involved, sir — but this is a sensitive *1283 area as far as the law is concerned, but it is an area [in] which we must have jurors that are fair and impartial. We must have jurors that would be -willing to sit and listen to the evidence and weigh that evidence fairly.
But again I say that we do ask you to set aside experiences in your life so that you can listen to the evidence and make an impartial decision. Again I ask if there is any of you who cannot do that, please indicate by raising your hand.
(Juror Nos. 15 and 17 indicated.)
The trial judge’s soliloquy, directed to no juror in particular, amounts to a repetition of prior admonishments and a plea that the prospective jurors heed the admonitions. It does not rise to the level of the extensive rehabilitative inquiry Utah law demands.
See Bailey,
Furthermore, “inferences of bias are not to be confused with actual bias as evidenced by a prospective juror’s ‘attitude of bias’ or ‘strong feelings’.... Once such strong feelings are revealed, a prospective juror may not sit, even if the prospective juror later asserts that he or she can render an impartial verdict.”
Woolley,
Based upon the foregoing, we hold that the trial court committed error by refusing to dismiss Juror No. 19 for cause.
II. APPLICATION OF STATE V. MENZIES
We next determine the consequence of the trial court’s error. In March 1994, almost three years after defendant’s May 1991 trial, the Utah Supreme Court issued
State v. Menzies,
235 Utah Adv.Rep. 23,
The Menzies court disavowed this presumptive approach and adopted the majority rule, upheld by the United States Supreme Court, that “[s]o long as the jury that sits is impartial, the fact that the defendant had to use a peremptory challenge to achieve that result does not mean the [Constitution] was violated.” Menzies, 235 Utah Adv.Rep. at 24. In order to obtain reversal, the court *1284 proclaimed, “a defendant must demonstrate prejudice, viz., show that a member of the jury was partial or incompetent.” Id.
Defendant argues that the
Menzies
standard cannot apply to him retroactively, advancing the proposition that “[w]hen a new rule of criminal procedure constitutes a clear break with the past, it is not generally applied retroactively.”
State v. Hoff,
We disagree. When an appellate decision establishes a new rule of criminal procedure, courts have not permitted defendants tried before the rule to benefit from the trial court’s failure to adhere to it.
See Hoff,
The case more akin to the situation before us is
Salt Lake City v. Womack,
■ Womack argued on appeal that
Crosgrove
could not be applied to her because of state and federal constitutional prohibitions against ex post facto laws. The court rejected this argument, stating: “The constitutional ban on ex post facto laws applies only to legislative enactments.”
Id.
The court emphasized that “[t]he judicial overruling of a prior decision and the application of the new precedent do not constitute an ex post facto law.”
Id.
Therefore, the court had no difficulty retroactively applying
Crosgrove
to Womack, even though
Crosgrove
provided a clear break from well-established precedent.
Id.; see also State v. East,
The Menzies decision, like the Hansen decision applied retroactively in Womack and East, changes the result on appeal of the trial court’s error. It does not establish new trial court procedure. Therefore, we follow Menzies in our analysis of defendant’s claims.
*1285 III. REVERSIBLE ERROR OR INVITED ERROR
Unfortunately, Menzies does not answer the question this appeal presents. Menzies establishes the rule that “[t]o prevail on a claim of error based on the failure to remove a juror for cause, a defendant must demonstrate prejudice, viz., show that a member of the jury was partial or incompetent.” Menzies, 235 Utah Adv.Rep. at 24. In Menzies, however, all five objected-to prospective jurors were removed by peremptory challenge. In the instant case, the objected-to juror was not removed by peremptory challenge. Instead, Juror No. 19 sat on the jury that convicted defendant, even though he had openly admitted he would be unable to evaluate evidence involving rape and sodomy of a child impartially. Therefore, defendant need only point to the manifest partiality of Juror No. 19 to demonstrate prejudice.
However, the subsequent question— whether defendant is therefore entitled to reversal — is not addressed in Menzies, and prior Utah authority is of little assistance. In no prior Utah case has a defendant exhausted his or her peremptory challenges while allowing a patently biased objeeted-to-for-cause juror to remain on the jury, and then complained on appeal that he or she was tried by a biased jury. The question before us is thus one of first impression: Is a defendant who exhausts his or her peremptory strikes, but who does not remove a juror who should have been removed for cause, entitled to reversal on appeal because he or she was tried by a biased jury?
The State urges that defendant waived his right to complain of an impartial jury by not peremptorily striking Juror No. 19. To hold otherwise, the State argues, would be to “invite error.” The State relies on
Ross v. Oklahoma,
In
Ross,
the defendant resorted to one of his peremptory challenges to remove a juror whom the trial court should have excused for cause, ultimately using all nine of the peremptory challenges allowed under Oklahoma law. None of the twelve jurors who actually sat on the jury had been challenged for cause by the defendant. The United States Supreme Court upheld the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals’ determination that “ ‘as there is nothing in the record to show that any juror who sat on the trial was objectionable, we are unable to discover any grounds for reversal.’ ”
Ross,
The Court then undertook an analysis of Oklahoma law, determining:
It is a long settled principle of Oklahoma law that a defendant who disagrees with the trial court’s ruling on a for-eause challenge must, in order to preserve the claim that the ruling deprived him of a fair trial, exercise a peremptory challenge to remove the juror. Even then, the error is grounds for reversal only if the defendant exhausts all peremptory challenges and an incompetent juror is forced upon him.
Id. The Court concluded that this “waiver rule” did not violate the defendant’s due process rights, emphasizing: “[T]here is nothing arbitrary or irrational about such a requirement, which subordinates the absolute freedom to use a peremptory challenge as one wishes to the goal of empaneling an impartial jury.” Id.
Thus, Ross establishes that a state may, without offending due process, require criminal defendants to remove peremptorily a juror challenged for cause in order to preserve a claim of error on appeal. 3 The relevant *1286 inquiry remains whether Utah law imposes such a requirement. Defendant asserts that “at the time of trial Utah law had no requirement that a defendant exercise peremptory challenges to remove a juror who should have been removed for cause.” He concedes that “[i]n the usual case, a peremptory would be used on a for-cause juror in order to obtain a fairer jury and a greater chance of acquittal.” However, he claims that “[t]his practical result is in no way compelled by Utah law.” We agree.
Utah law to date imposes only one clear requirement on criminal defendants who claim on appeal that they were prejudiced by the trial court’s failure to excuse for cause a prospective juror: they must show their peremptory strikes were exhausted. In
People v. Hopt,
The subsequent case of
State v. Chealey,
Finally, the rule of
Hopt
and
Chealey,
that criminal defendants must exhaust their peremptory challenges in order to show prejudice from an erroneous for-cause ruling, was applied
post-Crawford
in
State v. Wetzel,
It is therefore clear that in a line of cases unbroken by the automatic reversal rule announced in Crawford, Utah law has consistently required that criminal defendants exhaust their peremptory challenges before the trial court’s failure to excuse for cause a biased juror will be deemed prejudicial. However, in no case has it been announced how defendants must use these challenges. While it may be inferred that criminal defendants are expected to remove peremptorily jurors they have challenged for cause, Utah law has by no means made this requirement clear to the extent that we can say defendant invited the error of which he now complains.
With respect to the instant case, the doctrine of invited error is particularly inap-posite. When defense counsel made the tactical decision to peremptorily remove prospective jurors he deemed more potentially damaging to defendant than Juror No. 19, the Crawford automatic reversal rule governed; defendant need only have exhausted his peremptory challenges in order to demonstrate prejudice and obtain a new trial. He could not have known that by the time of his appeal Menzies would govern, and that his greatest chance of showing prejudice by *1287 the trial court’s erroneous ruling would therefore be to leave Juror No. 19 on the jury. Cf. Menzies, 235 Utah Adv.Rep. at 30 (Stewart, Assoc. C.J., concurring) (emphasizing that reversal may still be required if defendant can demonstrate, actual prejudice in having lost peremptory challenge due to erroneous for-eause ruling, but conceding “it will be much more difficult to establish reversible error under this rule”).
Clearly, then, defendant was not attempting to manipulate the system when he used his peremptory challenges to strike prospective jurors other than Juror No. 19. Rather, he was forced by the trial court’s error to make a difficult choice between removing Juror No. 19 and removing other, potentially more adverse, prospective jurors.
4
The choice he made does not run afoul of the doctrine of invited error.
5
See State v. Smith,
Our decision today is consistent with opinions from other jurisdictions that have reversed convictions rendered by a jury on which an objectionable juror sat.
See, e.g., People v. Stremmel,
We therefore conclude that the trial court erred in refusing to excuse for cause a juror who had voiced actual bias, that defendant was prejudiced by the trial court’s error because the biased juror sat on the jury that convicted him, and that defendant is therefore entitled to a new trial as he was denied the right to a fair and impartial jury.
JACKSON and ORME, JJ., concur.
Notes
. Because we reverse on defendant's first claim of error, we do not reach his six substantial remaining claims (including an ineffective assistance of counsel claim delineating 12 instances of counsel error).
. THE COURT: ... Let me also ask you, members of the jury, if any of you or your immediate family, which I have defined to you, have been the victims of a sexual crime? And by "sexual crimes” I do not only mean of course as far as juveniles, I mean rape, incest, sodomy, anything of that type, whether it was as a minor or as an adult. If any of you or any member of your immediate family have been the victim of a sexual crime, please so indicate by raising your hand.
(Juror Nos. 15, 17 and 19 indicated.) ... JUROR NO. 19: My sister was raped and sodomized when she was eight years old.
THE COURT: Of course I assume that she is older now and it's been disposed of.
JUROR NO. 19: Yes. It's been about ten years ago.
THE COURT: Again, let me ask you: The fact that this has taken place in your life, I give the same admonition to you. We note that you have had experiences of this type, but we still ask you to be fair and impartial and set those things aside and give the State and the defendant a fair and impartial trial. If any of you could not do so, please indicate by raising your hand.
(Juror Nos. 15, 17 and 19 indicate.)
. Ross does not treat the potentially troubling situation in which the number of jurors chai- *1286 lenged for cause exceeds the defendant’s allot-merit of peremptory challenges.
. Defendant used all of his four peremptory challenges to remove women from the jury.
. We note that in cases tried post-Menzies, the doctrine of invited error poses a greater analytical challenge. We leave that question for a later day. However, we disagree with the State's contention that it is necessary to impose the requirement that defense attorneys peremptorily strike jurors they have objected to for cause in order to discourage invited error. This argument presumes that defense attorneys will gamble with their client's liberty by not removing a juror they deem biased on the chance that an appellate court will agree the juror was indeed biased. We cannot make such a presumption. Furthermore, a defense attorney's power to cure a clear trial court error is not unfettered. When prospective jurors cannot be challenged for cause, but nevertheless appear to be more adverse to the defendant than jurors for whom a valid for-cause challenge can be made, the defense attorney must, in the interest of impanelling the best jury, remove the more adverse jurors. If defendant's peremptory challenges are exhausted in this way, defense counsel has, in effect, no power to cure a trial court's erroneous refusal to excuse for cause a clearly biased juror: he or she must use the peremptories to remove the jurors deemed most potentially damaging to the defendant, whether they are jurors who can be validly challenged for cause or not.
