The appellant Richard Ball was convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol by a jury in the Fifth Circuit Court in Salt Lake County. His conviction was affirmed on appeal to the Third Judicial District.
On appeal, Ball raises five points, only two of which involve constitutional issues that may be reviewed by this Court.
State v. Taylor,
Utah,
During voir dire the trial judge asked the veniremen whether any of them had “prejudices against people that drink.” None responded that they did. Defense counsel later asked the veniremen whether any of them chose “not to drink for any reason.” Four veniremen responded that they did not drink. The following exchange then occurred:
Mr. Allred: May we inquire of [the four jurors who indicated they do not drink] whether that is for a personal conviction or a religious one?
The Court: I don’t — I don’t think that’s proper to ask. They say they choose not to drink, and I think that’s sufficient. Mr. Allred: May we inquire of the four of them whether that predisposition or attitude about alcohol—
The Court: I don’t think those questions are proper, Counsel, and I never ask them. You’re entitled to know those that drink and not drink, the reasons for doing so is [sic] personal and in fact, there is some question about whether that comes within the Constitution as to religious convictions and disqualification, because of that, so I don’t ask the questions.
I won’t ask questions in that area. I never have, sir, and I just won’t. I think it’s something that’s precluded by the State Constitution.
*1057 Mr. Allred: May the record indicate that it would have been my intention to pursue those individual beliefs to attempt to uncover any bias or prejudice based solely on the use or non-use of alcohol?
Defense counsel was able to eliminate three of the four teetotaling jurors by exercising all of his three peremptory challenges. The fourth, however, sat on the jury that convicted the defendant.
Article I, § 4 of the Utah constitution states in pertinent part: “The rights of conscience shall never'be infringed ... nor shall any person be incompetent as a ... juror on account of religious belief or the absence thereof.” We must decide whether this provision of the Utah constitution prohibits asking a prospective juror whether his abstention from alcohol is based on “personal or religious” grounds.
The question of whether the juror’s abstention was “for a personal conviction or a religious one” has only a minimal relationship to the constitutional language regarding incompetence of jurors because of “religious belief or the absence thereof.” The mere asking of the question has nothing to do with competence to serve, that is, with a juror’s basic qualifications to participate in a panel. Age (in adults), gender and occupation likewise may not be used to render an individual incompetent as a prospective juror, but an exploration of the attitudes and convictions that may exist in a person who belongs to those groups is certainly permissible to aid in discovering actual bias or prejudice relating to the subject matter of a particular case. For example, an individual could not be challenged for cause and eliminated from a jury panel on the basis of race. But if his attitudes in a criminal prosecution, which were related to his experiences respecting race, were such as to preclude him from acting impartially, a challenge would lie. Religious beliefs, unlike gender or race, are not readily apparent, and their existence, if directly related to the subject matter of the suit (as they may be in a case involving alcohol consumption), must be determined by preliminary inquiry. Should those religious beliefs (or the absence thereof) be the basis for actual bias, prejudice, or impartiality, a challenge for cause would likewise lie. In that event, an individual would not be declared “incompetent ... on account of religious belief” in violation of the constitution, but rather unfit to serve in a particular cause because of actual prejudice. The fact that actual bias or prejudice is related in some way to an individual's religious beliefs does not preclude exclusion for demonstrated inability to serve as an impartial juror. To declare otherwise would be to subordinate the rights of a criminal defendant to receive a fair trial before an impartial jury to the rights to serve as jurors of persons prejudiced by their religion (or irre-ligión) against certain defendants or behavior. Such a conflict between constitutional values is not required by the language of art. I, § 4.
Our constitution is not unique; its substance is contained in the constitutions of several other states. Article I, § 4 of the California constitution stated:
[N]o person shall be rendered incompetent to be a ... juror on account of his opinions on matters of religious belief.
(1879, amended 1974. Amended provision reads: “A person is not incompetent to be a witness or juror because of his or her opinions on religious beliefs.”)
In People v. Rollins,
Cal.,
All that the provision quoted means is that a person called as witness or juror “is competent without any respect to his religious sentiments or convictions; the law leaving this matter of competency to legal sanctions or, at least, to considerations independent of religious sentiments or convictions.” In other words, he may not be debarred as a witness or juror *1058 because of his religious faith, and that element must be disregarded in determining his “competency.”
Id.
at 796-97,
The State argues in this case that, since no jurors had earlier indicated that they had any biases or prejudices in response to the court’s general inquiry on that question, the defendant’s question was superfluous. That position suggests an unwarranted naivety regarding human nature. The most characteristic feature of prejudice is its inability to recognize itself. It is unrealistic to expect that any but the most sensitive and thoughtful jurors (frequently those least likely to be biased) will have the personal insight, candor and openness to raise their hands in court and declare themselves biased. Voir dire is intended to provide a tool for counsel and the court to carefully and skillfully determine, by inquiry, whether biases and prejudices, latent as well as acknowledged, will interfere with a fair trial if a particular juror serves in it.
The ruling at issue here also reflects inadequate deference to the function of peremptory challenges in our system of jury trials. In
Swain v. Alabama,
is no less frequently exercised on grounds normally thought irrelevant to legal proceedings or official action, namely, the race, religion, nationality, occupation or affiliations of people summoned for jury duty.... [T]he question a prosecutor or defense counsel must decide is not whether a juror of a particular race or nationality is in fact partial, but whether one from a different group is less likely to be.... Hence veniremen ... are challenged in light of the limited knowledge counsel has of them, which may include their group affiliations, in the context of the case to be tried.
Id.
at 220-21,
The extreme deference afforded in
Swain
to the unfettered exercise of such challenges has been criticized by some as permitting improper exclusion of groups classified on constitutionally impermissible grounds, specifically race,
2
but the Su
*1059
preme Court has declined recently to review
Swain
in the context of allegations of minority exclusion from juries.
See Davis v. Illinois,
464 U.S. -,
In practice, a party will use a peremptory challenge only when he believes that the juror he removes may be consciously or unconsciously biased against him, or that his successor may be less biased.
To say that peremptories will ordinarily be exercised only in cases of bias, however, does not clarify the kinds of bias upon which the challenge may permissibly be based. In contrast to the limited list of events authorizing a challenge for cause on the ground of implied bias (Pen.Code, § 1074), the law recognizes that a peremptory challenge may be predicated on a broad spectrum of evidence suggestive of juror partiality. The evidence may range from the obviously serious to the apparently trivial, from the virtually certain to the highly speculative.
By contrast, when a party presumes that certain jurors are biased merely because they are members of an identifiable group distinguished on racial, religious, ethnic, or similar grounds — we may call this “group bias” — and peremptorily strikes all such persons for that reason alone, he not only upsets the demographic balance of the venire but frustrates the primary purpose of the representative cross-section requirement. That purpose, as we have seen is to achieve an overall impartiality by allowing the interaction of the diverse beliefs and values the jurors bring from their group experiences. Manifestly if jurors are struck simply because they may hold those very beliefs, such interaction becomes impossible and the jury will be dominated by the conscious or unconscious prejudices of the majority. Seen in this light, the presumed group bias that triggered the peremptory challenges against its members is indistinguishable from the group perspective we seek to encourage by the cross-section rule.
People v. Wheeler,
Properly utilized, however, it may be seen that the peremptory challenge performs a valuable function in our jury system. Its efficacy is necessarily vitiated when a party is not permitted to gather enough information from prospective jurors in order to exercise his right intelligently. In
State v. Taylor,
Utah,
We do think ... it was error for the trial court to sustain the objections to the questions propounded to the jurymen with reference to their “prejudice against a man who may take a drink of intoxicating liquor” and with reference to any religious prejudices they might entertain. ... [T]he answer would necessarily have afforded counsel information which might have enabled him to more intelligently exercise his peremptory challenges.
State v. Miller,
It requires little imagination to understand why defense counsel may have wanted to know whether the veniremen who abstained from drink did so for religious reasons or personal ones. For example, a person who does not drink alcohol for medical reasons peculiar to himself may nevertheless see nothing wrong in the drinking of alcohol by those about him. But a person who abstains from alcohol out of a religious conviction that it is sinful, unhealthy or unwise may be more likely to think ill of all who do drink. Of course it does not follow that the person who abstains from alcohol for religious or moral reasons will therefore necessarily be unable to act as a fair and impartial juror in a trial for driving under the influence of alcohol. It does, however, follow that a defense attorney may, from a similar analysis, conclude that one person is generally less impartial than another. It is to allow such decisions to be informed that a party must be allowed to gather sufficient relevant information during voir dire.
The gathering of sufficient rele-. vant information must, of course, be pursued with a sensitivity to the privacy of the potential juror. The criminal defendant’s right to a fair trial does not create a license in his defense counsel to conduct an inquisition into the private beliefs and experiences of a venireman. The trial judge, in his broad discretionary power to conduct voir dire,
State v. Malmrose,
Utah,
We hold that asking a venireman whether his abstention from the drinking of alcohol has a religious basis is not prohibited by the Utah constitution. 3 We also hold that the failure of the court to permit counsel’s inquiry was not only error, but also, inasmuch as one of the jurors in question actually sat on the panel that convicted defendant, prejudicial error.
We stress that we do not examine the scope of permissible grounds for a challenge for cause relating to claimed bias solely by reason of a person’s adherence to specific religious beliefs, as that question is not before us. We only hold that a question as to the existence of a religious *1061 ground for a venireman’s abstention from alcohol was not prohibited by the Utah constitution and should have been allowed.
The appellant’s second claim is that his constitutional right against self-incrimination under the Utah constitution (art. I, § 12) was violated when the arresting officer failed to give him a
Miranda
warning before administering field sobriety tests. The appellant’s brief was submitted before we decided
Salt Lake City v. Carner,
Utah,
Based on our holding that the circuit court misconstrued art. I, § 4 of the Utah constitution and that the defendant was prejudiced thereby, we vacate his conviction and remand this case for a new trial.
Notes
. Similarly, the Oregon constitution states: "No person shall be rendered incompetent as a ... juror in consequence of his opinions on matters of religeon [sic]_” Article I, § 6. In
State v. Barnett,
.
See, e.g.,
the following articles referenced in
People v. Wheeler,
. We note that in
State v. Chealey,
