49 N.C. App. 141 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1980
Defendant presents, as his sole assignment of error, the denial of his right to be represented by court appointed counsel at his trial for sale and delivery of PCP. The record indicates that on the day of defendant’s trial, during arraignment on other charges, the trial court stated that defendant had appeared before the court at the prior session in September and been denied the right of court appointed counsel because he was found able to hire his own counsel. The defendant acknowledged that to be correct. The court then said, “[s]ince that time you have had full opportunity to hire a lawyer if you wanted to, is that right?” The defendant responded that he had tried with
I don’t think that I am capable of representing myself, there are a lot of technicalities that I don’t know and as far as me being guilty of the possession, yes, but of sale, no. I am guilty of possession for a reason, not for a profit, but for some other reason.
The court then said that Judge Long had found defendant able to hire his own lawyer and he had not done so, and that defendant had signed a waiver of counsel. Defendant acknowledged that the court was correct. The court then asked other routine questions and proceeded to arraign and try the defendant without counsel on the sale and delivery charge.
G.S. 15A-942 provides:
If the defendant appears at the arraignment without counsel, the court must inform the defendant of his right to counsel, must accord the defendant opportunity to exercise that right, and must take any action necessary to effectuate the right. (Emphasis supplied.)
The North Carolina Supreme Court in State v. Sanders, 294 N.C. 337, 240 S.E.2d 788 (1978) held that the defendant there was entitled to a new trial because of the trial court’s failure to comply with the mandates of this statute, stating that “the statute made it the duty of the trial judge, when defendant appeared at the arraignment without counsel, to inquire into his indigency irrespective of any request by defendant.” Sanders, 294 N.C. at 344, 240 S.E.2d at 792. (Emphasis in original.) In Sanders, as here, the trial court had denied defendant’s request for counsel by order pre-dating by several weeks the defendant’s arraignment. The Supreme Court, however, viewed the issue as being not whether the defendant was indigent at the time the prior order was entered, but whether he was indigent on the day he was arraigned and tried without counsel. The Court noted that this question could not be answered because the trial judge failed at the time of arraignment “to make the inquiries directed by G.S. 15A-942.” Sanders at 345, 240 S.E.2d at 792. (Emphasis supplied.)
The opinion in Sanders does not indicate whether or not the defendant there executed a waiver of his right to assigned counsel. Assuming, arguendo, that he did not, the only factual basis for conceivably distinguishing this case from Sanders is that here the defendant had signed a waiver of his right to assigned counsel on 28 March 1979. In view of subsequent developments, however, defendant’s waiver did not remove the duty of the trial court to make the inquiry of indigency at the time of arraignment. This Court stated in State v. Watson, 21 N.C. App. 374, 379, 204 S.E.2d 537, 540-541 (1974):
The waiver in writing once given was good and sufficient until the proceeding finally terminated, unless the defendant himself makes known to the court that he desires to withdraw the waiver and have counsel assigned to him. The burden of showing the change in the desire of the defendant for counsel rests upon the defendant.
Here, by filing an affidavit of indigency some six months subsequent to executing the waiver, defendant clearly carried this burden of informing the court of his desire to withdraw the waiver and have counsel appointed to represent him.
Moreover, the trial court’s determination that defendant was not indigent some three weeks before arraignment cannot reasonably be determinative of his capacity to retain counsel at the time of arraignment. Supervening events could well have rendered defendant’s financial status very different on 17 October 1979 from what it was on 26 September 1979. It appears from defendant’s affidavit of indigency that loss of employment alone could have altered his status from non-indigent to indigent. Without the required inquiry by the trial court at the time of arraignment, however, this Court has no means to determine whether defendant’s financial status at that critical juncture merited the appointment of counsel.
New trial.