Defendant Daniel Flick was charged with Obstructing Government Administration, 17-A M.R.S.A. 751 (1983), and has had two jury trials in Superior Court (Kennebec County). Each ended in the declaration of a mistrial. Following the second trial the Defendant moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that a third trial would violate the double jeopardy clause of the Maine Constitution, Article I, § 8, and of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The Superior Court denied the motion. Flick appeals under an exception to the final judgment rule,
State v. Hanson,
I.
The Defendant was arrested on March 15, 1983. He was arraigned in District Court, Waterville, where he sought both a motion in limine to suppress a statement made by his brother Richard, who was present at the scene of the arrest and a transfer to Superior Court for a jury trial. The District Court ordered that, “[n]o third party may testify or be questioned at trial regarding [the statement].” It then transferred the case to the Superior Court. On August 11,1983, the Defendant’s first trial resulted in a hung jury. Deciding, after inquiry, that the jurors were “genuinely deadlocked,” the court declared a mistrial. Flick’s first appointed counsel withdrew from the case, the court appointed a second, and the retrial took place on January 25, 1984.
The Defendant’s brother, Richard Flick, testified for the defense at the second trial. On direct examination, he was not asked whether or not he had made any statement at the time Daniel was arrested. Nonetheless, and without having first raised the *342 question of its admissibility notwithstanding the ruling in limine, the Assistant District Attorney in cross-examination confronted him with the statement. The defense counsel objected, but was overruled. During the next recess she moved for a mistrial. The presiding Justice was apparently taken by surprise when advised of the ruling in limine, but he confirmed his ruling that the statement was admissible and denied the motion for mistrial.
Before the jury returned, the Defendant complained to the court that he was unfairly prejudiced, inter alia, by the admission of the statement. The court explained its rationale, then let the trial proceed. The Defendant later made an oblique reference to the ruling in the course of his testimony on direct examination, whereupon the court sent the jury out and again discussed the issue directly with the Defendant. Their colloquy lasted for some time. The court asked the Defendant a number of questions about his concerns, to which he responded frankly. The Defendant became quite agitated, expressing his frustration at the extended proceedings, and his displeasure with his lawyers’ tactics in both trials, the arresting officers’ credibility and treatment of him, and the general east of the proceedings, which he saw as severely biased against him. While he clearly felt the presiding Justice was also biased, he was civil throughout, though excited. The Justice not only permitted the petty tirade to continue, he prolonged it by questioning the Defendant about the range of his concerns. The defense counsel took no part in the colloquy and, indeed, nothing further was heard from her after the court began questioning the Defendant.
At the end of the exchange the court ordered a recess, then declared a mistrial, stating its reasons on the record. They were (1) its concern that Flick’s relationships with his counsel “could be a problem with any conviction on appeal,” (2) that it would not be “appropriate to proceed with that record having been made,” and (3) that, given Flick’s remarks “with regard to the court, I don’t know the extent to which, if there was a conviction, I would be in a position to impose a fair sentence.”
Finally, the court stated, “I am also, to make sure the record is clear and protected with regard to any future trial, would grant the motion for the reasons originally urged by defense counsel, although I continue to view that as not the extent of the problem suggested by defense counsel.” At no time did the court consult the defense counsel about its decision, either to inquire whether the defense wished to renew its earlier motion for mistrial, or whether the Defendant consented to a mistrial on any other ground.
Flick’s counsel received permission to withdraw soon after the trial. The court then appointed a third attorney who filed the present motion to dismiss on May 14, 1984. The motion asserts that neither mistrial was properly granted, and thus that the Defendant has been in jeopardy twice within the meaning of Article I, Section 8 and the Fifth Amendment. Alternatively, it asserts that the second prosecutor engaged in deliberate misconduct when she disregarded the ruling in limine in order to question Richard Flick about his statement. The defense argues that the complaint must be dismissed because of either instance of former jeopardy or because of the prosecutor’s conduct.
The motion Justice considered the circumstances of both trials. As to the first, he found that the deadlocked jury made it “manifestly necessary” to declare a mistrial. As to the second, he found both “manifest necessity” and consent to the mistrial. Though he agreed with the presiding Justice that the prosecutor had not engaged in deliberate misconduct by eliciting the suppressed statement, the motion Justice found that the defendant’s motion for mistrial was not withdrawn and constituted his consent to the trial court’s ultimate declaration of mistrial. In addition, the motion Justice held that the reasons for mistrial stated on the record by the presid *343 ing Justice constituted “manifest necessity.”
II.
“No person, for the same offense, shall be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.” Me. Const, art. I, § 8. This guarantee protects “the valued right of the accused to have his trial completed by a particular tribunal.”
State v. Rowe,
In
State v. Howes,
[t]he underlying idea, one that is deeply ingrained in at least the Anglo-American system of jurisprudence, is that the State with all its resources and power should not be allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal and compelling him to live in a continual state of anxiety and insecurity, as well as enhancing the possibility that even though innocent he may be found guilty.
This parallel, though separate, jurisprudential history is the reason that, while the United States Supreme Court’s decisions “delineat[e] the binding effect on the States of the federal Constitution’s protection against double jeopardy, [we may also] look upon them as most helpful guides regarding the scope of the protection against double jeopardy afforded by the Constitution of Maine.”
State v. Howes,
While the drafters of Article I, Section 8 and the Fifth Amendment certainly sought the same objectives,
[t]his does not, however, say much toward demonstrating the correct application of such a constitutional text. In particular, the proposition does not support the non sequitur that the United States Supreme Court’s decisions under such a text not only deserve respect but presumptively fix its correct meaning also in state constitutions.
State v. Kennedy,
III.
The issues here are whether the mistrials were declared at the defendant’s request or by his consent, and, if not, whether there existed such manifest necessity as to require overriding the Defendant’s interest in being tried only once. We examine the circumstances of the second trial first.
“[A] motion by the defendant for mistrial is ordinarily assumed to remove any barrier to reprosecution, even if the defendant’s motion is necessitated by pros-ecutorial or judicial error.”
United States v. Jorn,
A defendant’s valued right to have his case tried by only one tribunal means that he “has a significant interest in the decision whether or not to take the case from the jury.”
State v. Rowe,
Therefore, as the District of Columbia Court of Appeals cogently explained, whether retrial is barred “depends not only upon whether the declaration of mistrial followed a request by the defendant for a mistrial, but whether the mistrial was declared in a manner and under circumstances which fully recognize the right of the defendant to retain that primary control.” Id. Even though the defendant has attempted once to waive his right to go to the jury (by the motion), he does not thereby waive the “primary right” to retain control if the attempt is rejected (by denial of the motion). Id. Thus,
[w]here the request for mistrial is not granted and the trial proceedings resume, the defendant is again entitled to resume control over the course of those proceedings, a control which would be meaningless if subject to defeasance through a purported grant of a request made prior to the resumption of control.
Id.
4
This analysis is equally applicable to the double jeopardy clause of the Maine Constitution. Having reviewed the transcript, we conclude that, in the particular circumstances of this case, the mistrial was not declared in a manner that “fully recognize[d] the right of the defendant to retain that primary control,”
Braxton v. United States,
The trial resumed after the denial of the defense motion, but the court and the Defendant soon began their extended colloquy. The defense counsel, for whatever reason, played no further part in the trial at all. Following the colloquy, the court took a brief recess, then declared a mistrial immediately upon its return. We need not determine whether, as the motion Justice held, the Defendant “did not withdraw” his motion, since the trial court had unequivocally denied it. We agree with the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court that, “[i]f a judge decides to rest the decision to declare a mistrial on a defendant’s earlier motion, the judge must inquire whether the defendant wishes to maintain the motion.”
Jones v. Commonwealth,
*346
Nor are we able to read the Defendant’s statements during the colloquy as “consent” to the mistrial. He asserted, and the court acknowledged, his desire not to prolong the resolution of the charge. He stated, “[t]his has been eating at me for almost a year now, and I am tired, and I want this mess over with." Though the court once mentioned the possibility of a mistrial, it did so under the apparent impression that it could revive the motion
sua sponte.
Flick’s reaction, though ambiguous, was, at best, one of resignation.
7
In these circumstances, we will “resolve any doubt in favor of the liberty of the citizen, rather than in favor of [the] exercise of what would be an unlimited, uncertain, and arbitrary judicial discretion.”
Braxton v. United States,
IV.
Former jeopardy is no bar to reprosecution when a mistrial is declared,even over the defendant’s objection, if there is “urgent, manifest or imperious necessity” to take the case from the jury.
State v. Sanborn,
Nonetheless, the defendant’s “right to go to a particular tribunal,”
State v. Linscott,
While “it is also true that a criminal trial is, even in the best of circumstances, a complicated affair to manage,”
United States v. Jorn,
The court should have attempted to resolve the problems through counsel or undertaken measures available for dealing with a disruptive defendant. Instead it prolonged the Defendant’s outpouring of frustration by encouraging him to speak his mind. While this was, certainly, an understandable attempt to obtain the Defendant’s compliance with the court’s rulings, it had the result of compounding the difficult situation.
*347
It would, of course, be “impossible to define all the circumstances which would render it proper to interfere” once the jury is empaneled.
United States v. Perez,
But this commendable demonstration of integrity does not, alone, remove the double jeopardy bar. The court had reached that point largely as a result of its engagement of the Defendant in an argument and discussion. The public interest in fair trials does not permit the court to go so far in this direction that it finds itself unable to continue to preside, yet requires the Defendant to bear the burden. The Defendant’s right to a trial by this jury is too important to permit its deprivation in this fashion. Thus, we conclude that a third trial would be barred by Article I, Section 8 of the Maine Constitution.
Accordingly, we do not reach the Defendant’s Fifth Amendment claim.
State v. Rowe,
The entry is:
Order denying motion to dismiss vacated.
Remanded for entry of an order dismissing the complaint.
All concurring.
Notes
. In
State v. Elden,
. In this regard, we adopt Justice Linde’s succinct manifesto:
*344 This court like others has high regard for the opinions of the Supreme Court, particularly when they provide insight into the origin of provisions common to the state and federal bills of rights rather than only a contemporary "balance” of pragmatic considerations about which reasonable people may differ over time and among the several states. It is therefore to be expected that counsel and courts often will refer to federal decisions, or to commentary based on such decisions, even in debating an undecided issue under state law. Lest there be any doubt about it, when this court cites federal opinions in interpreting a provision of [state] law, it does so because it finds the views there expressed persuasive, not because it considers itself bound to do so by its understanding of federal doctrines.
Id.
.
Compare Lee v. United States,
.The Braxton court continued,
[w]ere the defendant, upon denial of his mistrial motion, not reinvested with his right to proceed to verdict, moreover, control over the course of further proceedings would necessarily devolve upon the trial judge and the prosecutor. A decision to abort the proceedings at some later stage, however, motivated, would be wholly unreviewable, for the defendant’s earlier motion would have waived all of his rights. The potential for abuse is obvious. And where the trial judge's reasons for a later declaration of mistrial are not those earlier urged by the defendant, the potential for abuse would be unmitigated even by the presumed integrity of the trial judge.
Id. at 767-68.
. If the court did come to agree with the grounds for the motion, but the defendant no longer wished to maintain it, the court could only declare a mistrial if the circumstances had created a “manifest necessity" to take the case from the jury.
. It should be remembered that we are considering here only the Defendant’s
motion
and not his tirade, behavior that the State argues
required
a mistrial. Because the "manifest necessity” inquiry concerns the propriety of declaring
*346
a mistrial
despite
the defendant’s wish to complete the trial, it is distinct from the question whether he consented.
E.g., State v. Rowe,
Nor do we find credible the State's argument that the Defendant intentionally provoked a mistrial. The motion Justice did not make such a finding and our own reading of the transcript does not find support for this view.
. The Court: "Mr. Flick, you say you want to get it over with today, but you understand that if I do declare a mistrial that it will be prolonged for some period of time?”
The Witness: “I know, and if we do get a mistrial I don’t know what I am going to do, go talk to, shop for a lawyer, I guess; go for percentage. I don’t know. I want to just get this thing over with a long time ago, and I was going to not sue....”
.
Compare
the Fifth Amendment cases supporting a similar view,
e.g., Arizona v. Washington,
