This is a double jeopardy case. It involves that narrow segment of former jeopardy principles applicable to retrial of a criminal case in which the first trial was terminated by an order granting defendant’s motion for a mistrial.
*333 The defendant was charged in a criminal complaint with having sexual intercourse with a girl fifteen years of age contrary to sec. 944.10(2), Stats. A jury trial of the charge was commenced September 26, 1977. On September 28, 1977, Judge Christ T. Seraphim granted the defendant’s motion for a mistrial. The case was reassigned to Judge Landry who heard and denied defendant’s motion to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds. The circuit judge found that the conduct of Judge Sera-phim constituted judicial overreaching but that such conduct was not intended to provoke defendant’s motion for a mistrial. For that reason, Judge Landry found that retrial of the charges was not barred by the former jeopardy provisions of the United States and Wisconsin Constitutions.
The defendant contends that judicial overreaching which invokes a double jeopardy bar to reprosecution need not be intended to provoke a defendant’s mistrial request but rather need only be sufficient to justify a mistrial. Nevertheless, in elaboration of that argument, defendant compromises that contention by describing the circumstances of this case as judicial conduct designed either to avoid an acquittal or to insure a conviction and presumably intended to prejudice the defendant’s prospects for acquittal. We do not agree with the contentions of the defendant.
The fifth amendment double jeopardy clause is applicable to the states through the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution.
Benton v. Maryland,
Relying upon
Abney v. United States,
“The Fifth Amendment’s prohibition against placing a defendant ‘twice in jeopardy’ represents a constitutional policy of finality for the defendant’s benefit in federal criminal proceedings.
United States v. Jorn,
Former jeopardy provisions represent the idea that the “heavy personal strain” of repeated attempts to convict an individual by the utilization of the power and resources of government, thereby subjecting him to the hazards of delay, embarrassment, expense, ordeal and anxiety should not be allowed.
Green v. United States,
Reprosecution, where the first trial is terminated by a mistrial order made without the defendant’s consent, is permitted if “there is a manifest necessity for [it] or the ends of public justice would otherwise be defeated.”
United States v. Perez,
The general rule is that when the defendant requests or consents to the mistrial he waives the right to completion of the trial and, ordinarily, the double jeopardy clause does not bar reprosecution.
United States v. Dinitz, supra,
at 607;
United States v. Jorn,
In the context of the double jeopardy clause we define judicial overreaching as conduct that is egregious rather than merely error. Conduct that is intended to prompt a mistrial request by the defendant or is intended to harass or prejudice the defendant characterizes judicial overreaching. The kinds of judicial misconduct which lead to defendant’s mistrial request and bars reprosecution are seeded in a state of mind of the judge which intends to frustrate the defendant’s valued right to but one trial and the avoidance of the delay, expense, anxiety, embarrassment and order of retrial. Allowing mere error, prosecutorial or judicial, to bar retrial “would fail to adequately take into account the public interest in
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prosecuting and punishing individuals guilty of crime.”
Muller v. State,
A minority of other courts have held that gross negligence of a prosecutor or a failure to satisfy professional standards constitutes prosecutorial overreaching.
United States v. Crouch,
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The burden is on the defendant to establish that prosecutorial or judicial conduct constitutes overreaching and that such conduct is intentional.
United States v. Beasley,
As in the case of prosecutorial misconduct, judicial misconduct intended to prompt a defendant’s mistrial request or intended to harass or prejudice him is required if the double jeopardy clause is to bar reprosecution.
United States v. Dinitz, supra,
at 611. In
United States v. Lee,
“It follows under Dinitz that there was no double jeopardy barrier to petitioner’s retrial unless the judicial or prosecutorial error that prompted petitioner’s motion was ‘intended to provoke’ the motion or was otherwise ‘motivated by bad faith or undertaken to harass or prejudice’ petitioner.”
The key words are “intended” and “motivated” in the first two instances and “undertaken to harass or prejudice” in the third instance. All of the situations are characterized by intentional conduct.
Defendant relies upon decisions of federal courts of appeal to sustain his contention that intentional judicial misconduct is not required to constitute judicial overreaching. In
United States v. Kessler,
In Kessler the court specifically found that the introduction of inadmissible hearsay declarations as a founda *338 tion for introduction of an automatic rifle that the prosecutor knew was false evidence was prosecutorial misconduct that caused serious prejudice to the defendant’s rights to a fair trial. The circumstance was described as follows:
“Such intentional misconduct is ‘prosecutorial overreaching’ and is one of the ‘type[s] of oppressive practices at which the double-jeopardy prohibition is aimed.’ ” pp. 1257-8. (Emphasis supplied.)
Although the opinion in
United States v. Martin,
If the government’s actions in reading this irrelevant and highly prejudicial testimony to the jury were not intentionally designed to provoke a mistrial request, at a minimum they constitute gross negligence. It can best be described as prosecutorial error undertaken to harass or prejudice the defendant — prosecutorial overreaching.” p. 140 (Emphasis supplied.)
The dissenting opinion in Martin expressed fear that the majority did not require intentional misconduct to invoke the double jeopardy clause; however, it is apparent that the majority did find intentional misconduct on the part of the prosecutor. 3
Kessler
also cited
United States v. Wilson,
We have reviewed the entire record in this case with particular attention to the circumstances detailed in the appellant’s brief and appendix. When considering double jeopardy clause application, the United States Supreme Court has observed that a “criminal trial is, even in the best of circumstances, a complicated affair to manage.” 4 Long experience as trial judges leads us to find the impact of that statement not only in its accuracy but also in its understatement. The record is replete with the trial judge’s accusations that the defendant’s attorney was engaged in dilatory tactics, excessive motions, twisting the facts and not seeking the truth. All of the foregoing subjects and the colloquies in which they were discussed were out of the presence of the jury.
The issue to which we are directed in this review is whether the defendant should be reprosecuted, not whether the conduct of the trial judge or trial counsel should be vindicated.
From our reading of the record, we conclude that the trial was proceeding at an unusually slow pace, and we can understand the trial judge’s expressed concern for the flow of cases through the overburdened trial courts. Nevertheless, we cannot find from a cold typewritten record that the conduct of counsel was reprehensible. We believe the trial judge was severe in his assessment of counsel’s conduct in the light of the record wherein it appears that counsel at all times was courteous to the court.
On one occasion the trial judge, in response to a request by defense counsel for the reason for the judge’s evidentiary ruling, commented in the presence of the jury, that the girls who were the principal witnesses
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against the defendant were not on trial. The comment was pertinent and proper.
Bowers v. State,
In a hearing on a pretrial motion some months before the trial, the trial judge characterized the defendant as a lying and evasive witness. The record discloses that the trial judge did not remember that characterization until it was brought to his attention by counsel for the defendant when motions were made just before the commencement of the trial. It is unrelated to the conduct of the judge at trial.
At various times and in the jury’s presence, the trial judge commented upon the confusion (and thus the credibility) of youthful witnesses. In what the judge described as attempts to eliminate confusion, he asked leading and suggestive questions. At one time he decried the delay in the proceedings.
The combination of the statements described and others less important justified the mistrial order. However, we fail to discover in the events an intention by the trial judge to provoke a mistrial or conduct motivated by bad faith or intended to harass or prejudice the defendant. Although we have weighed heavily the defendant’s right to avoid the resultant delay, we believe the interest of the public in prosecuting persons accused of crime is not outweighed and must be fulfilled by a full trial on the merits of this charge.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
Notes
U.S. Const. amend. V; Wis. Const, art I, §8.
State v. Elkinton,
In
United States v. Weaver,
United States v. Jorn, supra, at 479.
