60 N.C. App. 425 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1983
Defendant has brought forward twelve assignments of error, but we deem appropriate to deal with only one.
In his third assignment of error, defendant contends that the trial court erred in refusing to make a record of the proceedings and by threatening to incarcerate defendant’s counsel for requesting the trial court to do so. In support of this argument, defendant refers to both the trial transcripts and to an affidavit of defendant’s counsel, attached to and incorporated into defendant’s motion for appropriate relief, included in the record on appeal. The trial transcript shows that upon the trial court’s sustaining the State’s objection to several questions put to witnesses by defendant’s counsel, bench conferences were held. Counsel’s affidavit states that at several of these conferences, the trial judge refused to allow him to put the witness’s answers in the record and that the trial judge “advised defense counsel that he had come close to going to jail and could still go if he persisted in attempting to get matters and rulings into the record.” The af
First, we note the procedural problems implicit in the presentation of defendant’s contentions as to the threats made to counsel by the trial judge. While the trial transcript does show that counsel were called to the bench frequently during the course of the trial, it does not record the threats defendant’s counsel attributes to the trial judge. Defense counsel’s affidavit, however, was accepted by the Assistant District Attorney who tried the case for the State, without objection. In its brief, the State apparently concedes that the events described by defendant’s counsel did occur at trial. Under these circumstances, we deem it appropriate to accept defense counsel’s affidavit as a legitimate representation of these trial events and circumstances.
While it is fundamental that trial counsel be allowed to make a trial record sufficient for appellate review, see G.S. 15A-1446(a), G.S. 1A-1, Rule 43(c) of the Rules of Civil Procedure and Shuford’s North Carolina Civil Practice and Procedure (2nd Ed.), § 43-5, not every failure by the trial court to comply with the Rule will be deemed prejudicial error. See State v. Chapman, 294 N.C. 407, 241 S.E. 2d 667 (1978). When such efforts by trial counsel are met by not mere failure or refusal of the trial court to make such a record, but are met also by overt hostility of the trial judge to such efforts, the risks that a good trial record will not be made are significantly increased. While recognizing that the balancing of the needs of judicial efficiency against lawyer exuberance will often be difficult for the trial judge, we are constrained to say that the risk of regretable judicial mistakes, see State v. Chapman, supra, will be less likely if trial judges avoid overt hostile reactions to such efforts by trial counsel. It is also appropriate to note that such efforts by trial counsel should rarely occasion threats by the trial judge to incarcerate counsel, lest not only should a good trial record fail to be made, but also that such actions by the trial court may amount to such manifest abuse of the trial court’s discretion in the conduct of the trial as to prejudice the outcome. See State v. Goode, 300 N.C. 726, 268 S.E. 2d 82 (1980).
As the other errors asserted by defendant are not likely to recur, we deem it unnecessary to discuss them.
New trial.