368 N.E.2d 1278 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1977
Defendant Bryan Gilbert Trapp was indicted separately from his alleged companion James C. Smith, Jr., for offenses which occurred at a United Dairy Farmers store on June 22, 1975. These two were tried jointly. Trapp was found guilty of all four counts in his indictment: rape, aiding and abetting rape, aggravated robbery and felonious assault. He now assigns seven errors, hereinafter designated by Roman numerals. Smith appealed separately from his conviction by the same jury for three offenses arising out of the same circumstances (Case No. C-76135).
Trapp was a juvenile at the time of the alleged offenses, as he was when he was arrested on July 24, 1975. He was brought before the juvenile division and, after the procedures required by R. C. Chapter 2151 were met, he was transferred to the Court of Common Pleas by an order journalized August 7, 1977, fourteen days after his arrest. His joint trial with Smith began October 29, 1975. That was the ninety-seventh day after his arrest, but the eighty-third day after the transfer between courts. Trapp had been held in juvenile detention from the time of his arrest and in jail from the time of his transfer to the Court of Common Pleas.
The first claim presented is that Trapp was entitled to the same rights as an adult and the beginning day under R. C.
The other issue presented is whether this different treatment for juveniles deprived Trapp of the equal protection of the law under the
The provisions for binding a juvenile over to be tried under adult criminal procedures are carefully designed to protect the interests of the minor and the safety of the community. For instance, after a consideration of such matters as probable cause to believe the minor committed the offense; the minor's age and prior juvenile record; the efforts previously made to treat or rehabilitate him; and his *191
family environment and school record, and after mental and physical examinations of the child are conducted, the court must find reasonable grounds to believe that he is not amenable to rehabilitation by juvenile procedures and that the safety of the community requires that he be placed under legal restraint, including (if necessary) a length of time beyond his majority. The juvenile judge should have time to make a careful evaluation and decision. This is a reasonable classification. ComparePorter v. City of Oberlin (1965),
The first assignment of error is overruled.
"The court erred in permitting Trapp to participate in his own defense over the objections of counsel.
"The court erred in overruling Trapp's motions for a mistrial."
At the beginning of the second day of the trial, before continuing the voir dire examination which had begun the day before, but out of the hearing of the prospective jurors, Trapp's attorney, George Clark, moved to sever Trapp's trial from Smith's trial; this motion was denied. Clark then moved for permission to withdraw as defense counsel; that motion was also denied.
The reason for these two motions was that Mr. Clark knew that Trapp's alibi defense would require the presentation of perjured testimony or false evidence. Trapp insisted on the presentation of his alibi defense, against the advice of counsel. Reading into the record the specific provisions of several disciplinary rules of the Code of Professional Responsibility that prohibit a lawyer from using perjured testimony or false evidence and from engaging in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation, and other disciplinary rules which require an attorney's withdrawal if he knows that his continued employment *192 will result in the violation of a Disciplinary Rule,1 Mr. Clark stated to the court:
"I am totally unable to proceed in accordance with my duties as an attorney, under the rules laid down by the Supreme Court of the state of Ohio, and in accordance with the oath of office I took. In addition, I am unable to proceed in accordance with my client's wishes. I cannot reconcile the two. * * *
"And I think that if I am forced to go forward that I am placed in the position of either not rendering effective assistance to my client in accordance with his wishes, or being unethical."
The court acknowledged Mr. Clark's right and duty to refuse to participate in the presentation of false evidence, but went on to say that the defendant himself was not prevented from presenting his alibi defense, and that Mr. Clark could cross-examine the state's witnesses and put the state to its proof. Mr. Clark responded that he would not proceed with any testimony on behalf of the defendant, suggesting Trapp might want other counsel. When the court asked Trapp whether he wished to say anything, the defendant replied:
"Well, I feel if I don't get, if I do get another counsel, I'm going to get found guilty anyway because it's too much prejudice in this court room. That's the way I feel about it."
Without any further examination of Trapp or inquiry into his competency to handle his own case, the trial proceeded as the court had directed. Mr. Clark conducted the voir dire examination on behalf of the defendant, Trapp made an opening statement on his own behalf over the objections of Mr. Clark and counsel for co-defendant Smith, and Mr. Clark cross-examined all of the state's witnesses. *193
At the conclusion of the state's case, Mr. Clark again raised the question of effective assistance of counsel for Trapp. The court responded by saying, in effect, that Mr. Clark should do the best he could under the circumstances. Mr. Clark replied that he declined to advise Trapp as to how to proceed with his defense and raised the question of his competency to conduct his own defense. The court then determined that Trapp understood Mr. Clark's position and that the court would assist Trapp in presenting such witnesses as he desired to call.
The presentation of defense witnesses proceeded on that basis, with the court questioning defense witnesses in accordance with the suggestions made by Trapp within the hearing of the jury. In addition, over Mr. Clark's objections, Trapp was permitted to take the stand on his own behalf, with the court again handling the examination. At the conclusion of all of the evidence, both Trapp and Mr. Clark made closing arguments.2
At no point did the court obtain from Trapp a waiver of his right to counsel or a consent to the procedure used in the trial. The court conducted no investigation or examination into the competency of Trapp to manage and handle his own defense.
The foregoing review of the record is presented in considerable detail in order to make clear the factual basis upon which our conclusions are reached. We do not intend to infringe upon the wide discretion accorded to trial judges in the management of trials, but constitutional demands of due process and fair trial outweigh, in this case, policies favoring wide judicial discretion and the prompt and efficient dispatch of court business. In particular, we note that the first crucial moment arose prior to the swearing of the jury, before jeopardy attached.
We hold that, on this record, defense counsel should *194 have been allowed to withdraw completely from this case, and that the court erred in failing to obtain from the defendant a knowing, intelligent and voluntary waiver of counsel.3
Mr. Clark spread on the record his specific reasons for requesting withdrawal, and we find that his statements were made in good faith and were amply sufficient to require his withdrawal from the case.4 The Ohio Code of Professional Responsibility clearly prohibits a lawyer from knowingly using perjured testimony or false evidence and from making a false statement of fact. A lawyer has a duty to withdraw if the client persists in such a course. ABA Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility, Informal Opinion 1318, January 13, 1975. Compare In re Complaint as to the Conduct of A., Accused
(1976),
"The law does not make a law office a nest of vipers in which to hatch out frauds and perjuries."
This duty to withdraw was recognized by the trial court in the instant case, but only in part. Mr. Clark was required to remain in the trial. While he performed part of the function of defense counsel, a significant portion of the defense was carried out by the defendant without the assistance of counsel. Trapp had some help from the judge, but that does not constitute "assistance of counsel." The denial of a substantial portion of defense counsel's function is as much a violation of constitutional rights to counsel as the total denial of all assistance of counsel.
However, the defendant did not knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily waive his right to counsel, in writing or otherwise. He did not ask to conduct part of his defense; he was told he would do so. The question of waiver was never put to him. This constituted a violation of Trapp's constitutional right to the assistance of counsel under the
"Presuming waiver from a silent record is impermissible. The record must show, or there must be an allegation *196 and evidence which show, that an accused was offered counsel but intelligently and understandingly rejected the offer. Anything less is not waiver. * * *
"Where, as in this case, the constitutional infirmity of trial without counsel is manifest, and there is not even an allegation, much less a showing, of affirmative waiver, the accused is entitled to relief from his unconstitutional conviction."
We find that as claimed in the second and third assignments of error, the court erred in refusing to allow Mr. Clark to withdraw and in not obtaining a written waiver of counsel knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily made by the defendant. This finding makes it unnecessary to rule on the fourth assignment of error.
The trial court granted defendant's motion to suppress his in-custody statement to police, without stating the basis of this ruling. However, the testimony adduced at the suppression hearing, the jury being absent, indicated that while Trapp had received adequate Miranda warnings, other circumstances were sufficient to convince the court that the statement he made was not voluntary.
Thereafter, during cross-examination of Trapp by the state, the court allowed Trapp to answer that he had made a statement to police while in custody, but did not allow the jury to hear the contents of that statement from any witness.
We hold that this was not error prejudicial to Trapp. The bare information that Trapp had made a statement, the contents of which the jury did not hear, may raise some questions in a juror's mind as to what was said, but it is impossible to say whether the juror would think the net result was favorable or unfavorable to defendant. That is a matter of speculation. Further, this jury was duly instructed that they could not draw any inference from a question which the court did not permit to be answered, and that they could not find Trapp guilty unless they found the state proved each and every element of the offenses beyond *197 a reasonable doubt by evidence produced in open court.
Crim. R. 33(E)(3) provides that a judgment shall not be reversed by reason of the admission of evidence unless the defendant was prejudiced thereby. We find that Trapp was not prejudiced by the admission of evidence in this instance. The fifth assignment of error is not well taken.
Defendant claims that the evidence was such that reasonable minds could conclude that he did not have on or about his person a deadly weapon (that is, a revolver), and therefore, that he was entitled to have the jury instructed on the lesser charge.
This claim has no merit. It is not necessary for the state to produce the deadly weapon. State v. Hornsby, unreported, First District Court of Appeals, No. C-76345, rendered April 19, 1976. Nor is it necessary for the state to prove that the deadly weapon was operable. Finally, the state's evidence that defendant had a weapon was not controverted by any defense evidence, and we do not believe the cross-examination of the state's witnesses so changed the character of their testimony about the weapon as to make it reasonable to conclude that what Trapp had was something other than a deadly weapon. State v.Kilby (1977),
The defendant's total defense was alibi. This case is governed by State v. Nolton (1969),
The aggregate of minimum terms of the four sentences is twenty-six years. R. C.
At the sentencing hearing on September 11, 1976, the *198
court orally ordered these sentences to be served consecutively to the extent permitted by law, thus limiting the aggregate minimum term to fifteen years under R. C.
We reverse and remand this case for a new trial.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
BETTMAN, P. J., and CASTLE, J., concur.