Randy Wolfe appeals his conviction for the class D felony of sexual misconduct in the first degree, § 566.090, RSMo 2000, for subjecting a nine-year-old girl to sexual contact through her clothing. 1 After waiving his right to a jury trial, the court received a stipulation from the parties, statements of the victims and Wolfe, and the testimony of two police officers. The defendant did not testify at trial.
Wolfe raises a single point of error, claiming that the trial court plainly erred in violation of his constitutional rights by not announcing its finding of guilt in open court in this court tried case. We affirm.
The trial court concluded on February 26, 2002, and the court announced that it would review the evidence and notify the parties of its decision. The following day, the court made a docket entry denying motions for judgment of acquittal, finding Wolfe guilty, and finding that he was subject to sentence enhancement because of the prior felony conviction. A pre-sen-tence investigation was ordered and sentencing set for a later date. Neither Wolfe nor his counsel was present when the court made its docket entry finding appellant guilty. At the sentencing, the trial court referred to its earlier finding of guilt, asked if Wolfe had any questions, and sentenced him to five years in prison. No objection regarding the verdict was raised until appeal. Our review is thus limited to plain error review under Rule 30.20.
Standard of Review
Plain errors affecting substantial rights may be considered in the discretion of the court when the court finds that manifest injustice or a miscarriage of justice has resulted therefrom.
State v. Brown,
Analysis
Wolfe argues that the failure to render the verdict in open court violates Article I, section 18(a) of the Missouri Constitution, sections 546.030 and 546.090, RSMo, and Rule 29.01. Article I, section 18(a) provides that an accused has the right to appear and defend in person. Section 546.030, RSMo, further details the nature of the right to be present and that the verdict may be received in the absence of the defendant if the absence is willful or voluntary. 2 Section 546.390, RSMo, requires that a verdict must be rendered in open court. See also Rule 29.01(a).
Wolfe also cites to
State v. Buckner,
Apparently, in response to
Buckner
and its progeny, the legislature in 1879 adopted section 1891, the predecessor to today’s section 546.080, RSMo. In
State v. Hope,
As the law has continued to develop regarding the defendant’s right to be present at various stages of a criminal proceeding, the Supreme Court has recognized three sources. They are: Section 546.030; Article I, section 18(a) of the Missouri Constitution; and the due process clause of the United States Constitution.
5
State v. Middleton,
No case in Missouri, cited to or found by us, expressly refers to a constitutional or statutory right of a defendant to be present at the pronouncement of guilt in a court-tried case. We assume, without deciding, that the pronouncement of guilt or innocence in a court-tried case is such a significant and integral part of the trial 6 to be encompassed within the rights reflected in our constitution and statutes. However, the law is equally clear since Hope that the constitutional right is not absolute.
Our inquiry is whether the trial court committed plain error and whether a manifest injustice occurred. We believe no manifest injustice occurred here. One element of the right to be present is to request that the jury be polled to confirm that all agree with the verdict. Rule 29.01(d). We see no such polling being applicable in a court-tried case. Another, is to provide an opportunity to object to inconsistent or otherwise technically improper verdicts so that the jury can resume deliberations or, possibly, correct an error before discharge. Again, no such purpose applies in a court-tried case.
Wolfe relies upon
State v. De Anda,
We are also mindful of the remedy that would be applied here if we were to sustain Wolfe’s argument. Unlike in a jury case, where the finder of fact has been discharged, the only arguable remedy in this case would be a remand for the purpose of the court’s announcement of its finding of guilt in the defendant’s presence and resentencing.
See United States v. Canady,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The offense was a felony because Wolfe had a prior conviction under Chapter 566. § 566.090.2, RSMo.
. The State does not argue and we find that defendant's silence does not constitute a waiver of a right to be present when the verdict is announced.
.The one difference is that R.C. 1855 p. 1191 did not allow for the taking of a verdict in the absence of the defendant that was willful or *917 voluntary. In fact, Buckner had escaped between the close of the evidence and the jury’s verdict.
.
Hope
also traced the progeny of
Buckner
and the reasons for the 1879 statutory enactment.
See
. Although Wolfe refers to the 6th and 14th Amendments in his point relied on, he does not develop any federal constitutional argument or point to any cases holding that those amendments are violated by such a situation as occurred here.
.In this area, it is important to remember the distinction between the trial itself and trial proceedings, or even some administrative parts of the trial, because the willingness to find waiver by either affirmative act or the failure to object is more likely as to certain pretrial or administrative matters.
See generally, Middleton,
