320 A.2d 12 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1974
The plaintiff was sentenced in Circuit Court 14 to the correctional center at Somers for a term of not less than eighteen months nor more than three years. He claims that this sentence is illegal because (1) the prosecutor failed to disclose to the court all of the material terms of the plea bargain; (2) the court, in rejecting the recommended sentence, refused to permit the plaintiff to withdraw his guilty plea; and (3) the sentence imposed exceeded the constitutionally permitted jurisdiction of the Circuit Court.
The plaintiff was initially charged with seven counts of receiving stolen credit cards and seven counts of larceny by receiving stolen property. On May 17, 1973, to a substitute complaint charging single counts of these crimes, the plaintiff, who was represented by the public defender, entered pleas of not guilty and elected trial by jury. The next day, during the course of the trial and as the result of a plea bargain between the prosecutor and the plaintiff's counsel, the plaintiff was permitted to withdraw his pleas and election. The plaintiff then entered a plea of guilty to the crime of receiving stolen credit cards. This crime is a class D felony, carrying a maximum penalty of five years. General Statutes §§
On June 15, 1973, just prior to sentencing, the plaintiff moved to withdraw his guilty plea, claiming, inter alia, that it was his understanding that the court was bound to go along with the state's recommendation. The trial judge reminded the plaintiff that the trial judge had previously explained to him that the court was not bound by the recommendation and that the plaintiff had so understood at the time. The public defender advised the trial judge of negotiations he had with the prosecutor in which the negotiating prosecutor had indicated that he would not object to the withdrawal of the guilty plea at any time and that the public defender had so notified the plaintiff. The negotiating prosecutor was not present at the time of sentencing; in his place the state was represented by another prosecutor. Upon inquiry by the trial judge, the sentencing prosecutor stated that he was not familiar with any prior discussions and objected to the withdrawal of the guilty plea although he assumed that he was bound by any promises made by the other prosecutor. The court denied the plaintiff's motion and thereupon, after further inquiry of the parties respecting the sentence to be imposed, imposed the sentence referred to above.
The agreement entered into between the public defender and the negotiating prosecutor was that the state would recommend a sentence of no less than one nor more than two years and that if the trial judge did not go along with the recommended sentence the state would not oppose the plaintiff's withdrawal of his guilty plea. There is no evidence that either the negotiating or the sentencing prosecutor *34 advised the trial judge at any time about the agreement respecting withdrawal of the plaintiff's guilty plea. The sentencing prosecutor, who was aware of this part of the agreement, believed that it did not become operative unless the motion to withdraw was made after the sentence was imposed, and since the motion was not renewed at that time he felt justified in remaining silent.
"A plea of guilty differs in purpose and effect from a mere admission or an extra-judicial confession; it is itself a conviction. Like a verdict of a jury it is conclusive. More is not required; the court has nothing to do but give judgment and sentence. Out of just consideration for persons accused of crime, courts are careful that a plea of guilty should not be accepted unless made voluntarily after proper advice and with full understanding of the consequences." Kercheval v. United States,
The agreement in this case not only involved a recommended sentence but also was that the state would not oppose a withdrawal of the guilty plea in the event that the sentencing judge did not accept the recommendation. Whether, in the circumstances, the sentencing judge was obligated to permit a withdrawal *35
of the guilty plea; United States ex rel. Culbreath
v. Rundle,
The defendant points to the circumstances surrounding the guilty plea — the commencement of the trial, the state's summoning of many witnesses, the termination of the trial at the request of the plaintiff, the present unavailability of one of the state's witnesses, and the possible prejudice to the state's case as a result — and suggests that these factors should outweigh the supposed failure of the prosecutor to carry out the terms of the plea bargain, by objecting to the withdrawal of the guilty plea. The difficulty with the defendant's position is that it is *36 the plaintiff who has in fact been prejudiced and it cannot be said that the prosecutor's action did not contribute to it. Whatever prejudice the state may have sustained is problematic and could have been avoided had the prosecutor alerted the trial judge to the entire agreement at the time of the guilty plea. Had the trial judge declined to accept the agreement, then both the state and the plaintiff could have reexamined their positions in the light of the court's position or, in the alternative, the trial could have proceeded to verdict. The defendant's claim of prejudice to the state is not only not convincing but, when measured against the plaintiff's constitutionally deficient guilty plea, pales into insignificance.
Since the plaintiff's conviction cannot stand, the question arises as to the appropriate remedy. Santobello
v. New York,
The Circuit Court is a lower state court, created by the General Assembly; Conn. Const. art.
Our state constitution, in article second, divides the powers of government into three distinct departments, namely, legislative, executive and judicial, and assigns to each a separate magistracy. Under article fifth § 1, the judicial power is vested in "a supreme court, a superior court, and such lower courts as the general assembly shall, from time to time, ordain and establish." The judicial structure prescribed by the constitution is a three-tiered system consisting of a constitutional appellate court of last resort, a constitutional trial court of general jurisdiction, and statutory lower courts of limited jurisdiction. The Superior Court, the constitutionally designated court of general jurisdiction, was established long before the adoption of our state constitution in 1818. It was the intent of the constitution that this court should continue with the essential characteristics which it had previously possessed. Walkinshaw v. O'Brien,
Prior to Walkinshaw, arguably, any statewide court other than the Superior Court was constitutionally impermissible. Osborn v. Zoning Board ofAppeals,
What was this new court which just barely passed muster? Under chapter 283 of the 1941 Supplement to the General Statutes, this court "was given exclusive jurisdiction of legal actions wherein the matter in demand exceeded $100 but did not exceed $2500, of equitable actions wherein the matter in demand did not exceed that sum, and of appeals from municipal boards, officers and commissions and from the liquor control commission; and concurrent jurisdiction with the Superior Court of actions for the foreclosure of mortgages or liens wherein the matter in demand exceeded $2500; General Statutes, Sup. 1941, §§ 808f-810f." Walkinshaw v. O'Brien, supra, 126. Its criminal jurisdiction was limited to appeals from justices of the peace and municipal courts. The maximum criminal jurisdiction at that time of any municipal court was limited to crimes wherein the penalty provided did not exceed a fine of $500 or imprisonment for one year or both. Rev. 1949 § 7579.
There were three significant changes wrought by the act of 1941: the new court was changed from several county courts to a single state court, the exclusive civil jurisdiction was changed from $100 to $500 to $100 to $2500, and the new court was *39 given exclusive jurisdiction of statutory appeals from municipal boards, officers and commissions and from the liquor control commission. Except for the quantum jump from local to state court the new court, in the eyes of the Walkinshaw majority, did not appear to be too much different, in a jurisdictional sense, from the old county courts, which had had concurrent jurisdiction with the Superior Court of all actions claiming either legal or equitable relief wherein the matter in demand exceeded $500 but did not exceed $2000. Cum. Sup. 1939, § 1396e. The upper limit increase of civil jurisdiction from $2000 to $2500 was not too great. As for the change from concurrent to exclusive jurisdiction, this did not overly disturb the Walkinshaw majority, because in its view there was no material distinction between the two insofar as impairment of the constitutional jurisdiction of the Superior Court was affected.Walkinshaw v. O'Brien, supra, 138. Respecting the observation in the Walkinshaw dissent (p. 149) that "between 1818 and 1941 the legislature by degrees, but none the less progressively and effectively, had been gradually depriving the Superior Court of jurisdiction," the Walkinshaw majority was satisfied that its warning (p. 144) "that in the broad grant of jurisdiction to the Court of Common Pleas, summing up as it does the various extensions of jurisdiction which through the years have been made as regards the former Courts of Common Pleas, the General Assembly has trenched far upon the jurisdiction of the Superior Court as it existed when the constitution of 1818 became effective, and the question whether the act can be sustained is a very close one," was sufficient to prevent a further metastasis of the constitutional judicial structure.
Although the Walkinshaw majority may have thought that in yielding to the legislative will with respect to the state Court of Common Pleas it was *40 stemming the tide of encroachment upon the jurisdiction of the Superior Court, in actuality its decision served only to open the sluice gates. Since then not only has the civil jurisdiction of the Court of Common Pleas been increased to $15,000; General Statutes § 52-6; and in certain instances to an unlimited amount; § 52-31; but the court also has been given jurisdiction of appeals from virtually all municipal and state agencies. Public Acts 1971, No. 870. In addition, the legislature has created another statewide court, the Circuit Court, whose criminal jurisdiction is the subject matter of this proceeding.
The Circuit Court was established by the 1959 session of the General Assembly; Public Acts 1959, No. 28; to perform the judicial functions of the justices of the peace and the town, city and borough courts. Collins v. York,
When one contemplates the creation and steady expansion of the state Court of Common Pleas and the state Circuit Court, it is apparent that the judicial plug fashioned by Walkinshaw has metamorphosed into a legislative gouge which over the years, under such high sounding and deceptively appealing titles as "court reorganization" and "court reform," has tended to erode the jurisdiction of the Superior Court by the creation of legislative replicas.
It is well to remember that the state's constitutional system was established, not by the grace of the legislature nor by the fiat of the judiciary, but rather by the will of the people. "The people made the constitution, and the people can unmake it. It is the creature of their will, and lives only by their will. But this supreme and irresistible power to make or to unmake, resides only in the whole body of the people; not in any sub-division of them."Cohens v. Virginia, 19 U.S. (6 Wheat.) 264, 389. Although members of all three branches of government take an oath to support and defend the constitution of the state; General Statutes §
A constitutional trial court with an independent judiciary serves to protect the public interest by insulating the judicial process from the influence of pressure groups and from reprisal by the legislature. If, as a result, the legislature is frustrated from time to time because it cannot work its will, how much more so would the people be frustrated if the legislature were free to interfere with the judicial process by tampering with a court's constitutional jurisdiction! Walkinshaw was the foot in the door. Since then the civil jurisdiction of the statutory courts gradually has been increased. Now we are witnessing an expansion of criminal jurisdiction. The combined civil and criminal jurisdiction of both the Court of Common Pleas and the Circuit Court is such that by a process of legislative domain they have become other courts, not the lower courts contemplated by the constitution.
Giving the Circuit Court final jurisdiction of crimes involving a sentence of more than one year is no small matter. The one-year barrier is the checkpoint between misdemeanors and felonies. General Statutes §
Thus far we have discussed this case without adverting to the fact that Walkinshaw was construing the constitution of 1818 and not the constitution of 1965, under which we are now operating. The defendant suggests that, when we view the present constitution in the context of the judicial structure *44 in existence at the time of its adoption in 1965, the criminal jurisdiction given to the Circuit Court in the present formulation of § 54-1a does not trench upon the constitutional structure of the Superior Court.
In 1965 there were three trial courts in the state — the constitutionally constituted Superior Court and the statutory courts — Common Pleas and Circuit. The jurisdiction of the Court of Common Pleas was limited to civil matters. The Circuit Court had both civil and criminal jurisdiction, its civil jurisdiction limited, under § 52-2a, to claims not exceeding $7500 in amount, and its final criminal jurisdiction, under § 54-1a, limited to crimes punishable by a certain fine or by imprisonment for not more than one year or both.
The constitutional convention of 1965 did not meet in a legal vacuum. Although convened to deal with the question of legislative reapportionment, the convention dealt with other matters as well, including a review of the judicial article. Introduced at the convention was Resolution 177, which would have vested the judicial power "in a supreme court, a superior court, and such other courts as the general assembly shall from time to time, ordain and establish." Conn. Const. Convention 1965, Resolutions, No. 177. In view of the fact that among the delegates to the convention were three former members of the Supreme Court, two of whom — former chief justices — were cochairmen of the convention, the adoption of the proposed resolution, in the light of the legal gloss placed upon article fifth of the constitution of 1818 by Walkinshaw, would have been significant. Instead, the convention adopted a resolution substituting the word "lower" for "inferior" in respect to the statutory courts. Conn. Const. art.
In sum, whether viewed against the backdrop of the 1818 constitution or the 1965 constitution, the expansion of the final criminal jurisdiction of the Circuit Court into the felony area produces a significant distortion of the state's judicial picture to the detriment of the Superior Court. While it is true, as the defendant contends, that the Superior Court has not been ousted of criminal jurisdiction, the enlargement of the concurrent criminal jurisdiction of the Circuit Court has the same effect and vastly accelerates the process of rendering the Superior Court an empty constitutional shell. It is to prevent further deterioration of the constitutional judicial structure that we are constrained to hold that insofar as § 54-1a authorizes the Circuit Court to impose a sentence in excess of one year it is invalid. In the circumstances, the Circuit Court *46 lacks the authority to put into effect either the actual sentence of eighteen months to three years or the recommended sentence of one to two years.
Accordingly, the writ is granted and the plaintiff is ordered discharged from custody unless within thirty days from date hereof the Circuit Court vacates his conviction and erases his guilty plea, and thereafter within a reasonable time conducts a hearing in probable cause to determine whether he should be bound over to the Superior Court.