This is an appeal from conviction, after jury trial, on charges of possessing an unregistered firearm in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 5861(d) (1982), and possessing a firearm not identified by serial number in violation of 26 U.S.C. §§ 5842, 5861(i). The firearm in question was a short-barreled shotgun found by the Metropolitan Police Department at the Argyle Variety Store in Northwest Washington, on a shelf beneath the counter at which the defendant was working. The principal basis of appeal is that there was inadequate evidence to establish the “knowing dominion and control,”
United States v. Whitfield,
It has been the law of this circuit, first announced by dictum in
Cephus v. United States,
(1) Should this Circuit abandon the so-called “nonwaiver” rule announced in Cephus v. United States, ... ?
(2) If so, should such change be effected prospectively?
The full court has had the benefit of briefing and oral argument by the parties, and of briefing by the District of Columbia Public Defender Service as an invited amicus.
I
Although the nonwaiver rule was first applied as a holding by this court in
Austin v. United States,
[M]ost jurisdictions, including Federal circuits, have cоnsistently followed the waiver rule; and the Supreme Court, in a case from the Ninth Circuit, has provided at least a dictum supporting it.
The
Cephus
court felt, however, that the waiver rule had been “imported from civil into criminal trials without considering the demands of our accusatorial system of criminal justice.”
The eminent courts that put [the “waiver” theory] forth intended [it], we think, not as [an] explanation[ ] of the genuine reason for their result, but as [a] deviee[] — no more fictional than many others to be found — for weaving a result demanded on policy grounds unobtrusively into the fabric of the law____ [T]hey have denied the Fifth Amendment claim primarily because of the unreasonable and debilitating effect it would have upon society’s conduct of a fair inquiry into the defendant’s culpability.
Id. at 1113. So also with the “waiver” here; it is a conventional fiction used to describe and produce the result that the courts will not blind themselves to incriminating evidence introduced by the defendant who chooses to respond, rather than to demur, to the government’s case. As the Fifth Circuit has put it:
The doctrine’s operative principle is not so much that the defendant offering testimony “waives” his earlier motion but that, if he presents the testimony of himself or of others and asks the jury to evaluate his credibility (and that of his witnesses) against the government’s case, he cannot insulate himself from the risk that the evidence will be favorable to the government. Requiring the defendant to accept the consequences of his decision to challenge directly the government’s case affirms the adversary process.
United States v. Belt,
Of course underlying Cephus’s refusal to accept the fictional “waiver” was its policy judgment — similar to that urged by appellant and
amicus
here — that the result this convention produced wаs inadequate to “the demands of our accusatorial system of criminal justice.”
At the time
Cephus,
and later
Austin,
was decided, there was pеrhaps some reason to hope that the traditional rule we rejected would generally be displaced, and that the new rule we announced would find a broad acceptance. That hope has proved illusory. Although one treatise describes the waiver rule’s status as “uncertain” in several circuits, 2 C. Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure § 463 at 647 (2d ed. 1982), it is not clear that any other circuit has ever actually repudiated it. One circuit initially approved
Cephus,
in a case where it made no difference to the outcome since the government’s case-in-chief provided sufficient evidence to sustain the conviction.
United States v. Rizzo,
Accordingly, we hold that a criminal defendаnt who, after denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal at the close of the government’s case-in-chief, proceeds with the presentation of his own case, waives his objection to the denial. The motion can of course be renewed later in the trial, but appellate review of denial of the later motion would take into account all evidence introduced to that point. We emphasize that our holding only applies to the factual context addressed by the dictum of
Cephus,
the holding of
Austin,
and presented by the case before us. Specifically, we do not now decide the related question whether there has been a waiver of objection when the defendant proceeds with his evidence after the trial judge, in violatiоn of Rule 29(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal
*1086
Procedure, refuses to rule upon his acquittal motion in the face of a “clear demand” by defendant, thereby depriving him of the opportunity of testing the government’s case.
See, e.g., United States v. Rhodes,
II
We need discuss the second issue only briefly. We find that it was reasonable — indeed, the only responsible course— for counsel for defendant to proceed on the assumption that he had nothing to lose in the trial below by proceeding with the defendant’s evidence. That was the clear law of this circuit, repeated as recently as 1983.
United States v. Lewis,
Whether or not, as appellant suggests, applying our new rule to the present case would violate the due process clause,
cf. Marks v. United States,
The remaining issues in this appeal, and its final disposition, are left to the panel, whose opinion is issued simultaneously with this en banc opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
.
See Colella v. United States,
