Defendant-appellant Noel Spears was convicted, after a bench trial, of three counts of distributing heroin in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
The trial lasted two days, January 21 and 22, 1981. The prosecution presented four witnesses, two undercover agents to whom Spears sold the heroin, and two agents who performed surveillance. Their testimony was that an informant led the undercover agents to Spears, introducing them as drug dealers from Ohio. Spears agreed to sell heroin to them and discussed the possibility of buying cocaine from them. Spears sold heroin to the agents on three occasions; on the third occasion he was arrested.
Spears set up a defense of entrapment. He testified that he had been a heroin addict, and sold heroin to support his habit, until 1978, when he entered a methadone program. Since then, he had not dealt in drugs until 1980, when the informant (his erstwhile supplier of heroin) began to pressure him to re-enter the drug trade. Because he was having financial difficulties, he agreed to sell heroin to the informant’s “buyers,” who were, in fact, the undercover agents. Spears further testified that at his *992 first meeting between the informant and one of the undercover agents, the agent gave Spears a small amount of cocaine; Spears tried it and liked it, and asked to buy a quantity of it from the agents. According to Spears, the agent insisted, as a precondition to Spears’ purchase of cocaine, that Spears sell him a quantity of heroin. Spears also testified that he did not know where to obtain heroin, and that it was the informant who procured a source of heroin for him.
The trial judge took the case under advisement at the close of the evidence, and announced his decision three weeks later, on February 12,1981. The judge did not offer defense counsel an opportunity to make closing argument, and defense counsel did not request such an opportunity, did not object when the court announced the decision without hearing final arguments, and filed no post-trial motions requesting reconsideration in light of closing argument.
Spears argues on this appeal that the trial court’s failure to hear closing argument deprived him of a fair trial.
The issue presented here was not raised in the court below. Issues not raised at the trial level will not be considered by this court unless the trial court has committed plain error.
United States v. Stavros,
In
Herring v. New York,
The very premise of our adversary system of criminal justice is that partisan advocacy on both sides of a case will best promote the ultimate objective that the guilty be convicted and the innocent go free. In a criminal trial, which is in the end basically a fact finding process, no aspect of such advocacy could be more important than the opportunity finally to marshal the evidence for each side before submission of the case to judgment.
Id.
at 862,
The government argues that this case is distinguishable from Herring. In Herring, the criminal defendant requested the opportunity to make a closing argument, but his request was denied; and the narrow holding of Herring is that the denial of a request for summation is reversible error. In the present case, the government argues, the trial court did not actively deny closing argument because Spears never affirmatively requested it. The government urges us to conclude that “[i]n this case defense counsel’s inaction constituted a waiver of closing argument.” Government’s Brief at 11.
We find that defense counsel waived the right of summation in this case.
We note, as a preliminary matter, that the right to present a summation may be waived. The Supreme Court in Herring endorsed this proposition in quoting with approval the statement of the Maryland Court of Appeals.
The Constitutional right of a defendant to be heard through counsel necessarily includes his right to have his counsel make a proper argument on the evidence and the applicable law in his favor, however simple, clear, unimpeaehed, and conclusive the evidence may seem, unless he has waived his right to such argument, or unless the argument is not within the issues in the case, and the trial court has *993 no discretion to deny the accused such right.
Yopps v. State,
The
Herring
Court did not indicate what factors would be sufficient to show waiver. The general rule is that, for a court to find waiver, the record must clearly demonstrate “an intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege.”
Johnson v. Zerbst,
Naturally, where the right of summation is raised at the trial level, there is little difficulty in determining whether the right was waived. Thus, in
Commonwealth v. McCray,
Conversely, in
United States ex rel. Wilcox
v.
Pennsylvania,
On the other hand, where the issue of summation is not raised at the trial level, courts have split over whether to infer a waiver of the right of summation. In
City
*994
of Columbus v. Woodrick,
A different conclusion was drawn in
Covington v. State,
Although we find a waiver in this case, we need not and do not, in reaching this conclusion, adopt the rule announced in
Mann,
that in the absence of “special circumstances,” failure to assert the right of summation at tidal will ordinarily constitute a waiver, or the rule in
Covington,
that in the absence of “plain error,” a guilty verdict will not be reversed for lack of summation where no summation was requested. It is important to remember that in
Woodrick, Mann,
and
Covington,
the defendant had no clear opportunity either to assert
or
to waive the right to sum up before the trial judge announced the guilty verdict. In such cases, where the announcement of the verdict comes on the heels of the close of evidence, it seems unrealistic to suggest that the failure to request constitutes a waiver. Certainly, under such circumstances, it could not be said that there was “an intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege.”
Johnson v. Zerbst, supra,
*995 But we are not presented with such a case. The present case does not involve precipitous action on the part of the trial judge. Spears’ contention that the district judge “launched into” his guilty verdict (Defendant-Appellant’s Brief at 18) is a considerable overstatement: when the judge adjourned the trial on January 22, he made clear that the next hearing would be for the announcement of his verdict. Defense counsel cannot reasonably have expected to present a summation at a time when he knew the judge would have completed his review of the evidence and reached a decision. Rather, the time to make closing argument was before the final hearing. Spears had three weeks in which to assert his right to make closing argument. He failed to do so, and after the verdict was announced, failed to raise the issue of summation to the trial court in any manner whatsoever. We deem such inaction a tactical choice not to sum up.
Conclusion
We hold that where, as here, the record clearly demonstrates that the defendant had ample opportunity to request summation before the verdict was announced, but made no such request, and thereafter failed to bring the issue to the trial court’s attention, the right of summation is waived. Spears having waived his right to sum up, his appeal must fail. The conviction is affirmed.
Notes
.
See also Covington v. State,
. Fuhrman was a civil divorce and custody case. The North Dakota Supreme Court held that Herring applies to civil as well as criminal cases. Id. at 101.
.
See also United States ex rel. Spears v. Johnson,
