Can an accused waive the right to withdraw a plea of guilty before judgment is pronounced? This appeal presents this question for the first time.
Defendant female was indicted for murder. At the
Expressing concern for defendant’s rights the court then advised defendant and her counsel of the propriety of filing a motion to vacate the judgment for good cause so that an appeal could thereafter be taken for a review of the trial judge’s rulings on his position that defendant had waived her right to nullify her guilty plea.
After hearing this motion to vacate in which the decision
Historically our statute giving such right to withdraw a guilty plea first appeared in substantially today’s codal words at page 834 in Cobb’s Digest of the Laws of the State of Georgia published in 1851. The pertinent language reads: "But at any time before judgment is pronounced, such prisoner may withdraw the plea of 'guilty,’ and plead not guilty, and such former plea shall not be given in evidence against him or her on his or her trial.” Every Code beginning with our 1863 version has contained substantially these words which now appear as a part of our present Code in § 27-1404. The continuance of this substantial verbiage shows the importance our law makers have attached to this right.
The construction of this proviso favorably to defendants in the decided cases confirms judicial concern for this protective prerogative. " [I]t is the signed writing and not the previous oral announcement, which constitutes the legal sentence.”
Morgan v. Mount,
In the case sub judice defendant attempted to withdraw her plea of guilty and substitute a plea of not guilty before the judge made any attempt to sentence her. "Before sentence is passed one accused of a crime may withdraw his plea of guilty as a matter of right.”
Higgins v. State,
The trial judge’s finding was based upon construing defendant’s answers to his interrogation as amounting to a specific waiver of any right to withdraw her guilty plea. We cannot accept this view. Even though the traditional statute of the female figure of Justice shows her to wear a blindfold, Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence does not permit such legendary deprivation of the eyesight to prevent recognition by the courts of the realities of human nature. In making his decision as to acceptance of a guilty plea any trial judge might well expect an affirmative answer to his question "Do you waive your right to withdraw your plea of guilty?” This is due to an accused’s natural reaction which would be to construe the question as suggesting a" Yes, Sir” reply as a condition to the court’s acceptance of such plea. Nor should we blind our judicial mental vision to the reality of the accused’s hope of earning the good will of the sentencing judge so as to obtain a more lenient sentence.
Under these circumstances we hold the propounding of
The district attorney eloquently argues there are many constitutional and statutory rights that may be waived. He points out that "An accused may waive right to the benefit of counsel, Simmons v. State,
In fairness to the trial judge whose decision is being reversed we recognize instances have occurred where defendants have changed their minds upon learning their guilty pleas resulted in sentences exceeding those hoped for through a plea of guilty and by withdrawal
Even though there is currently a hue and a cry against courts enforcing our time honored individual rights earned through the blood of American patriots, we cannot and we shall not yield to such clamor. The courts must remain the bastion protecting the individual and his rights. This philosophy needs neither preachments nor homilies in support as the basic reason has been eloquently stated in these words: "The rights of the best of men are secure only as the rights of the vilest and most abhorrent are protected.”
The trial court erred in not permitting defendant to withdraw her plea of guilty and enter a plea of not guilty, in sentencing defendant after she made a motion to withdraw the plea of guilty and in overruling defendant’s motion to vacate, arrest and set aside the sentence and judgment.
Judgment reversed.
