Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment entered on the order of the District Court, Lawrence W. Pierce, Judge, granting petitioner William R. Phillips a writ of habeas corpus unless he is retried.
Phillips, a former New York City police officer, was indicted by a New York County grand jury on March 29, 1972 for the 1968 murders of a pimp and a prostitute and for the attempted murder of a customer of the bordello where the crimes occurred. In August 1972 Phillips’ first trial ended in a hung jury, deadlocked, he claims, ten to two for acquittal. On November 21, 1974, after a second trial of some seven weeks, he was convicted on all three counts. The convictions were affirmed without opinion, People v. Phillips, 52 App.Div.2d 758,
In April 1979 he commenced this habeas corpus proceeding, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, asserting, among other things, that he had been denied due process because during the second trial one of the jurors, John Dana Smith, applied to the New York District Attorney’s Office for a job as an investigator, a fact which the prosecutors knew but did not reveal to the trial judge or to Phillips’ counsel. Judge Pierce conditionally granted the writ. Phillips v. Smith,
Phillips’ second trial commenced before New York State Supreme Court Justice Harold Birns on September 16, 1974. After ten days of voir dire, twelve jurors and four alternate jurors were selected. Although Smith indicated on voir dire an interest in pursuing a career in law enforcement, particularly with the federal government, he was not challenged by the defense and was chosen as juror number three.
On September 23, 1974, the day he was sworn as a juror, Smith had lunch with Criminal Court Officer Rudolph Fontane, who had attended John Jay College of Criminal Justice with Smith’s wife. Fontane said that he was thinking of applying for a job as a rackets investigator in the District Attorney’s Office and told Smith that a federally funded position for a major felony investigator had opened in that office. .Smith said he was interested in the latter position.
Fontane made inquiries on behalf of Smith and himself as to the procedure for applying for a job as an investigator. He spoke first to Michael Mulderrig, an investigator in the District Attorney’s Office, who said that an application and resumé should be sent directly to the District Attorney. Fontane learned the same thing from Mario Piazza, a jury warden for the New York Supreme Court, who had spoken about the matter to John Lang, an Assistant District Attorney. Fontane reported what he had
Smith gave his application to Fontane, assuming that Fontane would deliver it to a personal acquaintance in the District Attorney’s Office. Instead, Fontane simply placed it in the mail, although he personally delivered his own application for the job of rackets investigator. Several days after the applications were submitted, Fontane met Smith and Piazza for lunch. Later that day or the next day, Piazza called Fontane and told him that Assistant District Attorney Joan Sudolnik was responsible for reviewing applications for employment in the Major Felony Program.
Smith’s application was forwarded to the Administrative Assistant District Attorney, who, on his return from vacation on November 9, 1974, sent it to Sudolnik. Sudolnik referred the application to Lang. On November 13, 1974, Fontane met Assistant District Attorney Robert Holmes, spoke of Smith’s application and mentioned for the first time to a member of the District Attorney’s staff, the fact that Smith was on the Phillips jury. Holmes promptly told this to Sudolnik, who instructed both her secretary and Lang that no one should correspond with Smith until after the trial. The next day, November 14, 1974, Sudolnik met with Jack Litman, the Assistant District Attorney prosecuting Phillips, and his assistant Phillip LaPenta, and informed them of the situation.
Litman testified that he directed Sudolnik to make no response to the application and said that he did not wish to know about anything contained in Smith’s resumé. Lit-man and LaPenta then decided that since Smith had revealed during the voir dire that he was interested in a career in law enforcement, there was nothing improper in the application to the District Attorney’s Office. Moreover, they concluded that inasmuch as they had not learned anything about Smith that had not been disclosed on voir dire they had no duty to notify the court or defense counsel.
At that time four alternate jurors were available, and had Justice Birns known of the job application he would have had the discretion to substitute an alternate or, if no alternate had been available, to declare a mistrial. See, e. g., People v. Genovese,
One week later, on November 21, 1974, the jury rendered its verdict. Smith attempted to contact Sudolnik the next day by telephone. She was not available and did not return the call. He then asked Wallace Reilly, for whom Smith had worked as a guard in a department store, to make inquiries on his behalf. Reilly, who was acquainted with several Assistant District Attorneys, called Sudolnik, gave Smith a good recommendation, and mentioned that Smith had been on the Phillips jury. Sudolnik replied that Smith would be interviewed along with other applicants.
On December 4,1974, LaPenta, concerned about public accusations made by Phillips’ trial counsel against the prosecution, informed the Chief Assistant District Attorney about Smith’s application. The District Attorney, Richard Kuh, was then notified, and on December 9, 1974 he brought the matter to the attention of the court and the defense.
Defense counsel moved to vacate the jury verdict. Justice Birns denied the motion after an extensive post trial hearing. People v. Phillips,
Justice Birns concluded that there was “no evidence” that any member of the District Attorney’s staff had a sinister or dishonest motive with respect to Smith’s application,
Justice Birns also found that, although the prosecution should have informed the court and defense counsel of the application and although their failure to do so was “a serious error in judgment,”
In granting the writ, Judge Pierce held that, while there was insufficient evidence to support a finding that Smith was actually partial, he was impliedly biased because the “average” juror in his position “would indeed be likely to favor the prosecution’s position-at least to some extent,”
Judge Pierce cited, among other authorities, Tumey v. Ohio,
Given the human propensity, often subconscious, for self-justification, as well as the “psychological impact” of requiring an individual to state before others whether he was fair and impartial, Irvin v. Dowd,
The requirements of disclosure which the due process clause imposes on a prosecutor have been dealt with in an analogous context in the line of cases commencing with Brady v. Maryland,
Subsequently, the opinion in United States v. Agurs,
The first involves the knowing use of perjured testimony by the prosecution. A conviction so obtained is “fundamentally
The second situation, illustrated by the Brady case, is where the defense requests specific evidence. In those circumstances “if the subject matter of such a request is material, or indeed if a substantial basis for claiming materiality exists, it is reasonable to require the prosecutor to respond either by furnishing the information or by submitting the problem to the trial judge,” and “the failure to make any response is seldom, if ever, excusable.”
The third situation is where, as in the Agurs case, there has been no specific request, in which event the prosecution has a duty to provide the defense with exculpatory evidence only if it “creates a reasonable doubt that did not otherwise exist.”
The Supreme Court held that there was no denial of due process, approving the trial court’s finding that this evidence did not create a reasonable doubt that did not otherwise exist. The evidence did not contradict the prosecution’s ease and was largely cumulative.
For purposes of the present case what is significant in the Agurs opinion is its indication that had Sewell’s prior record been requested and withheld Agurs would have been denied due process. Thus the standard of due process is not whether the defendant in the court’s opinion was in fact guilty. The test is whether the defendant has received “fair” treatment. By deciding that a request for specific evidence must be honored the court held that to sanction the withholding by the prosecutor of specified evidence as to which there is a substantial basis for claiming materiality would not only be unfair to the defendant but would also impugn the integrity of the judicial process itself.
We think similar considerations are applicable in this case. Here the defense had no reason to believe a juror had applied to the prosecutor for a job and therefore no reason to request such information. But an impartial jury is basic to a fair trial. Irvin v. Dowd,
We may assume for purposes of argument that the trial judge might find after a hearing that the juror was of so staunch a character and of such extraordinary sensitivity and righteousness that his judgment would not be affected, even subconsciously, by his interest in his future employment. But it is not the prosecutor’s function to predict what the court may find. His duty must be defined in objective terms. Where the facts indicate that an
No doubt there will be cases in which the prosecution receives innocuous information regarding a juror. While the prudent prosecutor will no doubt err on the side of disclosure, we do not suggest that a new trial will be required in every case. We merely hold that the prosecutor may not keep silent when he knows that a juror has applied to become his employee.
The judgment is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
In affirming the judgment herein, my colleagues have done exactly what the Supreme Court has said should not be done. They have measured the constitutional obligation of due process “by the moral culpability, or the willfulness, of the prosecutor.” United States v. Agurs,
In Remmer v. United States,
The state judge held a hearing during which the challenged juror was examined. Following the hearing, the judge found that the juror was not prejudiced or hostile and had made no premature determination of the defendant’s guilt; that instead the jur- or was honest and able to render a verdict on the evidence. The judge concluded that petitioner had not been deprived of a fair trial. The district court likewise found that the record did not support petitioner’s claim that the letter-writing juror was partial to the prosecutor’s case.
My colleagues say this makes no difference and approve the granting of a writ solely because they find the state prosecutor’s conduct to have been reprehensible. However, reprehensible conduct by a state prosecutor which has not deprived the defendant of a fair trial does not warrant federal habeas corpus relief. Fambo v. Smith,
New York State Supreme Court judges are obligated and fully qualified to supervise the trial conduct of state prosecutors. Unless a prosecutor’s conduct has so prejudiced a defendant as to deprive him of a fair trial, section 2254 gives a federal judge no right to usurp the state judge’s function. Borodine v. Douzanis,
I dissent.
