BURGETT v. TEXAS
No. 53
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued October 18, 1967.—Decided November 13, 1967.
389 U.S. 109
Leon Douglas argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Crawford Martin, Attorney General of Texas, George Cowden, First Assistant Attorney General, A. J. Carubbi and R. L. Lattimore.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner was convicted of “assault with malice aforethought with intent to murder; repetition of offense.” The jury fixed the punishment at 10 years in the Texas State Penitentiary.1 On appeal, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed petitioner‘s conviction.2 We granted certiorari, 386 U. S. 931.
Petitioner‘s counsel filed a pretrial motion to quash the four counts of the indictment referring to the prior convictions for failure to apprise the defense of what the State would attempt to prove.5 The record is silеnt as to the court‘s action on this motion. But when the indictment was read to the jury at the beginning of the trial, before any evidence was introduced, the four counts relating to the prior convictions were included.
The State then offered into evidence a certified copy of the indictment in the prior Texas case. Petitioner‘s counsel indicated he had no objection, and that record was received into evidence. Thereafter, testimony was offered concerning the judgment and sentence in the prior Texas case. After some testimony had been given, the jury was excused and the hearing continued out of its presence. At the conclusion of the hearing, petitioner‘s attorney objected that the Texas judgment was void on its face under state law. The court sustained that ob-
Petitioner‘s motion for a new trial was denied. In the Court of Criminal Appeals, petitioner arguеd, inter alia, that the court erred in permitting counts two through five of the indictment to be read to the jury at the beginning of the trial, and in failing to sustain petitioner‘s objection to the admission into evidence of the second version of the Tennessee conviction. The Court of Criminal Appeals held that since petitioner had not suffered the enhanced punishment provided by the recidivist statutes, and since the instruction to disregard the prior offenses had been given, no error was presented.
We do not sit as a court of criminal appeals to review state cases. The States are free to provide such pro-
The exclusion of coerced confessions is one example. Chambers v. Florida, 309 U. S. 227.
The exclusion of evidence seized in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments is another. Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U. S. 643.
Still another is illustrated by Pointer v. Texas, 380 U. S. 400. In that case we held thаt a transcript of a preliminary hearing had to be excluded from a state criminal trial because the defendant had no lawyer at that hearing, and did not, therefore, have the opportunity to cross-examine the principal witness against him who since that time had left the State. The exclusionary rule that we fashioned was designed to protect the privilege of confrontation guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment and made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth.
The same result must follow here. Gideon v. Wainwright established the rule that the right to counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment was applicable to the States by virtue of the Fourteenth, making it unconstitutional to try a person for a felony in a state court unless he had a lawyer or hаd validly waived one. And that ruling was not limited to prospective applications. See Doughty v. Maxwell, 376 U. S. 202; Pickelsimer v. Wainwright, 375 U. S. 2. In this case the certified records of the Tennessee conviction on their face raise a presumption that petitioner was denied his right to counsel in the Tennessee proceeding, and therefore that his conviction was void. Presuming waiver of counsel from
The admissiоn of a prior criminal conviction which is constitutionally infirm under the standards of Gideon v. Wainwright is inherently prejudicial and we are unable to say that the instructions to disregard it made the constitutional error “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt” within the meaning of Chapman v. California, 386 U. S. 18.
Our decision last Term in Spencer v. Texas, 385 U. S. 554, is not relevant to our present problem. In Spencer the prior convictions were not presumptively void. Moreover, the contention was that the guilt phase of the trial was prejudiced by the introduction of the evidence of prior crimes. As the Court noted, “[i]n the procedures before us . . . no specific federal right—such as that dealing with confessions—is involved; reliance is placed solely on a general ‘fairness’ approach.” Id., at
Reversed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN, concurring.
I am in full agreement with the opinion of the Court and the reasons stated therein for reversing the conviction in this case. However, in view of the terse dissent entered by my Brother HARLAN, I feel constrained to add some observations of my own.
The dissent refers to the Court‘s decision in Spencer v. Texas, and the entire thrust of the dissent is reminiscent of that decision of last Term which placed this Court‘s stamp of approval on the Texas recidivist procedures from which this case evolves. The dissent reminds us that “[w]e do not sit as a court of errors and appeals in state cases.” I would not disagree with that statement as an abstract proposition. But we are not dealing with abstracts in this case. We are dealing with a very real denial of a state criminal defendant‘s rights as guaranteed by the Federal Constitution. We are also told by the dissent that “this case shows no prosecutorial bad faith or intentional misconduct.” But this misses the mark. We are not limited in our review of constitutional errors in state criminal proceedings to those errors which flow from “prosecutorial bad faith or intentional misconduct.”1 Our concern is with the effect
This case is a classic example of how a rule eroding the procedural rights of a criminal defendant on trial for his life or liberty can assume avalanche proportions, burying beneath it the integrity of the fact-finding prоcess. In Spencer, the Court approved a procedure whereby a State, for the sole purpose of enhancing punishment, includes in the indictment allegations of prior crimes which are read to the jury and enters evidence at trial of those prior crimes, no matter how unrelated they might be to the charge on which the defendant is being tried. The rule аdopted in Spencer went so far as to allow the State to enter evidence on the prior crimes even though a defendant might be willing to stipulate the earlier convictions. In this case, that harsh rule was expanded to a degree close to barbarism.
In addition to charging the petitioner with the principal crime of “assault with malice aforethought with intеnt to murder,” the indictment alleged four prior convictions, one in Texas and three in Tennessee. Despite the efforts of the petitioner‘s attorney to quash those portions of the indictment referring to the prior crimes, the entire indictment was read to the jury at the start
Thus, the jury went into its deliberations knowing that the petitioner had been convicted and imprisoned for four prior felonies, although not one had been proven at the trial. To expect that the jury could wipe this from its memory and decide the petitioner‘s guilt only on the basis of the evidence of assault is to place too much faith in a jury‘s ability to detach itself from reality. This is particularly true since the trial judge gave the jurors not the slightest clue as to why matters which consumed so much time at trial were suddenly being removed from their consideration.
To suggest that such a procedure accords a man charged with a crime due process is beyond belief. This Court has reversed convictions in other cases based on unfair influences on juries which must be deemed minor when compared to the pervasive prejudice in this case. Not long ago we ruled that a defendant was denied due process when a court bailiff remarked in the presence of the jurors, “Oh that wicked fellow, he is guilty“; and, “If there is anything wrong [in the verdict] the Supreme Court will сorrect it.” Parker v. Gladden, 385 U. S. 363. We also reversed a murder conviction because two prosecution witnesses were deputy sheriffs who had been assigned to accompany the jury while it was sequestered. Turner v. Louisiana, 379 U. S. 466.4 If these transgressions offend constitutional standards of fairness, can it be doubted that the petitioner‘s trial was stripped of all
This case is the frightful progeny of Spencer and of that decision‘s unjustified deviation from settled principles of fairness. Today we have placed a needed limitation on the Spencer rule, but nothing except an outright rejection would truly serve the cause of justice.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE WHITE join, dissenting.
The record in this case shows nо prosecutorial bad faith or intentional misconduct. To the extent that the prosecutor contemplated the use of prior convictions in a one-stage recidivist trial, his right to do so is of course established by Spencer v. Texas, 385 U. S. 554, decided only last Term. The fact that the prior convictions turned out to be inadmissible for other reasons involves at the most a later corrected trial error in the admission of evidence. We do not sit as a court of errors and appeals in state cases, and I would affirm the judgment of the state court.
