At a criminal prosecution of petitioner in a North Carolina
state court, the judge declared a mistrial on the motion of the
prosecution after two of the State's witnesses refused to give any
testimony before the jury. Petitioner was later convicted of the
same offense in another trial, and his plea of double jeopardy
overruled.
Held: To try petitioner a second time for the same
offense after a first trial had been interrupted in the interests
of justice did not violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Pp.
344 U. S.
424-428.
234 N.C. 390,
67
S.E.2d 282, affirmed.
Petitioner was convicted in a criminal prosecution in a North
Carolina state court. The State Supreme Court affirmed. 234 N.C.
390,
67
S.E.2d 282. This Court granted certiorari. 343 U.S. 914.
Affirmed, p.
344 U. S.
428.
MR. JUSTICE MINTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner and two others, Jim Cook and Elmer Matthews,
employees on strike from a mill at Tarboro, North Carolina, were
arrested for firing five shots from a passing auto into the house
of a watchman at the mill, J. D. Wyatt. Wyatt's house was occupied
at the time of the shooting by himself, his wife, his daughter
and
Page 344 U. S. 425
son-in-law, and the latter couple's baby. After the shooting,
the petitioner and Cook and Matthews were taken to the jail. In the
presence of the sheriff, a police officer, and the petitioner, Cook
stated that the petitioner had helped plan the assault, and had
fired the shots.
Cook and Matthews were tried first, and were found guilty of
assault with a deadly weapon. Before judgments were entered on
their convictions, the petitioner was placed on trial. The State
put three witnesses on the stand, the sheriff, the police officer,
and Wyatt's son-in-law. The State then put Cook and Matthews on the
stand, intending to use their testimony to corroborate that of the
other three witnesses. Cook and Matthews refused to answer the
questions of the State on the ground that such answers might tend
to incriminate them, and their counsel informed the court that, in
the event of an adverse judgment on their convictions, they would
appeal therefrom to the Supreme Court of North Carolina. The trial
court upheld their refusal to answer. The State represented to the
court that the testimony of Cook and Matthews was necessary for the
State to present its case fully before the jury, and moved that the
court withdraw a juror from the sworn panel and declare a mistrial.
The court did so, stating:
"being of the opinion that the ends of justice require that the
State have available for its [
sic] testimony of the
witnesses Jim Cook and Elmer Matthews when the case is tried, and
that the State is entitled to have those witnesses to testify after
their cases have been disposed of in the Supreme Court, in its
discretion, withdraws a juror . . . and orders a mistrial of this
case, and that the same be continued."
The petitioner objected.
The Supreme Court of North Carolina affirmed the convictions of
Cook and Matthews.
State v. Matthews, 231 N.C. 617,
58
S.E.2d 625. The State then proceeded to impanel a
Page 344 U. S. 426
jury for the second time, and this time it tried the petitioner
to conclusion before this panel. He objected that to do so would
place him in jeopardy a second time, and thus deny him due process
of law, contrary to the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment to
the Constitution of the United States. His objection was overruled,
and he was placed on trial. Cook testified as a witness for the
State. The petitioner was found guilty and sentenced to two years'
imprisonment. From this judgment, he appealed to the Supreme Court
of North Carolina, which affirmed his conviction.
State v.
Brock, 234 N.C. 390,
67
S.E.2d 282. He then sought certiorari here, which we granted.
343 U.S. 914.
North Carolina has said there is no double jeopardy, because the
trial court has the discretion to declare a mistrial and require
the defendant to be presented before another jury if it be in the
interest of justice to do so. This has long been the common law
rule in North Carolina.
State v. Brock, supra; State v.
Dove, 222 N.C. 162, 22 S.E.2d 231;
State v. Guice,
201 N.C. 761, 161 S.E. 533;
State v. Weaver, 13 Ired.L.
(35 N.C.) 203.
The question whether such a procedure would be double jeopardy
under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States
is not raised in this case, as the Fifth Amendment applies only to
federal jurisdictions.
Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U.
S. 319;
Twining v. New Jersey, 211 U. S.
78.
The question before us is whether the requirement that the
defendant shall be presented for trial before a second jury for the
same offense violates due process of law as required of the State
under the Fourteenth Amendment. The question has been here before
under different circumstances. In
Palko v. Connecticut,
supra, the defendant was first tried for murder in the first
degree, and was found
Page 344 U. S. 427
guilty of murder in the second degree. Pursuant to a statute of
Connecticut, the State appealed and obtained a reversal for errors
of law at the trial. The defendant was retried, convicted of murder
in the first degree, and sentenced to death. An appeal to this
Court raised the question whether or not the requirement that he
stand trial a second time for the same offense placed him twice in
jeopardy, in violation of due process.
This Court held that the State had not denied the defendant due
process of law. In order to indicate the nature of due process,
this Court asked two questions:
"Is that kind of double jeopardy to which the state has
subjected him a hardship so acute and shocking that our polity will
not endure it? Does it violate those 'fundamental principles of
liberty and justice which lie at the base of all our civil and
political institutions'? . . . The answer surely must be 'no.'"
302 U.S.
319,
302 U. S. 328.
Here, the answer must be the same.
This Court has long favored the rule of discretion in the trial
judge to declare a mistrial and to require another panel to try the
defendant if the ends of justice will be best served.
Wade v.
Hunter, 336 U. S. 684;
Thompson v. United States, 155 U.
S. 271,
155 U. S.
273-274. As was said in
Wade v. Hunter, supra,
p.
336 U. S.
690,
"a trial can be discontinued when particular circumstances
manifest a necessity for so doing, and when failure to discontinue
would defeat the ends of justice."
Justice to either or both parties may indicate to the wise
discretion of the trial judge that he declare a mistrial and
require the defendant to stand trial before another jury. As in all
cases involving what is or is not due process, so, in this case, no
hard and fast rule can be laid down. The pattern of due process is
picked out in the facts and circumstances of
Page 344 U. S. 428
each case. The pattern here, long in use in North Carolina, does
not deny the fundamental essentials of a trial, "the very essence
of a scheme of ordered justice," which is due process.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, concurring.
Once it is agreed that the claim here made -- freedom from being
tried a second time on a criminal charge -- must be tested by the
independent scope of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, and not on the basis of the incorporation of the Fifth
Amendment into the Fourteenth, the application of the guarantee of
due process to a specific situation makes relevant the specific
phrasing of a common result. I therefore deem it appropriate to add
a word to the Court's opinion, in which I join.
The judicial history of the Fifth Amendment in prohibiting any
person from being "subject for the same offence to be twice put in
jeopardy of life or limb" serves as a good pragmatic confirmation
of the compelling reasons why the original Bill of Rights was found
to limit the actions of the Federal Government, and not those of
the States. The conflicting views expressed in
Ex parte
Lange, 18 Wall. 163;
Kepner v. United
States, 195 U. S. 100;
Trono v. United States, 199 U. S. 521;
In re Bradley, 318 U. S. 50, and
Wade v. Hunter, 336 U. S. 684,
indicate the subtle technical controversies to which the provision
of the Fifth Amendment against double jeopardy has given rise.
Implications have been found in that provision very different from
the mood of fair dealing and
Page 344 U. S. 429
justice which the Fourteenth Amendment exacts from a State in
the prosecution of offenders. A State falls short of its obligation
when it callously subjects an individual to successive retrials on
a charge on which he has been acquitted or prevents a trial from
proceeding to a termination in favor of the accused merely in order
to allow a prosecutor who has been incompetent or casual or even
ineffective to see if he cannot do better a second time.
Unless we can say that the trial judge was not justified in the
circumstances of this case in concluding that the ground for
requesting a mistrial was fair and not oppressive to the accused,
we would not be warranted in finding that the North Carolina,
through its Supreme Court, denied the petitioner due process of
law. The record does not seem to me to justify such a finding.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE VINSON, dissenting.
The petitioner and two others, Cook and Matthews, were indicted
for shooting into the home of J. D. Wyatt when Wyatt and four other
persons were present therein. After arrest, Cook and Matthews
confessed, charging Brock with firing the shots. Brock made no
confession.
Cook and Matthews were tried together. Wyatt, Hathaway, and
Bardin, the sheriff of the county, were the witnesses presented by
the State. Bardin, the sheriff, testified as to the confessions of
cook and Matthews. Cook and Matthews did not testify in their own
behalf. There was a verdict of guilty of assault with a deadly
weapon.
Judgment had not been entered on the verdict when Brock was
placed on trial.
The same witnesses used in the foregoing trial, Wyatt, Hathaway,
and Bardin, testified for the State. The latter witness again
testified that Cook and Matthews had
Page 344 U. S. 430
stated that Brock fired into the house. The prosecutor offered
Cook and Matthews as witnesses. They declined to testify on the
ground of self-incrimination, and the court sustained this claim of
privilege.
At this point, the Solicitor moved to withdraw a juror and for a
mistrial and the continuance of the case pending final judgment
against Cook and Matthews. His motion was granted, and a mistrial
and continuance of the case ordered.
Thereafter, a judgment of two years' imprisonment was entered on
the verdict against Cook and Matthews. Their appeal to the Supreme
Court of North Carolina was affirmed.
State v. Matthews,
231 N.C. 617,
58
S.E.2d 625 (1950).
Subsequently, Brock was brought to trial again. He interposed a
plea of former jeopardy which the court denied. Proper exceptions
were taken, and the federal question herein presented and
preserved. Then he pleaded not guilty to the indictment. The same
three witnesses, Wyatt, Hathaway, and Bardin, the sheriff,
testified in Brock's second trial to facts substantially similar to
their evidence in the first trial. The sheriff reiterated his
testimony that Cook and Matthews had stated that Brock fired the
rifle into the house. Thereupon, the Solicitor called Cook and
Matthews to the stand, and this time they testified to the part
that they took in the shooting and that Brock had fired into the
Wyatt home. The jury convicted, and Brock was sentenced for a
two-year imprisonment.
The Supreme Court of North Carolina affirmed the judgment,
holding that Brock's plea of former jeopardy was properly denied.
State v. Brock, 234 N.C. 390,
67
S.E.2d 282 (1951).
The petitioner is here urging that he was placed in jeopardy a
second time, and thereby was denied due process of law guaranteed
to him by the Fourteenth Amendment
Page 344 U. S. 431
to the Constitution of the United States. We granted certiorari.
343 U.S. 914 (1952).
For the first time in the history of this Court, it is urged
that a state could grant a mistrial in order that it might present
a stronger case at some later trial, and, in so doing, avoid a plea
of former jeopardy in the second trial.
The Solicitor had convicted two defendants engaged in the same
crime, by the testimony of Wyatt, Hathaway, and Bardin, the
sheriff. Cook and Matthews had refused to testify in their own
behalf in that trial. Immediately, the first Brock trial followed.
The judgment of conviction against Cook and Matthews had not been
entered. No motion for a continuance appears in the record. The
State willingly entered upon the trial. It had all the witnesses
and the evidence which had convicted Cook and Matthews of the same
crime. It presented that evidence. Cook and Matthews refused to
testify on the ground of self-incrimination, and the court
sustained their position. Under the circumstances, the Solicitor
either knew or should have known that Cook and Matthews would not
testify. After all the State's evidence was in, and after Cook and
Matthews refused to testify, the Solicitor moved for a mistrial.
The basis for his motion was that the State would, at a later date,
be able to present a stronger case against Brock, since Cook and
Matthews might at a later date testify differently or to additional
facts than at the first trial. It must be remembered that they had
not testified at any trial. The court sustained the motion that a
juror be withdrawn and a mistrial ordered and the case continued
pending the final judgment in the case against Matthews and Cook.
The court stated it was of the opinion that
"the ends of justice require that the State have available for
its testimony of the witnesses Jim Cook and Elmer Matthews when the
case is tried, and that the State is entitled to
Page 344 U. S. 432
have those witnesses to testify after their cases have been
disposed of in the Supreme Court. [
Footnote 1]"
The sole question is whether the record in this case presents an
offense to fundamental fairness and due process. Under the results
reached by the Court, the state is free, if the prosecutor thinks a
conviction probably cannot be won from the jury on the testimony at
the trial, to stop the trial and insist that it be tried again on
another day when it has stronger men on the field.
Orderly justice could not be secured if the rules allowed the
defendant to ask for a mistrial at the conclusion of testimony just
because the state had done well and the defense poorly. The same
limitation applies to the prosecution if the scales of justice are
to be kept in equal balance. [
Footnote 2] This Court recently has said that, in applying
the concept of due process of law, judges are not at large to apply
their own personal standards.
Rochin v. California,
342 U. S. 165
(1952). Thus, the considered views of many other jurisdictions may
be utilized in determining the basic requirements of orderly
justice and hence due process.
Wolf v. Colorado,
338 U. S. 25
(1949).
I grant that North Carolina contends that its present procedure
does not violate fundamental fairness. It was not always so. In
State v. Garrigues, 2 N.C. 276, 278 (1795), the Supreme
Court of North Carolina adopted the contrary rule in the following
strong language:
". . . in the reigns of the latter sovereigns of the Stuart
family, a different rule prevailed, that a jury in such case might
be discharged for the purpose of having better evidence against him
at a future day, and this power was exercised for the benefit of
the
Page 344 U. S. 433
crown only;
but it is a doctrine so abhorrent to every
principle of safety and security, that it ought not to receive the
least countenance in the courts of this country. In the time
of James the Second, and since the Revolution, this doctrine came
under examination, and the rule as laid down by L. Coke was
revived. . . . In the present case, the jury were suffered by the
court's officer to separate without giving a verdict; as they could
not agree to convict, it is strong evidence of the party's
innocence, and perhaps he could not be tried again with the same
advantage to himself as then. Perhaps his witnesses are dead or
gone away, or their attendance not to be procured, or some accident
may prevent their attendance. We will not again put his life in
jeopardy, more especially as it is very improbable we shall be able
to possess him in of the same advantages -- so he was
discharged."
(Emphasis supplied.) In the case of
In re Spier, 12
N.C. 491, 493, 494, 498, 499, 502 (1828), the court pointed out
--
"Hall Judge. -- In this case, the guilt or innocence of the
prisoner is as little the subject of enquiry as the merits of any
case can be when it is brought before this Court on a collateral
question of law. Although the prisoner, if unfortunately guilty,
may escape punishment in consequence of the decision this day made
in his favor, yet it should be remembered that the same decision
may be a bulwark of safety to those who, more innocent, may become
the subjects of persecution and whose conviction, if not procured
on one trial, might be secured on a second or third, whether they
were guilty or not."
"Taylor, Chief Justice. -- In the remarkable case of the
Kenlocks, reported by Foster . . . , a majority of the
judges . . . rejected with just animadversion
Page 344 U. S. 434
the authority of those cases, which had occurred in that period
of misrule and persecution preceding the revolution. In one of
these, the Court discharged a jury in a capital case
after
evidence given on the part of the Crown, merely for want of
sufficient evidence to convict, and in order to bring the prisoner
to a second trial when the Crown should be better prepared! .
. ."
"These stains upon the administration of justice show to what
extremes, in a state of civil discord, the passions of men urge
them to trample upon the most salutary principles of law, and in
what degree judges, holding their office at the will of the
sovereign, were eager to pander to his appetite for blood and
forfeitures."
"
* * * *"
". . . as
the common law of every state already protects the
accused against a second trial not only in crimes of all
descriptions, but in questions of civil right,
it is to be
inferred that the Constitutions meant much more, and that their
design was to protect the accused against a trial where the first
jury had been discharged without due cause."
(Emphasis supplied.)
But we are told that, in a later day, the North Carolina court
departed from its earlier rule. We are directed to
State v.
Dove, 222 N.C. 162, 22 S.E.2d 231 (1942);
State v.
Guice, 201 N.C. 761, 161 S.E. 533 (1931);
State v.
Bass, 82 N.C. 570 (1880);
State v. Andrews, 166 N.C.
349, 81 S.E. 416 (1914), and
State v. Ellis, 200 N.C. 77,
156 S.E. 157 (1930).
In the
Guice case, the State introduced its evidence
and rested its case. Counsel for the defendant made a motion for
judgment as of nonsuit. The court withdrew a juror and ordered a
mistrial, and the authority of the court to take this course was
the question presented on
Page 344 U. S. 435
appeal. The Supreme Court of North Carolina, in disposing of the
matter, said:
"In misdemeanors, and all cases of felonies not capital, the
court below has the discretion to order a mistrial and discharge a
jury before verdict in furtherance of justice, and the court need
not find facts constituting the necessity for such discharge, and
ordinarily the action is not reviewable. In capital felonies, the
facts must be found, and the necessity for such discharge is
subject to review. [
Footnote
3]"
In the
Bass case,
supra, the court held that
the judge
"had the discretion to dissolve the jury and hold the defendants
for a new jury, and that the security for the proper exercise of
his discretion rests not on the power of this court to review and
reverse the judge, but on his responsibility under his oath of
office. [
Footnote 4]"
While the technical ramifications evolved in the many
jurisdictions as part of the doctrine of double jeopardy do not
fall within the scope of due process, the basic idea is part of our
American concept of fundamental fairness. This is shown by the
universality of the provision against double jeopardy. The Fifth
Amendment to the Federal Constitution, inapplicable here, prohibits
double jeopardy. The Constitutions of all but five states,
Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, North Carolina, and Vermont,
contain clauses forbidding double jeopardy. [
Footnote 5] And each of those five states has the
prohibition against double jeopardy as part of its common law.
[
Footnote 6]
Page 344 U. S. 436
No case in any other jurisdiction to support North Carolina's
action in this case has been pointed out to us, and my research
fails to find a single prop supporting its position. On the other
hand, eight states have had occasion to rule on whether there might
be a second trial after the prosecutor at a previous trial was
unable to present evidence. Six have taken a firm position against
allowing a second trial. [
Footnote
7] A seventh, Iowa, is in accord with the above view, [
Footnote 8] for language to the
contrary in two other Iowa cases is not in point, since the
mistrials in those two cases were upon the motion of the defendant.
[
Footnote 9] In Alabama, the
eighth state, two cases have permitted a second trial. [
Footnote 10] Both of those cases,
however, involved facts of such extreme nature that it would have
been
Page 344 U. S. 437
shocking to the conscience not to permit a second trial. In one
of the cases, [
Footnote 11]
the Alabama Supreme Court even indicated the result probably would
be different if the prosecutor merely had been unprepared at the
first trial.
The rule to be gleaned from the cases is that a second trial
will be allowed only for extreme circumstances, often contributed
to by the defendant and beyond the control of the prosecutor, which
prevented the testimony from being available at the first trial.
Only North Carolina has clear precedent allowing a second trial
when the prosecutor simply failed to have his evidence ready at the
first trial. [
Footnote
12]
It may be considered that, this being a noncapital felony, the
considered action of the judiciary of a state should be followed
when it is said it is in the furtherance of justice. It certainly
is the easy way out, but, in view of the fact that no other state
in the Union has gone to this extreme of the North Carolina rule, I
must ponder upon it and conclude that the hard-won victory
achieved
Page 344 U. S. 438
in the field of "double jeopardy" ought not be lost even in a
small part by the affirmance of this case.
The Attorney General of North Carolina relies upon
Palko v.
Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319
(1937), in support of his position that the second trial of this
defendant did not violate due process. In
Palko, there was
an appeal by the State, as allowed by statute. The Supreme Court of
Connecticut found three errors prejudicial to the State committed
by the trial court, and reversed the judgment and ordered a new
trial. [
Footnote 13] The
second trial then followed. In the case before the Court, no error
of law tainted the first trial.
It is apparent that, in the
Palko case, the Legislature
of Connecticut had provided for a review of the trial by appeal. We
often have said that the considered action by a state legislature
or the Congress of the United States places the issue of
constitutionality in a different posture in respect of due process
of law. We agree that
Palko decided that this Court could
consider a particular case of double jeopardy of a defendant as not
being within the protective limits of due process of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution.
Certainly
Palko did not decide the issue in this case.
In that case, under a state statute, the State was asking for a
second trial to obtain a trial free from error by the court
prejudicial to the State. Here, the State asks for its second trial
in order to suit the convenience of the Solicitor in an endeavor to
strengthen the State's case, when the defendant had done nothing
either to bring about trial errors or to inveigle or entrap the
Solicitor to proceed to the first trial.
While this case is not controlled by
Palko, I am
comforted by language found in it which, in my view, envisions this
case as one which might well be within the
Page 344 U. S. 439
protective embrace of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Speaking for the Court, Justice Cardozo said:
"What the answer would have to be if the state were permitted
after a trial free from error to try the accused over again or to
bring another case against him, we have no occasion to consider. We
deal with the statute before us, and no other. The state is not
attempting to wear the accused out by a multitude of cases with
accumulated trials. It asks no more than this -- that the case
against him shall go on until there shall be a trial free from the
corrosion of substantial legal error. [
Footnote 14]"
I also receive comfort from the language contained in MR.
JUSTICE FRANKFURTER's concurring opinion in this case. He says that
a state falls short of its obligation
"when it callously subjects an individual to successive retrials
on a charge on which he has been acquitted or prevents a trial from
proceeding to a termination in favor of the accused merely in order
to allow a prosecutor who has been incompetent or casual or even
ineffective to see if he cannot do better a second time."
In my view, this case is snugly embraced in his very clear
statement of the law as I have always understood it until
today.
Wade v. Hunter, 336 U. S. 684
(1949), is cited in support of the discretion of a trial judge "to
declare a mistrial and to require another panel to try the
defendant if the ends of justice will be best served."
Thompson
v. United States, 155 U. S. 271,
155 U. S.
273-274 (1894), is likewise referred to in the majority
opinion. I have no quarrel with either of these cases. In the
Wade case, with which I agree, the court-martial trial was
held in the midst of the campaign to overthrow the forces of
Germany. There was a continuance in the trial to get certain
witnesses.
Page 344 U. S. 440
Before that date was reached, there were further advances toward
the enemy. The Army needed the officers participating in the trial
for tactical purposes, and the court-martial was dissolved. In the
Thompson case, after the jury was sworn and a witness
testified, a member of the jury was found to be disqualified
because he was a member of the Grand Jury which filed the
indictment. The jury was discharged, and a plea of jeopardy was
interposed at the second trial. Nothing was called to the attention
of the prosecutor or the court that such a condition obtained or
might have obtained. The plea of former jeopardy was overruled,
with cases cited. The Court said:
"Those cases clearly establish the law of this court that courts
of justice are invested with the authority to discharge a jury from
giving any verdict whenever, in their opinion, taking all the
circumstances into consideration, there is a manifest necessity for
the act, or the ends of public justice would otherwise be defeated,
and to order a trial by another jury, and that the defendant is not
thereby twice put in jeopardy within the meaning of the fifth
amendment to the constitution of the United States. [
Footnote 15]"
I submit there was no manifest necessity to discharge this jury
after the State had proceeded to trial and offered all its
evidence, and I submit that the ordering of a mistrial here for the
convenience of the State does not promote the ends of public
justice.
[
Footnote 1]
R. 16.
[
Footnote 2]
Cf. the classic expression of Justice Cardozo in the
opinion of this Court in
Palko, "The edifice of justice
stands, its symmetry, to many, greater than before."
302 U.
S. 319,
302 U. S. 328
(1937).
[
Footnote 3]
201 N.C. at 763, 161 S.E. at 534 (1931).
[
Footnote 4]
82 N.C. at 575 (1880).
[
Footnote 5]
State v. Brunn, 22 Wash. 2d 120, 154 P.2d 826
(1945).
[
Footnote 6]
State v. Benham, 7 Conn. 414 (1829);
Gilpin v.
State, 142 Md. 464, 121 A. 354 (1923);
Commonwealth v.
McCan, 277 Mass.199, 178 N.E. 633 (1931);
State v.
Clemmons, 207 N.C. 276, 176 S.E. 760 (1934), and
State v.
O'Brien, 106 Vt. 97, 170 A. 98 (1934).
[
Footnote 7]
Allen v. State, 52 Fla. 1, 41 So. 593 (1906) (during
first trial, defendant secured continuance to secure absent
witness, prosecutor then moved for and secured mistrial);
State
ex rel. Meador v. Williams, 117 Mo. App. 564, 92 S.W. 151
(1906) (prosecution witness did not respond to subpoena);
People v. Barrett, 2 Caines (N.Y.) 304, 2 Am.Dec. 239
(1805) (State could not use secondary evidence as to document since
defendant not given due notice to produce);
State v.
Richardson, 47 S.C. 166, 25 S.E. 220 (1896) (prosecutor, by
mistake, told witness to go home);
Pizano v. State, 20
Tex.App. 139, 54 Am.Rep. 511 (1886) (prosecutor answered ready and
started trial after being incorrectly informed by sheriff that all
witnesses were present);
State v. Little, 120 W.Va. 213,
197 S.E. 626 (1938) (at noon recess, prosecutor told witnesses to
be back at 1:30 p.m.; when they had not returned by 2 p.m., he
secured mistrial). Only the leading case in each jurisdiction has
been cited. There is a total of approximately fifteen more
decisions in these jurisdictions in accord with the cited
cases.
[
Footnote 8]
State v. Callendine, 8 Iowa 288 (1859) (witness
incompetent to testify because his name not indorsed on indictment,
mistrial on motion of the court).
[
Footnote 9]
State v. Parker, 66 Iowa 586, 24 N.W. 225 (1885), and
State v. Falconer, 70 Iowa 416, 30 N.W. 655 (1886).
[
Footnote 10]
State v. Nelson, 7 Ala. 610 (1845) (jury irregularly
sworn too early and the proceedings then revealed further issues
previous to the time the jury should have been impaneled and
sworn);
Hughes v. State, 35 Ala. 351 (1860) (before trial,
defendant agreed to a mistrial if a certain witness were too
intoxicated to testify; defendant then objected to a mistrial when
the agreed condition occurred).
[
Footnote 11]
"If the question really was that the jury had been discharged
because the prosecuting officer was not prepared to proceed with
the trial, we should entertain very serious doubts of the power of
a court to discharge a jury for that cause only; but it is a very
different matter when, from the intervention of some irregularity
in the proceedings, either a jury has been improperly impaneled or
an improper juror sworn."
State v. Nelson, supra, at 614.
[
Footnote 12]
State v. Dove, 222 N.C. 162, 22 S.E.2d 231, 232 (1942)
(court ordered mistrial, since evidence desired by State "was not
presently available");
State v. Guice, 201 N.C. 761, 161
S.E. 533 (1931) (defendant moved for nonsuit after State had
offered all its testimony; court instead of ruling on the motion
for nonsuit declared a mistrial).
[
Footnote 13]
State v. Palko, 121 Conn. 669, 186 A. 657 (1936).
[
Footnote 14]
302 U.S. at
302 U. S. 328
(1937).
[
Footnote 15]
Thompson v. United States, 155 U.
S. 271,
155 U. S. 274
(1894).
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
In 1795, when the reasons for the guarantee against double
jeopardy were still fresh in men's minds, a North Carolina court
stated the basis for not allowing the prosecution
Page 344 U. S. 441
to have a jury discharged so that it could obtain better
evidence against the accused.
"The rule, as laid down in 3 Co.Inst. 110, and 1 Inst. 227, is
general and without exception that a jury in a capital case cannot
be discharged without giving a verdict. Afterwards, however, in the
reigns of the latter sovereigns of the Stuart family, a different
rule prevailed, that a jury in such case might be discharged for
the purpose of having better evidence against him at a future day,
and this power was exercised for the benefit of the crown only; but
it is a doctrine so abhorrent to every principle of safety and
security that it ought not to receive the least countenance in the
courts of this country. In the time of James II, and since the
Revolution, this doctrine came under examination,
* and the
rule as laid down by my
Page 344 U. S. 442
Lord Coke was revived with this addition, that a jury should not
be discharged in a capital case unless for the benefit of the
prisoner, as if the prisoner be a woman and be taken in labor or if
the prisoner after the jury are charged with him be found to be
insane, and the like, or if, at the prisoner's request, a jury be
withdrawn to let him in to take the benefit of an exception, which
otherwise he would have lost. . . . In the present case, the jury
were suffered by the court's officer to separate without giving a
verdict. As they could not agree to convict, it is strong evidence
of the party's innocence, and perhaps he could not be tried again
with the same advantage to himself as then. Perhaps his witnesses
are dead, or gone away, or their attendance not to be procured, or
some accident may prevent their attendance. We will not again put
his life in jeopardy, more especially as it is very improbable we
shall be able to possess him of the same advantages."
State v. Garrigues, 2 N.C. 241.
That point of view should shape our conception of double
jeopardy and due process of law. Once the prosecution can call a
halt in the middle of a trial in order to await a more favorable
time, or to find new evidence, or to make up the deficiencies in
the testimony of its witnesses, the promise of protection against
double jeopardy loses the great force it was thought to have when
the Constitution was written. At that time, the practices of the
Stuarts were freshly in mind. And it was resolved that they should
not reach these shores.
* The strict rule, laid down by Coke, was departed from during
the reign of the Stuarts (1603-1714), notably in the case of the
treason trials of
Whitebread and
Fenwick, 7
How.St.Tr. 120 and 315. There, the jury was discharged at the close
of the Crown's evidence because of the failure to satisfy the two
witness rule. The defendants were later retried after the
prosecution had remedied the defect.
See also 2 Hale's
P.C. 294. This practice was condemned in 1746 as an example of the
great abuse to which the power to discharge the jury is subject.
See Kinloch's Case, 2 Foster's Reports 22.
In 1698, in the time of Lord Holt, the judges formulated rules
regarding the matter:
"(1) That in capital cases a juror cannot be withdrawn, tho' all
parties consent to it. (2) That, in criminal cases not capital, a
juror may be withdrawn if both parties consent, but not otherwise.
(3) And that, in all civil causes, a juror cannot be withdrawn but
by consent of all parties."
See Carthew's Reports 465.
Those rules were in time construed to be rules of practice or
guides for the exercise of discretion, not rules of law the breach
of which entitled a defendant to plead former jeopardy.
See
Queen v. Charlesworth, 1 B. & S. 460;
Winsor v.
Queen, 118 Eng.C.L.R. 141;
Queen v. Lewis, 2
Cr.App.R. 180. There is a review of this history in the dissenting
opinion of Crampton, J., in
Conway v. Regina, 7 Irish
L.Rep. 149, 165
et seq.