The Georgia Code, § 38-416, makes a person charged with a
criminal offense incompetent to testify under oath in his own
behalf at his trial; but § 38-415 gives him the right to make an
unsworn statement to the jury without subjecting himself to
cross-examination. At the trial in a state court in which appellant
was convicted of murder, his counsel was denied the right to ask
him any questions when he took the stand to make his unsworn
statement.
Held: this application of § 38-415 denied appellant the
effective assistance of his counsel at a crucial point in his
trial, and it violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Pp.
365 U. S.
570-596.
215 Ga. 117,
109 S.E.2d 44,
reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The State of Georgia is the only State -- indeed, apparently the
only jurisdiction in the common law world -- to retain the common
law rule that a person charged with a criminal offense is
incompetent to testify under oath in his own behalf at his trial.
Georgia in 1866 abolished by statute the common law rules of
incompetency for most other persons. However, the statute, now
Georgia Code § 38-416, expressly retained the incompetency rule as
to persons "charged in any criminal proceeding with the
Page 365 U. S. 571
commission of any indictable offense or any offense punishable
on summary conviction. . . ." Two years later, in 1868, Georgia
allowed the criminal defendant to make an unsworn statement. The
statute enacted for that purpose, as amended, is now Georgia Code,
§ 38-415, and provides:
"In all criminal trials, the prisoner shall have the right to
make to the court and jury such statement in the case as he may
deem proper in his defense. It shall not be under oath, and shall
have such force only as the jury may think right to give it. They
may believe it in preference to the sworn testimony in the case.
The prisoner shall not be compelled to answer any questions on
cross-examination, should he think proper to decline to
answer."
In this case, a jury in the Superior Court, Douglas County,
Georgia, convicted the appellant of murder, and he is under
sentence of death. After the State rested its case at the trial,
the appellant's counsel called him to the stand, but the trial
judge sustained the State's objection to counsel's attempt to
question him. To the argument that to deny counsel the
"right to ask the defendant any questions on the stand . . .
violates . . . [Amendment] VI . . . [and] the Fourteenth Amendment
to the Constitution of the United States . . . [because] it
deprives the defendant of the benefit of his counsel asking him
questions at the most important period of the trial . . . ,"
the trial judge answered that, under § 38-415,
". . . you do not have the right to do anything more than
instruct your client as to his rights, and . . . you have no right
to question him on direct examination."
In affirming the conviction and sustaining this ruling, the
Supreme Court of Georgia said:
"The constitutional provisions granting to persons charged with
crime the benefit and assistance of counsel confer only the right
to have counsel perform
Page 365 U. S. 572
those duties and take such actions as are permitted by the law,
and to require counsel to conform to the rules of practice and
procedure, is not a denial of the benefit and assistance of
counsel. It has been repeatedly held by this court that counsel for
the accused cannot, as a matter of right, ask the accused questions
or make suggestions to him when he is making his statement to the
court and jury."
215 Ga. 117, 119,
109 S.E.2d 44,
46-47.
On appeal brought here under 28 U.S.C. § 1257(2), we noted
probable jurisdiction. 362 U.S. 901.
The only question which the appellant properly brings before us
is whether this application by the Georgia courts of § 38-415
denied the appellant "the guiding hand of counsel at every step in
the proceedings against him,"
Powell v. State of Alabama,
287 U. S. 45,
287 U. S. 69,
within the requirements of due process in that regard as imposed
upon the States by the Fourteenth Amendment.
See also Chandler
v. Fretag, 348 U. S. 3.
Appellant raises no question as to the constitutional validity
of § 38-416, the incompetency statute. [
Footnote 1] However, decision of the question which is
raised under § 38-415 necessarily involves consideration of both
statutes. Historically, these provisions have been intertwined.
Page 365 U. S. 573
For § 38-416 is a statutory declaration of the common law rule
disqualifying criminal defendants from testifying, and § 38-415,
also with its roots in the common law, was an attempt to mitigate
the rigors of that incompetency.
The disqualification of parties as witnesses characterized the
common law for centuries. Wigmore traces its remote origins to the
contest for judicial hegemony between the developing jury trial and
the older modes of trial, notably compurgation and wager of law.
See 2 Wigmore, Evidence, pp. 674-683. Under those old
forms, the oath itself was a means of decision.
See
Thayer, Preliminary Treatise on Evidence, pp. 24-34. Jury trial
replaced decision by oath with decision of the jurors based on the
evidence of witnesses; with this change: "[T]he party was naturally
deemed incapable of being such a witness." 2 Wigmore, p. 682.
Incompetency of the parties in civil cases seems to have been
established by the end of the sixteenth century.
See 9
Holdsworth, History of English Law, p. 194. In time, the principal
rationale of the rule became the possible untrustworthiness of the
party's testimony; for the same reason, disqualification was
applied in the seventeenth century to interested nonparty
witnesses. [
Footnote 2]
Its firm establishment for criminal defendants seems to have
come somewhat later. In the sixteenth century, it was necessary for
an accused to conduct his own defense,
Page 365 U. S. 574
since he was neither allowed to call witnesses in his behalf nor
permitted the assistance of counsel. 1 Stephen, History of the
Criminal Law of England, p. 350. The criminal trial of this period
has been described as
"a long argument between the prisoner and the counsel for the
Crown, in which they questioned each other and grappled with each
other's arguments with the utmost eagerness and closeness of
reasoning."
Stephen,
supra, p. 326. In the process, the defendant
could offer by way of explanation material that would later be
characterized as testimony. 2 Wigmore, p. 684. In the seventeenth
century, however, he was allowed to call witnesses in his behalf;
the right to have them sworn was accorded by statute for treason in
1695 and for all felony in 1701. 7 Will. III, c. 3; 1 Anne, St. 2,
c. 9.
See Thayer,
supra, pp. 157-161, and n. 4; 2
Wigmore, pp. 685-686. A distinction was drawn between the accused
and his witnesses -- they gave evidence, but he did not.
See 2 Wigmore, pp. 684-685, and n. 42; 9 Holdsworth,
supra, pp. 195-196. The general acceptance of the interest
rationale as a basis for disqualification reinforced this
distinction, since the criminal defendant was, of course, par
excellence an interested witness. "The old common law shuddered at
the idea of any person testifying who had the least interest."
State v. Barrows, 76 Me. 401, 409.
See Benson v.
United States, 146 U. S. 325,
146 U. S.
336-337.
Disqualification for interest was thus extensive in the common
law when this Nation was formed. 3 Bl.Comm. 369. [
Footnote 3] Here, as in England, criminal
defendants were deemed incompetent as witnesses. In
Rex v. Lukens, 1
Dall. 5,
1 U.S. 6, decided
in 1762, a Pennsylvania court refused
Page 365 U. S. 575
to swear a defendant as a witness, holding that the issue there
is question "must be proved by indifferent witnesses." Georgia, by
statute, adopted the common law of England in 1784, and " . . . the
rules of evidence belonging to it . . . [were] in force there. . .
."
Doe v. Winn, 5
Pet. 233,
30 U. S. 241.
Georgia therefore followed the incompetency rule for criminal
defendants long before it was given statutory form by the Act of
1866.
See Jones v. State, 1 Ga. 610;
Roberts v.
State, 189 Ga. 36, 40-41, 5 S.E.2d 340, 343. [
Footnote 4]
Broadside assaults upon the entire structure of
disqualifications, particularly the disqualification for interest,
were launched early in the nineteenth century in both England and
America. Bentham led the movement for reform in England, contending
always for rules that would not exclude, but would let in the
truth.
See Rationale of Judicial Evidence, bk. IX, pt.
III, c. III (Bowring ed.), pp. 393-406. The basic ground of the
attack was, as Macaulay said, that
"[A]ll evidence should be taken at what it may be worth, that no
consideration which has a tendency to produce conviction in a
rational mind should be excluded from the consideration of the
tribunals."
Lord Macaulay's Legislative Minutes, 1835, pp. 127-128. The
qualification in civil cases of nonparty witnesses despite interest
came first.
See Lord Denman's Act of 1843, 6 & 7
Vict., c. 85. The first general exception in England for party
witnesses in civil cases was the County Courts Act of 1846, 9 &
10 Vict., c. 95, although there had
Page 365 U. S. 576
been earlier grants of capacity in certain other courts. Best
Evidence (Lely ed. 1893), pp. 158-159. Lord Brougham's Act of 1851,
14 & 15 Vict., c. 99, virtually abolished the incompetency of
parties in civil cases. [
Footnote
5]
Page 365 U. S. 577
The qualification of criminal defendants to give sworn evidence
if they wished came last. The first statute was apparently that
enacted by Maine in 1859 making defendants competent witnesses in
prosecutions for a few crimes. Maine Acts 1859, c. 104. This was
followed in Maine in 1864 by the enactment of a general competency
statute for criminal defendants, the first such statute in the
English-speaking world. The reform was largely the work of John
Appleton of the Supreme Court of Maine, an American disciple of
Bentham. Within 20 years. most of the States now comprising the
Union had followed Maine's lead. A federal statute to the same
effect was adopted in 1878, 20 Stat. 30, 18 U.S.C. § 3481. Before
the end of the century, every State except Georgia had abolished
the disqualification. [
Footnote
6]
Common law jurisdictions outside the United States also long ago
abolished the disqualification. This change
Page 365 U. S. 578
came in England with the enactment in 1898 of the Criminal
Evidence Act, 61 & 62 Vict., c. 36. [
Footnote 7] Various States of Australia had enacted
competency statutes even before the mother country, as did Canada
and New Zealand. Competency was extended to defendants in Northern
Ireland in 1923, in the Republic of Ireland in 1924, and in India
in 1955. [
Footnote 8]
The lag in the grant of competency to the criminally accused was
attributable in large measure to opposition from those who believed
that such a grant threatened erosion of the privilege against
self-incrimination and the presumption of innocence.
"[I]f we were to hold that a prisoner offering to make a
statement must be sworn in the cause as a witness, it would be
difficult to protect his constitutional rights in spite of every
caution, and would often lay innocent parties under unjust
suspicion where they were honestly silent, and embarrassed and
overwhelmed
Page 365 U. S. 579
by the shame of a false accusation. . . . [It would result in] .
. . the degradation of our criminal jurisprudence by converting it
into an inquisitory system, from which we have thus far been
happily delivered."
People v. Thomas, 9 Mich. 314, 320-321 (concurring
opinion).
See also Ruloff v. People, 45 N.Y. 213, 221-222;
People v. Tyler, 36 Cal. 522, 528-530;
State v.
Cameron, 40 Vt. 555, 565-566; 1 Am.L.Rev. 443; Maury, Validity
of Statutes Authorizing the Accused to Testify, 14 Am.L.Rev. 753.
[
Footnote 9]
The position of many who supported competency gave credence to
these fears. Neither Bentham nor Appleton was a friend of the
privilege against self-incrimination. [
Footnote 10] While Appleton justified competency as a
necessary protection
Page 365 U. S. 580
for the innocent, he also believed that incompetency had served
the guilty as a shield, and thus disserved the public interest.
Competency, he thought, would open the accused to
cross-examination, and permit an unfavorable inference if he
declined to take the stand to exculpate himself. [
Footnote 11]
This controversy left its mark on the laws of many jurisdictions
which enacted competency. The majority of the competency statutes
of the States forbid comment by the prosecution on the failure of
an accused to testify, and provide that no presumption of guilt
should arise from his failure to take the stand. The early cases
particularly emphasized the importance of such limitations.
See, e.g., Staples v. State, 89 Tenn. 231, 14 S.W. 603;
Price v. Commonwealth, 77 Va. 393;
State v.
Taylor, 57 W.Va. 228, 234-235, 50 S.E. 247, 249-250.
Cf. 1 Cooley, Constitutional Limitations (8th ed.), pp.
658-661.
See generally, Reeder, Comment Upon Failure of
Accused to Testify, 31 Mich.L.Rev. 40. For the treatment of the
accused as a witness in Canada,
see 12 Can.Bar Rev. 519,
13 Can.Bar Rev. 336; in Australia,
see 6 Res Judicatae 60;
and in Great Britain,
see 2 Taylor, Evidence (12th ed.)
864-865; 51 L.Q.Rev. 443; 58 L.Q.Rev. 369.
Experience under the American competency statutes was to change
the minds of many who had opposed them. It was seen that the
shutting out of his sworn evidence could be positively hurtful to
the accused, and that innocence
Page 365 U. S. 581
was in fact aided, not prejudiced, by the opportunity of the
accused to testify under oath. An American commentator discussing
the Massachusetts statute in the first year of its operation
said:
"We have always been of opinion that the law permitting
criminals to testify would aid in the detection of guilt; we are
now disposed to think that it will be equally serviceable for the
protection of innocence."
1 Am.L.Rev. 396.
See also 14 Am.L.Reg. 129.
This experience made a significant impression in England, and
helped to persuade Parliament to follow the American States and
other common law jurisdictions in granting competency to criminal
defendants. In the debates of 1898, the Lord Chancellor quoted a
distinguished English jurist, Russell Gurney:
"[A]fter what he had seen there [in America], he could not
entertain a doubt about the propriety of allowing accused persons
to be heard as witnesses on their own behalf."
54 Hansard,
supra, p. 1176. Arthur Balfour reported to
the Commons that
"precisely the same doubts and difficulties which beset the
legal profession in this country on the suggestion of this change
were felt in the United States, but the result of the experiment,
which has been extended gradually from State to State, is that all
fears have proved illusory, that the legal profession, divided as
they were before the change, have now become unanimous in favor of
it, and that no section of the community, not even the prisoners at
the bar, desire to see any alteration made in the system."
60 Hansard,
supra, pp. 679-680. [
Footnote 12]
Page 365 U. S. 582
A particularly striking change of mind was that of the noted
authority on the criminal law, Sir James Stephen. Writing in 1863,
Stephen opposed the extension of competency of defendants. He
argued that it was inherent that a defendant could not be a real
witness:
"[I]t is not in human nature to speak the truth under such a
pressure as would be brought to bear on the prisoner, and it is not
a light thing to institute a system which would almost enforce
perjury on every occasion."
A General View of the Criminal Law of England, p. 202.
Competency would put a dangerous discretion in the hands of
counsel.
"By not calling the prisoner, he might expose himself to the
imputation of a tacit confession of guilt, by calling him, he might
expose an innocent man to a cross-examination which might make him
look guilty."
Ibid. Allowing questions about prior convictions "would
indirectly put the man upon his trial for the whole of his past
life."
Id., p. 203. Twenty years later, Stephen, after
many years' experience on the criminal bench, was to say:
"I am convinced by much experience that questioning, or the
power of giving evidence is a positive assistance, and a highly
important one, to innocent men, and I do not see why, in the case
of the guilty, there need by any hardship about it. . . . A poor
and ill-advised man . . . is always liable to misapprehend the true
nature of his defence, and might in many cases be saved from the
consequences of his own ignorance or misfortune by being questioned
as a witness."
1 Stephen, History of the Criminal Law of England, pp. 442,
444.
In sum, decades ago, the considered consensus of the
English-speaking world came to be that there was no rational
justification for prohibiting the sworn testimony of the accused,
who above all others may be in a position to meet the prosecution's
case. The development of the unsworn statement practice was itself
a recognition of the harshness of the incompetency rule. While its
origins
Page 365 U. S. 583
antedated the nineteenth century, [
Footnote 13] its strong sponsorship by English judges of
that century is explained by their desire for a mitigation of the
rigors of that rule. Baron Alderson said:
"I would never prevent a prisoner from making a statement,
though he has counsel. He may make any statement he pleases before
his counsel addresses the jury, and then his counsel may comment
upon that statement as a part of the case. If it were otherwise,
the most monstrous injustice might result to prisoners."
Reg. v. Dyer, 1 Cox C.C. 113, 114.
See also Reg. v.
Malings, 8 Car. & P. 242;
Reg. v. Walkling, 8 C.
& P. 243;
Reg. v. Manzano, 2 F. & F. 64;
Reg.
v. Williams, 1 Cox C.C. 363. Judge Stephen's sponsorship of
the practice was especially influential.
See Reg. v.
Doherty, 16 Cox C.C. 306.
See also Reg. v. Shimmin,
15 Cox C.C. 122; 60 Hansard,
supra, p. 657. It became so
well established in England that it was expressly preserved in the
Criminal Evidence Act of 1898. [
Footnote 14]
Page 365 U. S. 584
The practice apparently was followed in this country at common
law in a number of States, and received statutory recognition in
some. Michigan passed the first such statute in 1861; unlike the
Georgia statute of 1868, it provided that the prisoner should be
subject to cross-examination on his statement.
See People v.
Thomas, 9 Mich. 314. [
Footnote 15] The Georgia Supreme Court, in one of the
early
Page 365 U. S. 585
decisions considering the unsworn statement statute, stressed
the degree of amelioration expected to be realized from the
practice, thereby implicitly acknowledging the disadvantages for
the defendant of the incompetency rule. The Court emphasized
"the broad and liberal purpose which the legislature intended to
accomplish. . . . This right granted to the prisoner is a modern
innovation upon the criminal jurisprudence of the common law,
advancing to a degree hitherto unknown the right of the prisoner
to give his own narrative of the accusation against him to
the jurors, who are permitted to believe it in preference to the
sworn testimony of the witnesses."
Coxwell v. State, 66 Ga. 309, 316-317. [
Footnote 16]
But the unsworn statement was recognized almost everywhere else
as simply a stop-gap solution for the
Page 365 U. S. 586
serious difficulties for the accused created by the incompetency
rule.
"The system of allowing a prisoner to make a statement had been
introduced as a mere makeshift, by way of mitigating the
intolerable hardship which occasionally resulted from the
prisoner's not being able to speak on his own behalf."
60 Hansard,
supra, p. 652.
"The custom grew up in England out of a spirit of fairness to
give an accused, who was otherwise disqualified, an opportunity to
tell his story in exculpation."
State v. Louviere, 169 La. 109, 119, 124 So. 188, 192.
The abolition of the incompetency rule was therefore held in many
jurisdictions also to abolish the unsworn statement practice. "In
such cases, the unsworn statement of an accused becomes secondary
to his right of testifying under oath, and cannot be received."
State v. Louviere, supra, 169 La. at 119, 124 So. at
192.
"The privilege was granted to prisoners because they were
debarred from giving evidence on oath, and for that reason alone.
When the law was changed and the right accorded to them to tell
their story on oath as any other witness the reason for making an
unsworn statement was removed."
Rex v. Krafchenko, [1914] 17 D.L.R. 244, 250
(Man.K.B.). [
Footnote
17]
Where the practice survives outside America, little value has
been attached to it.
"If the accused does not elect to call any evidence or to give
evidence himself, he very often makes an unsworn statement from the
dock.
Page 365 U. S. 587
It is well understood among lawyers that such a statement has
but little evidential value compared with the sworn testimony upon
which the accused can be cross-examined. . . ."
Rex v. Zware, [1946] S.A.L.R. 1, 7-8.
"How is a jury to understand that it is to take the statement
for what it is worth, if it is told that it cannot regard it as
evidence [
i.e., proof] of the facts alleged?"
68 L.Q.Rev. 463. The unsworn statement
"is seldom of much value, since it is generally incoherent and
leaves open many doubts which cannot be resolved by
cross-examination."
69 L.Q.Rev. 22, 25. "The right of a prisoner to make an unsworn
statement from the dock still exists . . . but with greatly
discounted value." 1933 Scots Law Times 29. Commentators and judges
in jurisdictions with statutory competency have suggested
abrogation of the unsworn statement right.
See 94 Irish
Law Times, March 5, 1960, p. 56; 68 L.Q.Rev. 463; Rex v. McKenna,
[1951] Q.S.R. 299, 308.
Georgia judges, on occasion, have similarly disparaged the
unsworn statement.
"Really, in practice it is worth, generally, but little if
anything to defendants. I have never known or heard of but one
instance where it was supposed that the right had availed anything.
It is a boon that brings not much relief."
Bird v. State, 50 Ga. 585, 589.
"The statement stands upon a peculiar footing. It is often
introduced for the mere purpose of explaining evidence, or as an
attempt at mitigation; the accused and his counsel throw it in for
what it may happen to be worth, and do not rely upon it as a
substantive ground of acquittal."
Underwood v. State, 88 Ga. 47, 51, 13 S.E. 856,
858.
The unsworn statement has anomalous characteristics in Georgia
practice. It is not treated as evidence or like the testimony of
the ordinary sworn witness.
"The statement may have the effect of explaining, supporting,
weakening, or overcoming the evidence, but still it is
something
Page 365 U. S. 588
different from the evidence, and to confound one with the other,
either explicitly or implicitly, would be confusing, and often
misleading. . . . The jury are to deal with it on the plane of
statement, and not on the plane of evidence, and may derive from it
such aid as they can in reaching the truth. The law fixes no value
upon it; it is a legal blank. The jury may stamp it with such value
as they think belongs to it."
Vaughn v. State, 88 Ga. 731, 739, 16 S.E. 64, 66.
Because the statement is not evidence, even the charge in the
strict terms of the statute favored by the Georgia Supreme Court,
see Garrett v. State, 203 Ga. 756, 765, 48 S.E.2d 377,
383;
Emmett v. State, 195 Ga. 517, 541, 25 S.E.2d 9, 23,
calls attention to the fact that the defendant is not under oath.
Moreover, charge after charge going beyond the terms of the statute
has been sustained. Thus, in
Garrett v. State, supra, the
trial judge instructed that, while the defendants were "allowed" to
make a statement,
"they are not under oath, not subject to cross-examination, and
you are authorized to give to their statement just such weight and
credit as you think them entitled to receive."
In
Emmett v. State, 195 Ga. at 540, 25 S.E.2d at 22,
the instruction was that the statement might be believed in
preference to the sworn testimony "if you see proper to give it
that weight and that place and that importance in the trial of this
case." In
Douberly v. State, 184 Ga. 573, 575, 192 S.E.
223, 225, the jury were told they might credit the statement
"provided they believe it to be true." In
Allen v. State,
194 Ga. 430, 436, 22 S.E.2d 65, 68, the charge was:
"There is no presumption attached to the defendant's statement.
No presumption that it is true, nor any presumption that it is not
true. In other words, it goes to you without a presumption either
for or against him. You have the right to reject the statement
entirely if you do not believe it to be true."
In many cases, the trial judges have been sustained in
specifically pointing out
Page 365 U. S. 589
that defendants were not subject to the sanction for perjury
with respect to their unsworn statements. "[I]f he failed to tell
you the truth, he incurred no penalty by reason of such failure."
Darden v. State, 171 Ga. 160, 161, 155 S.E. 38, 40. "[T]he
defendant's statement is not under oath; no penalty is prescribed
for making a false statement. . . ."
Klug v. State, 77 Ga.
734, 736.
"Surely there can be no wrong in calling the attention of the
jury to circumstances which should impair the force of such
testimony or which should enable them to give it the weight to
which it is entitled."
Poppell v. State, 71 Ga. 276, 278.
See also Grimes
v. State, 204 Ga. 854, 51 S.E.2d 797;
Thurmond v.
State, 198 Ga. 410, 31 S.E.2d 804;
Willingham v.
State, 169 Ga. 142, 149 S.E. 887;
Millen v. State,
175 Ga. 283, 165 S.E. 226.
Because it is not evidence, the statement is not a foundation
supporting the offer of corroborative evidence.
Champman v.
State, 155 Ga. 393, 117 S.E. 321;
Medlin v. State,
149 Ga. 23, 98 S.E. 551.
"The statute is silent as to corroborating the mere statement of
the accused, and, while it allows the jury to believe it in
preference to the sworn testimony, it seems to contemplate that the
statement shall compete with sworn testimony single-handed, and not
that it shall have the advantage of being reinforced by facts which
do not weaken the sworn evidence otherwise than by strengthening
the statement opposed to it."
Vaughn v. State, 88 Ga. 731, 736, 16 S.E. 64, 65.
Similarly, the statement is not an independent basis for
authenticating and introducing documents.
Sides v. State,
213 Ga. 482,
99 S.E.2d 884;
see also Register v. State, 10 Ga.App. 623, 74 S.E. 429.
In the absence of a specific request, the trial judge need not
charge the law applicable to a defense presented by the statement
but not supported in sworn testimony.
Prater v. State, 160
Ga. 138, 143, 127 S.E. 296, 298;
Cofer v. State, 213 Ga.
22,
96 S.E.2d 601;
Willingham v. State, 169 Ga. 142, 149
Page 365 U. S. 590
S.E. 887;
Holleman v. State, 171 Ga. 200, 154 S.E. 906;
Darby v. State, 79 Ga. 63, 3 S.E. 663. In contrast, the
trial judge may
sua sponte instruct the jury to treat the
accused's explanation as not presenting a defense in law;
"[i]n proper cases, the jury, may be guarded by a charge from
the court against giving the statement an undue effect in favor of
the prisoner. . . ."
Underwood v. State, 88 Ga. 47, 51, 13 S.E. 856, 858;
Fry v. State, 81 Ga. 645, 8 S.E. 308.
It is said that an advantage of substance which the defendant
may realize from the distinction is that the contents of his
statement are not circumscribed by the ordinary exclusionary rules
of evidence.
Prater v. State, 160 Ga. 138, 142-147, 127
S.E. 296, 298-300;
Richardson v. State, 3 Ga.App. 313, 59
S.E. 916;
Birdsong v. State, 55 Ga.App. 730, 191 S.E. 277;
Tiget v. State, 110 Ga. 244, 34 S.E. 1023. However,
"The prisoner must have some regard to relevancy and the rules
of evidence, for it was never intended that, in giving his
narrative of matters pertaining to his defense, he should attempt
to get before the jury wholly immaterial facts or attempt to
bolster up his unsworn statement by making profert of documents,
letters, or the like, which, if relevant, might be introduced in
evidence, on proof of their genuineness."
Nero v. State, 126 Ga. 554, 555, 55 S.E. 404.
See
also Saunders v. State, 172 Ga. 770, 158 S.E. 791;
Montross v. State, 72 Ga. 261;
Theis v. State, 45
Ga.App. 364, 164 S.E. 456;
Vincent v. State, 153 Ga. 278,
293-294, 112 S.E. 120, 127.
The situations in which the Georgia cases do assimilate the
defendant to an ordinary witness emphasize the anomalous nature of
the unsworn statement. If he admits relevant facts in his
statement, the prosecution is relieved of the necessity of proving
them by evidence of its own.
"The prisoner's admission in open court, made as a part of his
statement on the trial, may be treated by
Page 365 U. S. 591
the jury as direct evidence as to the facts."
Hargroves v. State, 179 Ga. 722, 725, 177 S.E. 561,
563.
"It is well settled that the statement of a defendant to a jury
is a statement made
in judicio, and is binding on him.
Where the defendant makes an admission of a fact in his statement,
such admission is direct evidence, and the State need not prove
such fact by any other evidence."
Barbour v. State, 66 Ga.App. 498, 499, 18 S.E.2d 40,
41;
Dumas v. State, 62 Ga. 58. And admissions in a
statement will open the door to introduction of prosecution
evidence which might otherwise be inadmissible.
McCoy v.
State, 124 Ga. 218, 52 S.E. 434. Admissions in a statement at
one trial are admissible against the accused in a later trial.
Cady v. State, 198 Ga. 99, 110, 31 S.E.2d 38;
Dumas v.
State, supra. The prosecution may comment on anything he says
in the statement.
Frank v. State, 141 Ga. 243, 277, 80
S.E. 1016. Although it has been held that the mere making of a
statement does not put the defendant's character in issue,
Doyle v. State, 77 Ga. 513, it is settled that
"A defendant's statement may be contradicted by testimony as to
the facts it narrates, and his character may be as effectively put
in issue by his statement as by witnesses sworn by him for this
purpose."
Jackson v. State, 204 Ga. 47, 56, 48 S.E.2d 864, 870;
Barnes v. State, 24 Ga.App. 372, 100 S.E. 788. The
prosecution may introduce rebuttal evidence of alleged false
statements.
Johnson v. State, 186 Ga. 324, 197 S.E. 786;
Camp v. State, 179 Ga. 292, 175 S.E. 646;
Morris v.
State, 177 Ga. 106, 169 S.E. 495.
Perhaps any adverse consequences resulting from these anomalous
characteristics might be in some measure overcome if the defendant
could be assured of the opportunity to try to exculpate himself by
an explanation delivered in an organized, complete and coherent
way. But the Georgia practice puts obstacles in the way of this.
He
Page 365 U. S. 592
must deliver a finished and persuasive statement on his first
attempt, for he will probably not be permitted to supplement it.
Apparently the situation must be most unusual before the exercise
by the trial judge of his discretion to refuse to permit the
defendant to make a supplemental statement will be set aside.
See Sharp v. State, 111 Ga. 176, 36 S.E. 633;
Jones v.
State, 12 Ga.App. 133, 76 S.E. 1070. Even after the State has
introduced new evidence to rebut the statement or to supplement its
own case, leave to make a supplemental statement has been denied.
Fairfield v. State, 155 Ga. 660, 118 S.E. 395;
Johnson
v. State, 120 Ga. 509, 48 S.E. 199;
Knox v. State,
112 Ga. 373, 37 S.E. 416;
Boston v. State, 94 Ga. 590, 21
S.E. 603;
Garmon v. State, 24 Ga.App. 586, 101 S.E. 757.
If the subject matter of the supplementary statement originates
with counsel and not with the defendant, it has been held that this
is sufficient reason to refuse to permit the making of a
supplemental statement.
August v. State, 20 Ga.App. 168,
92 S.E. 956. And the defendant who may have a persuasive
explanation to give has no effective way of overcoming the possible
prejudice from the fact that he may not be subjected to
cross-examination without his consent, for he has no right to
require cross-examination.
Boyers v. State, 198 Ga. 838,
844-845, 33 S.E.2d 251, 255-256. Of course, even in jurisdictions
which have granted competence to defendants, the prosecution may
decline to cross-examine. But at least the defendants in those
jurisdictions have had the advantage of having their explanation
elicited through direct examination by counsel. In Georgia,
however, as was held in this case, counsel may not examine his
client on direct examination except in the discretion of the trial
judge. The refusal to allow counsel to ask questions rarely seems
to be reversible error.
See, e.g., Corbin v. State, 212
Ga. 231,
91 S.E.2d 764;
Brown v. State, 58 Ga. 212. "This discretion is to be
sparingly exercised,
Page 365 U. S. 593
but its exercise will not be controlled except in cases of
manifest abuse."
Whitley v. State, 14 Ga.App. 577, 578, 81
S.E. 797. Indeed, even where the defendant has been cross-examined
on his statement, it has been held that defense counsel has no
right to ask a question,
Lindsay v. State, 138 Ga. 818, 76
S.E. 369. Nor may counsel call the attention of the defendant to a
material omission in his statement without permission of the trial
court.
Echols v. State, 109 Ga. 508, 34 S.E. 1038;
Clark v. State, 43 Ga.App. 384, 159 S.E. 135.
This survey of the unsworn statement practice in Georgia
supports the conclusion of a Georgia commentator:
"The fact is that, when the average defendant is placed in the
witness chair and told by his counsel or the court that nobody can
ask him any questions, and that he may make such statement to the
jury as he sees proper in his own defense, he has been set adrift
in an uncharted sea with nothing to guide him, with the result that
his statement in most cases either does him no good or is
positively hurtful."
7 Ga.B.J. 432, 433 (1945). [
Footnote 18]
Page 365 U. S. 594
The tensions of a trial for an accused with life or liberty at
stake might alone render him utterly unfit to give his explanation
properly and completely. Left without the "guiding hand of
counsel,"
Powell v. State of Alabama, supra,
Page 365 U. S. 595
p.
287 U. S. 69, he
may fail properly to introduce, or to introduce at all, what may be
a perfect defense. " . . . [T]hough he be not guilty, he faces the
danger of conviction because he does not know how to establish his
innocence."
Ibid. The treatment accorded the unsworn
statement in the Georgia courts increases this peril for the
accused. The words of Cooley, J., in his opinion for the Michigan
Supreme Court in
Annis v. People, 13 Mich. 511, 519-520,
fit his predicament.
"But to hold that, the moment the defendant is placed upon the
stand, he shall be debarred of all assistance from his counsel, and
left to go through his statement as his fears or his embarrassment
may enable him, in the face of the consequences which may follow
from imperfect or unsatisfactory explanation, would, in our
opinion, be to make what the statute designed as an important
privilege to the accused a trap into which none but the most cool
and self-possessed could place himself with much prospect of coming
out unharmed. An innocent man, charged with a heinous offence and
against whom evidence of guilt has been given, is much more likely
to be overwhelmed by his situation and embarrassed, when called
upon for explanation, than the offender who is hardened in guilt;
and if he is unlearned, unaccustomed to speak in public
assemblies,
Page 365 U. S. 596
or to put together his thoughts in consecutive order anywhere,
it will not be surprising if his explanation is incoherent, or if
it overlooks important circumstances. [
Footnote 19]"
We therefore hold that, in effectuating the provisions of §
38-415, Georgia, consistently with the Fourteenth Amendment, could
not, in the context of § 38-416, deny appellant the right to have
his counsel question him to elicit his statement. We decide no more
than this. Our decision does not turn on the facts that the
appellant was tried for a capital offense and was represented by
employed counsel. The command of the Fourteenth Amendment also
applies in the case of an accused tried for a noncapital offense,
or represented by appointed counsel. For otherwise, in Georgia,
"the right to be heard by counsel would be of little worth."
Chandler v. Fretag, 348 U. S. 3,
348 U. S. 10.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
It is suggested in the concurring opinions that we should
nevertheless adjudicate the validity of § 38-416. Apart from the
incongruity of passing upon the statute the appellant expressly
refrained from attacking, and disregarding his challenge to the
statute he did call in question, such a course would be
disrespectful of the State's procedures. For it appears that the
Georgia Supreme Court would not have entertained an attack on §
38-416, since the appellant did not offer himself to be sworn as a
witness.
See Holley v. Lawrence, 194 Ga. 529, 22 S.E.2d
154; appeal here was dismissed on the express ground that
"the judgment of the court below rests upon a nonfederal ground
adequate to support it, namely, that the failure to tender such
testimony at the trial barred any later claim of the alleged
constitutional right. . . ."
317 U. S. 317 U.S.
518.
[
Footnote 2]
Wigmore concludes that "the principle of parties'
disqualification would have been the direct root of the
disqualification by interest in general." 2 Wigmore, p. 680.
"[A]fter Coke's time, and probably under the influence of his
utterances, the rule for a party was extended by analogy to
interested persons in general."
Pp. 682-683. Coke listed a number of disqualifications: if the
witness "becometh infamous, . . . [o]r if the witnesse be an
infidell, or of nonsane memory, or not of discretion, or a partie
interested, or the like." I Coke Upon Littleton, 6.b.
[
Footnote 3]
There, Blackstone stated the then-settled common law rule to be
that
"[a]ll witnesses, of whatever religion or country, that have the
use of their reason, are to be received and examined, except such
as are infamous, or such as are interested in the event of the
cause."
[
Footnote 4]
By the Act of February 25, 1784, the Georgia Legislature
provided that the common laws of England should remain in force in
Georgia, "so far as they are not contrary to the constitution,
laws, and form of government now established in this State."
Prince's Digest (1837), p. 570. Section 3772 of the Code of 1863,
which codified the statutory and decisional law of the State,
stated: "Witnesses are incompetent . . . [w]ho are interested in
the event of the suit."
[
Footnote 5]
The history of the transition in one American jurisdiction is
traced in Thayer, A Chapter of Legal History in Massachusetts, 9
Harv.L.Rev. 1. The first American statute removing the disability
of interested nonparty witnesses seems to have been Michigan's in
1846, and Connecticut was first to abolish the general incapacity
of parties in 1849. The Field reforms in New York State were
influential in leading other American jurisdictions to discard the
incapacity of both witnesses and parties in civil cases. For an
account of the development in the United States,
see 2
Wigmore, pp. 686-695.
The preamble to the 1866 Georgia legislation expressed the
legislative aim in extending competency:
"Whereas, the inquiry after truth in courts of justice is often
obstructed by incapacities created by the present law, and it is
desirable that full information as to the facts in issue, both in
civil and criminal cases, should be laid before the persons who are
to decide upon them, and that such persons should exercise their
judgment on the credit of the witnesses adduced for the truth of
testimony."
The first section of the Act forbade the exclusion of witnesses,
"by reason of incapacity from crime or interest, or from being a
party"; it also contained a "dead man's statute" proviso. The
remaining sections enumerated the exceptions to the extension of
competency; they were, in effect, a statutory declaration that
certain of the common law incapacities should remain intact.
See Roberts v. State, 189 Ga. 36, 5 S.E.2d 340;
Wilson
v. State, 138 Ga. 489, 492, 75 S.E. 619, 620;
Howard v.
State, 94 Ga. 587, 20 S.E. 426. The second section contained
the original of § 38-416, stating:
"But nothing herein contained shall render any person who, in
any criminal proceeding, is charged with the commission of any
indictable offence, or any offence punishable on summary
conviction. competent or compellable, to give evidence for or
against himself, or herself, or shall render any person compellable
to answer any question tending to criminate himself or herself; or
shall in any criminal proceeding render any husband competent or
compellable to give evidence for or against his wife, or any wife
competent or compellable to give evidence for or against her
husband; nor shall any attorney be compellable to give evidence for
or against his client."
Ga. Laws 1866, pp. 138-139. Save for the provision as to the
attorney-client privilege, added during the debate in the Georgia
Senate,
see Senate Journal, Dec. 5, 1866, p. 266, the
second section was verbatim the same as § III of Lord Brougham's
Act.
[
Footnote 6]
The dates on which the general competency statutes of the States
were enacted are: Alabama, 1885; Alaska, 1899; Arizona, 1871;
Arkansas, 1885; California, 1866; Colorado, 1872; Connecticut,
1867; Delaware, 1893; Florida, 1895; Hawaii, 1876; Idaho, 1875;
Illinois, 1874; Indiana, 1873; Iowa, 1878; Kansas, 1871; Kentucky,
1886; Louisiana, 1886; Maine, 1864; Maryland, 1876; Massachusetts,
1866; Michigan, 1881; Minnesota, 1868; Mississippi, 1882; Missouri,
1877; Montana, 1872; Nebraska, 1873; Nevada, 1867; New Hampshire,
1869; New Jersey, 1871; New Mexico, 1880; New York, 1869; North
Carolina, 1881; North Dakota, 1879; Ohio, 1867; Oklahoma, 1890;
Oregon, 1880; Pennsylvania, 1885; Rhode Island, 1871; South
Carolina, 1866; South Dakota, 1879; Tennessee, 1887; Texas, 1889;
Utah, 1878; Vermont, 1866; Virginia, 1886; Washington, 1871; West
Virginia, 1881; Wisconsin, 1869; Wyoming, 1877.
The current citations to these statutes are collected in the
Appendix to this opinion,
post, p.
365 U. S.
596.
[
Footnote 7]
Parliament had enacted a number of specialized competency
statutes prior to 1898, the first in 1872. About 25 others had been
passed by the time of the enactment of the general competency
statute.
See 56 Hansard, Parliamentary Debates, 4th
Series, pp. 977-978. The most important was the Criminal Law
Amendment Act of 1885, 48 & 49 Vict., c. 69, which made
defendants competent in certain felony prosecutions. Most of the
other statutes involved offenses created by regulatory legislation,
which were generally misdemeanors.
See generally Best,
supra, pp. 571-572; 2 Taylor, Evidence (12th ed.),
862-863.
[
Footnote 8]
Canada and New Zealand adopted competency statutes in 1893.
Canada Evidence Act,
see Rev.Stat.Can. (1952), c. 307, §
4(1); New Zealand Criminal Code Act, § 398,
see
N.Z.Repr.Stat., Evidence Act 1908, § 5. For an account of the
Australian development,
see 6 Res Judicatae 60. The
statute in Northern Ireland is the Criminal Evidence Act (Northern
Ireland); the Irish statute is the Criminal Justice (Evidence)
Act.
For the Indian statute,
see Code of Criminal Procedure
(Amendment) Act, 1955, § 61, in 42 A.I.Rep. (1955), Indian Acts
Section p. 91.
[
Footnote 9]
Opposition on this score was marked in Great Britain. Said one
member of Parliament in the 1898 debates:
"[W]hy is this change to be made in the law? The English
Revolution is against it, three centuries of experience is against
it, and the only argument adduced in its favor is the suggestion
that an honest man is occasionally convicted of a crime of which he
is innocent. . . . [I]t would be a degradation to your great
judicial tribunals that, though a guilty man may not, an innocent
man may be placed in a position of embarrassment and peril -- for
the first time under the British Constitution -- far greater than
any ancient law designed."
56 Hansard,
supra, pp. 1022, 1024. Said another:
"[F]or centuries, the criminal law of England has been
administered on the principle that, if you want to hang a man, you
must hang him on somebody else's evidence. This is a Bill to hang a
man on his own evidence. . . ."
Id. at 1030. There had been particular opposition on
the part of Irish members, who contended that competency would
become a means of oppression of defendants there; as a result,
Ireland was excluded from the coverage of the Act.
See 60
Hansard,
supra, pp. 721-742. Other members were hostile
because of fear that the statute would have an adverse effect on
laborers who became criminal defendants.
See 60 Hansard,
supra, pp. 546-547, 574-578.
[
Footnote 10]
See Bentham, Rationale of Judicial Evidence, bk. IX,
pt. IV, c. III, pp. 445-468; Appleton, The Rules of Evidence, pp.
126-134.
[
Footnote 11]
"That then the accused, if guilty, should object being placed in
an attitude so dangerous to him, because he is guilty, is what
might have been expected. . . . His objection to testifying, is an
objection to punishment."
Appleton,
supra, p. 131.
See also State v.
Cleaves, 59 Me. 298;
cf. State v. Bartlett, 55 Me.
200, 215-221. For a note on Appleton's role in the movement to
extend competency,
see Thayer, A Chapter of Legal History
in Massachusetts, 9 Harv.L.Rev. 1, 12.
See also 14
Am.L.Reg. 705.
[
Footnote 12]
For other comments on the impact of the competency statutes,
see Alverstone, Recollections of Bar and Bench, pp.
176-180; Biron, Without Prejudice; Impressions of Life and Law, p.
218; Train, The Prisoner at the Bar, pp. 205-211; Sherman, Some
Recollections of a Long Life, p. 234; 1933 Scots Law Times 29; 2
Fortnightly L.J. 41.
[
Footnote 13]
The origins probably lie in the necessity for the prisoner to
defend himself during the early development of English criminal
law.
See p.
365 U. S. 573,
supra. Even after the defendant was allowed to have
witnesses in his behalf in England, he still had no right to be
heard by counsel, except for treason, until the act of 1836, and
his participation in the trial remained of major importance; as
before, "a prisoner was obliged, in the nature of the case, to
speak for himself."
Reg. v. Doherty, 16 Cox C.C. 306, 309.
Although the practice developed in the eighteenth century of
allowing counsel to advise the accused during the trial and to
cross-examine the Crown's witnesses, counsel was still not
permitted to address the jury. Stephen,
supra, p. 424. The
defendant continued to do this in his own behalf.
See 1
Chitty, Criminal Law (5th Am. ed.), p. 623; Bentham,
supra, bk. IX, pt. V, c. III, p. 496.
See
generally 26 Austral.L.J. 166.
[
Footnote 14]
Criminal Evidence Act, § 1(h). Some English judges had sought to
curtail the practice after defendants were statutorily accorded
full benefit of counsel by the act of 1836, 6 & 7 Will. 4, c.
114. In
Reg. v. Boucher, 8 Car. & P. 141, Coleridge,
J., held that because defense counsel and addressed the jury, the
accused could not make a statement.
See also Reg. v.
Beard, 8 Car. & P. 142;
Reg. v. Rider, 8 Car.
& P. 539. In
Reg. v. Taylor, 1 F. & F. 535, Byles,
J., said that the prisoner or his counsel would be permitted to
address the jury, but not both. At least a remnant of this judicial
hostility to the statement lingered almost until the time of the
grant of competency.
See Reg. v. Millhouse, 15 Cox C.C.
622.
In addition to its statutory preservation in Great Britain, it
survives in other common law jurisdictions recognizing the
defendant's competency.
E.g., New Zealand,
see Rex v.
Perry, [1920] N.Z.L.R. 21;
Kerr v. Reg., [1953]
N.Z.L.R. 75, 28 N.Z.L.J. 305; Australia,
see Rex v.
McKenna, [1951] Q.S.R. 299; Ireland,
see People v.
Riordan, [1948] I.R. 416, 94 Irish Law Times, Feb. 20, 1960,
p. 43, Feb. 27, 1960, p. 49, March 5, 1960, p. 55; South Africa,
see Rex v. de Wet, [1933] S.A.L.R. 68, 64 So.Afr.L.J.
374.
[
Footnote 15]
In some States recognizing the statement at common law, the
defendant was confined to arguing the law and commenting on the
evidence of the witnesses; he could not state facts.
See Ford
v. State, 34 Ark. 649;
Wilson v. State, 50 Tenn. 232.
In other States, the prisoner appears to have been allowed more
latitude.
See People v. Lopez, 2 Edm.Sel.Cases, N.Y., 262.
In Massachusetts, the right of a defendant with counsel to make a
statement seems to have been recognized only in capital cases.
See the historical review in
Commonwealth v.
Stewart, 255 Mass. 9, 151 N.E. 74, 44 A.L.R. 579;
see also
Commonwealth v. McConnell, 162 Mass. 499, 39 N.E. 107;
Commonwealth v. Burrough, 162 Mass. 513, 39 N.E. 184;
Commonwealth v. Dascalakis, 246 Mass. 12, 32, 140 N.E.
470, 479. For other considerations of the common law statement,
see State v. Taylor, 57 W.Va. 228, 50 S.E. 247;
Hanoff
v. State, 37 Ohio St. 178, 184-185 (dissenting opinion);
O'Loughlin v. People, 90 Colo. 368, 384-385, 10 P.2d 543,
549;
State v. Louviere, 169 La. 109, 124 So. 188;
cf.
Reg. v. Rogers, [1888] 1 B.C.L.R. pt. 2, p. 119. Alabama gave
the unsworn statement statutory sanction in 1882. Previously the
right had been confined there to an argument on the evidence,
State v. McCall, 4 Ala. 643, but the statute was construed
to allow the statement of matters in the nature of evidence.
See Blackburn v. State, 71 Ala. 319;
Chappell v.
State, 71 Ala. 322. Wyoming gave a statutory right of unsworn
statement in 1869.
See Anderson v. State, 27 Wyo. 345,
196 P. 1047;
Florida, in 1866, gave the accused in the discretion of the court
an opportunity to make a sworn statement on which he could not be
cross-examined. This was made an absolute right in 1870.
See
Miller v. Florida, 15 Fla. 577. All these States, of course,
subsequently made defendants fully competent.
[
Footnote 16]
It is doubtful how far the practice had been followed at common
law in Georgia.
See Roberts v. State, 189 Ga. 36, 41, 5
S.E.2d 340, 343. Initially there seems to have been considerable
opposition to giving the unsworn statement statutory sanction. The
bill that became the predecessor of present § 38-415 was originally
tabled in the House and then passed after reconsideration, and was
originally defeated in the Senate.
See House Journal Aug.
8, 10, 13, 1868, pp. 158, 160, 173; Senate Journal, Oct. 3, 1868,
p. 492. As passed, it provided that, in cases of felony, the
prisoner should have the right to make an unsworn statement; he was
not subject to cross-examination on it, and the jury was empowered
to give it such force as they thought right. Ga.Laws 1868, p. 24.
In 1874, the right was extended to all criminal defendants. Ga.Laws
1874, pp. 22-23. In 1879, the jury was explicitly empowered to
believe the statement in preference to the sworn testimony, Ga.Laws
1878-1879, pp. 53-54, and the statute took its present form.
[
Footnote 17]
See also Clarke v. State, 78 Ala. 474;
Harris v.
State, 78 Ala. 482;
Hart v. State, 38 Fla. 39, 20 So.
805;
Copeland v. State, 41 Fla. 320, 26 So. 319;
O'Loughlin v. People, 90 Colo. 368, 10 P.2d 543.
In Wyoming, the defendant had the option to make an unsworn
statement even after the grant of competency, since the competency
statute expressly preserved the statement. In 1925, the reservation
of the right of statement was removed.
See Anderson v.
State, 27 Wyo. 345, 196 74. Massachusetts thus appears to be
the only American jurisdiction still explicitly allowing a
defendant in some cases to give either sworn testimony or an
unsworn statement.
See Commonwealth v. Stewart, 255 Mass.
9, 151 N.E. 74.
[
Footnote 18]
For other Georgia comments on the practice,
see 17
Ga.B.J. 120; 15 Ga.B.J. 342; 14 Ga.B.J. 362, 366; 3 Mercer L.Rev.
335;
cf. 5 Ga.B.J., Feb. 1943, p. 47. The Georgia Bar
Association has in the past supported a proposal in the legislature
to make defendants competent.
See, e.g., 1952 Ga.Bar
Assn.Rep. 31. Recent study of the problem by the Association's
Committee on Criminal Law and Procedure resulted in a report
recommending against change on grounds that it would
"aid the prosecution and conviction of the defendant and would
be of no material benefit to any defendant in a criminal case.
Those who are on trial for their lives and liberty cannot possibly
think and testify as clearly as a disinterested witness, and of
course, it is agreed that a shrewd prosecutor could create, by
expert cross-examination, in the minds of the jury, an unfavorable
impression of a defendant."
1957 Ga.Bar Assn.Rep. 182. However, since that time, the
Committee has twice recommended competency for criminal defendants,
and has prepared draft legislation for that purpose.
See
1960 Ga.Bar Assn.Rep. 109, 115, 116, 119.
Georgia's adherence to the rule of incompetency of criminal
defendants contrasts with the undeviating trend away from exclusion
of evidence that has characterized the development of the State's
law since the nineteenth century. The Code of 1863 indicates that
the limitations on and exceptions to disqualifications in the
common law were numerous even before the Act of 1866.
See,
e.g., §§ 3772(5), 3779, 3780, 3781, 3782, 3783, 3785, 4563.
The Georgia Arbitration Act of 1856 had made the parties competent
in arbitration proceedings.
See Golden v. Fowler, 26 Ga.
451, 458. Judge Lumpkin declared:
"[A]s jurors have become more capable of exercising their
functions intelligently, the judges both in England and in this
country, are struggling constantly to open the door wide as
possible . . . to let in all facts calculated to affect the minds
of the jury in arriving at a correct conclusion. . . . Truth,
common sense, and enlightened reason alike demand the abolition of
all those artificial rules which shut out any fact from the jury,
however remotely relevant, or from whatever source derived, which
would assist them in coming to a satisfactory verdict."
Johnson v. State, 14 Ga. 55, 61-62.
A policy favoring the reception of evidence has consistently
characterized the decisions of the Georgia courts and Acts of the
legislature since the 1866 Act.
See, e.g., Blount v.
Beall, 95 Ga. 182, 22 S.E. 52;
Myers v. Phillips, 197
Ga. 536, 29 S.E.2d 700;
Manley v. Combs, 197 Ga. 768,
781-782, 30 S.E.2d 485, 493-494;
Sisk v. State, 182 Ga.
448, 453, 185 S.E. 777, 781;
Berry v. Brunson, 166 Ga.
523, 531-533, 143 S.E. 761, 765;
Polk v. State, 18 Ga.App.
324, 89 S.E. 437;
Watkins v. State, 19 Ga.App. 234, 91
S.E. 284. The legislature has removed some of the exceptions
retained in the 1866 Act.
See Ga.Laws 1935, p. 120,
allowing parties to testify in breach of promise actions. In 1957,
the legislature removed the incompetency of a wife to testify for
or against her husband. Ga.Laws 1957, p. 53, amending § 38-1604.
Ga.Code, § 38-101 sums up this policy:
"The object of all legal investigation is the discovery of
truth. The rules of evidence are framed with a view to this
prominent end, seeking always for pure sources and the highest
evidence."
Moreover, in the case of defendants jointly tried, Georgia
allows one codefendant to testify as a sworn witness for the other,
although his testimony may serve to acquit himself if believed.
See, e.g., Staten v. State, 140 Ga. 110, 78 S.E. 766;
Cofer v. State, 163 Ga. 878, 137 S.E. 378. It may even be
error in such a situation for the court to treat such testimony as
if it were an unsworn statement, and to fail to give sufficient
emphasis in the charge to the jury as to its effect as evidence.
Staten v. State, supra; Burnsed v. State, 14 Ga.App. 832,
82 S.E. 595;
Roberson v. State, 14 Ga.App. 557, 81 S.E.
798;
cf. O'Berry v. State, 153 Ga. 880, 113 S.E. 203. And
a defendant is allowed to give sworn testimony as to matters in his
trial not going to the issue of his guilt.
See Thomas v.
State, 81 Ga.App. 59,
58 S.E.2d
213.
[
Footnote 19]
There, the Michigan Supreme Court reversed a conviction because
the trial judge refused to let counsel remind the defendant that he
had omitted a material fact from his unsworn statement. The quoted
excerpt immediately follows an observation that the Michigan
statute permitting an unsworn statement evidently did not
contemplate an ordinary direct examination.
|
365
U.S. 570app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE COURT
Ala.Code, 1940, Tit. 15, § 305.
Alaska Comp.Laws Ann.1949, § 66-13-53.
Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann., 1956, § 13-163.
Ark.Stat.1947, § 43-2016.
Cal.Pen.Code, § 1323.5.
See also Cal.Pen.Code, § 1323;
Cal.Const.Art. I, § 13.
Colo.Rev.Stat.Ann.1953, § 39-7-15.
Conn.Gen.Stat.1958, § 54-84.
Page 365 U. S. 597
Del.Code Ann.1953, Tit. 11, § 3501.
Fla.Stat., 1959, § 918.09.
Hawaii Rev.Laws 1955, § 222-15.
Idaho Code Ann.1948, § 19-3003.
Ill.Rev.Stat., 1959, c. 38, § 734.
Ind.Ann.Stat.1956, § 9-1603.
Iowa Code, 1958, § 781.12.
See also Iowa Code §
781.13.
Kan.Gen.Stat.Ann.1949, § 62-1420.
Ky.Rev.Stat.1960, § 455.090.
La.Rev.Stat.1950, § 15.461.
See also La.Rev.Stat. §
15.462.
Me.Rev.Stat.Ann.1954, c. 148, § 22.
Md.Ann.Code 1957, Art. 35, § 4.
Mass.Gen.Laws Ann., 1959, c. 233, § 20.
Mich.Comp.Laws 1948, § 617.64.
Minn.Stat., 1957, § 611.11.
Miss.Code Ann.1942, § 1691.
Mo.Rev.Stat., 1959, § 546.260.
See also Mo.Rev.Stat. §
546.270.
Mont.Rev.Codes Ann.1947, § 94-8803.
Neb.Rev.Stat.1956, § 29-2011.
Nev.Rev.Stat.1957, § 175.170.
See also Nev.Rev.Stat. §
175.175.
N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann.1955, § 516.31.
See also
N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 516.32.
N.J.Rev.Stat.1951, § 2A:81-8.
N.M.Stat.Ann.1953, § 41-12-19.
N.Y.Code Crim.Proc. § 393.
N.C.Gen.Stat.1953, § 8-54.
N.D.Rev.Code 1943, § 29-2111.
Ohio Rev.Code Ann.1953, § 2945.43.
Okla.Stat.1951, Tit. 22, § 701.
Ore.Rev.Stat.1953, § 139.310.
Pa.Stat., 1930, Tit. 19, § 681.
See also Pa.Stat.Tit.
19, § 631.
R.I.Gen.Laws Ann.1956, § 12-17-9.
Page 365 U. S. 598
S.C.Code 1952, § 26-405.
S.D.Code 1939, § 34.3633.
Tenn.Code Ann.1955, § 40-2402.
See also Tenn.Code Ann.
§ 40-2403.
Tex.Code Crim.Proc.1948, Art. 710.
Utah Code Ann.1953, § 77-44-5.
Vt.Stat.Ann.1959, § 13-6601.
Va.Code Ann.1950, § 19.1-264.
Wash.Rev.Code 1951, § 10.52.040.
W.Va.Code Ann.1955, § 5731.
Wis.Stat.1959, § 325.13.
Wyo.Stat.1957, § 7-244.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER's separate opinion for reversing the
conviction, in which MR. JUSTICE CLARK joins.
Georgia in 1784, adopted the common law of England, Act of
February 25, 1784, Prince's Digest 570 (1837). This adoption
included its rules of competency for witnesses, whereby an accused
was precluded from being a witness in his own behalf. It is
doubtful whether and to what extent the common law privilege of an
accused, barred as a witness, to address the jury prevailed in
Georgia, but it is a fair guess that the practice was far less than
uniform.
See Roberts v. State, 189 Ga. 36, 41, 5 S.E.2d
340, 343. While the common law rigors of incompetency were
alleviated by an enactment of 1866 because "the inquiry after truth
in courts of justice is often obstructed by incapacities created by
the present law,"
* Georgia retained
the incompetency of an accused to testify in his own defense. In
1868, for the first time a statutory provision granted the accused
the privilege of making an unsworn statement to the jury.
Ga.Laws
Page 365 U. S. 599
1868, p. 24. The sum of all this legislative history is that the
defendant in a criminal prosecution in Georgia was disqualified as
a witness, but was given opportunity to say his say to the jury.
These two aspects of the legal situation in which Georgia placed
the accused were made consecutive sections of the penal code in
1895, Ga.Code 1895, §§ 1010, 1011, and have thus remained through
their present form as §§ 38-415 and 38-416.
(1) It would seem to be impossible, because essentially
meaningless as a matter of reason, to consider the constitutional
validity of § 38-415 without impliedly incorporating the Georgia
law which renders the defendant incompetent to present testimony in
his own behalf under oath. This is not a right to counsel case. As
the Georgia Supreme Court correctly stated:
"The constitutional provisions . . . confer only the right to
have counsel perform those duties and take such actions as are
permitted by the law; and to require counsel to conform to the
rules of practice and procedure, is not a denial of the benefit . .
. of counsel."
215 Ga. 117, 119,
109 S.E.2d 44,
46. What is in controversy here is the adequacy of an inextricably
unified scheme of Georgia criminal procedure. The right to make an
unsworn statement, provided by § 38-415, is an attempt to
ameliorate the harsh consequences of the incompetency rule of the
section following. Standing alone, § 38-415 raises no
constitutional difficulty. Only when considered in the context of
the incompetency provision does it take on meaning. If Georgia may
constitutionally altogether bar an accused from establishing his
innocence as a witness, it goes beyond its constitutional duty if
it allows him to make a speech to the jury, whether or not aided by
counsel. Alternatively, if § 38-416 is unconstitutional -- a legal
nullity -- a Georgia accused can insist on being sworn as a
competent witness, and the privilege also to
Page 365 U. S. 600
make an unsworn statement without benefit of counsel would
constitute an additional benefit of which he may or may not choose
to avail himself. If, as is the truth, § 38-415 has meaning only
when applied in the context of § 38-416's rule of incompetency,
surely we are not so imprisoned by any formal rule governing our
reviewing power that we cannot consider the two parts of a
disseverable, single whole because petitioner has not asked us in
terms to review both halves. It is formalism run riot to find that
the division into two separate sections of what is organically
inseparable may not, for reviewing purpose, be treated as a single,
appealable unit. This Court, of course, determines the scope of its
reviewing power over a state court judgment.
(2) But if limitations on our power to review prevent us from
considering and ruling upon the constitutionality of the
application of Georgia's incompetency law -- which alone creates
the significant constitutional issue -- then I should think that
what is left of this mutilation should be dismissed for want of a
substantial federal question. Considered
in vacuo, §
38-415 fails, as has been pointed out, to present any reasonable
doubts as to its constitutionality, for it provides only an
additional right. If appellant had, in fact, purposefully chosen
not to be a witness, had agreed to the validity of the incompetency
provisions, and had intentionally limited his attack to § 38-415 as
applied, he would be presenting an issue so abstract that the Court
would not, I believe, entertain it.
Perhaps the accused failed to offer himself as a witness because
he thought it would be a futile endeavor under settled Georgia law,
while the opportunity to have the aid of counsel in making an
unsworn statement pursuant to § 38-415 would be a discretionary
matter for Georgia judges. Since I cannot assume that appellant
purposefully intended to waive his constitutional claim concerning
his incompetency -- though he may not explicitly have
Page 365 U. S. 601
asserted this claim -- I have no difficulty in moving from the
Court's oblique recognition of the relevance to this controversy of
§ 38-416 to the candid determination that that section is
unconstitutional.
* Ga.Laws 1866, p. 138.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK, whom MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER joins,
concurring.
Because, as applied by the Georgia court, § 38-415 grants
criminal defendants the opportunity to make unsworn statements in
their own behalf, but withholds from the same defendants the
assistance of their counsel in eliciting perhaps more effective
statements, the Court today strikes down that section. It is held
to be unconstitutional "in the context of § 38-416," which renders
criminal defendants incompetent as witnesses at their own trials.
The Court does not, however, treat § 38-416 as anything more
substantial than "context," and, while rendering its validity
doubtful, fails to pass upon its constitutionality. The Court's
hesitancy to reach that question appears to be due to appellant's
tactic at the trial, of offering his statement under § 38-415 and,
in so doing, demanding the aid of his counsel, but not offering
himself as a competent witness or challenging his exclusion under §
38-416. This has proven to be a perfect cast of appellant's line,
for the Court has risen to the bait exactly as anticipated. The
resulting advantage of the Court's present holding to the criminal
defendant in Georgia is obvious -- as matters now stand, the
defendant may make an unsworn statement as articulate and
convincing as the aid of counsel can evoke, but the prosecution may
not cross-examine.
It is true that merely to defeat such a result is insufficient
justification for this Court to reach out and decide additional
constitutional questions otherwise avoidable. Nevertheless, the
problem appellant poses under § 38-415 is so historically and
conceptually intertwisted with the
Page 365 U. S. 602
rule of § 38-416 that not only must they be considered together,
as the Court expressly recognizes, but they must be allowed to
stand or fall together, as a single unitary concept,
uncircumscribed by the accident of divisive codification. The
section today struck down, § 38-415, is not even intelligible
except in terms of the incompetency imposed by § 38-416.* Were the
latter rule not codified, its proscription would have to be
understood as § 38-415's operative premise of common law
disability. The purported boon of § 38-415 was founded on that
disability, against the hardships of which, nowhere else presently
imposed, it was intended to at least partially relieve. I would not
withhold adjudication because of the fact of codification, nor
merely on account of the procedural dodge resorted to by
counsel.
Reaching the basic issue of incompetency, as I feel one must, I
do not hesitate to state that, in my view, § 38-416 does not meet
the requirements of due process, and that, as an unsatisfactory
remnant of an age gone by, it must fall as surely as does its
palliative, § 38-415. Until such time as criminal defendants are
granted competency by the legislature, the void created by
rejection of the codified common law rule of Georgia may be filled
by state trial judges who would have to recognize, as secured by
the Fourteenth Amendment, the right of a criminal defendant to
choose between silence and testifying in his own behalf. In the
same manner, the state courts presently implement other federal
rights secured to the accused, and therefore the fact that a void
of local policy would be created is not an insuperable obstacle to
the disposition I propose. Nor would past convictions be
automatically rendered subject to fatal constitutional attack
unless, as
Page 365 U. S. 603
was, in my view, done here, the proper challenge had been
preserved by appropriate objection to active operation of the
concept embodied in the incompetency rule in either of its phases.
In view of the certain fact that criminal prosecutions will
continue to be had in Georgia, and that some defendant, if not
appellant himself at his new trial, will demand the right to
testify in his own behalf, in strict compliance with the procedural
standard adhered to today, we will sooner or later have the
question of the validity of § 38-416 back on our doorstep. The
result, predictably, will be the same as that reached under §
38-415 today. If that proves in fact to be the Court's future
disposition of the claim I anticipate, the stability of interim
convictions may well be jeopardized where related constitutional
claims are preserved but, perhaps, not pressed. So too, on the
reverse side of the coin, there may well be interim convictions
where, had defendants been permitted to testify under oath in their
own behalf, verdicts of acquittal would have been returned. This
Court should not allow the administration of criminal justice to be
thus frustrated or unreasonably delayed by such a fragmentation of
the critical issue through procedural niceties made solely in the
hope of avoiding a controlling decision on a question of the first
magnitude.
For these reasons, I deem it impractical as well as unwise to
withhold for a future date a decision by the Court on the
constitutionality of § 38-416.
Disagreeing with the distorted way by which the Court reverses
the judgment, I join in its reversal only on the grounds stated
here and in the opinion of my Brother FRANKFURTER, which I
join.
* I agree with my Brother FRANKFURTER that, if § 38-415 is to be
isolated from the incompetency provision of § 38-416, "what is left
of this mutilation should be dismissed for want of a substantial
federal question."