DocketNumber: No. 3D18-400
Judges: Luck, Salter, Scales
Filed Date: 1/9/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
After finding M.W., a juvenile, guilty of petit theft, the trial court withheld adjudication and issued a judicial warning. M.W. appeals on the lone ground that the trial judge "entered the fray" during the trial and sacrificed trial court neutrality. Because we conclude that the trial judge did not overstep his obligation to remain neutral and impartial, we affirm the order on appeal.
The State charged M.W. in a one-count petition for delinquency after M.W. was arrested for shoplifting headphones at an Apple Store. According to statute, "if the property stolen is valued at $100 or more, but less than $300, the offender commits petit theft in the first degree." § 812.014(2)(e), Fla. Stat. (2017). At trial, the State was examining the store security officer who arrested M.W. when the following exchange occurred:
WITNESS: We basically, because he is a juvenile we have [to] call the parent. And the fact that the amount was 299.95 -*215DEFENSE: Objection, hearsay.
JUDGE: Establish how he knows.
STATE: Your Honor, he has personal knowledge.
JUDGE: Establish.
Thereafter, the State asked the appropriate set of questions to establish the value of the headphones at $299.95. On appeal, M.W. argues that this exchange shows the trial judge entering the fray to an impermissible degree in order to establish a key fact of the proceeding. Conceding that the defense at trial lodged no objection to the trial court's participation in this exchange, M.W. further argues fundamental error.
A trial court owes a duty of neutrality to the parties and may not favor one side or the other. J.L.D. v. State,
In Lyles v. State,
M.W. cites to both J.L.D. and Lyles to establish that a trial judge's decision to enter the fray may rise to the level of fundamental error. M.W. supports these cases with several, other non-fundamental error cases that confirm the proposition that a trial court may not breach neutrality. See Seago v. State,
In the instant case, the trial judge did not enter the fray to an extent or a magnitude close to the intrusions of the trial judges in M.W.'s cited cases. In this instance, the trial judge merely told counsel for the State to lay a proper predicate for the evidence the State knew it was required to present. The trial judge neither asked a question of the witness nor told the State which question to ask of the witness. In other words, the trial judge did not cross a line and assume the role of the prosecutor. Here, the judge's conduct fell within a trial court's latitude to regulate the course of a trial in his courtroom. Hahn v. State,
*216Because we find that the trial judge did not sacrifice neutrality or impartiality during the trial below, we affirm.
Affirmed.