DocketNumber: 53
Citation Numbers: 19 L. Ed. 2d 319, 88 S. Ct. 258, 389 U.S. 109, 1967 U.S. LEXIS 266
Judges: Douglas, Warren, Harlan, Black, White
Filed Date: 11/13/1967
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner was convicted of “assault with malice aforethought with intent to murder; repetition of offense.” The jury fixed the punishment at 10 years in the Texas State Penitentiary.
Petitioner’s counsel filed a pretrial motion to quash the four counts of the indictment referring to the prior convictions for failure to apprise the defense of what the State would attempt to prove.
The State then offered into evidence a certified copy of the indictment in the prior Texas case. Petitioner’s counsel indicated he had no objection, and that record was received into evidence. Thereafter, testimony was offered concerning the judgment and sentence in the prior Texas case. After some testimony had been given, the jury was excused and the hearing continued out of its presence. At the conclusion of the hearing, petitioner’s attorney objected that the Texas judgment was void on its face under state law. The court sustained that ob
Petitioner’s motion for a new trial was denied. In the Court of Criminal Appeals, petitioner argued, inter alia, that the court erred in permitting counts two through five of the indictment to be read to the jury at the beginning of the trial, and in failing to sustain petitioner’s objection to the admission into evidence of the second version of the Tennessee conviction. The Court of Criminal Appeals held that since petitioner had not suffered the enhanced punishment provided by the recidivist statutes, and since the instruction to disregard the prior offenses had been given, no error was presented.
We do not sit as a court of criminal appeals to review state cases. The States are free to provide such pro
The exclusion of coerced confessions is one example. Chambers v. Florida, 309 U. S. 227.
The exclusion of evidence seized in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments is another. Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U. S. 643.
Still another is illustrated by Pointer v. Texas, 380 U. S. 400. In that case we held that a transcript of a preliminary hearing had to be excluded from a state criminal trial because the defendant had no lawyer at that hearing, and did not, therefore, have the opportunity to cross-examine the principal witness against him who since that time had left the State. The exclusionary rule that we fashioned was designed to protect the privilege of confrontation guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment and made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth.
The same result must follow here. Gideon v. Wainwright established the rule that the right to counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment was applicable to the States by virtue of the Fourteenth, making it unconstitutional to try a person for a felony in a state court unless he had a lawyer or had validly waived one. And that ruling was not limited to prospective applications. See Doughty v. Maxwell, 376 U. S. 202; Pickelsimer v. Wainwright, 375 U. S. 2. In this case the certified records of the Tennessee conviction on their face raise a presumption that petitioner was denied his right to counsel in the Tennessee proceeding, and therefore that his conviction was void. Presuming waiver of counsel from
The admission of a prior criminal conviction which is constitutionally infirm under the standards of Gideon v. Wainwright is inherently prejudicial and we are unable to say that the instructions to disregard it
Our decision last Term in Spencer v. Texas, 385 U. S. 554, is not relevant to our present problem. In Spencer the prior convictions were not presumptively void. Moreover, the contention was that the guilt phase of the trial was prejudiced by the introduction of the evidence of prior crimes. As the Court noted, “[i]n the procedures before us ... no specific federal right — such as that dealing with confessions — is involved; reliance is placed solely on a general ‘fairness’ approach.” Id., at
Reversed.
The maximum penalty for a first conviction of assault with intent to murder is 25 years; the minimum penalty is two years. Tex. Pen. Code, Art. 1160 (Supp. 1966).
Burgett v. State, 397 S. W. 2d 79 (1965).
The statutes involved here are Articles 62 and 63 of the Tex. Pen. Code (1952).
Article 62 provides: “If it be shown on the trial of a felony less than capital that the defendant has been before convicted of the same offense, or one of the same nature, the punishment on such second or other subsequent conviction shall be the highest which is affixed to the commission of such offenses in ordinary cases.”
Article 63 provides: “Whoever shall have been three times convicted of a felony less than capital shall on such third conviction be imprisoned for life in the penitentiary.”
Tex. Pen. Code, Art, 63 (1952).
In petitioner’s amended motion for a new trial, which was denied by the court, he explained that the purpose of the pretrial motion was “so that defendant could establish their [the previous convictions alleged for enhancement] admissibility before they were read into the record in the presence of the jury; same reading into the record in the presence of the jury was prejudicial to defendant herein.”
The court apparently withdrew consideration of the prior convictions from the jury since only the record of the one prior Tennessee conviction for forgery had been accepted. Thus, Article 63 could not be applied to petitioner. Further, since forgery could not be considered as an offense of the “same nature” as assault with intent to murder, Article 62 would not be applicable. See n. 3, supra.
The State apparently did not attempt to introduce the records of the other two Tennessee convictions for forgery because the indictment showed that all of the convictions occurred on- the same date. To invoke the provisions of Article 63, each succeeding conviction must be subsequent in time to the previous conviction — both with respect to commission of the offense and to conviction. Cowan v. State, 172 Tex. Cr. R. 183, 355 S. W. 2d 521 (1962).
See, e. g., Boyd v. United States, 142 U. S. 450; United States v. Clarke, 343 F. 2d 90 (C. A. 3d Cir. 1965). Cf. Waldron v. Waldron, 156 U. S. 361, 383; Throckmorton v. Holt, 180 U. S. 552; Lawrence v. United States, 357 F. 2d 434 (C. A. 10th Cir. 1966); United States v. DeDominicis, 332 F. 2d 207 (C. A. 2d Cir. 1964).
What Mr. Justice Jackson said in Krulewitch v. United States, 336 U. S. 440, 445, 453 (concurring opinion), in the sensitive area of conspiracy is equally applicable in this sensitive area of repetitive crimes, “The naive assumption that prejudicial effects can be overcome by instructions to the jury ... all practicing lawyers know to be unmitigated fiction.”