Petitioners, who were convicted of felonies in Texas courts,
challenge the then-existing procedure under Texas' recidivist or
habitual criminal statutes whereby, through allegations in the
indictment and the introduction of proof concerning a defendant's
past convictions, the jury trying the pending criminal charge was
fully informed of such past convictions for sentencing purposes,
but was also charged by the court that such matters were not to be
taken into account in assessing the defendant's guilt or innocence
under the current indictment. Petitioners claim that this procedure
violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Held: Texas' use of prior convictions in the
petitioners' current criminal trials did not offend the provisions
of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
385 U. S.
559-569.
(a) The recidivist statutes are not unconstitutional. Pp.
385 U. S.
559-560.
(b) The States have wide leeway in dividing responsibility
between judge and jury in criminal cases, and it is not
unconstitutional for the jury to assess the punishment in a
criminal case, or to make findings as to a prior conviction even
though enhanced punishment is left to be imposed by the judge. P.
385 U. S.
560.
(c) As in other instances where evidence of prior convictions
has traditionally been admitted to serve a specific purpose, the
possibility of prejudice here is outweighed by the validity of the
State's purpose in permitting introduction of the evidence. Pp.
385 U. S.
560-561.
(d) The defendants' interests were protected by limiting
instructions, and by the discretion of the trial judge to limit or
forbid admission of particularly prejudicial evidence. P.
385 U. S.
561.
(e) Enforcement of recidivist statutes in a one-stage trial
serves a valid state purpose. P.
385 U. S.
563.
(f) Neither the specific provisions of the Constitution nor
cases decided under the Due Process Clause establish this Court as
a
Page 385 U. S. 555
rulemaking organ for the promulgation of state rules of criminal
procedure.
Jackson v. Denno, 378 U.
S. 368, distinguished. Pp.
385 U. S.
564-565.
(g) The States have power to promulgate their own rules of
evidence to try their state-created crimes in their own courts, as
long as their rules are not prohibited by the Federal Constitution,
which these rules are not. Pp.
385 U. S.
568-569.
No. 68, appeal dismissed and certiorari granted;
389
S.W.2d 304, affirmed; No. 61,
387
S.W.2d 411, No. 70, 343 F.2d 723, affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Texas, reflecting widely established policies in the criminal
law of this country, has long had on its books
Page 385 U. S. 556
so-called recidivist or habitual-criminal statutes. Their effect
is to enhance the punishment of those found guilty of crime who are
also shown to have been convicted of other crimes in the past. The
three cases at hand challenge the procedures employed by Texas in
the enforcement of such statutes. [
Footnote 1]
Until recently, and at the time of the convictions before us,
the essence of those procedures was that, through allegations in
the indictment and the introduction of proof respecting a
defendant's past convictions, the jury trying the pending criminal
charge was fully informed of such previous derelictions, but was
also charged by the court that such matters were not to be taken
into account in assessing the defendant's guilt or innocence under
the current indictment. [
Footnote
2]
Page 385 U. S. 557
The facts in the cases now here are these. In
Spencer
(No. 68), the petitioner [
Footnote
3] was indicted for murder, with malice, of his common law
wife. The indictment alleged that the defendant had previously been
convicted of murder with malice, a factor which, if proved, would
entitle the jury to sentence the defendant to death or to prison
for not less than life under Texas Pen.Code Art. 64,
n 1,
supra, whereas, if the prior
conviction was not proved, the jury could fix the penalty at death
or a prison term of not less than two years,
see Texas
Pen.Code Art. 1257. Spencer made timely objections to the reading
to the jury of that portion of the indictment, and objected as well
to the introduction of evidence to show his prior conviction. The
jury was charged that, if it found that Spencer had maliciously
killed the victim, and that he had previously been convicted of
murder with malice, the jury was to "assess his punishment at death
or confinement in the penitentiary for life." The jury was
instructed
Page 385 U. S. 558
as well that it should not consider the prior conviction as any
evidence of the defendant's guilt on the charge on which he was
being tried. Spencer was found guilty and sentenced to death.
In
Bell (No. 69), the petitioner was indicted for
robbery, and the indictment alleged that he had been previously
convicted of bank robbery in the United States District Court for
the Southern District of Texas. Bell moved to quash the indictment
on the ground, similar to that in
Spencer, that the
allegation and reading to the jury of a prior offense was
prejudicial, and would deprive him of a fair trial. Similar
objections were made to the offer of documentary evidence to prove
the prior conviction. The court's charge to the jury stated that
the prior conviction should not be considered in passing upon the
issue of guilt or innocence on the primary charge. The sentencing
procedure in this noncapital case was somewhat different from that
in
Spencer. The jury was instructed that, if it found the
defendant guilty only of the present robbery charge, it could fix
his sentence at not less than five years nor more than life.
See Texas Pen.Code Art. 1408. But if it found that Bell
had also been previously convicted as alleged in the indictment, it
should bring in a verdict of guilty of robbery by assault, and a
further finding that the allegations "charging a final conviction
for the offense of bank robbery are true." The jury so found, and
the judge fixed punishment, set by law for such a prior offender,
at life imprisonment in the penitentiary.
See Texas
Pen.Code Art. 62,
note 1
supra.
The
Reed case (No. 70), [
Footnote 4] involving a third-offender
Page 385 U. S. 559
prosecution for burglary,
see Texas Pen.Code Art. 63,
n 1,
supra, entailed
the same practice as followed in
Bell.
The common and sole constitutional claim made in these cases is
that Texas' use of prior convictions in the current criminal trial
of each petitioner was so egregiously unfair upon the issue of
guilt or innocence as to offend the provisions of the Fourteenth
Amendment that no State shall "deprive any person of life, liberty,
or property, without due process of law. . . ." We took these cases
for review, 382 U.S. 1022, 1023, 1025, because the courts of
appeals have divided on the issue. [
Footnote 5] For reasons now to follow, we affirm the
judgments below.
The road to decision, it seems to us, is clearly indicated both
by what the petitioners in these cases do
not contend and
by the course of the authorities in closely related fields. No
claim is made here that recidivist statutes are themselves
unconstitutional, nor could there be under our cases. Such statutes
and other enhanced-sentence laws, and procedures designed to
implement their underlying policies, have been enacted in all the
States, [
Footnote 6] and by the
Federal Government as well.
See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. §
2114; Fed.Rule Crim.Proc.
Page 385 U. S. 560
32(c)(2); D.C.Code § 22-104 (1961). Such statutes, though
not in the precise procedural circumstances here involved, have
been sustained in this Court on several occasions against
contentions that they violate constitutional strictures dealing
with double jeopardy,
ex post facto laws, cruel and
unusual punishment, due process, equal protection, and privileges
and immunities.
Moore v. Missouri, 159 U.
S. 673;
McDonald v. Massachusetts, 180 U.
S. 311;
Graham v. West Virginia, 224 U.
S. 616;
Gryger v. Burke, 334 U.
S. 728;
Oyler v. Boles, 368 U.
S. 448.
Nor is it contended that it is unconstitutional for the jury to
assess the punishment to be meted out to a defendant in a capital
or other criminal case, or to make findings as to whether there was
or was not a prior conviction even though enhanced punishment is
left to be imposed by the judge. The States have always been given
wide leeway in dividing responsibility between judge and jury in
criminal cases.
Hallinger v. Davis, 146 U.
S. 314;
Maxwell v. Dow, 176 U.
S. 581;
cf. Chandler v. Fretag, 348 U. S.
3;
Giaccio v. Pennsylvania, 382 U.
S. 399,
382 U. S. 405,
n. 8.
Petitioners do not even appear to be arguing that the
Constitution is infringed if a jury is told of a defendant's prior
crimes. The rules concerning evidence of prior offenses are
complex, and vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, but they can
be summarized broadly. Because such evidence is generally
recognized to have potentiality for prejudice, it is usually
excluded except when it is particularly probative in showing such
things as intent,
Nye & Nissen v. United States,
336 U. S. 613;
Ellisor v. State, 162 Tex.Cr.R. 117,
282
S.W.2d 393; an element in the crime,
Doyle v. State,
59 Tex.Cr.R. 39, 126 S.W. 1131; identity,
Chavira v.
State, 167 Tex.Cr.R.197,
319
S.W.2d 115; malice,
Moss v. State, 364
S.W.2d 389; motive,
Moses v. State, 168 Tex.Cr.R.
Page 385 U. S. 561
409,
328
S.W.2d 885; a system of criminal activity,
Haley v.
State, 87 Tex.Cr.R. 519, 223 S.W. 202; or when the defendant
has raised the issue of his character,
Michelson v. United
States, 335 U. S. 469;
Perkins v. State, 152 Tex.Cr.R. 321, 213 S.W.2d 681; or
when the defendant has testified and the State seeks to impeach his
credibility,
Giacone v. State, 124 Tex.Cr.R. 141, 62
S.W.2d 986. [
Footnote 7]
Under Texas law, the prior convictions of the defendants in the
three cases before the Court today might have been admissible for
any one or more of these universally accepted reasons. In all these
situations, as under the recidivist statutes, the jury learns of
prior crimes committed by the defendant, but the conceded
possibility of prejudice is believed to be outweighed by the
validity of the State's purpose in permitting introduction of the
evidence. The defendants' interests are protected by limiting
instructions,
see Giacone v. State, supra, and by the
discretion residing with the trial judge to limit or forbid the
admission of particularly prejudicial evidence even though
admissible under an accepted rule of evidence.
See Spears v.
State, 153 Tex.Cr.R.
Page 385 U. S. 562
14, 216 S.W.2d 812; 1 Wigmore, Evidence 20a (3d ed.1940);
Uniform Rule of Evidence 45; Model Code of Evidence, Rule 303.
This general survey sufficiently indicates that the law of
evidence, which has been chiefly developed by the States, has
evolved a set of rules designed to reconcile the possibility that
this type of information will have some prejudicial effect with the
admitted usefulness it has as a factor to be considered by the jury
for any one of a large number of valid purposes. The evidence
itself is usually, and in recidivist cases almost always, of a
documentary kind, and, in the cases before us, there is no claim
that its presentation was in any way inflammatory.
Compare
Marshall v. United States, 360 U. S. 310. To
say the United States Constitution is infringed simply because this
type of evidence may be prejudicial, and limiting instructions
inadequate to vitiate prejudicial effects, would make inroads into
this entire complex code of state criminal evidentiary law and
would threaten other large areas of trial jurisprudence. For
example, all joint trials, whether of several codefendants or of
one defendant charged with multiple offenses, furnish inherent
opportunities for unfairness when evidence submitted as to one
crime (on which there may be an acquittal) may influence the jury
as to a totally different charge.
See Delli Paoli v. United
States, 352 U. S. 232;
cf. Opper v. United States, 348 U. S.
84;
Krulewitch v. United States, 336 U.
S. 440. This type of prejudicial effect is acknowledged
to inhere in criminal practice, but it is justified on the grounds
that (1) the jury is expected to follow instructions in limiting
this evidence to its proper function, and (2) the convenience of
trying different crimes against the same person, and connected
crimes against different defendants, in the same trial is a valid
governmental interest.
Page 385 U. S. 563
Such an approach was, in fact, taken by the Court in
Michelson v. United States, 335 U.
S. 469. There, in a federal prosecution, the Government
was permitted to cross-examine defense witnesses as to the
defendant's character and to question them about a prior
conviction. The Court, recognizing the prejudicial effect of this
evidence, noted that "limiting instructions on this subject are no
more difficult to comprehend or apply than those upon various other
subjects,"
id. at
335 U. S. 485, and held that this Court was not the best
forum for developing rules of evidence, and would, therefore, not
proscribe the longstanding practice at issue.
A fortiori,
this reasoning applies in the cases before us today, which arise
not under what has been termed the supervisory power of this Court
over proceedings in the lower federal courts,
see Cheff v.
Schnackenberg, 384 U. S. 373, but
in the form of a constitutional claim that would require us to
fashion rules of procedure and evidence in state courts. It is
noteworthy that nowhere in
Michelson did the Court or
dissenting opinions approach the issue in constitutional terms.
It is contended nonetheless that, in this instance, the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires the exclusion
of prejudicial evidence of prior convictions even though limiting
instructions are given and even though a valid state purpose
enforcement of the habitual offender statute -- is served. We
recognize that the use of prior crime evidence in a one-stage
recidivist trial may be thought to represent a less cogent state
interest than does its use for other purposes, in that other
procedures for applying enhancement of sentence statutes may be
available to the State that are not suited in the other situations
in which such evidence is introduced. We do not think that this
distinction should lead to a different constitutional result.
Cases in this Court have long proceeded on the premise that the
Due Process Clause guarantees the fundamental
Page 385 U. S. 564
elements of fairness in a criminal trial.
See, e.g., Tumey
v. Ohio, 273 U. S. 510;
Betts v. Brady, 316 U. S. 455;
cf. Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.
S. 335;
see Estes v. Texas, 381 U.
S. 532;
Sheppard v. Maxwell, 384 U.
S. 333;
cf. Griffin v. Illinois, 351 U. S.
12. But it has never been thought that such cases
establish this Court as a rulemaking organ for the promulgation of
state rules of criminal procedure. And none of the specific
provisions of the Constitution ordains this Court with such
authority. In the face of the legitimate state purpose and the
longstanding and widespread use that attend the procedure under
attack here, we find it impossible to say that, because of the
possibility of some collateral prejudice, the Texas procedure is
rendered unconstitutional under the Due Process Clause as it has
been interpreted and applied in our past cases. As Mr. Justice
Cardozo had occasion to remark, a state rule of law
"does not run foul of the Fourteenth Amendment because another
method may seem to our thinking to be fairer or wiser, or to give a
surer promise of protection to the prisoner at bar."
Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S.
97,
291 U. S. 105.
See also Buchalter v. New York, 319 U.
S. 427. Petitioners' reliance on
Jackson v.
Denno, 378 U. S. 368, is
misplaced. There the Court held unconstitutional the New York
procedure leaving to the trial jury alone the issue of the
voluntariness of a challenged confession, an area of law that has
been characterized by the development of particularly stiff
constitutional rules.
See Rogers v. Richmond, 365 U.
S. 534;
Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.
S. 436. The Court held that a judicial ruling was first
required to determine whether, as a matter of law -- federal
constitutional law -- the confession could be deemed voluntary.
This requirement of a threshold hearing before a judge on the
federal question of voluntariness lends no solid support to the
argument made here -- that a two-stage jury trial is required
whenever
Page 385 U. S. 565
a State seeks to invoke an habitual offender statute. It is true
that the Court in
Jackson supported its holding by
reasoning that a general jury verdict was not a "reliable" vehicle
for determining the issue of voluntariness, because jurors might
have difficulty in separating the issues of voluntariness from that
of guilt or innocence. But the emphasis there was on protection of
a specific constitutional right, and the
Jackson procedure
was designed as a specific remedy to ensure that an involuntary
confession was not, in fact, relied upon by the jury. In the
procedures before us, in contrast, no specific federal right --
such as that dealing with confessions -- is involved; reliance is
placed solely on a general "fairness" approach. In this area, the
Court has always moved with caution before striking down state
procedures. It would be extravagant in the extreme to take
Jackson as evincing a general distrust on the part of this
Court of the ability of juries to approach their task responsibly
and to sort out discrete issues given to them under proper
instructions by the judge in a criminal case, or as standing for
the proposition that limiting instructions can never purge the
erroneous introduction of evidence or limit evidence to its
rightful purpose.
Compare Opper v. United States,
348 U. S. 84;
Leland v. Oregon, 343 U. S. 790.
[
Footnote 8]
It is fair to say that neither the
Jackson case nor any
other due process decision of this Court even remotely supports the
proposition that the States are not free to enact habitual offender
statutes of the type Texas
Page 385 U. S. 566
has chosen, and to admit evidence during trial tending to prove
allegations required under the statutory scheme. Tolerance for a
spectrum of state procedures dealing with a common problem of law
enforcement is especially appropriate here. The rate of recidivism
is acknowledged to be high, [
Footnote 9] a wide variety of methods of dealing with the
problem exists, and experimentation is in progress. The common law
procedure for applying recidivist statutes, used by Texas in the
cases before us, which requires allegations and proof of past
convictions in the current trial, is, of course, the simplest and
best known procedure. [
Footnote
10] Some jurisdictions deal with the recidivist issue in a
totally separate proceeding,
see, e.g., Oyler v. Boles,
368 U. S. 448, and
as already observed (
n 2,
supra), Texas, to some extent, has recently changed to
that course. In some States, such a proceeding can be instituted
even after conviction on the new substantive offense,
see
Ore.Rev.Stat. § 168.040 (1959);
Graham v. West
Virginia, 224 U. S. 616. The
method for determining prior convictions varies also between
jurisdictions affording a jury trial on this issue,
e.g.,
Fla.Stat.Ann. § 775.11 (1965), and those leaving that question
to the court,
see, e.g., Fed.Rule Crim.Proc. 32(a);
Mo.Rev.Stat. 556.280(2) (1959). [
Footnote 11] Another procedure,
Page 385 U. S. 567
used in Great Britain and Connecticut,
see Coinage
Offences Act, 1861, 24 & 25 Vict., c. 99;
State v.
Ferrone, 96 Conn. 160, 113 A. 452, requires that the
indictment allege both the substantive crime and the prior
conviction, that both parts be read to the defendant prior to
trial, but that only the allegations relating to the substantive
crime be read to the jury. If the defendant is convicted, the prior
offense elements are then read to the jury, which considers any
factual issues raised. Yet another system relies upon the parole
authorities to withhold parole in accordance with their findings as
to prior convictions.
See, e.g., N.J.Stat.Ann. §
30:4-123.12 (1964). And, within each broad approach described,
other variations occur.
A determination of the "best" recidivist trial procedure
necessarily involves a consideration of a wide variety of criteria,
such as which method provides most adequate notice to the defendant
and an opportunity to challenge the accuracy and validity of the
alleged prior convictions, which method best meets the particular
jurisdiction's allocation of responsibility between court and jury,
which method is best accommodated to the State's established trial
procedures, and, of course, which method is apt to be the least
prejudicial in terms of the effect of prior crime evidence on the
ultimate issue of guilt or innocence. To say that the two-stage
jury trial in the English-Connecticut style is probably the
fairest, as some commentators and courts have suggested, [
Footnote 12] and with which we might
well agree were the
Page 385 U. S. 568
matter before us in a legislative or rulemaking context, is a
far cry from a constitutional determination that this method of
handling the problem is compelled by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Two-part jury trials are rare in our jurisprudence; they have never
been compelled by this Court as a matter of constitutional law, or
even as a matter of federal procedure. [
Footnote 13] With recidivism the major problem that it
is, substantial changes in trial procedure in countless local
courts around the country would be required were this Court to
sustain the contentions made by these petitioners. This we are
unwilling to do. To take such a step would be quite beyond the pale
of this Court's proper function in our federal system. It would be
a wholly unjustifiable encroachment by this Court
Page 385 U. S. 569
upon the constitutional power of States to promulgate their own
rules of evidence to try their own state-created crimes in their
own state courts, so long as their rules are not prohibited by any
provision of the United States Constitution, which these rules are
not. The judgments in these cases are
Affirmed.
* Together with No. 69,
Bell v. Texas, on certiorari to
the Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, argued October 17, 1966,
and No. 70,
Reed v. Beto, Corrections Director, on
certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit, argued October 18, 1966.
[
Footnote 1]
The recidivist statutes here involved are Articles 62, 63, and
64 of the Texas Pen.Code (1952).
Article 62 provides:
"If it he 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."
Article 64 provides:
"A person convicted a second time of any offense to which the
penalty of death is affixed as an alternate punishment shall not
receive on such second conviction a less punishment than
imprisonment for life in the penitentiary."
[
Footnote 2]
These procedures were embodied in Texas Code Crim.Proc. Art. 642
(1941), providing as follows:
"A jury being impaneled in any criminal action, the cause shall
proceed in the following order: 1. The indictment or information
shall be read to the jury by the attorney prosecuting. . . . 4. The
testimony on the part of the State shall be offered."
By judicial gloss, it appears that, at least in noncapital
cases, a defendant, by stipulating his prior convictions, could
keep knowledge of them away from the jury.
See Pitcock v.
State, 367
S.W.2d 864.
But see the decision below in
Spencer, 389
S.W.2d 304, for the inapplicability of the stipulation rule in
capital cases. In the view we take of the constitutional issue
before us, we consider it immaterial whether or not that course was
open to any of the petitioners. Subsequent to the present
convictions, Texas has passed a new law respecting the procedure
governing recidivist cases, the effect of which seems to be that,
except in capital cases, the jury is not given the recidivist issue
until it has first found the defendant guilty under the principal
charge. Texas Code Crim.Proc. Art. 36.01, effective January 1,
1966. Since these cases were all tried under the older procedure,
the new statute is not before us.
[
Footnote 3]
The question of whether
Spencer is properly here as an
appeal, a matter which we postponed to consideration of the merits,
is a tangled one.
See Dahnke-Walker Milling Co. v.
Bondurant, 257 U. S. 282;
Hart & Wechsler, The Federal Courts and the Federal System
565-567 (1953). Rather than undertake to resolve it, we think it
more profitable to dismiss this appeal, treat it as a petition for
certiorari, 28 U.S.C. § 2103, and grant the petition,
particularly as there is pending in the Court Spencer's timely
filed alternative petition for certiorari, which has been held to
await the outcome of this appeal. Accordingly, we have in this
opinion referred to Spencer as a "petitioner."
[
Footnote 4]
The
Reed case, unlike the
Spencer and
Bell cases, which come to us from the Court of Criminal
Appeals of Texas, is here from a judgment of the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirming the District
Court's dismissal of a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that the
Texas recidivist procedure did not offend the United States
Constitution. 343 F.2d 723.
[
Footnote 5]
The Third Circuit, in
United States v. Banmiller, 310
F.2d 720, held a similar Pennsylvania procedure, when applied in
capital cases, unconstitutional. The Fourth Circuit held a
comparable Maryland recidivist practice unconstitutional in all
cases.
Lane v. Warden, 320 F.2d 179. The Fifth Circuit, in
Breen v. Beto, 341 F.2d 96, and again in the
Reed
case before us today, 343 F.2d 723, and the Eighth Circuit in
Wolfe v. Nash, 313 F.2d 393, have held such procedures
constitutional. The Ninth Circuit, in
Powell v. United
States, 35 F.2d 941, sustained the procedure in the context of
a second offense under § 29 of the National Prohibition Act,
41 Stat. 316.
[
Footnote 6]
See annotations at 58 A.L.R. 20, 82 A.L.R. 345, 79
A.L.R.2d 826; Note, Recidivist Procedures, 40 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 332
(1965).
[
Footnote 7]
These Texas cases reflect the rules prevailing in nearly all
common law jurisdictions.
See generally McCormick,
Evidence §§ 157-158 (1954); 1 Wharton's Criminal Evidence
§§ 221-243 (Anderson ed.1955); 1 Wigmore, Evidence
§§ 215-218 (3d ed.1940 and 1964 Supp.); Note, Other
Crimes Evidence at Trial, 70 Yale L.J. 763 (1961). For the English
rules, substantially similar,
see Cross, Evidence 292-333
(2d ed.1963). Recent commentators have criticized the rule of
general exclusion, and have suggested n broader range of
admissibility. Model Code of Evidence, Rule 311; Carter, The
Admissibility of Evidence of Similar Facts, 69 L.Q.Rev. 80 (1953),
70 L.Q.Rev. 214 (1954); Note, Procedural Protections of the
Criminal Defendant, 78 Harv.L.Rev. 426, 435-451 (1964). For the use
of this type of evidence in continental jurisdictions,
see
Glanville Williams, The Proof of Guilt 181 (2d ed.1958); 1 Wigmore,
supra, § 193.
[
Footnote 8]
Indeed, the most recent scholarly study of jury behavior does
not sustain the premise that juries are especially prone to
prejudice when prior crime evidence is admitted as to credibility.
Kalven & Zeisel, The American Jury (1966). The study contrasts
the effect of such evidence on judges and juries, and concludes
that "Neither the one nor the other can be said to be distinctively
gullible or skeptical."
Id. at 180.
[
Footnote 9]
See "Careers in Crime," a statistical survey collected
in Uniform Crime Reports for the United States -- 1965, p. 27
(Dept. of Justice, 1966). The Statistical Abstract of the United
States, 1966, reveals that 62% of prisoners committed to federal
prisons in the year ending June 30, 1965, had been previously
committed.
Id. at 163.
[
Footnote 10]
For a survey and analysis of the various recidivist procedures,
see Note, Recidivist Procedures, 40 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 332
(1965);
see also Note, The Pleading and Proof of Prior
Convictions in Habitual Criminal Prosecutions, 33 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 210
(1958).
[
Footnote 11]
Texas juries have had authority to impose punishment since 1846,
but in all but 11 States, this power is held by the judge.
See Reid, The Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, 44
Tex.L.Rev. 983, 1008-1009 (1966).
[
Footnote 12]
See, e.g., Lane v. Warden, 320 F.2d 179; Note, 40
N.Y.U.L.Rev. 332, 348 (1965). Other commentators have cautioned
against a too hasty adoption of the two-stage trial.
See
the Second Circuit decision in
United States v. Curry, 358
F.2d 904, 914-915, where the court discussed the procedure as it
applied in federal capital cases, and concluded:
"Given the many considerations which may affect the necessity
for a two-stage trial in each case, and considering the
questionable desirability of this untested technique, we think it
best to leave this question to the discretion of the trial
court."
See also the discussion of the practical and
administrative disadvantages of such a procedure in
Frady v.
United States, 121 U.S.App.D.C. 78, 108-109, 348 F.2d 84,
114-115 (dissenting opinion). We have been presented with no
positive information concerning actual experience with a separate
penalty procedure that would bear on a decision to impose it upon
all the States as a matter of constitutional law. One study
suggests that, as a practical matter, such a procedure has not
proved helpful to defendants:
"The California experience, dating back to 1957, has rather been
that defense counsel have often neglected to prepare adequately for
the penalty phase and have exhibited a lack of sophistication
concerning what facts should be advanced as mitigating. Apparently,
the approach of defense lawyers has been to devote the bulk of
their efforts to the substantive issue of guilt and to relegate the
penalty phase to a minor role. On the other hand, the prosecution
has taken complete advantage of the penalty phase and has attempted
to marshal and to present to the jury all of the aggravating
circumstances that exist."
Note, Executive Clemency in Capital Cases, 39 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 136,
167 (1964).
[
Footnote 13]
In cases where, as in
Spencer, a jury itself fixes the
penalty, the effect of the emphasis in THE CHIEF JUSTICE's separate
opinion upon the use of a stipulation would, in reality, be to
require, as a matter of federal constitutional law, a two-stage
jury trial. For a stipulation, no less than evidentiary proof,
would bring the fact of prior convictions before the trial
jury.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, concurring.
If the Constitution gave me a roving commission to impose upon
the criminal courts of Texas my own notions of enlightened policy,
I would not join the Court's opinion. For it is clear to me that
the recidivist procedures adopted in recent years by many other
States [
Footnote 2/1] -- and by
Texas herself since January 1 of last year [
Footnote 2/2] -- are far superior to those utilized in
the cases now before us. But the question for decision is not
whether we applaud, or even whether we personally approve, the
procedures followed in these recidivist cases. The question is
whether those procedures fall below the minimum level the
Fourteenth Amendment will tolerate. Upon that question, I am
constrained to join the opinion and judgment of the Court.
[
Footnote 2/1]
See opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE,
post at
385 U. S. 586,
n. 11.
[
Footnote 2/2]
See opinion of the Court,
ante at
385 U. S. 556,
n. 2.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN, with whom MR. JUSTICE FORTAS concurs,
dissenting in Nos. 68 and 69, and concurring in No. 70.
It seems to me that the only argument made by the Court which
might support its disposition of these cases is the amorphous one
that this Court should proceed hesitantly in dealing with courtroom
procedures which are alleged to violate the Due Process Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment. It attempts to bolster its decision with
arguments about the conceded validity of the purpose of recidivist
statutes, and by pointing to occasions
Page 385 U. S. 570
when evidence of prior crimes is traditionally admitted to serve
a specific purpose related to finding guilt or innocence. For the
reasons which I shall discuss, I do not find in these two arguments
support for the decision. Nor am I persuaded by its cautious
attitude toward this procedure. I recognize that the criteria for
decision in procedural due process cases are necessarily drawn from
the traditional jurisprudential attitudes of our legal system,
rather than from a relatively specific constitutional command.
However, this Court has long recognized the central importance of
courtroom procedures in maintaining our constitutional liberties.
As Mr. Justice Frankfurter often reminded us, the history of
individual liberty is largely coincident with the history of
observance of procedural safeguards,
Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee
Committee v. McGrath, 341 U. S. 123,
concurring opinion of Frankfurter, J., at
341 U. S.
164.
It seems to me that the use of prior convictions evidence in
these cases is fundamentally at odds with traditional notions of
due process not because this procedure is not the nicest resolution
of conflicting but legitimate interests of the State and the
accused, but because it needlessly prejudices the accused without
advancing any legitimate interest of the State. If I am wrong in
thinking that the introduction of prior convictions evidence serves
no valid purpose, I am not alone, for the Court never states what
interest of the State is advanced by this procedure. And this
failure, in my view, undermines the logic of the Court's
opinion.
There is much said about the valid purpose of enhanced
punishment for repeating offenders with which I agree, and about
the variety of occasions in criminal trials in which prior crimes
evidence is admitted as having some relevance to the question of
guilt or innocence. But I cannot find support for this procedure in
either the purposes of recidivist statutes or by analogy to the
Page 385 U. S. 571
traditional occasions where prior crimes evidence is admitted.
And the Court never faces up to the problem of trying to justify
this recidivist procedure on the ground that the State would not
violate due process if it used prior convictions simply as evidence
of guilt because it showed criminal propensity.
Recidivist statutes have never been thought to allow the State
to show probability of guilt because of prior convictions. Their
justification is only that a defendant's prior crimes should lead
to enhanced punishment for any subsequent offenses. Recidivist
statutes embody four traditional rationales for imposing penal
sanctions. [
Footnote 3/1] A man's
prior crimes are thought to aggravate his guilt for subsequent
crimes, and thus greater than usual retribution is warranted.
Similarly, the policies of insulating society from persons whose
past conduct indicates their propensity to criminal behavior, of
providing deterrence from future crime, and of rehabilitating
criminals, are all theoretically served by enhanced punishment
according to recidivist statutes. None of these four traditional
justifications for recidivist statutes is related in any way to the
burden of proof to which the State is put to prove that a crime has
currently been committed by the alleged recidivist. The fact of
prior convictions is not intended by recidivist statutes to make it
any easier for the State to prove the commission of a subsequent
crime. The State does not argue in these cases that its statutes
are, or constitutionally could be, intended to allow the prosecutor
to introduce prior convictions to show the accused's criminal
disposition. But the Court's opinion seems to accept, without
discussion, that this use of prior crimes evidence would be
consistent with due process.
The amended Texas procedure is the nearest demonstration that
none of the interests served by recidivist
Page 385 U. S. 572
statutes is advanced by presentation of prior crimes evidence
before the defendant has been found guilty. Under current statutory
law, [
Footnote 3/2] effective since
January 1, 1966, and therefore not involved in these cases, in
felony cases, the jury first decides the question of guilt or
innocence of the crime currently charged, and only after the
defendant is found guilty of the current crime is evidence
presented on the entirely separate question of whether the
defendant has been previously convicted of a crime which places him
within the scope of a recidivist statute requiring enhanced
punishment. Under the old Texas procedure involved in these cases,
just as under the new procedure, the fact of prior convictions is
relevant only to the question of enhanced punishment. Recidivist
statutes have nothing whatever to do with the method by which the
State shows that an accused has committed a crime.
Whether or not a State has recidivist statutes on its books, it
is well established that evidence of prior convictions may not be
used by the State to show that the accused has a criminal
disposition, and that the probability that he committed the crime
currently charged is increased. [
Footnote 3/3] While this Court has never held
Page 385 U. S. 573
that the use of prior convictions to show nothing more than a
disposition to commit crime would violate the Due Process Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment, our decisions exercising supervisory
power over criminal trials in federal courts, [
Footnote 3/4] as well as decisions by courts of
Page 385 U. S. 574
appeals [
Footnote 3/5] and of
state courts, [
Footnote 3/6]
suggest that evidence of prior crimes introduced for no purpose
other than to show criminal disposition would violate the Due
process Clause.
Page 385 U. S. 575
Evidence of prior convictions has been forbidden because it
jeopardizes the presumption of innocence of the crime currently
charged. A jury might punish an accused for being guilty of a
previous offense, or feel that incarceration is justified because
the accused is a "bad man," without regard to his guilt of the
crime currently charged. Of course, it flouts human nature to
suppose that a jury would not consider a defendant's previous
trouble with the law in deciding whether he has committed the crime
currently charged against him. As Mr. Justice Jackson put it in a
famous phrase,
"[t]he naive assumption that prejudicial effects can be overcome
by instructions to the jury . . . all practicing lawyers know to be
unmitigated fiction."
Krulewitch v. United States, 336 U.
S. 440,
336 U. S. 453
(concurring opinion) (1949).
United States v. Banmiller,
310 F.2d 720, 725 (C.A.3d Cir.1962). Mr. Justice Jackson's
assessment has received support from the most ambitious empirical
study of jury behavior that has been attempted,
see Kalven
& Zeisel, The American Jury 127-130, 177-180.
Recognition of the prejudicial effect of prior convictions
evidence has traditionally been related to the requirement of our
criminal law that the State prove beyond a reasonable doubt the
commission of a specific criminal act. It is surely engrained in
our jurisprudence that an accused's reputation or criminal
disposition is no basis for penal sanctions. Because of the
possibility that the generality of the jury's verdict might mask a
finding of guilt based on an accused's past crimes or unsavory
reputation, state and federal courts have consistently refused to
admit evidence of past crimes except in circumstances where it
tends to prove something other than general criminal
disposition.
As I have stated, I do not understand the opinion to assert that
this Court would find consistent with due process the admission of
prior crimes evidence for no
Page 385 U. S. 576
purpose other than what probative value it has bearing on an
accused's disposition to commit a crime currently charged. It
ignores this issue, and points out that evidence of prior crimes in
other contexts has not been thought so prejudicial that it cannot
be admitted to serve a particular valid purpose. Thus, past crimes
may be used to show a common design between a past crime and one
currently charged, to show the distinctive handiwork of the
defendant, or to show that the act presently at issue was probably
not unintentional. [
Footnote 3/7]
We need not disagree with the admission of evidence of prior
convictions in cases such as these, because past convictions are
directly relevant to the question of guilt or innocence of the
crime currently charged. It is admitted because its probative
value, going to elements of the current charges, is so strong that
it outweighs the prejudice inherent in evidence of prior crimes.
Also, as the Court further points out, evidence of prior crimes has
traditionally been admitted to either impeach the defendant's
credibility when he testifies in his own behalf, or to counteract
evidence introduced by the defendant as to his good character. In
each of these situations, the possibility of prejudice resulting
from the evidence of prior convictions is thought to be outweighed
by the legitimate purposes served by the evidence. When a defendant
attempts to convince the jury of his innocence by showing it that
he is a person of such character that it is unlikely that he
committed the crime charged, the State has a legitimate interest in
counteracting this evidence of good character by showing that the
accused has been previously convicted. The defendant has initiated
the inquiry into his reputation, and the State should be allowed to
respond to this general character evidence as best it can.
Page 385 U. S. 577
Similarly, when prior convictions are introduced to impeach the
credibility of a defendant who testifies, a specific purpose is
thought to be served. The theory is that the State should be
permitted to show that the defendant witness' credibility is
qualified by his past record of delinquent behavior. In other
words, the defendant is put to the same credibility test as any
other witness. A defendant has some control over the State's
opportunity to introduce this evidence, in that he may decide
whether or not to take the stand. Moreover, the jury hears of the
prior convictions following a defendant's testimony, and it may be
thought that this trial context, combined with the usual limiting
instruction, results in the jury's actually behaving in accordance
with the theory of limiting instructions: that is, that the prior
convictions are only taken into account in assessing the
defendant's credibility.
Although the theory justifying admission of evidence of prior
convictions to impeach a defendant's credibility has been
criticized, [
Footnote 3/8] all that
is necessary for purposes of deciding this case is to accept its
theoretical justification and to note the basic difference between
it and the Texas recidivist procedure. In the case of impeachment,
as in all the examples cited by the Court, the prior convictions
are considered probative for a limited purpose which is relevant to
the jury's finding of guilt or innocence. This purpose is, of
course, completely different from the purpose for which prior
convictions are admitted in recidivist cases, where there is no
connection between the evidence and guilt or innocence.
In all the situations pointed out by the Court, the admission of
prior crimes evidence rests on a conclusion that the probative
value of the evidence outweighs the
Page 385 U. S. 578
conceded possibility of prejudice. There is no middle position
between the alternatives of admission or exclusion, because, if the
evidence is to serve the purpose for which it is considered
probative, it must be admitted before the jury decides whether the
defendant is guilty or innocent. The problem thus becomes the
delicate one of balancing probative value against the possibility
of prejudice, and the result for most state and federal courts
(including this Court in the exercise of its supervisory power over
proceedings in federal courts) has been that the trial judge is
given discretion to draw the balance in the context of the trial.
In view of this uniform tradition, it is apparent that prior
convictions evidence introduced for certain specific purposes
relating to the determination of guilt or innocence, other than to
show a general criminal disposition, would not violate the Due
Process Clause.
From these situations where the probative value of prior
convictions evidence is thought to outweigh its prejudicial impact,
the Court draws the legitimate conclusion that prior convictions
evidence is not so inherently prejudicial that its admission is
invariably prohibited. It combines this premise with the concededly
valid purpose of recidivist statutes to produce the following
logic: since prior crimes evidence may be admitted at the guilt
phase of a trial where the admission serves a valid purpose, and
since the purpose of recidivist statutes is valid, prior crimes may
be proven in the course of the guilt phase of a trial in order that
the jury may also assess whether a defendant, if found guilty,
should be sentenced to an enhanced punishment under recidivist
statutes. I believe this syllogism is plausible only on the
surface, because the Court's premises do not combine to justify its
far-reaching result. I believe the Court has fallen into the
logical fallacy sometimes known as the fallacy of the undistributed
middle, because it has failed to examine the
Page 385 U. S. 579
supposedly shared principle between admission of prior crimes
related to guilt and admission in connection with recidivist
statutes. [
Footnote 3/9] That the
admission in both situations may serve a valid purpose does not
demonstrate that the former practice justifies the latter, any more
than the fact that men and dogs are animals means that men and dogs
are the same in all respects.
Unlike the purpose for the admission of prior convictions
evidence in all the examples cited by the Court, the admission in
connection with enhancing punishment for repeating offenders has
nothing whatever to do with the question of guilt or innocence of
the crime currently charged. Because of the complete irrelevance of
prior convictions to the question of guilt or innocence, the
recidivist situation is not one where the trial courts are called
upon to balance the probative value of prior convictions against
their prejudicial impact. The purpose of admitting prior
convictions evidence should be served, and prejudice completely
avoided, by the simple expedient of a procedure which reflects the
exclusive relevance of recidivist statutes to the issue of proper
punishment. Only after a defendant has been found guilty does the
question of whether he fits the recidivist category become relevant
to the sentence, and any issue of fact as to his prior convictions
should then be decided by the jury.
The availability of this procedural alternative, through which
the interests of the State, as reflected in its recidivist
statutes, can be fully effectuated, while prejudice to the
defendant is avoided, means that the only interest the State may
offset against the possibility of prejudice to justify introducing
evidence of prior crimes in these cases is the inconvenience which
would result from postponing a determination that the defendant
falls within a recidivist category until after the jury has found
him guilty of the crime currently charged. However, for the
Page 385 U. S. 580
purpose of deciding these cases, it is not necessary to consider
whether the State's convenience in not conducting a two-stage trial
justifies the prejudice which ensues when prior convictions are
presented to a jury before it has decided whether the defendant is
guilty of the crime charged. For the fact is that Texas has not
even this matter of convenience in the method used to find facts
regarding prior convictions to balance against the prejudice which
ensues from the admission of this prior convictions evidence. In
No. 68,
Spencer v. Texas, the defendant offered to
stipulate to the truth of that portion of the indictment which
alleged that he had been previously convicted of a crime which put
him within the scope of a recidivist statute. The prosecutor
refused to accept this stipulation, and the Texas courts allowed
proof of the prior conviction to be presented to the jury on the
ground that, under the recidivist statute dealing with capital
crimes, the jury has a choice between the death penalty and life
imprisonment. The courts reasoned that the existence of the prior
conviction was information which the jury would find relevant in
determining sentence. Of course, the offered stipulation dispensed
completely with the need for the State to have the fact of prior
crimes found by the jury to determine whether a recidivist statute
applied to the defendant. Instead, the State tries to justify the
refusal to accept the stipulation on the ground that it was
relevant to the jury's discretion in ordering the death penalty.
But this rationale would justify letting the jury hear, before
determining guilt or innocence, all kinds of evidence which might
be relevant to sentencing, but which has traditionally been
considered extremely prejudicial if admitted during the guilt phase
of a trial. Thus, this argument would justify admitting probation
reports, all kinds of hearsay evidence about the defendant's past,
medical and psychiatric reports, and virtually anything else which
might seem relevant to the
Page 385 U. S. 581
broad discretion exercised in sentencing. The Court evidently
believes that it is consistent with due process for a State to
introduce evidence of a kind traditionally considered prejudicial
which is relevant only to sentencing discretion in a single-stage
trial before a finding of guilt. This seems to me the only possible
ground for affirming No. 68, since it is obvious that the offer of
stipulation removes the need for a finding of fact as to the prior
conviction in connection with the recidivist statute.
I would reverse No. 68 and remand for a new trial. For me, the
State's refusal to accept the stipulation removes any vestige of
legitimate interest it might have to balance against the prejudice
to the accused. To nevertheless admit the evidence seems to me
entirely inconsistent with the way evidence of prior convictions is
traditionally handled in our legal system.
What I have said about the State's lack of interest in
introducing this evidence when the defendant tries to stipulate to
the prior conviction seems to me to apply equally to defendants
under the Texas procedure who were not offered the opportunity of
stipulating to their prior convictions. Because of the unclear
state of the law in Texas as to the right to have such a
stipulation accepted, the failure of a defendant to volunteer a
stipulation cannot be interpreted as indicative of what would have
happened if the State made stipulation a right. The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals approved a stipulation procedure for felony cases
in
Pitcock v. State, 367
S.W.2d 864 (1963), on the convincing ground that, because the
recidivist statutes in felony cases provided for automatic
sentencing, a stipulation resolved all issues for which the prior
convictions were relevant. As the court put it: "[t]o allow its
introduction after such stipulation resolves no issue, and may
result in prejudice to the accused." 367 S.W.2d at 865. However,
two later cases held that refusal by the prosecutor to accept a
Page 385 U. S. 582
stipulation, and the introduction of evidence to the jury of
prior convictions over an offer of stipulation was not reversible
error.
See Sims v. State, 388
S.W.2d 714 (1965);
Ross v. State, 401
S.W.2d 844 (1966). Thus, the Texas courts reduced the
stipulation procedure to an admonition to the prosecutor, and
allowed refusal of the stipulation even though, in felony cases,
the only conceivable reason the prosecutor could have for refusing
was to have the benefit of the prejudicial impact of presenting
prior convictions to the jury.
Because the stipulation procedure had become merely a matter of
prosecutorial discretion, the petitioners in Nos. 69 and 70 cannot
be said to have waived any right to stipulate their prior
convictions, and it seems to me that, in the absence of a
stipulation right, they must be regarded in the same light as the
petitioner in No. 68, whose offer of stipulation was refused. If a
defendant's offer of stipulation removes any legitimate interest
the State might otherwise have in presenting prior convictions to
the jury for recidivist purposes, and makes the introduction
inconsistent with due process, then it seems to me that the
protection of the Due Process Clause should not be limited
according to whether a defendant actually explored the chance that
a prosecutor might accept an offer of stipulation. Since a
stipulation procedure would completely effectuate the minimal state
interest in having facts found under its recidivist statutes
without the inconvenience of a two-part trial, while at the same
time offering a defendant the chance to prevent the possibility of
prejudice, it seems to me that due process requires this
safeguard.
If the admission of prior convictions evidence solely for the
purpose of enhancing punishment in the event a defendant is found
guilty violates due process when the defendant is not given the
right of conceding the prior convictions evidence to prevent its
admission, petitioners'
Page 385 U. S. 583
convictions in Nos. 68 and 69 must be reversed. No. 70, however,
raises the question of whether a decision that the old Texas
procedure violates due process should be retroactively applied to
convictions which are final but which are collaterally attacked in
the federal courts by habeas corpus. Considerations of fundamental
fairness have led to the opening of final judgments in criminal
cases when it has appeared that a conviction was achieved in
violation of basic constitutional standards. Thus, in the decisions
which have been applied retroactively,
Gideon v.
Wainwright, 372 U. S. 335
(1963);
Douglas v. California, 372 U.
S. 353 (1963);
Griffin v. Illinois,
351 U. S. 12
(1956), and
Jackson v. Denno, 378 U.
S. 368 (1964), the Court concluded that the
constitutional error perceived undermined "the very integrity of
the factfinding process,"
Linkletter v. Walker,
381 U. S. 618,
381 U. S. 639
(1965), and the fundamental fairness of the resulting conviction.
On the other hand, our decisions in
Linkletter and
Tehan v. Shott, 382 U. S. 406
(1966), demonstrate that practices found to violate the Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment need not necessarily be applied
to final convictions. The factors adverted to in those cases for
determining whether a constitutional decision should be applied to
final cases were the State's reliance on the conduct newly found
unconstitutional, whether the purpose of the new rule would be
served by fully retroactive effect, and the effect of retroactivity
on the administration of justice.
In my view, these factors justify limiting the application of
the decision I propose to nonfinal convictions. Texas came to rely
on the constitutionality of the procedure involved in these cases
by this Court's consistent failure to review the practice until the
grant of certiorari in these cases. Moreover, there can be no doubt
but that application of this rule to final convictions would
seriously disrupt the administration of criminal
Page 385 U. S. 584
law in Texas as well as the other States which have employed a
similar procedure in recidivist cases.
Cf. Johnson v. New
Jersey, 384 U. S. 719
(1966). Thus, the question becomes whether the procedure which I
would hold unconstitutional infected every proceeding of which it
was a part with the clear danger of convicting the innocent.
See Tehan v. Shott, supra. It seems to me that the
prejudicial impact of the Texas procedure is not so great as to
justify application to final cases.
In all the cases where the constitutional doctrine has been
retroactively applied, the judgment was made that the procedure
found erroneous went to the heart of the fairness of the conviction
and raised the danger of convicting the innocent. Thus, in
Gideon and
Douglas, the Court concluded that
failure of an indigent defendant to be represented by counsel at
trial and on appeal negated the possibility of a fair adversary
proceeding. Similarly, the rule of
Griffin v. Illinois was
retroactively applied because forcing an indigent to forgo a
meaningful appeal because he could not pay for a transcript meant
that the availability of a basic part of the State's system for
determining guilt or innocence was conditioned on financial
resources. This procedure was an obvious and fundamental denial of
fairness in the process leading to conviction. In the final area
where new rulings have been retroactively applied,
Jackson v.
Denno, the prejudice to the defendant was that he was not
assured of a fair procedure in determining the voluntariness of his
confession, and, moreover, that a jury might take into account a
confession which it believed to be coerced in determining the
defendant's guilt. Obviously, the prejudice which results from the
jury's learning of a confession which is obtained
unconstitutionally goes directly to the heart of the finding of
guilt, and, because one reason the Constitution has been held to
outlaw involuntary confessions is their unreliability,
Brown v.
Mississippi, 297 U. S. 278
(1936) (for
Page 385 U. S. 585
other reasons,
see, e.g., Rogers v. Richmond,
365 U. S. 534
(1961);
Culombe v. Connecticut, 367 U.
S. 568 (1961)), the procedure held unconstitutional in
Jackson involved a danger of convicting the innocent.
In contrast to the unconstitutional procedures involved in the
cases discussed above, the admission of prior convictions evidence
in connection with a recidivist statute does not seem to me to
justify reversal of final convictions. The fact that prior
convictions evidence has been traditionally admitted when related
to guilt or innocence suggests that its prejudice has not been
thought so great as to undermine "the very integrity of the
factfinding process" and to involve a "clear danger of convicting
the innocent."
See Linkletter v. Walker, 381 U.S. at
381 U. S. 639;
Tehan v. Shott, 382 U.S. at
382 U. S. 416.
Consequently, I would not apply a decision in line with this
dissent to final convictions, such as No. 70, a habeas corpus
proceeding.
The decision I propose is consistent with a large body of
judicial thought. Two United States Courts of Appeals have adopted
the view that recidivist procedures which authorize admission of
prior convictions evidence before the jury determines that the
defendant is guilty violate due process. In
Lane v.
Warden, 320 F.2d 179 (C.A.4th Cir.1963), the court reasoned
that
"it is patent that jurors would be likely to find a man guilty
of a narcotics violation more readily if aware that he has had
prior illegal association with narcotics. . . . Such a prejudice
would clearly violate the standards of impartiality required for a
fair trial."
320 F.2d at 185. In the same vein, the Third Circuit, in
United States v. Banmiller, 310 F.2d 720 (1962), reasoned
that a procedure like the one involved in the three cases at bar
would cause the jury to have in mind the defendant's previous
convictions in determining his guilt of the crime currently
charged. Both these courts, in fact, went farther than I would, in
that they applied their decisions to final
Page 385 U. S. 586
convictions. In England, the prejudice which results from proof
of prior crimes before a finding of guilt has been recognized for
more than a century, and the rule has been that a finding as to
prior crimes is made in a separate hearing after the finding of
guilt. [
Footnote 3/10]
The majority of States have adopted procedures which cure the
prejudice inherent in the procedure in the cases at bar. In all,
some 31 States have recidivist procedures which postpone the
introduction of prior convictions until after the jury has found
the defendant guilty of the crime currently charged. [
Footnote 3/11] And at least three
others
Page 385 U. S. 587
have substantially mitigated the prejudice of the single-stage
recidivist procedure by affording the defendant the right to
stipulate to his prior crimes to prevent their introduction at the
trial. [
Footnote 3/12] Thus, only
16 States still maintain the needlessly prejudicial procedure
exemplified in these three cases. The decision I propose would
require only a small number of States to make a relatively minor
adjustment in their criminal procedure to avoid the manifest
unfairness and prejudice which have already been eliminated in
England and in 34 of the United States.
I would reverse the convictions in Nos. 68 and 69 and remand for
a new trial. In No. 70, I would affirm this final conviction.
[
Footnote 3/1]
See generally Note, Recidivist Procedures, 40
N.Y.U.L.Rev.32 (1965).
[
Footnote 3/2]
Texas Code Crim.Proc. Art. 36.01, effective January 1, 1966. The
new two-stage procedure does not apply in capital cases, the reason
for the distinction apparently being because, in capital cases, the
jury has a choice of punishment under the applicable recidivist
statute. The validity of this distinction will be discussed
below.
[
Footnote 3/3]
Professor McCormick states:
"The rule is that the prosecution may not introduce evidence of
other criminal acts of the accused unless the evidence is
substantially relevant for some other purpose than to show a
probability that he committed the crime on trial because he is a
man of criminal character."
McCormick, Evidence § 157 (1954 ed.). Dean Wigmore agrees
with this statement of the general rule of exclusion, 1 Wigmore,
Evidence §§ 193-194 (3d ed.1940). As Wigmore points out,
evidence of prior crimes is objectionable not because it is not
somewhat probative, but because the jury is likely to give it more
weight than it deserves, and might decide that the defendant
deserves to be punished because of the past crime without regard to
whether he is guilty of the crime currently charged.
[
Footnote 3/4]
See, e.g., Marshall v. United States, 360 U.
S. 310 (1959);
Michelson v. United States,
335 U. S. 469
(1948);
Boyd v. United States, 142 U.
S. 450 (1892).
In
Michelson, the Court stated:
"Courts that follow the common law tradition almost unanimously
have come to disallow resort by the prosecution to any kind of
evidence of a defendant's evil character to establish a probability
of his guilt. Not that the law invests the defendant with a
presumption of good character,
Greer v. United States,
245 U. S.
559, but it simply closes the whole matter of character,
disposition and reputation on the prosecution's case-in-chief. The
state may not show defendant's prior trouble with the law, specific
criminal acts, or ill name among his neighbors, even though such
facts might logically be persuasive that he is, by propensity, a
probable perpetrator of the crime. The inquiry is not rejected
because character is irrelevant; on the contrary, it is said to
weigh too much with the jury, and to so overpersuade them as to
prejudge one with a bad general record and deny him a fair
opportunity to defend against a particular charge. The overriding
policy of excluding such evidence, despite its admitted probative
value, is the practical experience that its disallowance tends to
prevent confusion of issues, unfair surprise and undue
prejudice."
335 U.S. at
335 U. S.
475-476.
In
Marshall, the Court reversed a conviction where it
was shown that newspaper accounts of the defendant's prior
convictions had been seen by a substantial number of jurors. The
Court stated:
". . . We have here the exposure of jurors to information of a
character which the trial judge ruled was so prejudicial it could
not be directly offered as evidence. The prejudice to the defendant
is almost certain to be as great when that evidence reaches the
jury through news accounts as when it is a part of the
prosecution's evidence."
360 U.S. at
360 U. S.
312-313.
In
Boyd, the defendants were charged with murder
following an attempt to rob, and the prosecution introduced
evidence that the defendants had committed other robberies before
the one involved in the crime charged. The Court, in an opinion by
the first Mr. Justice Harlan, held the evidence of other crimes
inadmissible:
". . . Those robberies may have been committed by the defendants
in March, and yet they may have been innocent of the murder of
Dansby in April. Proof of them only tended to prejudice the
defendants with the jurors, to draw their minds away from the real
issue, and to produce the impression that they were wretches whose
lives were of no value to the community, and who were not entitled
to the full benefit of the rules prescribed by law for the trial of
human beings charged with crime involving the punishment of
death."
142 U.S. at
142 U. S.
458.
[
Footnote 3/5]
See, e.g., Lovely v. United States, 169 F.2d 386, 389
(C.A.4th Cir.1948):
"The rule which thus forbids the introduction of evidence of
other offenses having no reasonable tendency to prove the crime
charged, except insofar as they may establish a criminal tendency
on the part of the accused, is not a mere technical rule of law. It
arises out of the fundamental demand for justice and fairness which
lies at the basis of our jurisprudence. If such evidence were
allowed, not only would the time of courts be wasted in the trial
of collateral issues, but persons accused of crime would he greatly
prejudiced before juries, and would be otherwise embarrassed in
presenting their defenses on the issues really on trial."
Railton v. United States, 127 F.2d 691, 693 (C.A. 5th
Cir.194):
". . . It is logical to conclude, and very apt to be concluded,
that, because a man was dishonest once he will steal again. It is
certainly 'more probable' that a crooked official did steal than if
he were an upright one. Yet our law forbids these very premises. It
cannot be shown that the accused has committed other similar crimes
to show that it is probable he committed the one charged."
Cf. also Tedesco v. United States, 118 F.2d 737 (C.A.
9th Cir.1941);
Swann v. United States, 195 F.2d 689
(C.A.4th Cir.1952);
United States v. Jacangelo, 281 F.2d
574 (C.A.3d Cir.1960).
[
Footnote 3/6]
Texas recognizes this general rule,
Seay v.
State, 395
S.W.2d 40. Other typical decisions are
People v.
Molineux, 168 N.Y. 264, 61 N.Y. 86 (1901);
State v.
Scott, 111 Utah 9, 175 P.2d 1016 (1947).
See also State v.
Myrick, 181 Kan. 1056,
317 P.2d 485
(1957);
Scarbrough v. State, 204 Miss. 487, 37 So. 2d 748
(1948).
[
Footnote 3/7]
See generally exceptions set out in McCormick, Evidence
§ 157.
[
Footnote 3/8]
See, e.g., Note, Other Crimes Evidence at Trial: of
Balancing and Other Matters, 70 Yale L.J. 763 (1961).
[
Footnote 3/9]
See Stebbing, A Modern Introduction to Logic 88 (6th
ed.1948).
[
Footnote 3/10]
Coinage Offences Act, 1861, 24 & 25 Vict., c. 99; Act of 6
& 7 Will. 4, c. 111; Reg. v. Shuttleworth, 3 Car. & K.
375.
[
Footnote 3/11]
The States which have adopted a procedure, either by legislation
or judicial decision, which separates the determination of prior
convictions from the determination of guilt of the crime currently
charged are: Alaska, Alaska Stat. § 12.55.060 (1962);
Arkansas,
Miller v. State, 239 Ark. 836,
394 S.W.2d 601
(1965); Colorado,
Heinze v. People, 127 Colo. 54,
253 P.2d 596
(1953); Connecticut,
State v. Ferrone, 96 Conn. 160, 113
A. 452 (1921); Delaware, Del.Code Ann. Tit. 11, § 3912(b)
(Supp. 1964); Florida, Fla.Stat.Ann. § 775.11 (1965),
Shargaa v. State, 102 So. 2d
814 (1958); Idaho,
State v. Johnson, 86 Idaho 51, 383
P.2d 326 (1963); Illinois, Ill.Rev.Stat. c. 38, §§
603.1-603.9 (1963), Ill.Rev.Stat. c. 38, § 22-43 (1965);
Kansas, Kan.Gen.Stat.Ann. § 21-107a (1949); Louisiana,
La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 15:529.1D (Supp. 1962); Maryland, Md.Rule
of Proc. 713; Michigan, Mich.Stat.Ann. § 28.1085 (1954);
Minnesota, Minn.Stat.Ann. § 609.16; Missouri, Mo.Rev.Stat.
§ 556.280 (1959); Nebraska, Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2221
(1964); New York, N.Y.Pen.Law § 1943; New Mexico,
Johnson
v. Cox, 72 N.M. 55,
380 P.2d 199
(1963); North Dakota, N.D.Cent.Code § 12-06-23 (1960); Ohio,
Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 2961.13 (1954); Oklahoma, Okla.Stat.Ann.
Tit. 22, § 860 (Supp. 1964),
Harris v.
State, 369
P.2d 187 (1962); Oregon, Ore.Rev.Stat. § 168.065 (1961);
Pennsylvania, Pa.Stat.Ann. Tit. 18, § 5108 (1963); South
Dakota, S.D.Code § 13.0611(3) (1939); Tennessee, Tenn.Code
Ann. § 40-2801 (1955),
Harrison v. State, ___ Tenn.
___,
394
S.W.2d 713 (1965); Texas, Texas Code Crim.Proc. Art. 36.01
(1966); Utah, Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-19 (1953),
State v.
Stewart, 110 Utah 203, 171 P.2d 383 (1946); Virginia, Va.Code
Ann. § 53-296 (1958); Washington,
State v.
Kirkpatrick, 181 Wash. 313, 43 P.2d 44 (1935); West Virginia,
W.Va.Code Ann. § 6131 (1961). In addition to these 29 States,
two States take prior convictions into account in the determination
of when a convict is eligible for parole, and entrust the
factfinding determination to parole boards: Mississippi, Miss.Code
Ann. § 4004-03 (Supp. 1964), as amended, Miss.Laws 1964, c.
366; New Jersey, N.J.Stat.Ann. § 30:4-123.12 (1964),
N.J.Rev.Stat. § 2A:85-13 (Supp. 1966). Thus, 31 States in all
have adopted wholly nonprejudicial procedures in connection with
their recidivist statutes.
[
Footnote 3/12]
The three States which have adopted a stipulation procedure are:
Arizona, Ariz.Rule Crim.Proc. 180, Ariz.Code Ann. § 44-1004
(1939),
Montgomery v. Eyman, 96 Ariz. 55,
391 P.2d 915
(1964); California, Cal.Penal Code § 1025,
People v.
Hobb, 37 Cal. App. 2d
8, 98 P.2d 775 (1940), and Wisconsin,
State v. Meyer,
258 Wis. 326, 46 N.W.2d 341 (1951).
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS joins,
dissenting.
I join the opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE insofar as that opinion
would reverse in Nos. 68 and 69. I would,
Page 385 U. S. 588
however, also reverse in No. 70. It seems to me that the
constitutional error here involved undermined "the very integrity
of the factfinding process,"
Linkletter v. Walker,
381 U. S. 618,
381 U. S. 639,
and I would therefore apply the rule retroactively.
Gideon v.
Wainwright, 372 U. S. 335;
Douglas v. California, 372 U. S. 353;
Griffin v. Illinois, 351 U. S. 12;
Jackson v. Denno, 378 U. S. 368.