Rehearing Denied Dec. 4, 1972. See 409 U.S. 1050.
On petition for writ of certiorari to the United States Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit.
The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied.
Mr. Justice MARSHALL, with whom Mr. Justice DOUGLAS concurs,
dissenting.
I dissent. I think petitioner's guilty plea entered in New York
state court was clearly involuntary, particularly, after our
decision last Term in Santobello v. New York,
404 U.S. 257 ( 1971). On
October 23, 1968, petitioner was charged in an indictment returned
in New York state court with one count of criminally selling a
dangerous drug in the second degree1 and one count of criminally
selling a dangerous drug in the third degree. [
Footnote 2] In November 1968, a second indictment
was returned against petitioner in state court charging him with a
single count of criminally selling a dangerous drug in the third
degree. Prior to the 1969 amendments of the New York Penal Law,
criminally selling a dangerous drug in the second degree was
punishable by a maximum of 15 years' imprisonment, while the
maximum sentence under a third degree charge was seven years'
imprisonment. [
Footnote 3] At
arraignment, petitioner pleaded not guilty to all the charges; the
case was set for trial. On February 17, 1969, the State moved for
trial. Before the proceedings commenced, the prosecutor, the
defense counsel, and the trial judge met in the judge's
Page 409 U.S.
959 , 960
chambers-in the absence of the petitioner-to discuss the case.
When the case was subsequently called for disposition, the
prosecutor began by stating that he understood petitioner wished to
withdraw his earlier pleas of not guilty and to 'enter a plea of
guilty to the second count of [the October 23] indictment . . .
charging [him] with the crime of Criminally Selling a Dangerous
Drug in the Third Degree.' At this point the court interrupted the
prosecutor and the following exchange occurred:
'The Court: Wait a minute. Third
Degree?
'[Prosecutor]: The second count, Your
Honor, of the [first] indictment . . ..
'[Defense Counsel]: There are two
counts of Second Degree and one of Third Degree.
'The Court: That is not what I
understood.
* * * * *
'(Whereupon a conversation was had
off the record).
'The Court: . . . [A]s far as I am
concerned, it may be that two indictments were to be disposed of
through one plea, but it was not a plea to Selling a Dangerous Drug
in the Third Degree. That was no part of our talk.
'[Defense Counsel]: It was this
afternoon, Judge.
'The Court: It was not part of our
talk.'
Unable to obtain the plea he had expected, defense counsel
requested a one-day adjournment because he was 'not prepared to go
to trial.'
'The Court: The case will proceed to
trial or disposition right now.
'[Defense Counsel]: . . . This case
was answered ready by my office at the February calendar, but I was
not informed until this morning that we were proceeding. And I
would again respectfully request
Page 409 U.S.
959 , 961
that the court grant me until at least tomorrow morning.
'The Court: Application
denied.'
When the defense counsel subsequently turned to the
prosecutor-the same prosecutor who only a moment before had stated
in open court that he understood the defendant wished to change his
pleas of not guilty to a plea of guilty to the third degree
charge-for assistance in clearing up the confusion, the only
response was, 'No comment.'
Defense counsel indicated that he was going to withdraw 'because
I can't adequately defend this man without some preparation, and I
think the District Attorney should at least give me that kind of
notice.' Defense counsel was given a few moments to speak with
petitioner. Faced with the dilemma of either proceeding immediately
to trial on all three charges with unprepared counsel or pleading
guilty to one count of selling a dangerous drug in the second
degree, petitioner not unexpectedly chose the latter course as the
lesser of two evils. The usual litany of the plea then followed.
[
Footnote 4] In advance of
sentencing, petitioner sought to withdraw his plea but this was
denied, and he received an indefinite sentence of from five to 15
years' imprisonment. After appealing his case through the state
courts,5 petitioner sought review of his plea by way of federal
habeas corpus. The District Court denied relief without a hearing,
and
Page 409 U.S.
959 , 962
the Court of Appeals affirmed with one judge dissenting,
455 F.2d
705 (CA2 1972.)
Last Term in Santobello we emphasized the importance of the plea
bargaining process: 'If every criminal charge were subject to a
full-scale trial, the States and Federal Government would need to
multiply by many times the number of judges and court facilities,'
404 U.S., at 260, 91 S. Ct. 945. But a guilty plea necessarily
involves the waiver of a variety of fundamental constitutional
rights, see, e. g., Duncan v. Louisiana,
391 U.S.
145, 194 (1968) (right to jury trial); Pointer v. Texas,
380 U.S. 400
(1965) ( right to confront one's accusers), and the process by
which it is obtained must therefore be governed by a standard of
absolute fairness. The plea must be the result of 'a voluntary and
intelligent choice among the alternative courses of action open to
defendant.' North Carolina v. Alford,
400 U.S.
25, 31 (1970). See also Boykin v. Alabama,
395 U.S.
238, 242 (1969); Machibroda v. United States,
368 U.S.
487, 493 (1962). I think it clear that this petitioner was
denied such a choice. To be sure, it is in the nature of the plea
bargaining process that some pressure is brought to bear on the
defendant to enter a plea. But here the normal pressures inherent
in the plea bargaining process were improperly argumented by both
the prosecutor and the trial judge.
In Santobello, supra, 404 U.S. at 262, we said 'that when a plea
rests in any significant degree on a promise or agreement of the
prosecutor, so that it can be said to be a part of the inducement
or consideration, such promise must be fulfilled.' In that decision
we condemned a prosecutor's failure to abide by the agreement of an
associate who had promised to make no recommendation as to sentence
in return for the guilty plea. What occurred here was far more
serious. It would be naive to deny that, at least as between
defense counsel and the prosecutor, a clear understanding had been
reached in the judge's chambers
Page 409 U.S.
959 , 963
that petitioner would be allowed to plead guilty to the
third-degree charge. The prosecutor's opening remarks in the
subsequent proceedings unquestionably indicate that this was the
case. Yet when defense counsel turned to the prosecutor for
corroboration that the deal struck was indeed for a plea to the
less serious charge in the third degree, he received only the
unhelpful 'No comment.' This is not fulfillment by the prosecutor
of his promise. And at this juncture it is impossible to assess
what impact affirmative support from the prosecutor might have had
upon the trial judge who quickly became unreceptive to the
unsupported efforts of defense cousel to clarify the situation.
I would not stop in this case, however, with the prosecutor. For
the trial judge saw fit to become a party to the plea negotiations
and agreement. Whatever the considerations when the judge is not a
participant in the plea bargaining process, it seems to me that
once he has injected himself into that process he must he held to
the same strict standard of fairness as the prosecutor. This is not
to say that the trial judge should be deprived of his traditional
discretion to reject a plea of guilty; I agree that '[t]here is . .
. no absolute right to have a guilty plea accepted,' Santobello,
supra, at 262, citing Lynch v. Overholser,
369 U.S.
705, 719 (1962). By the same token, though, a trial judge
cannot be allowed to use his discretion to apply undue pressures on
a defendant. Nothing could be more destructive of the integrity-and
ultimately the viability-of the plea bargaining process. I do not
doubt that in this instance there was a misunderstanding between
the prosecutor and defense counsel, on the one hand, and the trial
judge, on the other, as to the charge to which petitioner would be
allowed to plead guilty. In light of this confusion over the plea
agreement, the trial judge was justified in refusing to accept the
plea to the third- degree
Page 409 U.S.
959 , 964
charge. But he certainly was not justified in visiting the
consequences of the misunderstanding and the resulting confusion on
petitioner by compelling him either to go to trial on all three
charges with counsel that was unprepared or to plead guilty to the
more serious charge. Having been a party to the negotiations and
having thereafter refused to accept the plea which both the other
parties to the negotiations thought was agreed upon, the trial
judge was obligated to allow petitioner to extract himself from the
predicament in which he had been placed by the misunderstanding
which subsequently became apparent. Consequently, I believe that
the judge should at least have granted the one-day continuance
requested by defense counsel.
It is no answer that defense counsel should have been prepared
to proceed to trial at once because his office had answered ready
to the call of the February calendar. First, it is not disputed
that defense counsel was not informed until the morning of the
proceeding that the case was to be heard. We cannot ignore that in
these days of crowded dockets, attorneys-as well as judges-are
often forced to juggle unreasonably large case loads. Moreover,
regardless of whether defense counsel technically should have been
ready for trial because the case had previously been answered ready
at the call of the February calendar, counsel undoubtedly could
have made valuable use of the time between the conference in the
judge's chambers and the formal disposition of the case had he not
been under the misimpression that a bargain had been struck.
[
Footnote 6] In short, I
question whether defense counsel can be faulted for his
unpreparedness for immediate trial upon discover-
Page 409 U.S.
959 , 965
ing that a plea to a third-degree charge would not be accepted.
But whatever the justification for defense counsel's
unpreparedness, it was the petitioner, nor his counsel, whom the
trial judge forced to bear the consequences. I cannot accept this
penalizing of petitioner for the conduct of his attorney given the
importance of the rights at stake. Weighed against the right of
effective assistance of counsel, the request for a one-day
continuance was hardly unreasonable. Previously we have said:
And the alternative to proceeding with unprepared counsel was
the waiver of a variety of important constitutional rights by way
of a plea of guilty to a charge to which, as a matter of unfettered
choice, petitioner was obviously not prepared to plead guilty.
Therefore, I think-as I have already indicated-granting of the
short continuance7 requested was incumbent on the trial judge
Page 409 U.S.
959 , 966
once he had rejected the plea bargain which everyone else
understood to have been struck. The judge's refusal to grant the
continuance can only be viewed as an unjustified compounding of the
coercive circumstances under which petitioner's plea was
procured.
Hence, I would grant the petition for certiorari and remand the
case with instructions that petitioner's plea be vacated and he be
allowed to replead to the original charges. In Santobello, the
Court declined to direct that the guilty plea there at issue be
vacated and simply remanded for reconsideration. The broken promise
in Santobello, however, affected only the petitioner's sentence,
not the charge to which he had pleaded guilty. Here, by contrast,
the conduct of the prosecutor and the trial judge improperly
coerced petitioner to plead guilty to the second-degree charge.
Footnotes
Footnote 1 N.Y.Penal Law,
McKinney's Consol. Law, c. 40, 220.35 (1967), as amended, N.Y.Penal
Law 220.35 (Supp. 1972-1973).
Footnote 2 N.Y.Penal Law
220.30 (1967), as amended, N.Y.Penal Law 220.30 ( Supp.
1972-1973).
Footnote 3 See N.Y.Penal Law
70.00(2)(c)-(d) (1967).
Footnote 4 Indeed, there was
only a single slip by petitioner when he indicated that he had been
told what sentence he would receive. Defense counsel quickly denied
this, and petitioner naturally corrected himself.
Footnote 5 People v.
Martinez, 34 A.D.2d 174, 311 N.Y.S.2d 117 (4th Dept. 1970), leave
to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals was denied, and a
petition for a writ of certiorari was denied by this Court, 401
U.S. 941 (1971).
Footnote 6 Although the
record is not entirely clear on this point, it does appear that a
substantial amount of time elapsed between the conference in the
judge's chambers and whom petitioner's case was called for formal
disposition.
'The matter of continuance is
traditionally within the discretion of the trial judge, and it is
not every denial of a request for more time that violates due
process even if the party fails to offer evidence or is compelled
to defend without counsel. . . . Contrariwise, a myopic insistence
upon expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable request for delay
can render the right to defend with counsel an empty formality. . .
.' Ungar v. Sarafite,
376 U.S.
575, 589 (1964).
Footnote 7 The Court of
Appeals majority, in discounting the unpreparedness of defense
counsel and the importance of the continuance, suggested that 'the
very request for merely an overnight adjournment would indicate the
lack of complexity of the defense.' We have noted, though, that
whether or not a continuance would in fact 'have been useful to the
accused, . . . the importance of assistance of counsel in a serious
criminal charge after arraignment is too large to permit
speculation on its effect.' Hawk v. Olson,
326 U.S.
271, 278 (1945).