The federal rule that jeopardy attaches in a jury trial when the
jury is empaneled and sworn, a rule that reflects and protects the
defendant's interest in retaining a chosen jury, is an integral
part of the Fifth Amendment guarantee against double jeopardy made
applicable to the States by the Fourteenth Amendment. Hence, a
Montana statute providing that jeopardy does not attach until the
first witness is sworn cannot constitutionally be applied in a jury
trial. Pp.
437 U. S.
32-38.
546 F. d 1336, affirmed.
STEWART, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN, WHITE, MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, and STEVENS, JJ., joined.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a concurring opinion,
post, p.
437 U. S. 38.
BURGER, C.J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
437 U. S. 39.
POWELL, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BURGER, C.J., and
REHNQUIST, J., joined,
post, p.
437 U. S.
40.
Page 437 U. S. 29
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves an aspect of the constitutional guarantee
against being twice put in jeopardy. The precise issue is whether
the federal rule governing the time when jeopardy attaches in a
jury trial is binding on Montana through the Fourteenth Amendment.
The federal rule is that jeopardy attaches when the jury is
empaneled and sworn; a Montana statute provides that jeopardy does
not attach until the first witness is sworn. [
Footnote 1]
I
The appellees, Merrel Cline [
Footnote 2] and L. R. Bretz, were brought to trial in a
Montana court on charges of grand larceny, obtaining money and
property by false pretense, and several counts of preparing or
offering false evidence. A jury was empaneled and sworn following a
three-day selection process. Before the first witness was sworn,
however, the appellees filed a motion drawing attention to the
allegation in the
Page 437 U. S. 30
false pretenses charge that the defendants' illegal conduct
began on January 13, 1974. [
Footnote 3] Effective January 1, 1974, the particular
statute relied on in that count of the information, Mont.Rev.Codes
Ann. § 94-1805 (1947), had been repealed. The prosecutor moved
to amend the information, claiming that "1974" was a typographical
error, and that the date on which the defendants' alleged violation
of the statute had commenced was actually January 13, 1973, the
same date alleged in the grand larceny count. The trial judge
denied the prosecutor's motion to amend the information and
dismissed the false pretenses count. The State promptly but
unsuccessfully asked the Montana Supreme Court for a writ of
supervisory control ordering the trial judge to allow the
amendment.
Returning to the trial court, the prosecution then asked the
trial judge to dismiss the entire information so that a new one
could be filed. That motion was granted, and the jury was
dismissed. A new information was then filed, charging the appellees
with grand larceny and obtaining money and property by false
pretenses. Both charges were based on conduct commencing January
13, 1973. Other than the change in dates, the new false pretenses
charge described essentially the same offense charged in the
earlier defective count.
After a second jury had been selected and sworn, the appellees
moved to dismiss the new information, claiming that the Double
Jeopardy Clauses of the United States and Montana Constitutions
barred a second prosecution. The motion was denied, and the trial
began. The appellees were found guilty on the false pretenses
count, and sentenced to terms of imprisonment. The Montana Supreme
Court, which had previously denied appellees habeas corpus relief,
State ex rel. Bretz v. Sheri, 167 Mont. 363, 539 P.2d
1191, affirmed the judgment as to Bretz on the ground that, under
state law,
Page 437 U. S. 31
jeopardy had.not attached in the first trial.
State v.
Cline, 170 Mont. 520, 555 P.2d 724.
In the meantime, the appellees had brought a habeas corpus
proceeding in a Federal District Court, again alleging that their
convictions had been unconstitutionally obtained because the second
trial violated the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment guarantee against
double jeopardy. The federal court denied the petition, holding
that the Montana statute providing that jeopardy does not attach
until the first witness is sworn does not violate the United States
Constitution. The court held, in the alternative, that, even if
jeopardy had attached, a second prosecution was justified, as
manifest necessity supported the first dismissal.
Cunningham v.
District Court, 406 F.
Supp. 430 (Mont.). [
Footnote
4]
The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed. 546 F.2d
1336. It held that the federal rule governing the time when
jeopardy attaches is an integral part of the constitutional
guarantee, and thus is binding upon the States under the Fourteenth
Amendment. The appellate court further held that there had been no
manifest necessity for the Montana trial judge's dismissal of the
defective count, and, accordingly, that a second prosecution was
not constitutionally permissible. [
Footnote 5]
Appellants appealed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1254(2),
seeking review only of the holding of the Court of Appeals that
Montana is constitutionally required to recognize that, for
purposes of the constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy,
jeopardy attaches in a criminal trial when the jury is empaneled
and sworn. We postponed consideration of probable jurisdiction
sub nom. Crist v. Cline, 430 U.S. 982, and the case was
argued. Thereafter, the case was set for
Page 437 U. S. 32
reargument,
434 U. S. 980, and
the parties were asked to address the following two questions:
"1. Is the rule heretofore applied in the federal courts -- that
jeopardy attaches in jury trials when the jury is sworn --
constitutionally mandated?"
"2. Should this Court hold that the Constitution does not
require jeopardy to attach in any trial -- state or federal, jury
or nonjury -- until the first witness is sworn?"
II
A
The unstated premise of the questions posed on reargument is
that, if the rule "that jeopardy attaches in jury trials when the
jury is sworn" is "constitutionally mandated," then that rule is
binding on Montana, since "the double jeopardy prohibition of the
Fifth Amendment . . . [applies] to the States through the
Fourteenth Amendment," and "the same constitutional standards" must
apply equally in federal and state courts.
Benton v.
Maryland, 395 U. S. 784,
395 U. S.
794-795. The single dispositive question, therefore, is
whether the federal rule is an integral part of the constitutional
guarantee.
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment is stated in
brief compass: "[N]or shall any person be subject for the same
offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb." But this
deceptively plain language has given rise to problems both subtle
and complex, problems illustrated by no less than eight cases
argued here this very Term. [
Footnote 6] This case, however, presents a single
straightforward issue concerning the point during a jury trial when
a defendant is deemed to have been put in jeopardy, for only if
that point has once been
Page 437 U. S. 33
reached does any subsequent prosecution of the defendant bring
the guarantee against double jeopardy even potentially into play.
Serfass v. United States, 420 U.
S. 377,
420 U. S. 388;
Illinois v. Somerville, 410 U. S. 458,
410 U. S.
467.
The Fifth Amendment guarantee against double jeopardy derived
from English common law, which followed then, as it does now,
[
Footnote 7] the relatively
simple rule that a defendant has been put in jeopardy only when
there has been a conviction or an acquittal -- after a complete
trial. [
Footnote 8] A primary
purpose served by such a rule is akin to that served by the
doctrines of
res judicata and collateral estoppel -- to
preserve the finality of judgments. [
Footnote 9] And it is clear that, in the early years of
our national history, the constitutional guarantee against double
jeopardy was considered to be equally limited in scope. As Mr.
Justice Story explained:
"[The Double Jeopardy Clause] does not mean that [a person]
shall not be tried for the offence a second time if the jury shall
have been discharged without giving any verdict; . . . for, in such
a case, his life or limb cannot judicially be said to have been put
in jeopardy."
3 J. Story, Commentaries on the Constitution § 1781, pp.
659-660 (1833).
But this constitutional understanding was not destined to
endure. Beginning with this Court's decision in
United
Page 437 U. S. 34
States v. Perez, 9 Wheat. 579, it became firmly
established by the end of the 19th century that a defendant could
be put in jeopardy even in a prosecution that did not culminate in
a conviction or an acquittal, and this concept has been long
established as an integral part of double jeopardy jurisprudence.
[
Footnote 10] Thus, in
Wade v. Hunter, 336 U. S. 684,
336 U. S. 688,
the Court was able accurately to say:
"Past cases have decided that a defendant, put to trial before a
jury, may be subjected to the kind of 'jeopardy' that bars a second
trial for the same
Page 437 U. S. 35
offense even though his trial is discontinued without a
verdict."
See also e.g., Arizona v. Washington, 434 U.
S. 497.
The basic reason for holding that a defendant is put in jeopardy
even though the criminal proceeding against him terminates before
verdict was perhaps best stated in
Green v. United States,
355 U. S. 184,
355 U. S.
187-188:
"The underlying idea, one that is deeply ingrained in at least
the Anglo-American system of jurisprudence, is that the State, with
all its resources and power, should not be allowed to make repeated
attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby
subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal, and compelling
him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity, as
well as enhancing the possibility that, even though innocent, he
may be found guilty."
Although it has thus long been established that jeopardy may
attach in a criminal trial that ends inconclusively, the precise
point at which jeopardy does attach in a jury trial might have been
open to argument before this Court's decision in
Downum v.
United States, 372 U. S. 734.
[
Footnote 11] There, the
Court held that the Double Jeopardy Clause prevented a second
prosecution of a defendant whose first trial had ended just after
the jury had been sworn and before any testimony had been taken.
The Court thus necessarily pinpointed the stage in a jury trial
when jeopardy attaches, and the
Downum case has since been
understood as explicit authority for the proposition that jeopardy
attaches when the jury is empaneled and sworn.
See United
States v. Martin Linen Supply Co., 430 U.
S. 564,
430 U. S. 569;
Serfass v. United States, 420 U.S. at
420 U. S.
388.
The reason for holding that jeopardy attaches when the jury is
empaneled and sworn lies in the need to protect the interest of an
accused in retaining a chosen jury. That
Page 437 U. S. 36
interest was described in
Wade v. Hunter, supra, as a
defendant's "valued right to have his trial completed by a
particular tribunal." 336 U.S. at
336 U. S. 689.
It is an interest with roots deep in the historic development of
trial by Jury in the Anglo-American system of criminal justice.
[
Footnote 12] Throughout
that history, there ran a strong tradition that, once banded
together, a jury should not be discharged until it had completed
its solemn task of announcing a verdict. [
Footnote 13]
Regardless of its historic origin, however, the defendant's
"valued right to have his trial completed by a particular tribunal"
is now within the protection of the constitutional guarantee
against double jeopardy, since it is that "right" that lies at the
foundation of the federal rule that jeopardy attaches when the jury
is empaneled and sworn.
United States v. Martin Linen Supply
Co., supra; Serfass v. United States, supra at
420 U. S. 388;
Illinois v. Somerville, 410 U.S. at
410 U. S. 467;
United States v. Jorn, 400 U. S. 470,
400 U. S.
478-480, 484-485 (plurality opinion).
Page 437 U. S. 37
B
It follows that Montana's view as to when jeopardy attaches is
impermissible under the Fourteenth Amendment unless it can be said
that the federal rule is not "at the core" of the Double Jeopardy
Clause.
See Pointer v. Texas, 380 U.
S. 400,
380 U. S. 406;
Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U. S. 1,
378 U. S. 11;
Ker v. California, 374 U. S. 23,
374 U. S. 33. In
asking us to hold that it is not, appellants argue that the federal
standard is no more than an arbitrarily chosen rule of convenience,
[
Footnote 14] similar in its
lack of constitutional status to the federal requirement of a
unanimous verdict by 12 jurors, which has been held not to bind the
States.
Apodaca v. Oregon, 406 U.
S. 404;
Williams v. Florida, 399 U. S.
78.
But see Ballew v. Georgia, 435 U.
S. 223.
If the rule that jeopardy attaches when the jury is sworn were
simply an arbitrary exercise of linedrawing, this argument might
well be persuasive, and it might reasonably be concluded that
jeopardy does not constitutionally attach until the first witness
is sworn, to provide consistency in jury and nonjury trials.
[
Footnote 15] Indeed, it
might then be concluded that the point of the attachment of
jeopardy could be moved a few steps forward or backward without
constitutional significance. [
Footnote 16]
But the federal rule as to when jeopardy attaches in a jury
Page 437 U. S. 38
trial is not only a settled part of federal constitutional law.
It is a rule that both reflects and protects the defendant's
interest in retaining a chosen jury. We cannot hold that this rule,
so grounded, is only at the periphery of double jeopardy concerns.
Those concerns -- the finality of judgments, the minimization of
harassing exposure to the harrowing experience of a criminal trial,
and the valued right to continue with the chosen jury -- have
combined to produce the federal law that in a jury trial jeopardy
attaches when the jury is empaneled and sworn.
We agree with the Court of Appeals that the time when jeopardy
attaches in a jury trial "serves as the lynchpin for all double
jeopardy jurisprudence." 546 F.2d at 1343. In
Illinois v.
Somerville, supra at
410 U. S. 467,
a case involving the application of the Double Jeopardy Clause
through the Fourteenth Amendment, the Court said that "jeopardy
attached' when the first jury was selected and sworn." Today we
explicitly hold what Somerville assumed: the federal rule
that jeopardy attaches when the jury is empaneled and sworn is an
integral part of the constitutional guarantee against double
jeopardy. The judgment is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Montana Rev.Codes Ann. § 95-1711 (3) (1947) provides in
pertinent part:
"[A] prosecution based upon the same transaction as a former
prosecution is barred by such former prosecution under the
following circumstances: . . . (d) The former prosecution was
improperly terminated. Except as provided in this subsection, there
is an improper termination of a prosecution if the termination is
for reasons not amounting to an acquittal, and it takes place after
the first witness is sworn, but before verdict. . . ."
See also State v. Cunningham, 166 Mont. 530, 535-536,
535 P.2d 186, 189. In addition to Montana, Arizona also holds that
jeopardy does not attach until "proceedings commence," although
this may be as early as the opening statement.
Klinefelter v.
Superior Court, 108 Ariz. 494, 495,
502 P.2d
531, 532;
State v. Mojarro Padilla, 107 Ariz. 134,
139-140,
483 P.2d 549,
553. Until recently, New York had a similar rule.
See Mizell v.
Attorney General, 442 F.
Supp. 868 (EDNY).
[
Footnote 2]
We were informed during argument that the conviction of Merrel
Cline has been reversed,
see State v. Cline, 170 Mont.
520, 555 P.2d 724, and the charges against him dismissed. This
appeal, therefore, has become moot as to him.
[
Footnote 3]
The motion asked that the prosecution's evidence be limited to
the time period alleged in the information.
[
Footnote 4]
The
Cunningham case, involving the same issue, was
consolidated with the appellees' case.
[
Footnote 5]
In this Court the appellants specifically waived any challenge
to the Court of Appeals' ruling on manifest necessity, and we
intimate no view as to its correctness.
[
Footnote 6]
In addition to the present case,
see Arizona v.
Washington, 434 U. S. 497;
United States v. Wheeler, 435 U.
S. 313;
Burks v. United States, ante
437 U. S. l;
Greene v. Massey, ante, 437 U. S. 19;
Sanabria v. United States, post, 437 U.
S. 54;
Swisher v. Brady, No. 7753;
United
States v. Scott, post, 437 U. S. 82.
[
Footnote 7]
11 Halsbury's Laws of England � 242 (4th ed.1976).
[
Footnote 8]
Established at least by 1676,
Turner's Case, 89 Eng
Rep. 158, the rule was embodied in defensive pleas of former
conviction or former acquittal. Although the pleas did not mention
jeopardy, Blackstone commented that they were based on the
"universal maxim . . . that no man is to be brought into jeopardy
of his life more than once for the same offence." 4 W. Blackstone,
Commentaries *335.
See generally J. Sigler, Double
Jeopardy 1-37 (1969).
[
Footnote 9]
See Mayers & Yarbrough,
Bis Vexari: New
Trials and Successive Prosecutions, 74 Harv.L.Rev. 1 (1960).
See also M. Friedland, Double Jeopardy 6 (1969); ALI,
Administration of the Criminal Law: Double Jeopardy 7 (1935).
[
Footnote 10]
In perhaps the first expression of this concept, a state court
in 1822 concluded that jeopardy may attach prior to a verdict,
because "[t]here is a wide different between a verdict given and
the jeopardy of a verdict."
Commonwealth v. Cook, 6 Serg.
& R. 577, 596 (Pa.).
In the
Perez case, the trial judge had discharged a
deadlocked jury, and the defendant argued in this Court that the
discharge was a bar to a second trial. The case has long been
understood as standing for the proposition that jeopardy attached
during the first trial, but that, despite the former jeopardy, a
second trial was not barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause because
there was a "manifest necessity" for the discharge of the first
jury.
See, e.g., United States v. Tateo, 377 U.
S. 463,
377 U. S. 467;
Wade v. Hunter, 336 U. S. 684,
336 U. S.
689-690. In fact, a close reading of the short opinion
in that case could support the view that the Court was not
purporting to decide a constitutional question, but simply settling
a problem arising in the administration of federal criminal
justice. But to cast such a new light on
Perez at this
late date would be of academic interest only.
In two cases decided in the wake of
Perez, the Court
simply followed its precedential authority:
Simmons v. United
States, 142 U. S. 148;
Thompson v. United States, 155 U.
S. 271. But it had become clear at least by the time of
Kepner v. United States, 195 U. S. 100,
decided in 1904, that jeopardy does attach even in a trial that
does not culminate in a jury verdict:
"[A] person has been in jeopardy when he is regularly charged
with a crime before a tribunal properly organized and competent to
try him. . . . Undoubtedly, in those jurisdictions where a trial of
one accused of crime can only be to a jury, and a verdict of
acquittal or conviction must be by a jury, no legal jeopardy can
attach until a jury has been called and charged with the
deliverance of the accused."
Id. at
195 U. S. 128.
See also United States v. Dinitz, 424 U.
S. 600;
United States v. Wilson, 420 U.
S. 332,
420 U. S.
343-344;
Gori v. United States, 367 U.
S. 364.
[
Footnote 11]
But see Kepner v. United States, supra at
195 U. S. 128;
n 10,
supra.
[
Footnote 12]
Trial juries were at first merely a substitute for other
inscrutable methods of decisionmaking, such as trial by battle,
compurgation, and ordeal.
See 1 W. Holdsworth, A History
of English Law 317 (7th ed.1956).
See also T. Plucknett, A
Concise History of the Common Law 125 (5th ed.1956). They soon
evolved, however, into a more rational instrument of decisionmaking
-- serving as a representative group of peers to sit in judgment on
a defendant's guilt.
[
Footnote 13]
Illustrative of this tradition was the practice of keeping the
jury together unfed and without drink until it delivered its
unanimous verdict.
See Y. B. Trin. 14 Hen. VII, pl. 4.
See Plucknett,
supra at 119. As Lord Coke put the
matter: "A jury sworn and charged in case of life or member cannot
be discharged by the court or any other, but they ought to give a
verdict." 1 E. Coke, Institutes 227(b) (6th ed. 1861). And an
English court said as late as 1866:
"[The rule] seems to command the confinement of the jury till
death if they do not agree, and, to avoid any such consequence, an
exception was introduced in practice which Blackstone has described
by the words 'except in case of evident necessity.'"
Winsor v. The Queen, [1866] 1 Q.B. 390, 394.
[
Footnote 14]
The United States as
amicus curiae makes a similar
argument.
[
Footnote 15]
In nonjury trials, jeopardy does not attach until the first
witness is sworn.
Serfass v. United States, 420 U.
S. 377,
420 U. S.
388.
[
Footnote 16]
The United States alternatively proposes a due process sliding
"interest balancing test" under which the further the trial has
proceeded the more the justification required for a mid-trial
termination. Montana alternatively proposes that jeopardy should
not be held to attach until a
prima facie case has been
made, on the premise that only then will a defendant truly be in
jeopardy. The legal literature provides at least one other
approach: jeopardy should attach "as soon as the process of
selecting the jury begins."
See Schulhofer, Jeopardy and
Mistrials, 125 U.Pa.L.Rev. 449, 512-514 (1977).
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concurring.
Although I join the Court's opinion, I write to emphasize the
fact that I am not content to rest the result, as the Court seems
to be,
ante at
437 U. S. 36,
solely on the defendant's "valued right to have his trial completed
by a particular tribunal," a factor mentioned by Mr. Justice Black,
speaking for the Court, in
Wade v. Hunter, 336 U.
S. 684,
336 U. S. 689
(1949). That approach would also support a conclusion that jeopardy
attaches at the very beginning of the jury selection process.
See Schulhofer, Jeopardy and Mistrials, 125 U.Pa.L.Rev.
449, 512-514 (1977).
Other interests are involved here as well: repetitive stress
Page 437 U. S. 39
and anxiety upon the defendant; continuing embarrassment for
him; and the possibility of prosecutorial overreaching in the
opening statement.
It is perhaps true that each of these interests could be used,
too, to support an argument that jeopardy attaches at some point
before the jury is sworn. I would bring all these interests into
focus, however, at the point where the jury is sworn, because it is
then and there that the defendant's interest in the jury reaches
its highest plateau, because the opportunity for prosecutorial
overreaching thereafter increases substantially, and because stress
and possible embarrassment for the defendant from then on is
sustained.
MR CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, dissenting.
As a "rulemaking" matter, the result reached by the Court is a
reasonable one; it is the Court's decision to constitutionalize the
rule that jeopardy attaches at the point when the jury is sworn --
so as to bind the States -- that I reject. This is but another
example of how constitutional guarantees are trivialized by the
insistence on mechanical uniformity between state and federal
practice. There is, of course, no reason why the state and federal
rules must be the same. In the period between the swearing of the
jury and the swearing of the first witness, the concerns underlying
the constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy are simply not
threatened in any meaningful sense, even on the least sanguine of
assumptions about prosecutorial behavior. We should be cautious
about constitutionalizing every procedural device found useful in
federal courts, thereby foreclosing the States from experimentation
with different approaches which are equally compatible with
constitutional principles. All things "good" or "desirable" are not
mandated by the Constitution. States should remain free to have
procedures attuned to the special problems of the criminal justice
system at the state and local levels. Principles of federalism
should not so readily be compromised
Page 437 U. S. 40
for the sake of a uniformity finding sustenance perhaps in
considerations of convenience, but certainly not in the
Constitution. Countless times in the past 50 years, this Court has
extolled the virtues of allowing the States to serve as
"laboratories" to experiment with procedures which differ from
those followed in the federal courts. Yet we continue to press the
States into a procrustean federal mold. The Court's holding will
produce no great mischief, but it continues, I repeat, the business
of trivializing the Constitution on matters better left to the
States.
Accordingly, I join MR. JUSTICE POWELL's dissent.
MR. JUSTICE POWELL, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE
REHNQUIST join, dissenting.
The rule that jeopardy attaches in a jury trial at the moment
the jury is sworn is not mandated by the Constitution. It is the
product of historical accident, embodied in a Court decision
without the slightest consideration of the policies it purports to
serve. Because these policies would be served equally well by a
rule fixing the attachment of jeopardy at the swearing of the first
witness, I would uphold the Montana statute. Even if one assumed
that the Fifth Amendment now requires the attachment of jeopardy at
the swearing of the jury, I would view that rule as incidental to
the purpose of the Double Jeopardy Clause, and hence not
incorporated through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, and not applicable to the States. I therefore
dissent.
I
As the Court correctly observes,
ante at
437 U. S. 33, it
is clear that, in the early years of our national history, the
constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy was restricted to
cases in which there had been a complete trial -- culminating in
acquittal or conviction. The limited debate on the Double Jeopardy
Clause in the House of Representatives confirms this
proposition.
Page 437 U. S. 41
1 Annals of Cong. 753 (1789).
See generally United States v.
Wilson, 420 U. S. 332,
420 U. S.
339-342 (1975). This was consonant with the prevailing
English practice regarding pleas in bar. The pleas of
autrefois
acquit and
autrefois convict, which implemented the
maxim, repeated by Blackstone, that no man should twice be placed
in jeopardy for the same offense, [
Footnote 2/1] could be interposed only on the basis of
an actual verdict of acquittal or conviction. [
Footnote 2/2] It was to these pleas in bar -- which
embody a
res judicata policy, as the Court describes it,
ante at
437 U. S. 33 --
that the Double Jeopardy Clause was directed.
See, e.g., United
States v. Haskell, 26 F. Cas. 207, 212 (No. 15,321) (CC Pa.
1823) (Washington, J.);
People v. Goodwin, 18 Johns. 187,
205 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. 1820);
cf. People v. Olcott, 2 Johns.Cas.
301 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. 1801) (Kent, J.). This remains the English rule.
See n 2,
supra.
But there existed a separate rule of English practice that has
become intertwined with the doctrine of pleas in bar in the
development of our Double Jeopardy Clause. This was the rule, based
upon a dictum of Lord Coke, that, once the "[j]ury is returned and
sworn, their verdict must be heard, and they cannot be discharged.
. . ." 3 E. Coke, Institutes 110 (6th ed. 1681);
accord,
id. at 227(b). That this rule arose as an aspect of jury
practice, rather than as an element of the guarantee against double
jeopardy, is supported by several facts. First, it applied in civil
cases, as well as criminal. Kirk, "Jeopardy" During the Period of
the Year Books, 82 U.Pa.L.Rev. 602, 609 (1934). Second, the early
cases and treaties laid down no clear standard as to the effect of
a failure to follow the rule.
See, e.g., C. St. Germain,
Doctor and Student 1531, Dialogue 2, ch. 52 (1970). Third, it seems
never to have been pleaded successfully in bar of a second
Page 437 U. S. 42
prosecution in the period of the Year Books, when the rule is
said to have arisen. Kirk,
supra at 611. Fourth,
Blackstone dealt with the rule governing the discharge of the jury
not in his section on pleas in bar, but in his discussion dealing
with verdicts.
Compare 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries
*335-*338,
with id. at *360. [
Footnote 2/3] Hence, it is reasonably clear that the
rule forbidding discharge of the jury arose out of the
circumstances of medieval England,
"when jurors of the counties where the facts occurred were
summoned to give testimony at Westminster on a trial based on those
facts. It seems not to have been an invariable rule, and has never
been found to have had any connection, in the cases at English
common law, with the problem of two trials for the same
offense."
Kirk,
supra, at 612 (footnote omitted).
Notwithstanding its origin as an aspect of jury practice, the
rule against discharge of the jury became a useful defense against
Crown oppression in the 17th century. Reaction to the "tyrannical
practice,"
The Queen v. Charlesworth, 1 B. & S. 460,
500, 121 Eng.Rep. 786, 801 (Q.B. 1861), of discharging juries and
permitting reindictment when acquittal appeared likely [
Footnote 2/4] was so strong that the common
law judges
Page 437 U. S. 43
declared
"that, in all capital cases, a juror cannot be withdrawn, though
the parties consent to it; that, in criminal cases, not capital, a
juror may be withdrawn if both parties consent, but not otherwise.
. . ."
The King v. Perkins, Holt 403, 90 Eng.Rep. 1122 (K.B.
1698). Whether or not this strict rule was ever stringently
applied, it was modified soon after it was announced.
The King
v. Kinloch, Fost. 16, 168 Eng.Rep. 9 (K.B. 1746). In any
event, it seems never to have furnished the basis for a plea of
autrefois acquit. Rather, it was viewed as a matter
committed to the discretion of the trial judge, from which no writ
of error would lie nor any plea in bar of a future prosecution
would be allowed.
The Queen v. Winsor, 10 Cox C.C. 276,
313-323, 325-326 (Q.B. 1865);
The Queen v. Charlesworth,
supra, at 507-515, 121 Eng.Rep. at 803-806. [
Footnote 2/5] Thus, while the English judges had
adapted Lord Coke's rule to the protection of interests later
recognized in this country as within the sphere of the Double
Jeopardy Clause,
compare The Queen v. Winsor, supra at
301-302,
with Green v. United States, 355 U.
S. 184,
355 U. S.
187-188 (1957), they refused to import the rule into the
realm of pleas in bar, and it was the latter which informed the
framing of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
But it was the common law rule of jury practice -- a rule that
we well might have come to regard as an aspect of due process if it
had not been absorbed in this country by the
Page 437 U. S. 44
Double Jeopardy Clause -- with which this Court concerned itself
in
United States v.
Perez, 9 Wheat. 579 (1824). Sitting on the
Perez Court was Mr. Justice Washington, who one year
earlier had written that
"the jeopardy spoken of in [the Fifth Amendment] can be
interpreted to mean nothing short of the acquittal or conviction of
the prisoner, and the Judgment of the court thereupon."
United States v. Haskell, 26 F. Cas. at 212. Mr.
Justice Story authored the opinion of the Court in
Perez.
Nine years later, he would explain in his treatise on the
Constitution that the meaning of the Double Jeopardy Clause is
"that a party shall not be tried a second time for the same
offence, after he has once been convicted, or acquitted of the
offence charged, by the verdict of a jury, and Judgment has passed
thereon for or against him."
3 J. Story, Commentaries on the Constitution § 1781, p. 659
(1833). [
Footnote 2/6] It seems
most unlikely that either of these Members of the
Perez
Court thought that the decision was interpreting the Fifth
Amendment when it declared that the discharge of a jury, before
verdict, on grounds of "manifest necessity," was not a bar to a
retrial. [
Footnote 2/7] 9 Wheat. at
22 U. S. 580.
As both Justices Washington and Story believed that the Double
Jeopardy Clause embraced only actual acquittal and conviction, they
must have viewed
Perez as involving the independent rule
barring needless discharges
Page 437 U. S. 45
of the jury. [
Footnote 2/8] The
decisions of this Court throughout the 19th and early 20th
centuries dealing with discharges of the jury are ambiguous, but
can be read merely as reaffirming the principle of
Perez
that discharges before verdict may be justified by manifest
necessity, without adding a Fifth Amendment gloss. [
Footnote 2/9]
Throughout the 19th century, however, may state courts began to
blend the rule against needless discharges of juries into the
guarantee against double jeopardy contained in the Federal and
State Constitutions. [
Footnote
2/10] It was recognized that the
Page 437 U. S. 46
discharge rule provided significant protection against being
twice vexed:
"The right of trial by jury is of but little value to the
citizen in a criminal prosecution against him if [the guarantee
against double jeopardy] can be violated and the accused left
without remedy. If the judge can arbitrarily discharge and impanel
juries until one is obtained that will render such a verdict as the
state demands, or the attorney for the prosecution desires, and the
only protection against such oppression is that a new trial may be
ordered in the court trying him, or by the court of last resort,
then of what. value is this boasted right?"
O'Brian v. Commonwealth, 72 Ky. 333, 339 (1873).
Cf. Green v. United States, 355 U.S. at
355 U. S.
187-188. Thus, the state courts were putting Lord Coke's
rule to a use similar to that of the 17th-century English judges,
but they did so with no apparent awareness of the novelty of their
action -- under the rubric of the Double Jeopardy Clause. Given
this rather unreflective incorporation of a common law rule of jury
practice into the guarantee against double jeopardy, it is not
surprising that the state courts also generally fixed the
attachment of jeopardy at the swearing of the jury. [
Footnote 2/11] Because the
Page 437 U. S. 47
state courts do not appear to have been aware that they were
adapting a separate rule to a different area of individual rights,
they perceived no need to examine all the trappings of the rule in
light of the new uses to which it was being put. [
Footnote 2/12]
It was after more than a century of development in state courts
that the "defendant's valued right to have his trial completed by a
particular tribunal" appeared in the decisions of this Court for
the first time, also without analysis, as an element of the Double
Jeopardy Clause.
Wade v. Hunter, 336 U.
S. 684,
336 U. S. 689
(1940). The policies underlying this "valued right" were not
spelled out in
Wade, [
Footnote 2/13] but the rationale expressed in
Green
v. United States, supra at
355 U. S.
187-188 -- a case not involving mid-trial discharge of
the jury -- appears to echo the state courts of a century
earlier:
". . . [T]he State, with all its resources and power, should not
be allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for
an alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment,
expense and ordeal and compelling him to live in a continuing state
of anxiety and insecurity, as well as enhancing the possibility
that, even though innocent, he may be found guilty."
Although neither
Wade nor
Green confronted the
question of when jeopardy attached, the
Green Court
declared that
"[t]his Court, as well as most others, has taken the position
that a defendant is placed in jeopardy once he is put to trial
before a jury, so that, if the jury is discharged without his
consent, he cannot be tried again."
355 U.S. at
355 U. S.
188.
Having accepted almost without articulated thought the doctrine
that the Double Jeopardy Clause protects against needless discharge
of the jury, this Court proceeded to adopt
Page 437 U. S. 48
with a similar lack of reason or analysis the implementing rule
that jeopardy attaches when the jury is sworn. In
Downum v.
United States, 372 U. S. 734
(1963), the trial court declared a mistrial after the jury had been
sworn, but before any witness had been called. Finding an absence
of "imperious necessity,"
id. at
372 U. S. 736,
the Court held that the Fifth Amendment barred reprosecution. The
Downum opinion contains no discussion of the point of
jeopardy's attachment or of the policies underlying the selection
of the swearing of the jury as the determinative moment. [
Footnote 2/14] Nevertheless, the swearing
of the jury has been accepted since
Downum as the
constitutional line of demarcation for the attachment of jeopardy,
see, e.g., Illinois v. Somerville, 410 U.
S. 458,
410 U. S. 466
(1973);
United States v. Sisson, 399 U.
S. 267,
399 U. S. 305
(1970), even though no case before this Court has presented a
contest over that issue. [
Footnote
2/15] This Court, following the lead of the state courts,
simply enlisted the doctrine concerning needless discharge of
juries in the service of double jeopardy principles, largely
without analysis
Page 437 U. S. 49
and apparently with little awareness of history. In view,
however, of the consistency with which federal courts have assumed
without question that the swearing of the jury triggers jeopardy, I
would accept this as the established supervisory rule within the
federal system. But the acceptance of a supervisory rule, primarily
on grounds of long tenure and convenience, is no justification for
elevating it to constitutional doctrine. We should be hesitant to
constitutionalize a rule that derives no support from the Framers'
understanding of the English practice from which the Double
Jeopardy Clause was derived, and which is supported by no doctrinal
reasoning that reaches constitutional dimension. Restraint is
doubly indicated with respect to this rule, since it is applied
only in jury trials. Where a criminal case is tried to the court,
jeopardy does not attach until "the court begins to hear evidence."
Serfass v. United States, 420 U.
S. 377,
420 U. S. 388
(1975). No compelling reason has been suggested today, or in
earlier decisions of this Court, why the time when jeopardy
attaches should be different depending upon whether the defendant's
"valued right" is asserted in a jury trial, rather than a bench
trial.
I turn next to an examination of the jury trial rule in light of
the double jeopardy policies it is now belatedly thought to
advance.
II
Three aspects of criminal process ordinarily precede the initial
introduction of evidence in a jury trial: motions, jury selection,
and opening statements. Defendants are vitally interested in each,
yet it is far from clear that any should trigger the attachment of
jeopardy.
Defendants may, and sometimes must,
see, e.g., Fed.Rule
Crim.Proc. 12, move for various rulings on the indictment and the
admissibility of evidence before trial. These motions, in practical
terms, may decide the defendant's case. They
Page 437 U. S. 50
sometimes may require a devotion of time, energies, and
resources exceeding that necessary for the trial itself. Yet it has
never been held that jeopardy attaches as of the making or deciding
of pretrial motions.
See Serfass v. United States, supra.
Appellee does not contend otherwise. It is clear, then, that the
central concern of the Double Jeopardy Clause cannot be regarded
solely as protecting against repeated expenditures of the
defendant's efforts and resources.
Opening statements may be made in both bench and jury trials.
[
Footnote 2/16] In either type of
trial, statements by counsel or questions by the court may prompt
the prosecutor to abort -- by dismissing the indictment or
otherwise -- the proceedings with the view to reindicting the
defendant and commencing anew. The prosecutor also may simply
request a continuance to gain time to meet some unexpected defense
stratagem, although such a motion rarely would prevail. In any
event, delay or postponement occasioned during or as a result of
the opening statement phase of a trial would be equally adverse to
the defendant without regard to whether he were being tried by the
court or a jury. The Due Process Clause would protect such a
defendant in either case against prosecutorial abuse. Thus, with
respect to the opening statement phase of a criminal trial, there
appears to be no difference of substance between jury and bench
trials in terms of serving double jeopardy policies.
The situation does differ in some respects where a jury is
selected, and the defendant -- by
voir dire and challenges
-- participates in the selection of the factfinder. It is not
unusual for this process to entail a major effort and extend over a
protracted period. But, as in the case of pretrial
Page 437 U. S. 51
motions, expenditure of effort alone is not sufficient to
trigger the attachment of jeopardy. [
Footnote 2/17] The federal rule of attachment in jury
trials offers no basis for a double jeopardy claim if the
prosecutor -- dissatisfied by the jury selection process -- is
successful in dismissing the prosecution before the last juror is
seated, or indeed before the whole panel is sworn. A defendant's
protection against denial or abuse of his rights in this respect
lies in the Due Process Clause.
Moreover, the Double Jeopardy Clause cannot be viewed as a
guarantee of the defendant's claim to a factfinder perceived as
favorably inclined toward his cause. That interest does not bar
pretrial reassignment of his case from one judge to another, even
though he may have waived jury trial on the belief that the
original judge viewed his case favorably. Thus, the Double Jeopardy
Clause interest in having his "trial completed by a particular
tribunal,"
Wade v. Hunter, 336 U.S. at
336 U. S. 689,
must refer to some interest other than retaining a factfinder
thought to be disposed favorably toward defendant.
The one event that can distinguish one factfinder from another
in the eyes of the law in general, and the Double Jeopardy Clause
in particular, is the beginning of the factfinder's work. As the
Court stated in
Green, "a defendant is placed in jeopardy
once he is
put to trial before" a factfinder. 355 U.S. at
355 U. S. 188
(emphasis added). When the court or jury has undertaken its
constitutional duty -- the hearing of evidence -- the trial quite
clearly is under way, and the prosecution's case has begun to
unfold before the trier of fact.
Cf. United States v. Scott,
post at
437 U. S. 101.
As testimony commences, the evidence of the alleged criminal
conduct is presented to the
Page 437 U. S. 52
factfinder and becomes a matter of public record. The
defendant's public embarrassment and anxiety begin. From this point
on, retrial will mean repeating painful and embarrassing testimony,
together with the possibility that the earlier "trial run" will
strengthen the prosecution's case. At a retrial, for example,
prosecution witnesses may be better prepared for the rigors of
cross-examination. Thus, the defendant has a strong interest in
taking his case to the first jury, once witnesses testify.
Carsey v. United States, 129 U.S.App.D.C. 205, 208-209,
392 F.2d 810, 813-814 (1967) (Leventhal, J., concurring). The
rationale of the Double Jeopardy Clause is implicated once this
threshold is crossed, but not before.
That this is the crucial time for Double Jeopardy Clause
purposes is evident from the attachment rule in bench trials. Once
the judge has embarked upon his factfinding mission, the defendant
is justified in concluding that his ordeal has begun; he is in the
hands of his judge, and may expect the matter to proceed to a
finish. This same principle should apply in jury trials.
Thus, Montana's rule fixing the attachment of jeopardy at the
swearing of the first witness is consonant with the central
concerns of the Double Jeopardy Clause. It furnishes a clear line
of demarcation for the attachment of jeopardy, and it places that
line in advance of the point at which real jeopardy -- in Fifth
Amendment terms -- can be said to begin.
III
Even if I were to conclude that the Fifth Amendment -- merely by
virtue of long, unreasoned acceptance -- required attachment of
jeopardy at the swearing of the jury, I would not hold that the
Fourteenth Amendment necessarily imposes that requirement upon the
States. This issue would turn on the answer to the question whether
jeopardy's attachment at that point is fundamental to the
guarantees of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Apodaca v.
Oregon, 406 U. S. 404,
406 U. S. 373
(1972) (POWELL, J., concurring in judgment);
Ludwig
v.
Page 437 U. S. 53
Massachusetts, 427 U. S. 618,
427 U. S. 632
(1976) (POWELL, J., concurring). As the previous discussion makes
clear, the jury trial rule accorded constitutional status by the
Court today implicates no rights that have been identified as
fundamental in a constitutional sense. There is no basis for
incorporating it "jot-for-jot" into the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Duncan v. Louisiana, 391 U. S. 145,
391 U. S. 181
(1968) (Harlan, J., dissenting).
IV
Aside from paying cryptic homage to the hitherto unexplained
"valued right" to a particular jury, the Court does not even
attempt to justify its holding that the Fifth Amendment mandates
the rule of attachment that it adopts. It identifies no policy of
the Double Jeopardy Clause, and no interests of a fair system of
criminal justice, that elevate this "right" to constitutional
status. The Court's rule is not even a "linedrawing" that finds
support in logic or significant convenience.
I perceive no reason for this Court to impose what, in effect,
is no more than a supervisory rule of practice upon the courts of
every State in the Union.
[
Footnote 2/1]
W. Blackstone, Commentaries *335.
See also 3 E. Coke,
Institutes 213-214 (6th ed. 1681).
[
Footnote 2/2]
J Archbold, Pleading, Evidence & Practice in Criminal Cases
§§ 435-459 (35th ed.1962).
[
Footnote 2/3]
Interestingly, Blackstone wrote that the jury could not be
discharged not as soon as it was sworn, but only after evidence had
been introduced. 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *360. A relatively
recent edition of Blackstone, compiled from the earliest editions,
indicates that the close of the evidence may have been the point at
which the rule against discharge of the jury originally was fixed
by that authority. J. Ehrlich, Ehrlich's Blackstone 941 (1959).
[
Footnote 2/4]
2 M. Hale, Pleas of the Crown 294-295 (W. Stokes & E.
Ingersoll ed. 1847). In the infamous
Ireland's Case, 7
How.St.Tr. 79 (1678), five defendants were accused of high treason.
The court permitted the jury to deliberate as to three defendants,
but instructed the jury that the evidence against Whitebread and
Fenwick was not sufficient to convict, even though "so full, as to
satisfy a private conscience."
Id. at 121. The court
therefore discharged the jury of those two, declaring that it would
"be convenient, from what is already proved, to have them stay
until more proof may come in."
Ibid. They were reindicted,
convicted, and executed,
Whitebread's Case, 7 How.St.Tr.
311 (1679), despite their pleas of former jeopardy,
id. at
315-318.
[
Footnote 2/5]
In
Conway and Lynch v. The Queen, 7 Ir. 149 (Q.B.
1845), the Irish Court of Queen's Bench did review on writ of error
the prisoners' convictions after reindictment, holding that, where
the trial judge failed to state on the record the condition of
necessity which had prompted the discharge of the first jury, there
was an abuse of discretion preventing subsequent trial. The English
Court of Queen's Bench, however, rejected this view in
Charlesworth and in
Winsor. Indeed, that court
adopted the view of Justice Crampton, who had dissented in
Conway and
Lynch.
[
Footnote 2/6]
See also United States v. Coolidge, 25 F. Cas. 622 (No.
14,858) (CC Mass. 1815) (Story, J.). Despite the view clearly
expressed in Mr. Justice Story's Commentaries, there is some
evidence that, by the year following its publication, he was
beginning to consider the rule against discharge of the jury as
embodying some double jeopardy concerns.
See United States v.
Gilbert, 25 F. Cas. 1287, 1295-1296 (No. 15,204) (CC Mass.
1834).
[
Footnote 2/7]
That
Perez was not concerned with pleas in bar -- and
therefore not with the Double Jeopardy Clause -- is supported by
its recognition of the doctrine of manifest necessity. No
"necessity" -- for example, discovery of incontrovertible evidence
that. a previously acquitted person was guilty -- sufficed to
overcome a valid plea in bar. Necessity went only to the propriety
of discharging the jury.
See United States v. Bigelow, 14
D.C. 393, 401-403 (1884).
[
Footnote 2/8]
The Court recognizes that
Perez probably cannot be
viewed as a double jeopardy case.
Ante at
437 U.S. 34 n. 10.
[
Footnote 2/9]
Simmons v. United States, 142 U.
S. 148 (1891);
Logan v. United States,
144 U. S. 263
(1892);
Thompson v. United States, 155 U.
S. 271 (1894);
Dreyer v. Illinois, 187 U. S.
71 (1902);
Lovato v. New Mexico, 242 U.
S. 199 (1916).
See also United States v.
Morris, 26 F. Cas. 1323 (No. 15,815) (CC Mass. 1851) (Curtis,
J.).
But see Keerl v. Montana, 213 U.
S. 135 (1909);
cf. Kepner v. United States,
195 U. S. 100,
195 U. S. 128
(1904).
See also United States v. Shoemaker, 27 F. Cas.
1067 (No. 16,279) (CC Ill. 1840);
United States v. Watson,
28 F. Cas. 499 (No. 16,651) (SDNY 1868).
[
Footnote 2/10]
See, e.g., State v. Garrigues, 2 N.C. 188 (1795)
(
semble);
Commonwealth v. Cook, 6 Serg. & R.
577 (Pa. 1822);
State v. M'Kee, 1 Bailey 651 (S.C. 1830);
Mahala v. State, 18 Tenn. 532 (1837);
State v.
Roe, 12 Vt. 93 (1840);
Morgan v. State, 13 Ind 215
(1859);
People v. Webb, 38 Cal. 467 (1869);
Nolan v.
State, 55 Ga. 521 (1875);
Teat v. State, 53 Miss. 439
(1876);
Ex parte Maxwell, 11 Nev. 428, 435 (1876);
Mitchell v. State, 42 Ohio St. 383 (1884);
State v.
Ward, 48 Ark. 36, 2 S.W. 191 (1886);
People v.
Gardner, 62 Mich. 307, 29 N.W. 19 (1886);
Commonwealth v.
Hart, 149 Mass. 7, 20 N.E. 310 (1889);
State v.
Paterno, 43 La.Ann. 514, 9 So. 442 (1891);
McDonald v.
State, 79 Wis. 651, 48 N.W. 863 (1891);
State v.
Sommers, 60 Minn. 90, 61 N.W. 907 (1895);
Dulin v.
Lillard, 91 Va. 718, 20 S.E. 821 (1895).
But see, e.g.,
People v. Goodwin, 18 Johns. 187 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. 1820);
Commonwealth v. Wade, 34 Mass. 395 (1835);
Hoffman v.
State, 20 Md. 425, 433 (1863);
United States v.
Bigelow, 14 D.C. 393 (1884);
State v. Van Ness, 82
N.J.L. 181, 83 A. 195 (1912).
American treatises also included the rule against discharge of
the jury under the heading of Double Jeopardy.
See M.
Bigelow, Estoppel 36 (2d ed. 1876); 1 J. Bishop, Commentaries on
the Criminal Law § 1016 (5th ed. 1872); T. Cooley,
Constitutional Limitations 325-327 (2d ed. 1871).
See
generally ALI, Administration of the Criminal Law, Commentary
to § 6, pp. 61-72 (1935). The leading English criminal law
treatise was to the contrary.
See 1 J. Chitty, Criminal
Law 451-463, 480 (J. Perkins ed. 1847).
[
Footnote 2/11]
See, e.g., State v. M'Kee, supra at 655;
Moran v.
State, supra at 216;
State v. Redman, 17 Iowa 329,
333 (1864);
People v. Webb, supra at 478;
Nolan v.
State, supra at 523;
State v. Davis, 80 N.C. 384
(1879);
Mitchell v. State, supra at 393;
State v.
Ward, supra at 38, 2 S.W. 191;
People v. Gardner,
supra at 311, 29 N.W. at 20;
State v. Paterno, supra
at 515, 9 So. 442;
McDonald v. State, supra at 653, 48
N.W. at 864;
State v. Sommers, supra at 91, 61 N.W. 907;
Dulin v. Lillard, supra at 722, 20 S.E. at 822;
accord, Bishop,
supra, 437 U.S.
28fn2/10|>n. 10; Cooley,
supra, 437 U.S.
28fn2/10|>n. 10.
[
Footnote 2/12]
But see United States v. Bigelow, supra.
[
Footnote 2/13]
Similarly, the Court today does not explore the reasons
supporting valuation of this particular right, merely announcing
that it is "valued."
Ante at
437 U. S.
38.
[
Footnote 2/14]
The Government in
Downum conceded that jeopardy
attaches at the time the jury is sworn. Brief for United States,
O.T. 1962, No. 489, p. 31. In support of this concession, the
Government cited
Lovato v. New Mexico, 242 U.
S. 199 (1916), apparently believing that
Lovato
had involved discharge of the jury immediately after swearing. In
that case, however, the witnesses for both sides had been sworn, so
that it actually furnished no support for the concession. Since the
parties did not dispute the point of jeopardy's attachment, the
Court did not discuss the matter. Because the rule of attachment
was not put in issue and not discussed in
Downum, we owe
this
sub silentio determination less deference than a
holding arrived at after full argument and consideration,
see
Monell v. New York City Dept. of Social Services, 436 U.
S. 658,
436 U. S. 709
710, n. 6 (1978) (POWELL, J., concurring), particularly in a
constitutional case.
[
Footnote 2/15]
In
Serfass v. United States, 420 U.
S. 377 (1975), the petitioner sought to have the point
of attachment moved forward to the filing of pretrial motions. The
Court's refusal to fix the attachment of jeopardy at that stage of
the litigation did not require any consideration of the policies
underlying the rule assumed in
Downum and reaffirmed
today.
[
Footnote 2/16]
Apparently, defense counsel often choose to reserve their
opening statements until the close of the prosecution's case. Tr.
of Oral Arg. 10, 15-17; Brief on Reargument for United States as
Amicus Curiae 23 n. 25. Where this course is followed,
there will be no early disclosure of defense strategy.
[
Footnote 2/17]
At least one commentator has proposed fixing jeopardy's
attachment at the start of
voir dire, in order to protect
the defendant's interest in each juror, as selected. Schulhofer,
Jeopardy and Mistrials, 125 U.Pa.L.Rev. 449, 513 (1977). This
proposal, however, has no historical foundation, nor any clear
grounding in the concerns of the Double Jeopardy Clause.