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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
PARKER v. GLADDEN, 385 U.S. 363 (1966)
385 U.S. 363
PARKER v. GLADDEN, WARDEN.
CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF OREGON.
No. 81.
Argued November 9, 1966.
Decided December 12, 1966.
Petitioner was convicted of second degree murder. At a hearing on
his petition for post-conviction relief the trial court found that a
bailiff assigned to shepherd the sequestered jury had stated to a
juror, "Oh, that wicked fellow, he is guilty," and to another juror,
"If there is anything wrong [in finding him guilty] the Supreme
Court will correct it." Both statements were overheard by at least
one regular juror or an alternate. The trial court granted a new
trial but the Oregon Supreme Court reversed. Held: The bailiff's
statements violated the command of the Sixth Amendment, made
applicable to the States by the Fourteenth, that the accused shall
enjoy the right to a trial by an impartial jury and be confronted
with the witnesses against him.
245 Ore. ___, 407 P.2d 246, reversed.
John H. Schafer argued the cause and filed a brief for
petitioner.
David H. Blunt, Assistant Attorney General of Oregon, argued the
cause for respondent. With him on the brief was Robert Y. Thornton,
Attorney General.
PER CURIAM.
Petitioner, after his conviction for second degree murder, 235
Ore. 366, 384 P.2d 986, filed a petition for post-conviction relief,
Ore. Rev. Stat. 138.550. At a hearing on the petition the trial
court found that a court bailiff assigned to shepherd the
sequestered jury, which sat for eight days, stated to one of the
jurors in the presence of others while the jury was out walking on a
public sidewalk: "Oh that wicked fellow [petitioner], he is guilty";
1 and on another occasion said to another
[385 U.S. 363, 364]
juror under similar circumstances, "If there is
anything wrong [in finding petitioner guilty] the Supreme Court will
correct it."
2 Both statements were overheard by at least one regular juror
or an alternate. The trial court found "that the unauthorized
communication was prejudicial and that such conduct materially
affected the rights of the [petitioner]." The Supreme Court of
Oregon reversed, finding that "the bailiff's misconduct did not
deprive [petitioner] of a constitutionally correct trial." 245 Ore.
___, 407 P.2d 246. We granted certiorari,
384 U.S. 904 . The federal question decided by Oregon's highest
court is, of course, subject to final determination in this Court
and we have concluded that the judgment must be reversed.
We believe that the statements of the bailiff to the jurors are
controlled by the command of the Sixth Amendment, made applicable to
the States through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. It guarantees that "the accused shall enjoy the right to
a . . . trial, by an impartial jury . . . [and] be confronted with
the witnesses against him . . . ." As we said in Turner v.
Louisiana,
379 U.S. 466, 472 -473 (1965), "the `evidence developed' against
a defendant shall come from the witness stand in a public courtroom
where there is full judicial protection of the defendant's right of
confrontation, of cross-examination, and of counsel." Here there is
dispute neither as to what the bailiff, an officer of the State,
said nor that when he said it he was not subjected to confrontation,
cross-examination or other safeguards guaranteed to the petitioner.
Rather, his expressions were "private talk," tending to reach the
jury by "outside influence." Patterson v. Colorado,
205 U.S. 454, 462 (1907). We have followed the "undeviating
rule," Sheppard v. Maxwell,
384 U.S. 333, 351 (1966),
[385 U.S. 363, 365] that the rights of
confrontation and cross-examination are among the fundamental
requirements of a constitutionally fair trial. Kirby v. United
States,
174 U.S. 47, 55 , 56 (1899); In re Oliver,
333 U.S. 257, 273 (1948); Pointer v. Texas,
380 U.S. 400 (1965).
The State suggests that no prejudice was shown and that no harm
could have resulted because 10 members of the jury testified that
they had not heard the bailiff's statements and that Oregon law
permits a verdict of guilty by 10 affirmative votes. This overlooks
the fact that the official character of the bailiff - as an officer
of the court as well as the State - beyond question carries great
weight with a jury which he had been shepherding for eight days and
nights. Moreover, the jurors deliberated for 26 hours, indicating a
difference among them as to the guilt of petitioner. Finally, one
3 of the jurors testified that she was prejudiced by the
statements, which supports the trial court's finding "that the
unauthorized communication was prejudicial and that such conduct
materially affected the rights of the defendant." This finding was
not upset by Oregon's highest court. Aside from this, we believe
that the unauthorized conduct of the bailiff "involves such a
probability that prejudice will result that it is deemed inherently
lacking in due process," Estes v. Texas,
381 U.S. 532, 542 -543 (1965). As we said in Turner v.
Louisiana, supra, "it would be blinking reality not to recognize the
extreme prejudice inherent" in such statements that reached at least
three members of the jury and one alternate member. Id., at 473. The
State says that 10 of the jurors testified that they had not heard
the statements of the bailiff. This, however, ignores the testimony
that one of the statements was made to an unidentified juror, which,
including [385 U.S.
363, 366] Mrs. Inwards and Mrs. Drake, makes three. In
any event, petitioner was entitled to be tried by 12, not 9 or even
10, impartial and unprejudiced jurors. See State v. Murray, 164 La.
883, 888, 114 So. 721, 723.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] The statement was made to alternate juror Mrs.
Gattman and was overheard by juror Mrs. Inwards.
[
Footnote 2 ] The statement was made to an unidentified juror and
overheard by juror Mrs. Drake.
[
Footnote 3 ] Mrs. Inwards when recalled to the stand testified
in response to a question by the court that "all in all it must have
influenced me. I didn't realize it at the time."
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting.
By not setting forth the background of this proceeding the Court
has put seriously out of focus the constitutional issue involved in
this case.
Parker was convicted of second degree murder on May 19, 1961, and
sentenced to life imprisonment. On September 7, 1961, he addressed a
letter to several jurors protesting his innocence, condemning his
attorneys for incompetence, intimating that witnesses were coerced
into lying, and chiding the jurors for being duped into finding him
guilty. After affirmance of his conviction by the Supreme Court of
Oregon on September 15, 1963 - some two years after the jury verdict
- Parker again set out to take his case to the jury. He furnished
his wife with a tape recording in which he propounded a series of
questions designed to uncover possible improprieties in the jury's
deliberations. The jury had deliberated a long time and Parker had
been told that their discussion was heated. Although unaware of any
irregularities he commenced "shooting in the dark." (Tr., p. 16.)
Mrs. Parker then acquired a jury list and discovered those jurors
who had been most sympathetic to her husband.
1 She invited two regular jurors and an alternate to her home to
listen to the recording and discuss the case. An attorney was then
retained to prepare affidavits detailing the allegations before us
and to institute this post-conviction
[385 U.S. 363, 367]
proceeding. The statements before this Court were found
to have been made by this apparently Elizabethan-tongued bailiff,
but, contrary to this Court's assertion, the trial court found that
these statements were only prejudicial in nature and not that they
had a prejudicial effect.
2 The Oregon Supreme Court did not find the trial proceedings
fundamentally unfair.
This Court finds the bailiff's remarks to be in violation of the
Sixth Amendment's confrontation requirement. Although I believe that
"a right of confrontation is `implicit in the concept of ordered
liberty,'" Pointer v. Texas,
380 U.S. 400, 408 (concurring opinion of HARLAN, J.), I cannot
accede to the view that the Sixth Amendment is directly applicable
to the States through the Fourteenth. As to the confrontation
problem here asserted, I know of no case in which this Court has
held that jurors must have been absolutely insulated from all
expressions of opinion on the merits of the case or the judicial
process at the risk of declaration of a new trial. Irvin v. Dowd,
366 U.S. 717 . Even where this Court has acted in its
supervisory capacity it has refused to
[385 U.S. 363, 368]
hold that jury contact with outside information is
always a cause for overthrowing a verdict, wisely preferring to
allow "each case . . . [to] turn on its special facts." Marshall v.
United States,
360 U.S. 310, 312 . The Court notes that these remarks were made
by a state officer, but does not explain why the bailiff's official
capacity would in this instance make him any more a "witness" than
any other person able to communicate with the jury. Thus, though I
believe unintentionally, the Court's opinion leaves open the
possibility of automatically requiring a mistrial on constitutional
grounds whenever any juror is exposed to any potentially prejudicial
expression of opinion.
Considering this case, as I would, under the doctrine of
fundamental fairness implicit in the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, I think a different result follows. Much
reliance has been placed upon Turner v. Louisiana,
379 U.S. 466 . But in Turner we faced a situation in which the
trial court allowed two deputy sheriffs who were key witnesses to be
placed in "continuous and intimate association" with the jury, and
it would have been "blinking reality not to recognize the extreme
prejudice inherent in this" situation.
379 U.S., at 473 . There too we faced "a procedure employed by
the State" involving "such a probability that prejudice will result"
that we deemed it "inherently lacking in due process." Estes v.
Texas,
381 U.S. 532, 542 -543. Here no procedure adopted by the State
is to be faulted and it seems clear to me that the rule of Stroble
v. California,
343 U.S. 181 , and Irvin v. Dowd, supra, should apply and a
substantial showing of prejudice in fact must be made before a due
process violation can be found.
On this basis the occurrences before us seem inconsequential to
me in light of the eight-day trial and twenty-six-hour jury
deliberation. And my feeling is confirmed by the extremely trivial
evidence of prejudice amounting to no more than an assertion by one
obviously highly [385
U.S. 363, 369] emotional and "guilt-ridden" juror that
she might have been influenced without realizing it.
3 "[I]t is an impossible standard to require that tribunal [the
jury] to be a laboratory, completely sterilized and freed from any
external factors." Rideau v. Louisiana,
373 U.S. 723, 733 (CLARK, J., dissenting).
The potentialities of today's decision may go far beyond what, I
am sure, the Court intends. Certainly the Court does not wish to
encourage convicted felons to "intimidate, beset and harass," Stein
v. New York,
346 U.S. 156, 178 , a discharged jury in an effort to establish
possible grounds for a new trial. Our courts have always been alert
to protect the sanctity of the jury process. McDonald v. Pless,
238 U.S. 264 ; see Castaldi v. United States, 251 F. Supp. 681.
But in allowing Parker to overturn his conviction on the basis of
what are no more than inconsequential incidents in an otherwise
constitutionally flawless proceeding, the Court encourages others to
follow his example in pursuing the jury and may be thought by some
to commit federal courts in habeas corpus proceedings to interrogate
the jury upon the mere allegation that a prejudicial remark has
reached the ears of one of its members. Remmer v. United States,
347 U.S. 227 . To any such result I cannot subscribe.
I think the Oregon Supreme Court correctly assessed the
constitutional issue before us, and I would affirm its judgment.
[
Footnote 1 ] The record shows that Mrs. Parker first called
juror number one, Mrs. Inwards, and upon finding her sympathetic
obtained from her the names of those who had held out longest. Mrs.
Inwards also informed Mrs. Parker that an alternate juror, Mrs.
Gattman, was sympathetic to Parker's cause.
[
Footnote 2 ] The trial court purported to follow the State
Supreme Court's decision in State v. Kristich, 226 Ore. 240, 359
P.2d 1106, which held that where a bailiff had communicated with a
jury on a point of law prejudice would be presumed. Thus the trial
court said that "if the matters alleged in plaintiff's petition had
been called to the Court's attention, the Court, on its own motion,
would have granted the defendant a new trial," and held that Parker
deserved a new trial because the communication was of a prejudicial
nature. The Oregon Supreme Court reversed because it held that the
trial court erroneously applied the new-trial standard to a
post-conviction proceeding where only error of constitutional
magnitude would serve to overthrow the verdict. The Supreme Court
made no specific finding on prejudice but in distinguishing Turner
v. Louisiana,
379 U.S. 466 , noted a "difference in degree of the
out-of-courtroom influence . . . so great as to lead us to the
conclusion that the bailiff's misconduct did not deprive defendant
of a constitutionally correct trial." 245 Ore. ___, ___, 407 P.2d
246, 249.
[
Footnote 3 ] Mrs. Inwards, who on recall testified that she must
have been unconsciously influenced, denied any influence when first
examined. In her further testimony she admitted that she was
extremely upset by the verdict and would do anything short of
committing perjury to overturn it. She stated, however, that
although she had gone to the trial judge to discuss the verdict she
had never mentioned the bailiff's remarks to him. In specifying that
the bailiff's remarks "must" have influenced her she limited herself
to declaring that they did so in connection with the pressure put on
her by other jurors during the deliberations thus stating that "all
in all" she "must" have been influenced.
[385 U.S. 363, 370]
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