Merrill v. State

423 P.2d 686, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 195
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1967
Docket688
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 423 P.2d 686 (Merrill v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merrill v. State, 423 P.2d 686, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 195 (Ala. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINO WITZ, Justice.

In this appeal appellants raise several important questions of first impression relating to preliminary hearings and grand jury proceedings. We affirm the judgments and commitments which were entered by the superior court.

On June 14 and 15, 1965, complaints were filed in the district court 1 at Anchorage, Alaska, charging appellants with the crime of robbery. 2 On the basis of these complaints, warrants for appellants’ arrests were issued by the district judge. On June 16 appellants were apprehended at a point on the Richardson Highway in the vicinity of the community of Delta Junction. Appellants were arraigned before the district court in Fairbanks and then transported to Anchorage for further proceedings. Upon their return to Anchorage, appellants requested District Judge L. Eugene Williams to appoint counsel to represent them at preliminary hearing. While the matter was still pending in the district court, appellants moved the superior court to furnish counsel for. them in regard to their forthcoming preliminary hearing. Both courts declined to appoint counsel for appellants.

At the preliminary hearing held on July 7, 1965, Joseph McClain, the victim of the robbery, testified as to the commission of the crime but was unable to identify either appellant as its perpetrator. The district judge also heard testimony from James Glenn, an accomplice, who identified appellant Griffiths as the one who actually committed the robbery and further identified appellant Merrill as an additional accomplice to the crime. At this hearing appellants’ request that they be accorded the right to confront two additional witnesses, namely, Officer William Nix of the *688 Alaska State Police, the complainant, and Sergeant Malone of the Alaska State Police, was denied. 3

At the conclusion of the July 7, 1965, preliminary hearing appellants were hound over to the grand jury. On July 13 appellants were indicted for robbery. 4 The superior court then appointed Robert M. Libbey to represent appellants. Mr. Libbey filed a motion to stay the proceedings in the superior court and for a “full, lawful and immediate preliminary examination.” 5 Thereafter, the prosecutor and defense counsel informed the superior court that they had agreed upon a disposition of appellants’ motion for stay and for prelimin-inary hearing. On the basis of counsels’ agreement, Superior Court Judge Ralph E. Moody entered a stay and ordered a preliminary hearing “wherein the defendants may be represented by their appointed counsel, Robert M. Libbey, and wherein the defendants may examine Joseph McClain, James Glenn, Sergeant William Nix, and Officer Malone.” Pursuant to this order, a further hearing was held before District Judge James A. Hanson on September 24, 1965.' 6 At the conclusion of this hearing Judge Hanson declined to rule on the previously determined question of whether there was probable cause to bind appellants over to the grand jury.

Out of these somewhat unusual circumstances, appellants assert they were deprived of their constitutional rights at the preliminary hearing of July 7 by the courts’ refusals to appoint counsel for them. 7 Disposition of this contention requires analysis of several opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States and of the nature of the preliminary hearing contemplated by our Crim.R. 5 (d). Initially, we observe that appellants have given Gideon v. Wainwright 8 a more expanded interpretation than its holding indicates. Appellants argue that Gideon establishes that “all indigent defendants have a fundamental right to counsel in criminal proceedings whether in the Federal or State Courts.” Gideon left open the precise question we are asked to determine here. In Gideon it was held that the 6th and 14th amendments require that counsel be appointed for indigents in felony trials in state courts. 9 More pertinent to the issue here is appellants’ reliance on the Supreme Court of the United States’ decisions in Hamilton v. State of Alabama 10 and White v. State of Maryland. 11

' In Hamilton the Supreme Court reversed appellant’s conviction of a capital offense *689 in an Alabama court where there had been a denial of counsel at the time of appellant’s arraignment. In reversing, the Supreme Court said, “Arraignment under Alabama Law is a critical stage in criminal proceedings.” 12

Two years later the Supreme Court, in White, again had the opportunity to speak on this issue. At his preliminary hearing petitioner had pled guilty to a capital offense when he was not represented by counsel. Counsel was subsequently appointed for him and at his arraignment pleas of “not guilty” and “not guilty by reason of insanity” were entered. During the trial petitioner’s plea of guilty, which had been made at the preliminary hearing, was introduced into evidence against him. In holding that the conviction must be set aside under Hamilton, the Supreme Court stated:

Whatever may be the normal function of the ‘preliminary hearing’ under Maryland law, it was in this case as ‘critical’ a stage as arraignment under Alabama law. For petitioner entered a plea before the magistrate and that plea was taken at a time when he had no counsel.
We repeat what we said in Hamilton * * * that we do not stop to determine whether prejudice resulted: ‘Only the presence of counsel could have enabled this accused to know all the defenses available to him and to plead intelligently.’ 13

Further illumination on the question of whether there is a constitutional right to counsel at preliminary hearings is provided by the Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in Pointer v. State of Texas. 14 In this case the Supreme Court said:

[W]e do not find it necessary to decide * * * whether failure to appoint counsel to represent him at the preliminary hearing unconstitutionally denied him the assistance of counsel within the meaning of Gideon v. Wainwright * * *. In making that argument petitioner relies mainly on White v. State of Maryland * * * in which this Court reversed a conviction based in part upon evidence that the defendant had pleaded guilty to the crime at a preliminary hearing where he was without counsel. Since the preliminary hearing there, as in Hamilton v. State of Alabama * * * was one in which pleas to the charge could be made, we held in White as in Hamilton that a preliminary proceeding of that nature was so critical a stage in the prosecution that a defendant at that point was entitled to counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
423 P.2d 686, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrill-v-state-alaska-1967.