State v. Bailey

352 A.2d 415, 1976 Del. Super. LEXIS 128
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 27, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 352 A.2d 415 (State v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bailey, 352 A.2d 415, 1976 Del. Super. LEXIS 128 (Del. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

CHRISTIE, Judge.

Defendant was indicted on charges of murder in the first degree and possession of a deadly weapon during the commission of a felony. After a jury trial, the jury found him guilty of the lesser included offense of manslaughter and of possession of a deadly weapon during the commission of a felony. The trial began November 18, 1975, and lasted approximately four weeks. During the presentation of evidence, the jury was not confined or sequestered; but, after the jury was charged and the case was in its hands for decision, the jury was sequestered and was kept together for about 24 hours until it arrived at its verdict.

After the jury had been sequestered and had begun to deliberate, it was conducted *417 to the Du Pont Hotel, one block from the Court House, for dinner. Three uniformed court bailiffs had been sworn as being the bailiffs officially in charge of the jury. During the dinner hour, the three sworn bailiffs were joined by the chief bailiff, two or three additional uniformed court bailiffs, two court security officers and four Wilmington police officers in conducting the jury on foot to the hotel grill room and guarding them there during dinner.

During the meal, the jury sat at one large table by themselves and all of the court personnel, together with the police officers, sat at a separate large table about 15 or 20 feet away.

At the table occupied by the court personnel were the bailiffs, the court security officers and the police officers as well as the official court reporter and the presiding judge. The judge, who joined the group at the hotel, did not sit next to any of the police officers, and his part of the table was not clearly visible from the jury’s table due to a post and a partition.

All four of the police officers who accompanied this group to the hotel for dinner and who were then providing peripheral security protection to the jury had been witnesses for the State at the trial. The testimony of two of these police officers was significant testimony involving many phases of the case. There were, however, other persons who testified for the State that they were eyewitnesses of the alleged shooting and gave somewhat conflicting accounts of the details of what had occurred. No police officer was an eyewitness of the shooting, but some of the police testimony was, nevertheless, important to the State’s case.

The defense attorneys have made a formal motion for a new trial alleging that the events outlined above prejudiced the defendant’s case and violated defendant’s right to trial by an impartial and unbiased jury. The motion was assigned to me— rather than to the trial judge — since it was apparent that a hearing would be necessary and the hearing would involve events in which the trial judge had a part.

A special hearing was conducted before me on the matter. At the time of the hearing, the defense enlarged the grounds on which the written motion was based to include essentially the following two contentions :

1) Defendant was prejudiced because the police officers who took some part in guarding the jury at supper had been important witnesses for the State.
2) Defendant was prejudiced because the jury saw (or could have seen) the judge having dinner at a table where the four police officer witnesses were seated.

I

At the hearing the State presented essentially undisputed evidence which indicated that the jury went to the hotel in a compact group with uniformed bailiffs leading the way and bailiffs bringing up the rear. With the bailiffs was one or both of the Superior Court security officers. On a parallel sidewalk, perhaps 15 feet away, the police officers guarded the flanks without having any personal contact with the jurors.

In the dining room, the police officers ate at a large table with all the court personnel at least fifteen feet from the jurors’ table. When the jurors left the table to help themselves at the self-service salad buffet table, no police officers mingled with the jurors. Instead, the chief bailiff stood informal guard near the salad table and two police officers stood informal remote guard near the exits of the grill room. Later, the judge went to the salad table with some court personnel, but not with the police officers.

Thereafter, the procession returned to the Court House in a formation similar to the formation for the trip to the hotel.

*418 At no time did the jurors have any personal contact with the police officers, but the jurors could have observed the seating arrangements and might have noticed that the police officers were supplementing the bailiffs in guarding the jury.

The leading case on the possible violation of the constitutional rights of a defendant when persons having custody of the jury had also acted as witnesses in the case is Turner v. Louisiana, 379 U.S. 466, 85 S.Ct. 546, 13 L.Ed.2d 424 (1965). In that murder case, two deputy sheriffs were the two principal prosecution witnesses. The same deputy sheriffs were in charge of the jury which was sequestered during the entire three-day trial. They were in continuous and intimate association with the jurors for three days, eating at the same table with them, conversing with them and doing errands for them. The deputies drove the jurors to a restaurant for each meal and to their lodgings for each night. The jury convicted the defendant, and he was sentenced to death. The United States Supreme Court reversed the conviction on the grounds that the basic guarantee of the Fourteenth Amendment had been violated. In so holding the Court observed that a show of actual prejudice need be presented since “what happened in this case operated to subvert these basic guarantees of trial by jury.”

See also Bowles v. Texas, 366 F.2d 734 (CA.5, 1966) where a new trial was denied after analysis of the testimony of the witness in question.

Many other cases dealing with situations when police officers or sheriff’s deputies were witnesses and were also in charge of the jury are collected in 38 A.L.R.3d 1012.

The Turner case and the subsequent cases indicate that the areas of special concern in such cases include: the type of custodial relationship between the witness and the jury, the degree of actual contact, the duration of the relationship and the importance of the witnesses’ testimony. Each of these matters must be considered in the light of the facts of the particular case.

Type of custodial contact: In the Turner case and in several other cases where a verdict was set aside, the police officers or deputy sheriffs who had testified for the State at the trial were among those actually in official immediate charge of the jury. In the case at bar, sworn bailiffs in uniform were in immediate charge of the jury and had the only personal contact with jurors. The police witnesses were at most a remote supplemental guard force in addition to those actually in charge.

Degree of contact: In the Turner

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Related

Feleke v. State
620 A.2d 222 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1993)
Bailey v. Redman
502 F. Supp. 313 (D. Delaware, 1980)
State v. Cooper
370 N.E.2d 725 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1977)
Bailey v. State
363 A.2d 312 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
352 A.2d 415, 1976 Del. Super. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bailey-delsuperct-1976.