State v. Colbert

654 A.2d 963, 139 N.H. 367, 1995 N.H. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedFebruary 3, 1995
DocketNos. 92-517; 93-497
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 654 A.2d 963 (State v. Colbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Colbert, 654 A.2d 963, 139 N.H. 367, 1995 N.H. LEXIS 6 (N.H. 1995).

Opinions

JOHNSON, J.

The defendant, James M. Colbert, appeals the Superior Court’s {McHugh, J.) denial of his motions to set aside his four first degree murder convictions. The issues on appeal involve the substitution of an alternate juror for a juror who became ill in the midst of the jury’s deliberations. Colbert argues that the substitution violated former RSA 500-A:13 (1983) (current version at RSA 500-A:13 (1983 & Supp. 1994)), as well as his right to a twelve-person jury and due process. He also claims ineffective assistance of counsel, and contends that the Superior Court’s (McGuire, J.) failure to hold and record a colloquy with the excused juror violated his rights to an impartial jury, to due process, and to be present at his trial. We affirm.

In November 1991, Colbert was indicted on four counts of first degree murder for the deaths of his wife and three daughters. He pled not guilty by reason of insanity. At the start of trial, the trial court empaneled fifteen jurors, waiting until the close of evidence and the [369]*369end of its instructions to designate three of the fifteen as alternates. Although the trial court informed Colbert of these procedures before jury selection, he did not object to them at any time.

The jury deliberated for about four hours on a Friday without reaching a verdict and then reconvened the following Monday. At 10:45 that morning, the foreperson of the jury was excused due to illness. The trial transcript contains no record of any discussions concerning this dismissal. It reveals only that, following the dismissal, the court polled the three alternates for bias, substituted one for the ill juror, appointed a new foreperson, and told the reconstituted jury to begin their deliberations anew. According to Colbert’s brief, his counsel never objected to the juror substitution procedure. The new jury deliberated for two hours before returning verdicts of sane, and therefore guilty, on the four indictments. Colbert appealed, raising claims unconnected to the juror substitution.

Three months after Colbert’s trial, this court decided State v. Dushame, 136 N.H. 309, 616 A.2d 469 (1992), reversing a defendant’s convictions because a mid-deliberation juror substitution violated former RSA 500-A:13, which required that alternates be discharged upon final submission of the case to the jury. Within a week, Colbert moved to set aside the jury’s verdicts, citing Dushame. Colbert later filed a supplemental motion to set aside the verdicts, obtained new counsel, and filed two more motions, claiming ineffective assistance of trial counsel and lack of an adequate record.

At the hearing on Colbert’s motions, Colbert presented the testimony of his trial counsel and a deputy clerk in an effort to fill in the gaps in the record regarding the juror substitution. Colbert served a subpoena on the judge who presided at his trial, but the Superior Court (Gray, J.) granted the judge’s motion to quash it. The Superior Court (McHugh, J.) made the following relevant findings:

At around 10:00 a.m. [on Monday, August 10, 1992], the judge received word from a bailiff that the foreperson of the jury was ill. Counsel were summoned to chambers and told of the situation. Defense counsel requested that the judge speak to the juror on the record but outside the presence of counsel, to determine the nature of her problem and whether she was able to continue deliberating. . . . Defense counsel left the chambers conference to confer with defendant.
At the motion hearing, defendant’s trial counsel Bjorn Lange recounted how he met with defendant and informed him that a juror was ill and the judge would determine whether the juror could continue. Defendant expressed concern that the judge was talking to the juror outside the [370]*370presence of counsel, but counsel reassured him that it was best that lawyers for neither side be present, and that the colloquy would be on the record. .. .
At some point, the judge received word from a bailiff that the juror was vomiting. Based on testimony of Deputy Clerk Kris Spath at the motion hearing on May 13, 1993, it appears that the Clerk, acting on the trial judge’s instructions, spoke with the juror and confirmed her condition. This being the case, the judge determined that the juror was too ill to continue and that she should be discharged. No colloquy was conducted.

The superior court found Colbert’s claims of error meritless and accordingly denied his motions to set aside the verdicts.

Colbert then filed a second notice of appeal with this court, based on the juror substitution issues. This court accepted that appeal and consolidated it with his first one. We note that Colbert’s brief and oral argument contain no mention of the points raised in his first notice of appeal. Those claims are therefore waived. See State v. Field, 132 N.H. 760, 765, 571 A.2d 1276, 1279 (1990).

We first address Colbert’s contention that the trial court’s juror substitution violated former RSA 500-A:13, as well as his State constitutional right to a twelve-person jury and his State and federal constitutional rights to due process. We deem these issues to be raised as in a direct appeal. As in State v. Dushame, the trial court violated former RSA 500-A:13. See Dushame, 136 N.H. at 314, 616 A.2d at 472. Colbert’s convictions, however, cannot be overturned on this statutory basis because, unlike Dushame, he did not object below to any aspect of the substitution process. See id. at 312, 616 A.2d at 470-71; see also State v. Ryan, 135 N.H. 587, 588-89, 607 A.2d 954, 955 (1992). For the same reasons, Colbert’s due process claim is not properly before us.

Regarding the twelve-person jury issue, Colbert accurately notes that our usual contemporaneous objection rule does not apply. State v. Hewitt, 128 N.H. 557, 561, 517 A.2d 820, 822 (1986). A defendant relinquishes the right to a jury of twelve only by express, personal waiver. Id. Colbert also correctly points out that the trial record is devoid of such a waiver. The absence of a waiver, however, is irrelevant here because Colbert never surrendered his right to a twelve-person jury. In Hewitt, the defendant was convicted by a jury of eleven. In this case, the ill foreperson was replaced by one of the alternate jurors, not merely dismissed, thereby maintaining the required complement of twelve.

[371]*371The dissent focuses on a paragraph in Dushame to argue that a trial judge violates a defendant’s right to a twelve-person jury if the jury includes a person who is not, by statute, technically a juror. This paragraph, however, is at variance with a sentence following it: “We do not here consider the constitutional implications of late substitution [of a juror].” Dushame, 136 N.H. at 315, 616 A.2d at 472. Hence, the paragraph relied on by the dissent is dicta on the issue before us in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
654 A.2d 963, 139 N.H. 367, 1995 N.H. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-colbert-nh-1995.