McMillian v. Superior Court
McMillian v. Superior Court
Opinion of the Court
Opinion
In these consolidated proceedings, petitioner Robert E. McMillian, an attorney, seeks to annul two orders of the San Diego County Superior Court each adjudging him in direct contempt of court, and each sentencing him to jail for five days and imposing a fine of $500.
The alleged contempts occurred in open court during the jury trial of a criminal case in which petitioner represented the defendant, Oberreuter. A codefendant had separate counsel. We said in our opinion on appeal affirming the judgments, “The record here reflects contentiousness, argumentativeness, overzealousness on both sides of the counsel table. The judge on occasion became a participant.” (People v. Oberreuter, 4 Crim. No. 8819, filed June 27, 1979, unpublished.)
Background
The trial began on October 19, 1977. On October 25 the court admonished Oberreuter for being late in returning from the noon recess at 1:33 p.m. instead of 1:30, although the court had previously convened at 1:33 on the 19th, 1:34 on the 20th and 1:38 on the 24th. The court had said on the 19th, the first day of trial, when counsel wanted to recess until
Contempt I (4 Civ. 16990)
The first alleged contempt occurred on October 27, the last trial day of the week. Without precise notice to McMillian, the prosecution suddenly rested at 2:15 p.m., after using five days to present its case. McMillian had no witnesses present except the defendant whom he expected to put on the stand. The court was aware McMillian intended to call defendant as a witness. The court ordered him to proceed, to put the defendant on the stand. McMillian said he was not ready, he wanted to talk more with his client. His request for a continuance was denied. The court insisted he proceed and found him in contempt for not proceeding.
Preferably, diligent defense counsel will be thoroughly prepared for trial to permit the prompt commencement of his case at whatever time the plaintiff rests. However, the theoretical aspects of trial and the realities during trial are not always identical.
A defendant in a criminal case is a very important witness. His liberty, one of his most precious possessions, is at stake. As much as his attorney may talk with him before and during the first steps of a trial, when the people have rested and the attorney and his client have seen and heard all the evidence presented against the defendant, an attorney cannot be faulted for wanting to reevaluate his client’s situation and to discuss the case further with the defendant before putting him on the stand.
At oral argument before this court respondent’s counsel said McMillian was disrespectful to the trial court in referring to the court as “sir” when he said, “No, sir.” We have found another instance in the record where he said, “No, sir” to the court. We have also found on opening day where codefendant’s counsel said, “Yes, sir, your Honor; yes,” and later in the day he said, “I agree, your Honor, yes, sir.” In virtually all other instances McMillian said, “Your Honor.” In open court the members of this court often have been called “gentlemen,” “your Honors,” “sirs.” Where is the disrespect?
There was no contempt.
Contempt II (4 Crim. 8794)
The jury had returned to court from their deliberations with questions and with verdicts on some, but not all, charges. The judge asked McMillian if he wished the jury polled. He said he did but he wanted to wait until all the verdicts were in. The judge replied, “If you want them polled, we will poll them now.” McMillian agreed, and said, “Additionally, I would like the jury polled as to whether they had knowledge that I had been contempted.” The court cut him off and after polling the jury, admonished them to disregard the statement of counsel.
The jury retired and when the court asked why McMillian had made the statement about his contempt, McMillian immediately apologized, stating he had not done it deliberately. He was not insolent nor disrespectful. The court held him in contempt. Obviously it was a matter of timing. McMillian had hoped to have the jury polled when all the verdicts were in. And he made the same request at the end of the case when the balance of the verdicts came in; to which the court responded,
Again there was no contempt.
In bringing this episode to an end we cannot help but wonder, when court calendars are crowded with important matters pleading for attention, is it necessary for intelligent people to cause scores of judicial hours to be spent in this fashion?
The orders are annulled.
Cologne, J., and Staniforth, J., concurred.
Proceeding 4 Crim. 8794 was initiated by a petition for writ of habeas corpus filed in the California Supreme Court involving that court’s original jurisdiction (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 10). The Supreme Court stayed enforcement of the contempt order, released McMillian from custody, and ordered the Sheriff of the County of San Diego to show cause before this court why the relief prayed for should not be granted. The sheriff (represented by county counsel) has filed a written return incorporating points and authorities which the superior court submitted in opposition to the petition. ¶ Proceeding 4 Civ. 16990 was initiated by a petition for writ of certiorari filed in this court. We treated the petition as a petition for writ of habeas corpus (In re Buckley, 10 Cal.3d 237, 247, fn. 1 [110 Cal.Rptr. 121, 514 P.2d 1201, 68 A.L.R.3d 248]) and ordered the sheriff to show cause why the contempt order should not be annulled. The sheriff has filed a written return. IIBecause the petitions have legal issues in common and the facts underlying the contempt charges are related, we consolidated the proceedings.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ROBERT E. McMILLIAN v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY, Respondent THE PEOPLE, Real Party in Interest In re ROBERT E. McMILLIAN on Habeas Corpus
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published