State v. Maher
State v. Maher
Opinion of the Court
I.
Defendant was arrested in Raleigh on 27 July 1980 for the sale and delivery of the controlled substance methaqualone and for possession with intent to sell and deliver the controlled substance methaqualone. Counsel was appointed to represent defendant and his co-defendant, Laurence Edward Whittis, but in early August they retained private counsel, Daniel Work. Defendant agreed to waive venue on 12 August 1980 and the case was transferred to Carteret County on 26 August 1980.
Although defendant was originally indicted for possession with intent to sell and sale of methaqualone, subsequent laboratory tests indicated that the substance in the tablets allegedly sold by defendant was diazepam, also a controlled substance. On 17 November 1980 new indictments were returned which charged defendant with possession and sale of diazepam. These indictments were issued on 17 November 1980 and were served on defendant on 20 November 1980. On 19 November, Mr. Work appeared before the court and requested that he be allowed to withdraw as counsel for the defendant because of a conflict of interest. Judge DeRamus granted the motion to withdraw. On that same day, Allen King, an associate of Reginald Frazier, defendant’s trial counsel, appeared before Judge DeRamus and in
The case was called for trial on 24 November 1980 and Frazier, appearing for defendant, moved for a continuance on the grounds of lack of time for adequate preparation and of his involvement in a trial in progress in federal court. He told Judge Barefoot that he had been unable to prepare the case and had not even talked with defendant. The judge denied the motion to continue, and Frazier moved to be permitted to withdraw. This motion was likewise denied. A colloquy among the court, the district attorney and Fraizer then ensued. Frazier advised the court, “I can say I am totally unprepared to render to this defendant competent, effective assistance of counsel.” Judge Barefoot then advised Frazier, “I will give you 15 minutes to talk to him, but we will try him in 15 minutes.” The court then recessed for fifteen minutes and the case proceeded to trial.
The jury returned verdicts of guilty of possession with intent to sell and deliver diazepam and of sale and delivery of diazepam. Defendant was sentenced to three to four years’ imprisonment for possession and was given a consecutive sentence of three to four years’ imprisonment for the sale and delivery.
Defendant appealed to the Court of Appeals. That court, in an opinion by Chief Judge Morris in which Judges Hedrick and Wells concurred, found no error. Defendant gave notice of appeal to this Court on the basis of a substantial constitutional question pursuant to G.S. 7A-30(1) and alternatively petitioned our discretionary reivew pursuant to G.S. 7A-31. The Attorney General moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that no substantial constitutional question was presented. On 14 January 1982, we allowed defendant’s petition for discretionary review and denied the Attorney General’s motion to dismiss.
The question dispositive of this appeal is this: Under the facts of this case, did the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion for a continuance operate to deprive defendant of his constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel? To answer the issue so posited, we must determine whether, because of the refusal to allow a continuance, defendant’s attorney had adequate time to investigate, prepare and present a defense. The issue is not as incorrectly assumed by the Court of Appeals, whether defendant actually suffered prejudice by virtue of defense counsel’s performance at trial. We are here concerned with the relationship between defendant’s sixth amendment guarantee of effective assistance of counsel of his own choosing and the implicit constitutional guarantee that an accused and his counsel shall have a reasonable time to investigate, prepare and present defendant’s defense. We have previously addressed this bifocal constitutional guarantee in State v. McFadden, 292 N.C. 609, 234 S.E. 2d 742 (1977), and find that decision controlling here.
Although a motion for a continuance is ordinarily addressed to the discretion of the trial judge and is reviewable only upon a showing of an abuse of discretion, when the motion is based on a constitutional right the ruling of the trial judge is reviewable on appeal as a question of law. E.g., State v. McFadden, 292 N.C. 609, 234 S.E. 2d 742. Defendant’s motion for a continuance in this case was based on his constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel and, thus, is fully reviewable as a question of law.
Defendant’s claim here is based not on his attorney’s competency or performance at trial, but on the adequacy of the time given his attorney to prepare for trial. The record discloses the relevant circumstances to be these: Defendant’s privately retained counsel, Daniel Work, who had prepared the case for trial, withdrew as defendant’s attorney four days prior to trial. Frazier was retained by defendant and entered an appearance in the case through his associate, Allen King, on that same day. The court was informed that Frazier was then trying a case in federal court which was expected to last into the next week. On Monday, 24 November, Frazier appeared with defendant for the first time. He stated to the court that he had been unable to prepare the case for trial due to the shortness of time and his involvement in
As stated by Justice (now Chief Justice) Branch in McFadden,
It is implicit in the constitutional guarantees of assistance of counsel and confrontation of one’s accusers and witnesses against him that an accused and his counsel shall have a reasonable time to investigate, prepare and present his defense. However, no set length of time is guaranteed and whether defendant is denied due process must be determined under the circumstances of each case.
292 N.C. at 616, 234 S.E. 2d at 747. In McFadden, defendant had retained private counsel, Mr. Powell, who had investigated and prepared the case for trial. On the morning of the trial, Powell’s associate, Mr. Parrish, appeared and informed the court that Powell was engaged in another trial. The court denied defendant’s motion for a continuance and directed Parrish to represent defendant. In granting defendant a new trial, this Court stated:
In instant case defendant, who was charged with a felony, met and talked with Mr. Parrish for the first time about ninety minutes before the case was called for trial. Mr. Parrish had practiced law for eighteen months and had previously tried only one jury case. He knew nothing about this case until he arrived in court. All of the preliminary hearings and preparations for trial had been handled exclusively by Mr. Powell. Defendant indicated to Mr. Parrish on the day of the trial that he wanted his retained counsel to represent him. Under these circumstances defendant was denied effective assistance of counsel because he and Mr. Parrish did not have a reasonable time in which to prepare and present a defense.
Id. Although the circumstances of this case are somewhat different from McFadden in that defendant here was in fact represented by the attorney he chose to represent him, the remaining factors are remarkably similar. The attorney who
The Court of Appeals rejected defendant’s constitutional claim because he failed to show that the denial of his continuance motion resulted in prejudice. In support of this holding the court cited State v. Robinson, 283 N.C. 71, 194 S.E. 2d 811 (1973), and State v. Moses, 272 N.C. 509, 158 S.E. 2d 617 (1968) (per curiam). These cases do indeed hold that defendant must prove both error and prejudice in the denial of his continuance motion in order to entitle him to a new trial. The prejudice which must be shown, according to the Court of Appeals’ opinion, is that the trial was a “farce and mockery of justice.”
The Court of Appeals erred in addressing this appeal as though it involved the traditional claim of ineffective assistance of counsel by virtue of inadequate performance of counsel at trial. Unquestionably, prejudice to defendant resulting from counsel’s performance at trial must be shown by defendant in that instance. Here, however, the questions are altogether different. Neither performance of counsel at trial nor any resulting prejudice to defendant are relevant. Under the authority of McFadden, a defendant’s constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel implicitly guarantees defendant, as a matter of law, the right for him and his attorney to have adequate time to prepare a defense. In this instance, the error occurs before the trial even begins. Prejudice is presumed because no one can be certain how trial counsel might have been able to perform if he had had adequate time to perpare for trial. Thus, failure of the trial court to grant a motion to continue which is essential to allowing adequate time for trial preparation, unless the State can prove the absence of prejudice, operates to deny defendant his right to effective assistance of counsel.
In light of the foregoing, we wish to make it abundantly clear that we offer no opinion on Mr. Frazier’s performance at trial or on the propriety of his alleged conflict with a trial in another court. The trial court made no findings of fact with respect to the latter and we are bound by the record before us. The record discloses that Mr. Frazier was retained four days prior to this defendant’s trial (a Saturday and Sunday included) while he was appearing as counsel in a trial in another court and that he was allowed to consult with defendant for only fifteen minutes prior to the trial of a case with which he was unfamiliar.
Nor is this Court inadvertent to Mr. Frazier’s reputation for utilizing delaying tactics in the trial courts in the past. Again, however, we are bound by the facts revealed in the record before us now. As noted in McFadden,
*551 The record does not disclose that [defendant] had in any way contributed to his counsel’s absence. The fact that his counsel had accepted other employment which prevented his presence at the trial cannot be charged to defendant so as to deny him his constitutional right to counsel of his own choice. We find nothing in this record that indicates that defendant exercised his right to select counsel of his choice in a manner calculated to disrupt or obstruct the orderly progress of the court.
292 N.C. at 615, 234 S.E. 2d at 746-47.
So it is here. While this defendant did have the benefit of his chosen counsel at trial, he was clearly denied the right to adequate time for him and his counsel to prepare for trial. There is nothing in this record to indicate that defendant chose Mr. Frazier in order to obstruct the orderly progress of the court.
We also wish to reiterate Chief Justice Branch’s admonition in McFadden:
We wish to make it abundantly clear that we do not approve of tactics by counsel or client which tend to delay the trial of cases. . . . The judiciary possesses powers to regulate and discipline attorneys who deliberately or negligently impede the progress of our courts. Likewise an accused may lose his constitutional right to be represented by counsel of his choice when he perverts that right to a weapon for the purpose of obstructing and delaying his trial. It might well be said that defendant’s chosen counsel acted improvidently in that he did not consult the trial judge concerning a continuance, or in that ... he did not take steps to prepare [an associate] for the trial of the case and consult defendant as to the possibility that his associate might proceed with the trial in the event that a continuance was not obtained. However, any fault of counsel without defendant’s concurrence cannot be imputed to defendant so as to preclude him from obtaining counsel of his choice.
292 N.C. at 616, 234 S.E. 2d at 747 (emphasis added).
Defendant also contends that certain comments made by the district attorney during the closing argument amounted to an im
In summary, we find that the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion for a continuance infringed upon defendant’s constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel and that he is entitled to a new trial on both charges. The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the cause is remanded to that court with instructions to remand to the Superior Court, Carteret County, for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
. For cases in which the standard of representation, “within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases,” has been applied, see State v. Misenheimer, 304 N.C. 108, 282 S.E. 2d 791 (1981); State v. Milano, 297 N.C. 485, 256 S.E. 2d 154 (1979). We are not confronted in this case with the question of what is the standard against which an attorney’s performance in a criminal trial is to be measured, nor do we purport to decide that issue.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent, and vote to affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
The majority awards defendant a new trial on the ground that his constitutional rights were violated when the trial court did not afford him and his counsel adequate time to prepare for trial. I do not think there are sufficient established facts in the record to justify this determination. In my view the majority opinion creates another stumbling block in bringing defendants to trial.
In State v. McFadden, 292 N.C. 609, 234 S.E. 2d 742 (1977) this court said:
It is implicit in the constitutional guarantees of assistance of counsel and confrontation of one’s accusers and witnesses against him that an accused and his counsel shall have a reasonable time to investigate, prepare and present his defense. However, no set length of time is guaranteed and whether defendant is denied due process must be determined under the circumstances of each case. (Citations.)
The burden is on defendant to show that he and his counsel were not afforded adequate time to prepare for trial. State v.
The ground upon which the majority awards a new trial should be addressed in a motion for appropriate relief as provided by G.S. 15A-1415. Under that procedure the trial court could receive sworn testimony from Attorneys King and Frazier and defendant on the question of why they did not have adequate time to prepare for trial.
The majority relies strongly on the decision of this court in State v. McFadden, supra, in which this court granted the defendant a new trial for the reason that his counsel was not given adequate time to prepare for trial. The facts in that case are distinguishable from the facts of the case at hand.
In McFadden, the defendant had employed Attorney Powell to represent him. On the day of trial, Mr. Parrish, one of Mr.
In the case at hand, Attorney King, an associate of Attorney Frazier, was involved in the case for at least five days prior to trial. There is nothing in the record showing his experience in the trial of cases. On the day of trial, Attorney Frazier appeared and moved for a continuance on the ground that he was not prepared. His only explanation for not being prepared was that he had been engaged in the trial of a federal matter; he gave no further specifics. It will be noted that irrespective of the federal case, Attorney Frazier was in superior court on Monday and proceeded to represent defendant when required to do so.
I vote to affirm the Court of Appeals.
. It is true that a weekend is included in that period of time. I know of no statute, rule of court or canon of ethics that prevents an attorney from working on a weekend when he knows his client’s case is set for trial on Monday.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State of North Carolina v. Stephen J. Maher
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- 13 cases
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- Published