State v. Watkins
State v. Watkins
Opinion of the Court
We granted certiorari to review a Court of Appeals decision that reversed respondent’s convictions for armed robbery and possession of a weapon during a violent crime. State v. Watkins, Op. No. 2011-UP-091 (S.C. Ct.App. filed March 8, 2011). The Court of Appeals purported to adopt a rule
Did the Court of Appeals err in creating a rule mandating that a trial judge recuse himself upon motion if he heard the post-conviction relief (PCR) matter that led to the new proceeding?
ANALYSIS
Respondent was first convicted of armed robbery and weapons possession in a trial held in 2002. Following the Court of Appeals’ dismissal of respondent’s Anders
After remand, the matter came before Judge Patterson in March 2008 on cross-motions by the Public Defender’s Office to be relieved from representing respondent and respondent’s motion that it be relieved. Ultimately, the judge relieved counsel and informed respondent, who was hoping to hire a private attorney, that he would appoint counsel for respondent if he made a timely request before the case was scheduled to be tried in July 2008. At a subsequent hearing before Judge Patterson in April 2008, the State announced that respondent wanted a bench trial, and that the State wished to set it for June 2 before Judge Patterson, given his familiarity with respondent’s request to proceed pro se and the fear that once the case was called for trial that respondent would then seek to delay by asking for representation. Respondent’s request that Judge Patterson recuse himself for the retrial because he had presided at respondent’s PCR hearing was denied.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals held it was reversible error for Judge Patterson to deny respondent’s request that he recuse himself, analogizing this case to Floyd v. State, 303 S.C. 298, 400 S.E.2d 145 (1991). Floyd adopted a per se rule that a judge scheduled to hear a PCR matter must, upon request, recuse himself if he presided over the guilty plea, criminal trial, or probation revocation for which PCR is sought.
First, it is questionable whether respondent’s request that Judge Patterson recuse himself, made only at the April 2008 hearing preserved the recusal issue for appeal when it was not renewed either at the May 2008 hearing or at the September 2008 trial. Second, a retrial judge is in a different posture than the PCR judge. A PCR judge is frequently asked to review his own conduct in the trial, plea, or probation revocation proceeding, albeit most often through a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. On the other hand, a PCR judge tasked with retrying the case is not being asked to judge his own prior rulings. Moreover, the trial judge is often required in effect to pass upon the guilt of the defendant, while guilt or innocence is not at issue in a PCR hearing. Compare State v. Atterberry, 134 S.C. 392,133 S.E. 101 (1926) (where trial judge expressed opinion that defendant was guilty when sentencing defendant, must recuse at retrial upon objection) with State v.
While we disagree with the rule announced by the Court of Appeals, we emphasize that a criminal defendant may ask the judge who heard his PCR to recuse herself from the retrial of the matter for any of the reasons for which recusal may be sought. Here, we find no evidence of judicial bias warranting Judge Patterson’s recusal. Canon 3(E)(1)(a), SCACR.
CONCLUSION
The decision of the Court of Appeals is
REVERSED.
. Since this rule was announced in an unpublished memorandum opinion, it had no precedential value. Rule 220(a), SCACR.
. Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806, 95 S.Ct. 2525, 45 L.Ed.2d 562 (1975).
. Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 73 (1963).
. State v. Watkins, Op. No. 2004-UP-406 (S.C. Ct.App. filed June 22, 2004).
. We granted the State’s petition to argue against the Floyd precedent. Since Floyd, which establishes a rule for PCR, is not before the Court in this direct appeal, we decline to reconsider Floyd at this juncture.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The STATE v. Robert WATKINS
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published