Opinion ID: 1107717
Heading Depth: 1
Heading Rank: 1

Heading: the cases in conflict

Text: The petitioner, Robert Carratelli, was charged with six counts of vehicular homicide stemming from an automobile collision. Media coverage of the case rendered impaneling a jury difficult. During jury selection, defense counsel moved to strike several jurors for cause, alleging that they could not be impartial. When his challenges were denied, Carratelli struck three of the potential jurors (Johnson, Lott, and Nesbitt) with peremptory challenges. When the trial court denied his cause challenge to juror Inman, however, Carratelli used his remaining peremptory strike on another person; thus, Inman remained on the jury. The jury subsequently convicted Carratelli on all counts. On appeal, Carratelli alleged that the trial court erred in denying his challenges for cause. Carratelli v. State, 832 So.2d 850, 852 (Fla. 4th DCA 2003) ( Carratelli I ). Citing relevant excerpts from the voir dire transcript, the Fourth District agreed that the trial court abused its discretion in denying challenges to the three jurors whom the defendant struck with peremptory challenges: Here, the record demonstrates reasonable doubts concerning Nesbitt's, Johnson's, and Lott's abilities to be fair and impartial. Those doubts were not dispelled during subsequent questioning. Each of these jurors expressed significant reservations about their suitability to sit as jurors in this case. While a prospective juror's own perception of his or her unfitness to sit as a fair and impartial juror in a particular case does not end the inquiry, such an assessment cannot easily be disregarded. Because Nesbitt's, Johnson's, and Lott's responses created a reasonable doubt as to their ability to sit as fair and impartial jurors, the trial court abused its discretion in denying appellant's challenges for cause to this trio. Id. at 854-55. Despite finding error as to these three, however, the district court denied Carratelli a new trial because his defense counsel failed to preserve the claim. Id. at 856. The district court found that counsel's statement to the trial court after the State accepted the jury was neither a motion nor a request for additional peremptory challenges, and that even if the statement was deemed to be such, counsel failed to obtain a ruling on it. Id. Accordingly, the court found the errors had not been preserved. Although Carratelli also appealed the denial of his cause challenge to juror Inman, the Fourth District did not address the claim, and thus affirmed the denial of the cause challenge as to Inman as well. [1] Carratelli then filed a motion for postconviction relief under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. He alleged that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to preserve the denial of the cause challenges. Carratelli II, 915 So.2d at 1258. Carratelli alleged that he was prejudiced because his convictions would have been reversed on appeal and because one juror  Inman  who was biased against [him] and who should have been excused for cause, actually served on the jury. The circuit court denied the motion, and Carratelli appealed. The Fourth District equated the failure to preserve a challenge for cause with the failure to raise one. Both, the court said, result in an issue not properly presented to the trial court for a ruling. Id. Focusing on the prejudice prong of Strickland, the district court said: Where a lawyer's incompetence involves the failure to exercise or preserve a cause challenge, the proper inquiry for deciding whether prejudice under Strickland has occurred is not to ask whether the trial court would have sustained the challenge had it been made at trial, or whether the appellate court would have reversed the conviction had the objection been preserved. The Strickland requirement of actual prejudice imposes a stringent test for granting postconviction relief based on the failure to preserve a cause objection to a juror. The test is whether the failure to preserve a challenge to a juror by sufficiently bringing the objection to the trial judge's attention resulted in a biased juror serving on the jury. Id. at 1260 (quoting Jenkins v. State, 824 So.2d 977, 982 (Fla. 4th DCA 2002)). The court then applied this standard to Carratelli's case. Noting that three of the four challenged jurors did not serve on the jury, the district court examined the voir dire statements of the remaining juror and held that juror Inman's slight familiarity with the case did not rise to that level of actual bias necessary for postconviction relief. Id. at 1261. The court certified conflict with Austing. Id. at 1263. In Austing, it was the State that challenged defense counsel's peremptory strike. The trial court ruled that defense counsel's response to the State's challenge was not race-neutral. Austing, 804 So.2d at 604. [2] Defense counsel failed to preserve the error by renewing the objection before the jury was sworn. Id. n. 1. Austing later filed a postconviction motion alleging that his counsel was ineffective. The circuit court denied it, holding that Austing had not established prejudice by showing that with a different juror the outcome of the trial would have been different. The Fifth District reversed. The court addressed the prejudice prong of Strickland, stating that there can never be a showing as to what would have occurred with a different jury, id., and concluded: The trial court's erroneous denial of Austing's peremptory challenge was per se reversible error, and, if properly preserved, would have resulted in a reversal by this court on direct appeal. Therefore, it is apodictic that the result would have been different- i.e., reversal on appeal-had trial counsel been effective; therefore, the two-pronged Strickland test has been met. Id. at 605 (citations omitted). Therefore, Carratelli and Austing conflict on which standard to apply for determining prejudice when a defendant claims that defense counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to preserve a juror challenge. The Fourth District held that the defendant must demonstrate that someone actually biased against him served as a juror. The Fifth District, on the other hand, looked to the outcome of the appeal  not the trial  to determine prejudice. In that district, a defendant establishes prejudice if the error that counsel failed to preserve would have resulted in reversal on appeal  that is, if the defendant could establish a reasonable doubt concerning the potential juror's impartiality.