Court Opinion

ID: 9452161
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-04 17:31:44.045489+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:33:05.666638
License: Public Domain

BURGER, Circuit Judge
(dissenting).
I would remand for in camera inspection of Brown’s Grand Jury testimony. On that issue it should be noted that it is only a significant inconsistency between trial and Grand Jury testimony which affects credibility and warrants making the minutes available to the defense. Gordan v. United States, 112 U.S.App.D.C. 33, 299 F.2d 117 (1962); cf. De Binder v. United States, 110 U.S.App.D.C. 244, 292 F.2d 737 (1961).
However, I see no basis for reversal, especially none which justifies the majority’s finding plain error in an issue that was not briefed or argued. Again this Court reaches out for issues not considered important by the parties either at trial or on appeal.
The three witnesses referred to by the majority did not volunteer that the party was on March 27-28; they merely said, when asked by the defense where they were the night of March 27, that they were at a party. When Mrs. Smith answered in the same manner, the government cross-examined her as to how she remembered the date. She replied that she was not sure it was the 27th, “but I know it was a Saturday before he was arrested * * 1 Shortly thereafter she testified that it was the Saturday prior to his arrest.
Every concept of appellate functioning in this context leaves the reconciliation of conflicts in testimony to jury decision. The government justifiably argued the version of Mrs. Smith’s testimony more favorable to it, i. e., that the party was the Saturday before the arrest (April 3), which if accepted by the jury would have destroyed Appellant’s alibi that he was at the party the night of March 27, but it incorrectly attributed Mrs. Smith’s method of fixing the date to one of the other witnesses. The record before us indicates this mistake was inadvertent, and no party contended otherwise. Defense counsel did not object to it, although he had objected to another part of the prosecution argument.
In his argument defense counsel made a similar mistake by reinforcing his witnesses’ testimony with the statement that “these people told you it was the Saturday night of the week before the arrest,” meaning by this the Saturday ten days before the arrest (March 27). “These people,” however, had not fixed the date of the party by any such benchmarks; they had merely answered that they were at a party with Appellant on March 27. The contested issue was not whether the witnesses had indicated they were at a party with Appellant on March 27 but whether they had any basis for knowing the date of the party. By arguing that they had testified they knew the Saturday on which the party occurred *887was March 27 because of its relation to Appellant’s arrest, the defense was attributing to them statements they had not made. Only Mrs. Smith had been asked, on cross-examination, how she fixed the date.
The defense counsel made an additional mistake in his argument by misrepresenting Mrs. Smith’s testimony; neither of Mrs. Smith’s two answers coincided with defense counsel’s version of her testimony. She said it was the Saturday prior to the arrest or a Saturday before arrest; she never pinpointed it as the Saturday night “of the week before the arrest.” Defense counsel could attribute that to her only by providing his own interpretation of what Saturday was intended by “a Saturday.” Thus, not only did the defense extend the scope of Mrs. Smith’s remarks to other witnesses but it also, as the government did not, affirmatively misrepresented her testimony.
One of the purposes of having both sides argue the evidence and the inferences to be drawn is to neutralize or clarify utterances of the opposing counsel. The defense more than neutralized the government’s mistake in this case; the defense quite incorrectly summarized Mrs. Smith’s testimony and, like the government, attributed it to others.
That the government’s misstatement was one of fact and was inadvertent makes absence of an objection from the defense especially relevant. Since the error was in recital of facts which the jury had heard from witnesses, a timely objection by the defense would have enabled the prosecutor or the court to correct and remove any prejudicial effect the argument may have had on the jury. Inadvertent errors in arguments to the jury, such as those made by both sides here, are inevitable in the course of most trials; appellate courts ought not reverse whenever such an error occurs, particularly when the error was not sufficient to call forth an objection.
Here defense counsel requested preparation of a transcript of Mrs. Smith’s testimony, but that would not have resolved the question of how many had testified as she had. Also the jury interrupted its deliberations to ask that the disputed parts of two witnesses’ testimony be read to them. The ruling on such a request, however, must be left to the sound judicial discretion of the District Judge, who must consider, among other factors, whether repeating part of the evidence, especially at that point in the trial, would give it undue emphasis at the expense of the evidence as a whole.
Our recent holding in Cross v. United States, 122 U.S.App.D.C. 283, 353 F.2d 454 (1965), plainly supports affirmance here. There the prosecutor unequivocally stated two witnesses’ testimony to be that they had received no promises from the government, when in fact only one had so testified and the other had testified to the contrary — a far more inaccurate representation of the testimony than present in the instant case. In Cross the prosecution’s case rested primarily on the credibility of the two witnesses referred to, but this court found the argument was not prejudicial error since the defense counsel in his turn reminded the jury that one witness had in fact testified that promises had been made her. This surely was less a corrective than present in the instant case, where the defense did not limit itself to stating the evidence correctly but shaped it incorrectly to fit its case.
I emphasize that the references to defense and prosecution counsels’ actions are not intended to intimate misconduct in any sense but to point up that such inaccuracies are not uncommon; it is for this reason a jury is instructed not to rely on recitals of the evidence advanced by counsel in the heat of battle or by the court. But it hardly makes sense to reverse a conviction for prosecution error less significant than erroneous statements by the defense, especially when the Appellant did not urge this as grounds for reversal and the Government had no opportunity to brief or argue the point which the majority “discovered” on this appeal.

. Emphasis added.