Court Opinion

ID: 9648511
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-23 14:24:52.822959+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:12:02.259631
License: Public Domain

Heher, J.
(dissenting). I am not persuaded that the prosecutor’s unfinished statement engendered prejudice utterly *552immune to the remediable process of an appropriate instruction. The trial judge acted promptly and decisively and in peremptory terms expunged the remark and the issue from the case and the jury’s consideration. Counsel did not ask for a supplemental instruction; indeed, he did not want it; he deemed a mistrial the only means of doing justice.
A motion for a mistrial is addressed to the sound discretion of the court; it is a power exercised with the greatest caution, in the furtherance of justice between the accused and the State, and not allowable of right unless the vice is plainly ineradicable. And, absent a specific request by counsel, a curative instruction is not ordinarily the duty of the trial judge, where a mistrial is refused. Stale v. Witte, 13 N. J. 598, 612 (1953).
I would affirm the judgment.
For reversal—Chief Justice Yandebbilt, and Justices Oliphant, 'Waoheneeld, Burling, Jacobs and Brennan— 6.
For affirmance—Justice Heher—1.