Skinner v. Louisiana, 44
Decision Date | 27 January 1969 |
Docket Number | No. 44,44 |
Citation | 89 S.Ct. 704,21 L.Ed.2d 684,393 U.S. 473 |
Parties | William SKINNER et al., petitioners, v. LOUISIANA |
Court | U.S. Supreme Court |
George M. Leppert, New Orleans, La., for petitioners.
Mrs. Louise Korns, New Orleans, La., for respondent.
On writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court of Louisiana.
The writ of certiorari is dismissed as improvidently granted.
Petitioners were convicted of the possession and sale of marihuana and given lengthy prison terms. The Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed. State v. Skinner, 251 La. 300, 204 So.2d 370 (1967). We granted certiorari to consider several alleged errors occurring during the course of the state court proceedings. Skinner. v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 963, 88 S.Ct. 2031, 20 L.Ed.2d 876 (1968).
Petitioners argued before this Court that they were denied due process of law because the trial court refused to declare a recess, but instead allowed the trial to continue until nearly 3 a. m.1 The principal basis for this claim is that Mr. Gill, counsel for Skinner and Gueldner had become ineffective due to illness. I believe that the failure of the court to recess the trial when requested to do so by Gill effectively deprived petitioners Skinner and Gueldner of the right to the assistance of counsel guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution.
The facts are relatively simple. After several continuances, some granted because of Gill's illness, trial of the case commenced on the morning of March 21, 1966. The morning was consumed by selection of the jury and the trial proper did not commence until 2:45 p. m. The court recessed from 6:15 to 8 p. m. for dinner and at 11:40 p. m., the State rested. At that time, the following colloquy took place between court and counsel:
* * *
Thereafter, the court recessed for 35 minutes and reconvened at 12:25 a. m. The defense then presented its case. At 3 a. m., the court declared a recess until 9:30 the next morning. When the court reconvened, both parties presented their arguments to the jury.
In their motion for a new trial, petitioners alleged that the court erred in not declaring a recess after the State had rested. The trial court held a hearing on this issue, including the question of whether any of the jurors had been asleep during the trial.2 Gill and his physician testified at that hearing. Gill testified that by the time the State had concluded its case he was 'just about dead on [his] feet' and that he did not, either that evening or the next morning, present the type of defense to which petitioners were entitled. He failed to ask for a mistrial after he had noticed a juror sleeping and had not called two possible witnesses. He had been in the hospital the week before and had just finished trying a case shortly before the present one began. During that earlier trial, he had found it necessary to go to bed by 7 p. m. His physical condition continued to deteriorate and he entered the hospital for two weeks shortly after the trial.
Gill's doctor then testified as to his condition three days after the trial and to his probable condition on the day of the trial. He testified that Gill was suffering from an acidotic condition due to diabetes and from nervous exhaustion. The doctor testified that Gill's efficiency at the trial would have been about two-thirds of normal and, after midnight, he 'would be practically ineffective.'
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