After affirmance of his conviction largely on the testimony of Williford, a paid Government informer, for illicit whiskey operations, Newman v. United States, 5 Cir., 1955, 220 F.2d 289, certiorari denied 350 U.S. 824, 76 S.Ct. 51, 100 L.Ed. 736, Newman filed in the District Court a motion for new trial under Rule 33, Fed.Rules Crim.Proc. 18 U.S.C.A., Harrison v. United States, 5 Cir., 191 F.2d 874, on the basis of newly discovered evidence. The "new" evidence was not new at all in the real sense. On the contrary, it was but an assertion that Williford's former, "old," testimony was false as his annexed affidavit of recantation reflected.
But at the hearing on the motion, a most curious development occurred. When the United States Attorney, who had subpoenaed Williford, called for him to take the witness stand presumably to test the circumstances leading up to the recantation, the affidavit and its trustworthiness, a lawyer appearing for the witness Williford, sought, and obtained, a recess to advise with Williford on a Fifth Amendment plea of self-incrimination Without ever uttering one word, either of formal identification or claim of privilege, Williford was shortly "excused" as a witness on the plea of self-incrimination made for him by his counsel.
The affidavit of recantation stood thus in naked isolation — opposed not only to sworn and detailed testimony of this witness on the original trial — but lacking as well a present vouchsafing for its current truth. Was the Judge required to accept that?
Not to be forgotten is the decisive factor that relief being pursued was a request for a new trial because injustice had been done. That presented a solemn, serious matter, the solution of which was the very act of adjudication, the full exercise of the judicial function. This called for considerate deliberation and decision as a Judge, weighing carefully all that would indicate whether justice or injustice had been the result. The very nature of the process negatived, therefore, the basis for the claim that a paper — the recanting affidavit — compelled automatically the grant of a new trial. To honor such a claim — to test right by paper form, not substance — would be abdication of constitutional duty, frequently to persons who, as participants, co-conspirators, or actors in the criminal activity initially charged, might from a variety of base motives, or importunities, be impelled, by recantation, to come to the aid of a person whose conviction has been brought about by their testimony, confident, as experienced criminal litigants, that the unusual difficulties in successful prosecution for perjury would expose them to no real peril.
The function, on well-defined standards,
The Trial Judge had ample basis for impliedly concluding that Williford's trial testimony, not his affidavit,
The Judge's conclusion was reasonable and well founded. He did not abuse his discretion in overruling the motion for new trial, Harrison v. United States, 5 Cir., 191 F.2d 874, 876.
Affirmed.
FootNotes
"Affiant [Williford] * * * says * * * that he testified as a witness for the Government * * * and in his testimony * * * identified B. H. Newman as being one of said co-defendants connected with the case and in the violations therein charged, that as a matter of fact, affiant had seen B. H. Newman only two or three times before said occasions referred to in my testimony when I identified him, and on said occasions when I did identify him it was at night and, as a matter of fact, I was not correct in so identifying him; that while I thought I was correct nevertheless I was mistaken and I now say it was another party, unknown to me, but whom I thought was B. H. Newman, except affiant further says that he was not mistaken in his identity of B. H. Newman when affiant identified him in the Court room at the trial of the case * * *."
Comment
User Comments