PBCBA BAR BULLETINS PBCBA Bulletin - February 2020 | Page 13

PERSONAL INJURY CORNER Time Limits on Voir Dire TED BABBITT Three recent cases in the Fourth District Court of Appeals indicate a negative attitude in the appellate court for a trial judge’s arbitrary time limitations on voir dire examination. In Hopkins v. State , 223 So. 3d 285 (Fla. 4th DCA 2017), the trial court set an arbitrary time limit of three hours for each side for voir dire examination. At the end of the defense lawyer’s three-hour limit, he asked for an additional 20 minutes to question each remaining juror whom he had not been able to reach. Defense counsel gave his reasoning and his areas of probable examination and the trial court denied the request. After a finding of guilty of first-degree murder with a firearm, the defense appealed the imposition as an unreasonable time limitation on voir dire. The District Court reversed and remanded for a new trial. At Page 286, the appellate court held: Trial courts have considerable discretion in determining the extent of counsel’s examination of prospective jurors. This include setting time limitations on voir dire. Perry v. State, 675 So. 2d 976, 979 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996). However, limits that do not “flex with the circumstances” can result in unreasonable curtailment of counsel’s efforts to obtain a “fair and impartial jury to try the issues in this cause. Williams, 424 So.2d at 149. The appellate court found that given the large jury pool and the very few minutes with each juror and three-four time limit permitted counsel, the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to grant the relatively small additional time that defense counsel had requested. In Thomany v. State , 252 So. 3d 256 (Fla. 4th DCA 2018), the Fourth District affirmed a conviction for first degree murder under very different circumstances than Hopkins v. State, supra. There the appellate court found that counsel’s questions were primarily intended to plant seeds in the juror’s mind about the defendant’s theory of the case and concluded that such pre-trying of the case was not the purpose of voir dire and was a waste of the preallotted time. However, the appellate court held at Page 257: . . . despite the fact that defense counsel could have made better use of the allotted time, the trial court should not read this opinion as suggesting that inflexibility in the amount of time provided for voir dire is a wise path upon which to continue to travel. that would be necessary to try this case again.” The Fourth District took the dim view of the trial court’s refusal to allow the defense lawyer’s requested additional time to examine jurors on voir dire and states at Page 1237 Citing O’Hara v. State , 642 So. 2d 592 at 593-94 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994), the Fourth District in the Thomany case held: Even though trial judges may question prospective jurors, their role in jury selection must not impair counsel’s right and duty to question the venire. A trial court abuses its discretion when the imposition of unreasonable time limitations or limitations on the number of questions results in the loss of this fundamental right. In Strachan v. State, 279 So. 3d 1231 (Fla. 4th DCA 2019), the Fourth District reached a different result and reversed and remanded for a new trial a conviction for aggravated battery as a lesser included offense of attempted first degree murder based on an unreasonable limitation on a defendant’s voir dire of potential jurors. Unlike the Thomany case, the Fourth District held: . . . here defense counsel’s voir dire was primarily intended to elicit useful information for potential cause challenges or peremptory strakes. In short, defense counsel used the ultimately-allotted fifty-five minutes very wisely. The Fourth District found at Page 1236 [A] trial judge cannot question prospective jurors on such crucial areas as the presumption of innocence, the State’s burden of proof, and the defendant’s right not to testify, and then prevent counsel from further examination under the guise that it would be repetitive. The Fourth District cited with approval the above quoted finding in Thomany that “inflexibility in the amount of time provided for voir dire is a wise path upon which to continue to travel” and then admonished counsel for the State and the trial judge that “any extension of time would have been far less then the many hours which both sides appellate counsel spent on this appeal, and many days less than the amount of time PBCBA BAR BULLETIN 13 Citing O’Hara v. State , 642 So. 2d 592, 593-94 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994). The right to an adequate voir dire examination is a fundamental right in any trial, criminal or civil. This writer has never understood the necessity of any arbitrary limitation on voir dire examination including any pre-determined time limit. The trial judge has every right to consider cutting off a lawyer from voir dire when time is wasted in an unnecessary lengthy voir dire examination but limiting counsel in advance to an arbitrary voir dire examination appears to be an invitation to retrying a case and the above appellate decisions seem to suggest that such an arbitrary limit is indeed unwise. NOTE: BECAUSE A NUMBER OF PEOPLE HAVE REQUESTED COPIES OF PAST ARTICLES, A COMPILATION OF THESE ARTICLES IS NOW AVAILABLE TO MEMBERS OF THE PALM BEACH COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION, FREE OF CHARGE, BY CALLING (561) 684-2500.