State v. Hightower , 361 Or. 412 ( 2017 )


Menu:
  • 412	                            April 27, 2017	                            No. 25
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Respondent on Review,
    v.
    GREGORY LEON HIGHTOWER,
    aka Gregory Leon Hightower, Sr.,
    Petitioner on Review.
    (CC 120632737; CA A154220; SC S063924)
    On review from the Court of Appeals.*
    Argued and submitted September 23, 2016.
    Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Salem, argued the
    cause and filed the briefs for petitioner on review.
    Erin K. Galli, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, argued
    the cause and filed the brief for respondent on review.
    Before Balmer, Chief Justice, and Kistler, Walters,
    Landau, Brewer, and Nakamoto, Justices.**
    LANDAU, J.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The
    judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case is
    remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings.
    Case Summary: In a criminal prosecution, the trial court denied defendant’s
    mid-trial motion to represent himself. The Court of Appeals affirmed the denial
    of that motion and defendant petitioned for review. Held: (1) when a defendant
    attempts to exercise the constitutional right to self-representation after trial has
    begun, the trial court has discretion to grant or deny that motion; and (2) because
    the trial court erroneously stated that it had no discretion to allow defendant to
    represent himself mid-trial, it erred in denying defendant’s motion.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The judgment of the trial
    court is reversed.
    ______________
    **  Appeal from Multnomah County Circuit Court, Edward J. Jones, Judge.
    
    275 Or App 287
    , 364 P3d 29 (2015).
    **  Baldwin, J., retired March 31, 2017, and did not participate in the decision
    of this case.
    Cite as 
    361 Or 412
     (2017)	413
    LANDAU, J.
    The issue in this case is the scope of a criminal defen-
    dant’s right to self-representation when that right is invoked
    in the middle of trial. We hold that, although Article I, sec-
    tion 11, of the Oregon Constitution establishes a criminal
    defendant’s right to represent himself or herself in a crim-
    inal proceeding, the right is not unqualified. In particular,
    when the right is asserted well after trial commences, the
    trial court retains discretion to weigh its exercise against
    the constitutional obligation to preserve the integrity and
    fairness of the proceeding, as well as the court’s interest in
    ensuring an orderly and expeditious trial. If a trial court
    exercises that discretion to deny a defendant’s motion for
    self-representation, it should make a record that reflects
    how it exercised that discretion.
    In this case, the trial court concluded that defen-
    dant had no right to seek self-representation mid-trial.
    The Court of Appeals affirmed on the ground that the trial
    court’s decision reflected an “apparent” concern about poten-
    tial disruption of the trial and, because of that concern, did
    not amount to an abuse of discretion. State v. Hightower,
    
    275 Or App 287
    , 293, 364 P3d 29 (2015). We conclude that
    the trial court erred as a matter of law in concluding that
    a defendant may not assert the right to self-representation
    once trial has commenced. Accordingly, we reverse the deci-
    sions of the trial court and Court of Appeals and remand to
    the trial court for further proceedings.
    The relevant facts are not in dispute. Defendant was
    charged with a number of sex offenses, based on evidence
    that he sexually abused a 16-year-old girl and forced her
    and her 18-year-old step-sister into prostitution. Defendant
    asked for court-appointed counsel, and the court granted
    the request.
    Defendant was less than enthusiastic about his
    court-appointed counsel. He asked the court to replace the
    lawyer several times, but, each time, the court declined,
    explaining that defendant’s various complaints about his
    lawyer amounted to disagreements about trial strategy.
    414	                                         State v. Hightower
    During the first three days of the trial itself,
    during the state’s case-in-chief, defendant repeatedly com-
    plained about defense counsel’s actions, questioning his
    performance, instructing him to ask further questions, and
    attempting to object to witness testimony. The trial court
    responded by telling defendant to be quiet and twice warn-
    ing that it would send defendant out of the courtroom if he
    did not stop objecting.
    On the fourth day of trial, defendant stated that he
    wished to represent himself so that he could present evi-
    dence that counsel had refused to offer. The trial court did
    not rule on his request to represent himself, responding,
    “It’s the lawyer’s job to decide what evidence is presented.
    So it’s [defense counsel’s] call. * * * He gets to decide.” Later
    that day, defendant again moved to represent himself; the
    trial court again denied defendant’s motion, saying, “All
    right. Here’s the thing, * * * you don’t change horses in the
    midstream. And even though you have a right in some sense
    under some circumstances to defend yourself, in the middle
    of a trial I’m not going there.” When defense counsel argued
    that “one of his rights is if he wants to represent himself, he
    gets that right,” the trial court responded, “Well, actually
    not.” The court told defendant, “I understand you’re asking
    at this point to get rid of [defense counsel] and take over the
    defense of the case on your own. I’m denying you that right
    to do that.”
    Later, defendant renewed his motion to represent
    himself. Defense counsel asked the court to “make a clearer
    ruling” and the court again denied the motion. When defense
    counsel pressed the court for a reason, the court responded,
    “Well, I’m not going to take you off the case. I’m not going
    to right in the middle of the trial and change where we are.
    Certainly people have a right to represent themselves, but
    it doesn’t start in the middle of the trial, or indeed at the
    beginning of the defense case.”
    Defense counsel again argued that “in the absence of a find-
    ing that removing me would be disruptive, I think the court
    has an absolute obligation to do so.” The court again denied
    the motion, saying, “[W]e’ll have to disagree on that, then.
    Cite as 
    361 Or 412
     (2017)	415
    I’m confident that despite [defendant’s] desires, he’s not
    actually in a position to represent himself, so I’m going to
    deny that motion.”
    The state rested, and defense counsel moved for
    judgment of acquittal, at which point defendant again
    interjected with his own reasoning. Counsel again asked
    the court to allow defendant to represent himself. Counsel
    argued that defendant “would be best served if you allowed
    him to represent himself, and the disruptions to the Court
    would be significantly diminished if not completely elimi-
    nated.” Again, the court denied the motion, saying “Well,
    I’m not going to.”
    Defendant was ultimately convicted on seven counts
    and sentenced on each count to life in prison without the
    possibility of parole pursuant to ORS 137.719.
    Defendant appealed, arguing that the trial court
    erred in denying his motions for self-representation. At
    the least, defendant argued, the court erred in denying his
    requests in the absence of findings that, for instance, allow-
    ing him to represent himself would be disruptive. The Court
    of Appeals affirmed. The court explained that the Article I,
    section 11, right to self-representation is not unqualified.
    Hightower, 275 Or App at 292. Among other things, the
    Court of Appeals said, a trial court may decline to grant
    a motion for self-representation if it determines that the
    decision to waive the right to counsel is not “intelligent and
    understanding” or if it would result in “disruption of the
    orderly conduct of the trial.” Id. In this case, the Court of
    Appeals noted that, although the trial court had categor-
    ically rejected the notion that a defendant could “change
    horses in the midstream,” the court also had previously
    threatened to remove defendant for his disruptive behavior.
    Id. at 293. “Thus, it is apparent,” the Court of Appeals com-
    mented, “that the court’s overriding concern was that grant-
    ing defendant’s self-representation request in the middle of
    trial would have disrupted the orderly conduct of the pro-
    ceedings.” Id. As a result, it concluded that the trial court
    did not abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s motion.
    Id. at 294.
    416	                                        State v. Hightower
    On review, defendant argues to this court that the
    Court of Appeals erred. Defendant acknowledges that, at
    least once trial has begun, the right to self-representation
    is “not absolute.” He nevertheless contends that, as a matter
    of law, a trial court is required to grant a request for self-
    representation unless defendant has engaged in “[d]eliber-
    ate and serious” interference with counsel’s representation
    or “serious misconduct that thwarts the progression of trial.”
    At the least, defendant argues, the trial court cannot deny a
    motion for self-representation without making findings that
    enable a reviewing court to determine whether there was an
    appropriate exercise of discretion.
    For its part, the state contends that a criminal
    defendant must choose whether to be represented by coun-
    sel or to self-represent. By choosing one, the state asserts,
    the defendant necessarily relinquishes the other. Moreover,
    the state argues that a criminal defendant must make that
    choice before trial begins. In the state’s view, Article I, sec-
    tion 11’s purpose of “allowing the defendant a choice of how
    to present his defense at trial * * * can be fully vindicated
    only if it is exercised before trial.” At best, the state argues,
    if the right of self-representation is not asserted until after
    trial has begun, a trial court’s decision to deny the right is
    reviewed for an abuse of discretion. In this case, the state
    concludes, given defendant’s prior disruptive behavior, the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying his motion
    to represent himself.
    Article I, section 11, enumerates a number of rights
    that attach “[i]n all criminal prosecutions.” Among those
    rights is that the accused is entitled “to be heard by himself
    and counsel.” This court has long held that the right “to be
    heard by” oneself includes the right to self-representation at
    trial. As explained in State v. Butchek, 
    121 Or 141
    , 153, 
    253 P 367
     (1927), “[t]he Constitution guarantees to a defendant the
    right to be heard by himself and counsel, but it does not force
    counsel upon him.” See also Johnson v. Premo, 
    355 Or 866
    ,
    872, 333 P3d 288 (2014) (“[A]n individual litigant generally
    has the right to represent himself or herself in court.”).
    The right to self-representation is the counterpart
    to the right to be represented by counsel at trial. See State
    Cite as 
    361 Or 412
     (2017)	417
    v. Rogers, 
    330 Or 282
    , 297, 4 P3d 1261 (2000) (“The Oregon
    Constitution establishes that right in conjunction with the
    right to be heard by counsel.”). That is to say, the two rights
    are mutually exclusive. See State ex rel Ott v. Cushing, 
    289 Or 705
    , 709, 617 P2d 610 (1980) (“[T]he right of a defendant to
    the assistance of counsel carries with it the correlative right
    to dispense with such assistance.”). The accused in a crimi-
    nal trial has a choice either to be represented by counsel or
    to represent himself or herself. Article I, section 11, does not
    grant a right to so-called “hybrid representation.” State v.
    Stevens, 
    311 Or 119
    , 124-25, 806 P2d 92 (1991) (“[A] defen-
    dant has no constitutional right to hybrid representation.”).
    It necessarily follows that, by asserting the right to
    counsel, a defendant waives the right to self-representation.
    And, by waiving the right to counsel, a defendant necessar-
    ily asserts the right to self-representation. See, e.g., State v.
    Langley, 
    351 Or 652
    , 665, 273 P3d 901 (2012) (“A defendant
    may also elect to waive his or her right to counsel and pro-
    ceed pro se.”). That is precisely why a valid waiver of the
    right to counsel must be preceded by a warning concern-
    ing the “dangers and disadvantages of self-representation.”
    State v. Meyrick, 
    313 Or 125
    , 133, 831 P2d 666 (1992). In
    that sense, the state is correct in characterizing the rela-
    tionship between the rights.
    But that does not mean that, once the right to coun-
    sel or the right to self-representation has been invoked, the
    correlative right has been forever relinquished. Nothing
    prevents a defendant who has invoked the right to counsel
    or the right to self-representation from later waiving that
    right. E.g., State v. Turnidge, 
    359 Or 364
    , 400, 374 P3d 853
    (2016) (nothing prevents a suspect from waiving a previ-
    ously asserted right to counsel).
    That said, the right to waive is not absolute and
    unqualified. For one thing, a waiver of the Article I, section
    11, right to counsel or to self-representation must be know-
    ing and voluntary. Meyrick, 
    313 Or at 133
    . For another, the
    timing of a defendant’s waiver matters. In particular, once a
    trial has begun, a number of interests other than the defen-
    dant’s Article I, section 11, rights come into play. Among
    those are the trial court’s overriding obligation to ensure the
    418	                                         State v. Hightower
    fairness and integrity of the trial and its inherent authority
    to conduct proceedings in an orderly and expeditious man-
    ner. See ORS 1.010(3) (every court of justice has power “[t]o
    provide for the orderly conduct of proceedings before it”). As
    this court explained in Rogers,
    “A trial court’s authority to exercise reasonable discretion
    to ensure that the trial is orderly and expeditious does
    not evaporate when the parties assert their constitutional
    rights during trial. * * * Rather a trial court is obliged to
    accommodate the exercise of all pertinent constitutional
    and statutory rights by all parties within the context of
    an orderly and expeditious trial. * * * Nothing in the text
    of Article I, section 11, suggests that the framers intended
    that a defendant’s right to be heard ‘by himself’ should
    override the court’s authority and responsibility to conduct
    the trial as an orderly and expeditious proceeding.”
    
    330 Or at 301
     (internal citations omitted); see also State v.
    Harrell/Wilson, 
    353 Or 247
    , 261, 297 P3d 461 (2013) (not-
    ing that “[t]rial courts generally possess broad discretion
    to ensure that the proceedings before them are orderly and
    expeditious” in considering a defendant’s mid-trial waiver
    of right to a jury trial). In light of those additional interests
    that are triggered by the commencement of trial, any invo-
    cation of the right to counsel or to self-representation that
    occurs after that time is subject to the court’s discretion.
    Id.; see also State v. Langley, 
    314 Or 247
    , 258, 839 P2d 692
    (1992) (ruling on substitution of counsel motion reviewed for
    abuse of discretion).
    In short, if a defendant who has previously asserted
    the right to counsel waits until well into the conduct of trial
    to attempt to waive that right and proceed pro se, he or she
    has not necessarily relinquished permanently the right
    to self-representation, as the state suggests. But the trial
    court’s decision concerning the defendant’s request is sub-
    ject to appellate review for an abuse of discretion, in light of
    all other relevant interests that come into play at the com-
    mencement of trial. For example, a trial court may exercise
    its discretion to deny a motion for self-representation that is
    conditioned on the grant of a continuance. Or it may reason-
    ably deny the motion if it has reason to conclude that grant-
    ing the motion would result in disruption of proceedings.
    Cite as 
    361 Or 412
     (2017)	419
    We note in passing that our conclusion in that
    regard is consistent with the nearly uniform view of other
    courts that have addressed the matter—state and federal.
    All but a few state constitutions include the same guarantee
    of a right to self-representation that is contained in Article I,
    section 11. See Stevens, 
    311 Or at 124
     (so noting). And the
    uniform view among courts interpreting those state consti-
    tutional guarantees is that a mid-trial assertion of the right
    of self-representation is reviewed for an abuse of discretion,
    in light of the other interests that a trial court is obligated
    to take into account once trial has commenced.1
    1
    See, e.g., Upshaw v. State, 992 So 2d 57, 61 (Ala Crim App 2007) (right of
    self-representation becomes qualified once trial commences); Brewer v. State,
    55 P3d 749, 753 (Alaska Ct App 2002) (a judge “may deny a defendant’s last-
    minute request for self-representation when granting the request would neces-
    sarily delay the trial and the tardiness of the request is due to the defendant’s
    lack of diligence in pursuing the issue of self-representation”); State v. Lamar,
    205 Ariz 431, 436, 72 P3d 831, 836 (2003), supplemented, 210 Ariz 571, 115
    P3d 611 (2005) (request is considered timely if it is made “before meaningful
    trial proceedings have commenced”); People v. Lynch, 50 Cal 4th 693, 722, 237
    P3d 416, 437 (2010) (abuse of discretion standard for motion made after trial
    begins); People v. Vialpando, 954 P2d 617, 620 (Colo App 1997) (if request is not
    made in a timely fashion, court must “determine whether the request is made
    for purposes of delay or to gain tactical advantage, and whether the lateness of
    the request may hinder the administration of justice”); State v. Pires, 310 Conn
    222, 253, 77 A3d 87, 107 (2013) (abuse of discretion standard); Williams v. State,
    56 A3d 1053, 1055-56 (Del 2012) (“After a trial has begun, the right of self-
    representation may be curtailed, and the trial judge considering the motion must
    weigh the legitimate interests of the defendant against the prejudice that may
    result from the potential disruption of the proceedings already in progress.”);
    McCray v. State, 71 So3d 848, 870 (Fla 2011) (abuse of discretion standard for
    motion made after trial begins); Tyner v. State, 334 Ga App 890, 893, 780 SE2d
    494, 498 (2015) (allowing self-representation mid-trial if waiver of right to coun-
    sel is knowing and voluntary); State v. Reber, 
    138 Idaho 275
    , 278, 61 P3d 632,
    634-35 (Ct App 2002) (abuse of discretion standard); People v. Burton, 184 Ill 2d
    1, 24, 
    703 NE2d 49
    , 60 (1998) (same); Stroud v. State, 
    809 NE2d 274
    , 279 (Ind
    2004) (holding that “request [to proceed pro se] must be clear and unequivocal,
    and it must be [made] within a reasonable time prior to the first day of trial”);
    State v. Wehr, 852 NW2d 495, 501 (Iowa Ct App 2014) (request made prior to the
    jury being impaneled was timely); State v. Collins, 257 Kan 408, 415, 893 P2d
    217, 221 (1995) (abuse of discretion standard for motion made after trial began);
    Swan v. Com, 
    384 SW3d 77
    , 94 (Ky 2012) (request made one week before trial
    was timely); State v. Brown, 342 Md 404, 415, 676 A2d 513, 518 (1996) (abuse
    of discretion standard); Com v. Chapman, 8 Mass App Ct 260, 265, 
    392 NE2d 1213
    , 1217 (1979) (request is timely if made before jury is empanelled); State v.
    Blom, 682 NW2d 578, 613 (Minn 2004) (balancing test required if request is
    made after trial begins); State v. Black, 
    223 SW3d 149
    , 153 (Mo 2007) (requir-
    ing timely assertion of right); Watson v. State, 130 Nev Adv Op 76, 335 P3d 157,
    171 (2014) (request is timely if it “is clear that the request comes early enough to
    allow the defendant to prepare for trial without need for a continuance”); State
    v. Sweeney, 151 NH 666, 671, 867 A2d 441, 448 (2005) (timeliness of motion is
    420	                                                       State v. Hightower
    The United States Supreme Court recognized a
    similar right to self-representation implicit in the Sixth
    Amendment in Faretta v. California, 
    422 US 806
    , 814, 
    95 S Ct 2525
    , 
    45 L Ed 2d 562
     (1975). Since Faretta was decided,
    most federal appellate courts likewise have concluded that
    a trial court’s disposition of a mid-trial request for self-
    representation is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.2
    not dispositive in ruling on defendant’s motion); State v. Garcia, 
    149 NM 185
    ,
    194, 246 P3d 1057, 1066 (NM 2011) (reviewing denial of request made during
    trial for abuse of discretion); State v. Torkelsen, 
    2008 ND 141
     ¶ 43, 752 NW2d
    640, 655 (2008) (same); Naum v. State, 
    1981 OK CR 76
    , 630 P2d 785, 788 (1981)
    (same); Com v. Brooks, 628 Pa 524, 539, 104 A3d 466, 475 (2014) (same); State v.
    Winkler, 388 SC 574, 586, 698 SE2d 596, 602 (SC 2010) (same); State v. Hester,
    
    324 SW3d 1
    , 30-31 (Tenn 2010) (requiring timely invocation of right); O’Brien
    v. State, 
    482 SW3d 593
    , 622 (Tex App-Houston 2015), petition for discretionary
    rev granted (May 4, 2016) (abuse of discretion standard for motion after trial
    has begun); State v. Bean, 171 Vt 290, 297, 762 A2d 1259, 1264 (2000) (same);
    Thomas v. Com, 260 Va 553, 559, 539 SE2d 79, 82 (2000) (same); State v. Brown,
    177 W Va 633, 638, 355 SE2d 614, 619 (1987) (same); Hamiel v. State, 92 Wis 2d
    656, 673, 285 NW2d 639, 649 (1979) (same); Scott v. State, 
    2012 WY 86
    , ¶ 16,
    278 P3d 747, 753 (2012) (same).
    2
    See, e.g., United States v. Zhen Zhou Wu, 711 F3d 1, 33 (1st Cir 2013) (“A
    district court considering a mid-trial request to proceed pro se must balance the
    legitimate interests of the defendant in self-representation against the potential
    disruption of the proceedings already in progress. ” (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.)); United States v. Walker, 142 F3d 103, 108 (2d Cir 1998) (once trial
    has begun, court must balance defendant’s interests against the integrity of pro-
    ceedings); United States v. Bankoff, 613 F3d 358, 373 (3d Cir 2010) (mid-trial
    request to proceed pro se left to trial court’s discretion); United States v. Barefoot,
    754 F3d 226, 233 (4th Cir 2014) (“Once trial has begun under the stewardship
    of counsel, the necessity that it proceed efficiently, without inconvenience, delay,
    or confusion of the jury,” gives the trial court discretion to deny a motion to pro-
    ceed pro se.); United States v. Sanders, 843 F3d 1050, 1054 (5th Cir 2016) (“[T]he
    right to self-representation is limited by the trial court’s responsibility to prevent
    delay and other obstructionist behavior.”); United States v. Powell, 847 F3d 760,
    774 (6th Cir 2017) (“A defendant must assert the right to self-representation * * *
    in a timely manner, and ‘courts will balance any such assertion against consid-
    erations of judicial delay.’ ”); United States v. Kosmel, 272 F3d 501, 506 (7th Cir
    2001) (“[O]nce trial commences, the district court retains discretion to balance
    the interests of the defendant against the potential disruption of the proceedings
    already in progress.”); United States v. Wesley, 798 F2d 1155, 1155-56 (8th Cir
    1986) (“Once trial commences, that right is subject to the trial court’s discretion
    which requires a balancing of the defendant’s legitimate interests in representing
    himself and the potential disruption and possible delay of proceedings.”); Burton
    v. Davis, 816 F3d 1132, 1144 (9th Cir 2016) (“A motion made after [trial com-
    mences] is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court.”); United States v.
    Tucker, 451 F3d 1176, 1183 (10th Cir 2006); United States v. Young, 287 F3d 1352,
    1354 (11th Cir 2002); United States v. Washington, 353 F3d 42, 46 (DC Cir 2004).
    See generally John F. Decker, The Sixth Amendment Right to Shoot Oneself in the
    Foot: An Assessment of the Guarantee of Self-Representation Twenty Years After
    Faretta, 
    6 Seton Hall Const. L.J. 483
     (1996) (collecting cases).
    Cite as 
    361 Or 412
     (2017)	421
    Two additional matters deserve mention: First, the
    record must include some indication of how the trial court
    actually weighed the relevant competing interests involved
    for an appellate court to be able to determine whether the
    trial court abused its discretion in ruling on a request to
    waive the right to counsel and proceed pro se. As this court
    explained in State v. Guzek, 
    358 Or 251
    , 269, 363 P3d 480
    (2015), “[appellate] review is better facilitated by a record
    of findings that is direct, express, and clearly delineated.”
    Nevertheless, such express findings are not required, so
    long as the record reveals the reasons for the trial court’s
    actions. 
    Id.
     It is not sufficient that an appellate court may
    be able to speculate about what might have been the trial
    court’s rationale for its decision.
    Second, although the trial court’s decision in
    response to a request for self-representation is ordinarily
    a matter of discretion, in some cases, that decision may be
    predicated on certain subsidiary determinations—either
    findings of fact or conclusions of law—that trigger their
    own standards of review. See Oakmont, LLC v. Dept. of Rev.,
    
    359 Or 779
    , 789, 377 P3d 523 (2016) (“In reviewing a rul-
    ing for abuse of discretion, it can be important to distin-
    guish the factual and legal issues that underlie an agency
    or a trial court’s exercise of discretion.”). So, for example, if
    a court’s decision as to whether to grant a request for self-
    representation turns on the court’s legal conclusions as to
    the scope of the right, that determination is reviewed for
    errors of law. See State v. Sarich, 
    352 Or 601
    , 615, 291 P3d
    647 (2012) (legal determinations that are predicates for the
    exercise of discretion are reviewed for errors of law).
    With the foregoing principles in mind, we turn to
    the trial court’s decision in this case. The court’s comments
    in response to defendant’s motion reflect an understand-
    ing that, once trial commenced, defendant had forfeited
    the right to waive his right to counsel and proceed pro se.
    When defendant moved to represent himself, the trial court
    replied, “Here’s the thing, * * * you don’t change horses in
    the midstream.” When defense counsel insisted that “one of
    [defendant’s] rights is if he wants to represent himself, he
    gets that right,” the trial court responded, “Well, actually
    422	                                      State v. Hightower
    not.” The court told defendant, “I understand you’re asking
    at this point to get rid of [defense counsel] and take over the
    defense of the case on your own. I’m denying you that right
    to do that.” Later in the trial, when defendant renewed his
    motion, defense counsel asked the court to “make a clearer
    ruling,” and the court again denied the motion. When defense
    counsel pressed the court for a reason, the court responded,
    “Certainly people have a right to represent themselves, but
    it doesn’t start in the middle of the trial, or indeed at the
    beginning of the defense case.”
    Those statements do not reflect an exercise of dis-
    cretion or any finding that granting the motion would sig-
    nificantly delay or disrupt the trial. Rather, as we have
    noted, they appear to reflect an impression that the law sim-
    ply does not permit a defendant to waive the right to counsel
    and proceed pro se once trial has commenced. That, as we
    have explained, is incorrect as a matter of law.
    The state argues that, given the stage of the pro-
    ceedings and defendant’s prior record of disruptive behav-
    ior, “the trial court reasonably could have” determined that
    the interest in orderly and expeditious trial outweighed any
    prejudice to defendant’s right to self-representation. But the
    test is not whether the court “reasonably could have” made
    that determination. The test is whether the record reflects
    that the trial court’s actual decision amounted to a reason-
    able exercise of its discretion.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
    The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case
    is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings.