Maynard, Justice, concurring:
I agree with the majority
that the circuit court's order must be reversed and the appellant must be
allowed to withdraw his guilty plea. Upon remand, if the appellant's case
goes to trial, I agree that the State should be precluded from introducing
the transcript of Roy Benny Helmick's prior testimony unless the appellant
is afforded his right of cross- examination. I also agree that in order for
a spousal communication made in the presence of a third party not to be considered
confidential, the third party must be a comprehending third party. I agree
as well that only the accused can waive the marital privilege during criminal
prosecution. However, unlike the majority, I believe the appellant waived
his confidential marital communications privilege when he communicated the
privileged information to third parties. Therefore, I write separately. The majority summarily states
that they are unaware of any case in this State which holds that after
a spouse communicates privileged information to a third person, the confidentiality
is destroyed and the privilege is waived. The majority then concludes that
if the appellant's case goes to trial, the appellant's wife should be
precluded from testifying as to the confidential remarks made by the appellant[.] If the majority
had researched this issue outside of West Virginia, they would have found
that many other jurisdictions, when faced with this precise issue, have reached
the opposite result. For example, in Weedon
v. State, 647 A.2d 1078 (Del.Supr. 1994), reversed on other grounds,
Weedon v. State, 750 A.2d 521 (Del.Supr. 2000), the defendant, William
Weedon, Jr., was convicted by a jury of numerous crimes including attempted
first-degree murder. After he severely beat the victim, the defendant returned
home, told his wife the details of the crime, and asked her not to tell anyone.
However, the defendant immediately told several neighbors that he had assaulted
the victim earlier that morning. At the defendant's trial, Mrs. Weedon testified
by reciting the details of the crime which the defendant had confided in her.
On appeal, the defendant argued, inter alia, that the trial court erred
by admitting Mrs. Weedon's testimony regarding the conversation over Weedon's
marital communication privilege objection. The Supreme Court of Delaware reasoned
that [d]isclosure by a speaker-spouse to a third party of subject matter
that parallels that of an earlier, otherwise privileged marital communication
constitutes waiver. Id. at 1081. The court held, Weedon
waived the privilege [] by his subsequent actions. In disclosing to third
parties [] that he 'took care' of Ward, Weedon repeated in substance (absent
details) that which he had earlier told his wife to keep secret. Id.
at 1082.
In State v. Boucher,
652 A.2d 76 (Me. 1994), a jury convicted the defendant, Michael Boucher, Sr.,
of murder. The State connected Boucher to the murder with his own statements
which he made to various people over thirteen years. The trial court admitted
the testimony of his two ex-wives finding that the defendant waived the marital
privilege by revealing in non-privileged communications much of what he told
them. On appeal, Boucher contended the trial court erred by admitting this testimony.
The Supreme Judicial Court of Maine held that the trial court did not err by
finding that in disclosing to third parties the 'key element' of his communications
to [his ex-wives] waived protection as to all communications relating to the
incident. Id. at 77. See also People v. Fox, 862 P.2d 1000,
1006 (Colo. 1993) (The trial court admitted another letter because a postscript
therein is addressed personally to his brother. We conclude that the postscript
forms the basis for a waiver of the spousal privilege as to that letter.);
State v. Wilkinson, 136 N.H. 170, 612 A.2d 926 (1992) (The defendant
waived his marital communication privilege with respect to a conversation regarding
a hit-and-run accident when he revealed facts of his involvement with the incident
to a friend, which was overheard by a witness.); U.S. v. Lea, 249 F.3d
632 (7th Cir. 2001) (Confidentiality, as a necessary element of marital communications
privilege, is lost when a spouse divulges to a third party the communication
which he or she seeks to exclude from evidence.); State v. Countryman,
572 N.W.2d 553 (Iowa 1997) (The defendant waived any marital privilege applicable
to her notes to her husband by leaving the notes in the car she and her husband
had stolen, thereby exposing confidence to third parties.); Hall v. State, 720 So.2d 1043 (Ala.Crim.App. 1998) (Even if a murder defendant's
act of having a large amount of money in his wife's presence constituted a
privileged confidential communication, the defendant waived protection of
that privilege when he acknowledged in a statement to an investigator and
in trial testimony that a third party had given him $5,500 in the days immediately
following the murder and that he, in turn, gave some of the money to his wife
and told her where he buried the rest.); and Dansby v. State, 338 Ark.
697, 1 S.W.3d 403 (1999) (The defendant's spousal privilege was waived in
a capital murder trial when a third party testified that the defendant communicated
the privileged matter to him by confessing to murders while they were both
being held in jail, even though the third party's credibility was disputed
and there was no indication the communications were overheard by others.). I believe the great weight
of authority supports the proposition that communication of any significant
part of the privileged matter to someone other than the spouse waives the
spousal privilege. The view in federal courts is that the defendant-spouse
cannot prevent his or her spouse from testifying unless confidential communications
are involved. Trammel v. United States, 445 U.S. 40, 100 S.Ct. 906,
63 L.Ed.2d 186 (1980). In other words, if privileged information has been
communicated to third persons, only the witness-spouse has a privilege to
refuse to testify adversely. Consequently, upon withdrawal of his guilty plea,
if the appellant's case goes to trial, I would allow the appellant's wife
to testify regarding the remarks the appellant made to her in confidence because
the appellant himself later communicated these remarks to third persons. Accordingly, I concur in
the majority's final result. But I must disagree when we deport from the clear
and overwhelming trend of the law regarding waiver of the spousal privilege
by communication to third parties, and I strongly believe the majority is
simply wrong on this issue.