Wilkerson v. State
Wilkerson v. State
Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 1268
The appellant, Nicholas Ramon Wilkerson, was convicted of murder made capital because it was committed during a robbery in the first degree, §
The appellant argues that the trial court erred in not allowing him to conduct individual voir dire examination of C.S. concerning C.S.'s views on certain factors that might constitute mitigating evidence in evaluating the appropriateness of the death penalty. However, because the appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole, any error in this regard is harmless. Giles v. State,
The appellant argues that the trial court erred in not allowing him to conduct further individual voir dire examination of M.T. concerning M.T.'s possible fixed opinion of the appellant's guilt. The record reflects that the appellant's counsel had already engaged in individual voir dire of M.T. when he requested that he be allowed to question M.T. further. The trial judge then stated, "All right." However, theprosecutor stated, "I will deny further inquiry." R. 300. Instead of seeking a final ruling from the trial judge, the appellant's counsel, apparently in response to the prosecutor's statement, made only a general objection and asked M.T. no further questions. The appellant's claim that he was disallowed from conducting further voir dire of M.T. is procedurally barred from appellate review, because the appellant failed to obtain an adverse ruling from the trial court on this issue.Hemphill v. State,
Even had the appellant preserved this issue for our review, we would find it to be without merit. The appellant's contention in his brief to this Court that "[t]he trial judge limited the individual voir dire of [M.T.] to her opinions regarding the death penalty" (appellant's reply"brief at 6) is unsupported by the record. The record reflects that in addition to questioning M.T. about her opinions on the imposition of the death penalty, the appellant's counsel specifically questioned M.T. regarding whether she had a fixed opinion as to the appellant's guilt as a result of her prior knowledge of the case. The extent of individual voir dire examination is within the discretion of the trial court, See Haney v. State,
With regard to R.C., the appellant argues that this veniremember evidenced a fixed opinion as to his guilt because she indicated that she had read about the murder in the newspaper and she made the following statement with respect to what she read: "I just basically thought they had found somebody that did it is all I remember. I don't recall having any great thoughts about it." R. 49.
" ' "A 'fixed opinion' which will bias a verdict is one that is a conviction or prejudgment, a strong or deep impression which closes the mind of a juror and combats the testimony and resists its force." ' " Oryang v. State,
With regard to L.W., there is no indication in the record that the appellant ever made a challenge for cause as to this veniremember. As the State points out, while the appellant asserts in his brief that L.W. was juror no. 230, appellant's brief at 22, and the record does reflect that the trial judge denied a challenge as to juror no. 230, R. 84, the record does not reflect the juror number assigned to L.W. In fact, the record does not contain the jury list, and we are unable to discern from the transcript the numbers assigned to most veniremembers who were challenged for cause. Consequently, the appellant's claim as to L.W. is procedurally barred from appellate review. Minter v. State,
With regard to M.T., the appellant argues that this veniremember had a fixed opinion as to his guilt because of her relationship with a sheriff's deputy and because she had visited the murder scene on the night of the crime. During individual questioning by the trial judge, M.T. stated that her boyfriend was a Jefferson County sheriff's deputy, that she knew "a few" Hueytown police officers, and that she had driven by the scene of the murder, Bill's Farmhouse, a restaurant in Hueytown, on the night of the murder, and had asked persons present what had happened. R. 70-71. She then stated as follows: "I think I remember that someone had gone out to take the trash out the back door and someone came out behind and forced his way in and someone was shot. [I remember] [m]y boyfriend saying there was a BOLO out for five or six black males in a small car." R. 71. M.T. further stated that she thought she had made up her mind about what had happened in the crime, but that she had never heard anyone mention the names of those persons allegedly involved. R. 71. The trial judge then asked M.T. the following question: "Do you feel you could give [the appellant] a fair trial in spite of what you heard or would it affect your ability? What if you heard the evidence and didn't think the [S]tate proved it. Would you have a hard time returning a guilty verdict?" R. 71-72. M.T. responded,"I think I could be fair." R. 72. (Emphasis added.)
When cross-examined by the appellant's counsel shortly after she had stated that she could be fair, M.T. stated that she would believe what her boyfriend, a sheriff's deputy, told her about the crime. R. 72. The appellant's counsel then asked the following leading questions:
"[APPELLANT'S COUNSEL]: . . . [W]ouldn't that make it a little difficult to really sit on the jury in this case, even the fact that you drove by there that very night and saw, knowing someone was killed and seeing police cars and you knew the people. Wouldn't that make it difficult looking and searching yourself?
"[M.T.]: Well, I see your point.
"[APPELLANT'S COUNSEL]: It would, wouldn't it?
"[M.T.]: I think it would, yeah."
R. 72-73.
The questions from the appellant's counsel did not define the level of difficulty that M.T. might have were she to sit on the jury, and M.T.'s response to those questions could be construed to mean either that she would find it so difficult to sit on the jury that she could not give a fair trial, or (given her previous statement that she could be fair) that she would find it difficult to sit on the jury but that she could still be fair.
Judge Bowen, writing for the Court in Morrison v. State,
"Decisions regarding '[t]he clarity of the questions propounded' are also within the discretion of the trial court. [Citation omitted.] As the United States Supreme Court has observed:
" 'It is well to remember that the lay persons on the panel may never have been subjected to the type of leading questions and cross-examination techniques that frequently are employed . . . [during voir dire]. . . . Also, unlike witnesses, *Page 1271 prospective jurors have had no briefing by lawyers prior to taking the stand. Jurors thus cannot be expected invariably to express themselves carefully or even consistently. . . . The trial judge may properly choose to believe those statements that were the most fully articulated or that appeared to have been least influenced by leading.'
"Patton v. Yount,
467 U.S. 1025 ,1039 ,104 S.Ct. 2885 ,2893 ,81 L.Ed.2d 847 (1984)." 'While probable prejudice for any reason will serve to disqualify a prospective juror, qualification of a juror is a matter within the discretion of the trial court. . . .
" 'Ultimately, the test to be applied is whether the juror can set aside her opinions and try the case fairly and impartially, according to the law and the evidence. This determination . . . is to be based on the juror's answers and demeanor and is within the sound discretion of the trial judge.'
"Knop [v. McCain], 561 So.2d [229,] at 232 [(Ala. 1989)] (citations omitted) (emphasis added)."
601 So.2d at 169. Given that M.T.'s response to the questions from the appellant's counsel was open to different interpretations, we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in not granting the appellant's challenge for cause as to M.T.
Finally, as to B.A. and C.S., the appellant argues, as the defendant argued in Youngblood v. State,
The record reflects that, while in custody, the appellant gave three tape-recorded statements in a span of shortly over two hours, and that he was given Miranda1 warnings before he gave each statement. The appellant objects to a comment made at trial by Fairfield Police Officer Rubin Wilkinson in response to questioning by the prosecutor. That comment is emphasized in the following excerpt from Officer Wilkinson's trial testimony, in which he is describing events that took place following the appellant's second statement:
"Q: And what occurred while you were at the police station?
"A: I went in there and asked for Sgt. Rice. I was told he was in [an] interview. *Page 1272 I saw Officer Alexander and went back to where he was.
"Q: And what happened next?
"A: There was a subject sitting back there with him. I asked Officer Alexander was he the person they picked up from the high school and he said yes.
"Q: And who was that individual?
"A: It was — introduced myself to him, Nicholas Wilkerson.
"Q: And what occurred after that? What happened next?
"A: I asked him did he want to talk to me and he said 'No.'
"MR. JAFFE [appellant's counsel]: I object — I need to make an objection concerning that. That's — I do object to that comment as a violation of the Defendant's Fifth Amendment [rights]. I do object to that comment.
"THE COURT: Overrule your objection, Mr. Jaffe.
"Q: All right. Go ahead and — let me repeat the question. The individual back there was the defendant in this case, Nicholas Wilkerson?
"A: Yes, sir.
"Q: What happened at that time?
"A: After he told me that I stayed back there and talked to Officer Alexander, [whom] I had known for a couple years. Before that he originally worked at Fairfield. I stayed back there talking to him.
"Q: And what happened?
"A: After Alexander went to another part of [the] police department, Mr. Wilkerson asked me where I worked at and I told him [the] Fairfield Police [D]epartment. He asked me why I was there. I told him that I was — had helped and assisted Hueytown in this case and developed information about this case and that was the reason he was there now.
"Q: And what happened after that?
"A: He asked me for a cup of water. I told him he would have to wait until Officer Alexander got there.
"Q: And then what happened?
"A: Officer Alexander came back there and told him — asked could I get a cup of water for Mr. Wilkerson and he said yes. He went back to another part of [the] building. While he was gone Mr. Wilkinson said[,] 'I need to talk to you.' I told him he would have to wait until Officer Alexander got back."Officer Alexander got back with another officer. I looked at Mr. Wilkerson [and said], 'Tell him what you just told me.' And he looked at them and said, 'I need to talk to him,' [and] pointed to me."
R. 762-64. (Emphasis added.) Officer Wilkinson's subsequent testimony reveals that he then gave the appellantMiranda warnings and the appellant then gave his third taped statement. R. 764-78.
In Greer v. Miller,
Our review of the record reveals that the comment by Officer Wilkinson to which the appellant objects was never mentioned or alluded to again at trial by the prosecutor. The statement was not specifically elicited by the prosecutor and appears to be nothing more than part of Officer Wilkinson's narrative of the events leading to the making of the appellant's third taped statement. Clearly, the comment did not constitute an improper comment on the appellant's post-arrest silence for purposes ofDoyle.
Rule 21.2, A.R.Crim.P., provides: "No party may assign as error the court's . . . failing to give a written instruction . . . unless he objects thereto before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating the matter to which he objects and the grounds of his objection." In Molton v. State,
The record contains the transcript of the charge conference that was held before closing arguments in the appellant's case. At the beginning of the conference, the trial judge told the appellant's counsel that he would entertain argument on counsel's written requested charges of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide. The appellant's counsel then asked if he could recall the appellant's expert witness, Dr. Alan Blotcky, and renewed a request that he be allowed to ask Dr. Blotcky's opinion as to whether the appellant possessed the ability to form the intent to commit murder or the intent to commit robbery, in light of evidence presented at trial that the appellant was intoxicated. (See Part X of this opinion.) After the trial judge heard argument on counsel's request to recall Dr. Blotcky, he refused to change his previous ruling disallowing the questioning. The following then occurred:
"MR. JAFFE [appellant's counsel]: Yes, sir, I understand. In light of that, of course, we do rest finally. Judge, the only argument I would make on — the only argument I'm going to make on the lesser included offense is that I think that the alcohol, there is evidence before the court that the alcohol consumption and drug consumption of Nicholas Wilkerson nullifies the specific intent or the jury question nullifies the specific intent to commit both murder, straight murder, the intent to commit capital murder and also robbery.*Page 1274"And also I will ask the jury to be charged on, in addition, I know the court's indicated it was going to charge on felony murder, capital murder, and manslaughter. And I would ask the court to expand that to robbery and criminal negligent homicide and straight murder.
"THE COURT: All right. I will deny your request for — what evidence do you have, Mr. Jaffe, there was no robbery."MR. JAFFE: No, sir, it's just the specific criminal intent to commit robbery. He was so intoxicated to the point of [insanity] where he was so intoxicated he couldn't form that intent. If there is no intent then there is no robbery. There is all the physical elements, but there is still no offense, any more or less than there would be if it was just murder.
"THE COURT: I'm not sure that's a correct statement, but I will note your objection."
R. 950-52. (Emphasis added.)
On appeal, the appellant states that the ground for his objection at trial was that "[i]f the jury found that [the appellant] lacked the specific intent to commit robbery, then the lesser included offenses were warranted as there would be no conviction of capital murder or felony murder." Appellant's reply brief at 19. While the appellant's counsel's objection to the court's failure to give his requested charges was timely, it was not made with the required specificity. " 'Defendant must object specifically to each of the charges refused, . . . and the grounds assigned must be specific.' " Kinder v. State,
We further agree with the State's assertion that the appellant raises new grounds on appeal. For the first time, the appellant argues that his requested charges should have been given because they were supported by the evidence. Therefore, this issue is procedurally barred from appellate review for this reason as well. Wasp v. State,
Even if the appellant had preserved this issue for appellate review, we would not find reversible error. Because the trial court charged the jury on capital murder, felony murder, intentional murder, reckless manslaughter, and intoxication, and the jury convicted the appellant of the higher offense of capital murder, any error in the trial court's failure to charge the jury on reckless murder, robbery, and criminally negligent homicide was harmless. Moore v. State,
" 'It is unprofessional conduct to ask a question which implies the existence of a factual predicate which the examiner knows he cannot support by the evidence.' Young v. State,363 So.2d 1007 ,1012 (Ala.Crim.App. 1978); Bezotte v. State,358 So.2d 521 ,525 (Ala.Crim.App. 1978). . . ."Laying prejudicial allegations before the jury 'by dint of cross-examination without being prepared to prove them is generally regarded as reversible error.' United States v. Brown,
519 F.2d 1368 ,1370 (6th Cir. 1975). It is improper for the prosecutor 'to ask a question which implies a factual predicate which the examiner knows he cannot support by evidence or for which he has no reason to believe that there is a foundation of truth.' United States v. Harris,542 F.2d 1283 ,1307 (7th Cir. 1976); 6 J. Wigmore, Evidence Section 1808 (Chadbourn rev. 1976)."
448 So.2d at 438. See also Daniel v. State,
The record reflects that Richard Flowers, a high school classmate of the appellant's, testified that at school, after the crime had occurred, he overheard the appellant talking with some of his accomplices about the crime and that the appellant said, "[t]hat nigger deserved it." R. 632-34. This evidence provided sufficient support for the prosecutor's question as to whether the appellant had told "anybody that the old man deserved it." R. 938.
Here, as in Wright v. State,
"The prosecutor's comment was a reasonable inference from the evidence. 'The test of a legitimate argument is that whatever is based on facts in evidence is within the scope of proper comment in argument to the jury.' Ward v. State,440 So.2d 1227 ,1230 (Ala.Cr.App. 1983). 'Counsel for both the State and [the] defendant are allowed wide latitude in drawing reasonable inferences from the evidence in their closing arguments. A prosecutor as well as defense counsel has a right to present [her] impression from the evidence, if reasonable, and may argue every legitimate inference.' Manigan v. State,402 So.2d 1063 ,1072 (Ala.Cr.App.) (citations omitted), cert. denied,402 So.2d 1072 (Ala. 1981). 'A prosecutor may express her opinion concerning reasonable inferences, deductions, and conclusions to be drawn from the facts in evidence, as long as she *Page 1276 does not express an opinion as to the defendant's guilt. Sams v. State,506 So.2d 1027 ,1029 (Ala.Cr.App. 1986).' Cross v. State,536 So.2d 155 ,160 (Ala.Cr.App. 1988)."
However, the record shows that the State's second and third witnesses used the diagram that the appellant complains of, without objection, to illustrate their testimony, specifically pointing out the location on the diagram of the body and the dish cart. The police officer who created the diagram subsequently testified and explained how he created the diagram, describing his positioning of the victim's body and the dish cart on the diagram based on photographs of the crime scene. The appellant's counsel waited until three more witnesses testified for the State before objecting to the diagram and asking the trial court to "reconsider the admissibility" of the diagram. R. 718. Any error in the admission of the diagram into evidence was harmless because it was merely cumulative to the testimony of these witnesses.Reese v. City of Dothan,
The appellant testified at trial that on the night of May 15, 1992, armed with a handgun, he and two accomplices entered Bill's Farmhouse, a restaurant in Hueytown, through the back door, which opened into the restaurant's kitchen. According to the appellant, he and his accomplices then proceeded into the dining area through a swinging door. Once in the dining area, the appellant ordered William Wesson, the murder victim, who was talking on a wall telephone near the swinging door, to lie on the floor. The appellant testified that he straddled Mr. Wesson, who was lying face-down, took his wallet, and then stood up. The appellant testified that one of his accomplices, who had gone to another part of the restaurant, returned and said, "let's go," and then ran through the swinging door into the kitchen and out the back door of the restaurant, followed by the appellant's other accomplice. The appellant testified that he then backed up toward the swinging door, covering Mr. Wesson with his gun. The appellant testified that when he got near the door, which was still swinging, the door hit his arm, accidentally causing his gun to fire and killing Mr. Wesson.
Mr. Wesson's wife, Maxine Wesson, who was working at the restaurant as the cashier at the time of the crime, testified at trial that she was standing by the cash register counting money when she heard several people running around and yelling. A man armed with a shotgun appeared, ordered her to the floor, and held her there at gunpoint. According to Mrs. Wesson, after a time, the man said, "Let's go." She said she then heard the swinging door open and hit the dish cart that always sat in the dining area, next to the door, and a couple of seconds after hearing the door hit the cart, she heard a gunshot.
The videotape depicted a police officer pushing the swinging door with increasing force until it hit the dish cart. The State was attempting to show how the swinging door had hit the dish cart, as testified to by Mrs. Wesson. The trial court admitted the videotape through the testimony of Hueytown Police Officer Jimmy Brown, the officer who made the videotape, under the "pictorial communication" theory, one of two theories by which the admissibility of videotapes is ordinarily analyzed. See Ex parte Rieber,
"Experiments involve tests carried out before trial and the results of which are offered in evidence through the testimony of witnesses who either experienced or observed them." Charles W. Gamble, McElroy's Alabama Evidence § 81.01(1) (4th ed. 1991). "[E]vidence of an experiment, conducted out of court and having probative value on a matter in issue, is admissible if the conditions of the experiment were substantially similar to the conditions existing at the time of the occurrence involved in the litigation." Gamble, supra at § 81.02(2).
In Morgan v. State,
"On occasion, counsel may wish to go further and show the fact finder relevant tangibles in motion or processes in which relevant tangibles play or played some role. Examples could include demonstrations reenacting a crime or tort, demonstrations that a certain event could or could not have happened as asserted, and demonstrations that a relevant tangible could or could not behave or perform as asserted."
William A. Schroeder, Jerome A. Hoffman, Alabama Evidence, § 11-5, p. 562 (2d ed. 1993). Because the videotape's primary value to the State was to demonstrate to the jury that it was actually possible for the swinging door to strike the dish cart as Mrs. Wesson testified, we will analyze its admissibility as an experiment.
The appellant argues that the conditions of the experiment in this case were not the same as the conditions at the time of the crime because, he says, the police moved the dish cart closer to the swinging door so that the door would hit it. Nothing in the record supports this contention. Officer Brown, who made the videotape, testified that he did not recall whether the cart had been repositioned. More importantly, the owner of the restaurant, Bill Wesson, the murder victim's son, testified that the cart was in the same position in the videotape as it was at the time of the crime. The conditions of the experiment in this case were substantially similar to the conditions at the time of the crime. The trial court did not err in admitting the videotape.
Even if the trial court did err in admitting the videotape, the error was harmless because the videotape was merely cumulative to Mrs. Wesson's testimony that she heard the swinging door strike the dish cart. Reese v. City of Dothan,
In conjunction with this issue, the appellant also argues that he was denied the opportunity to rebut the State's experiment with his own test, because, he says, the State failed to timely provide him with the videotape. However, as the State correctly points out, when the videotape was offered into evidence, the appellant's counsel stated, "I just saw the video provided to me a few weeks ago at least. I have no qualm with that." R. 549. The appellant maintains that he preserved this claim when his counsel stated that the videotape was "a highly prejudicial version of how this shooting occurred without a chance for us to rebut it, or cross-examine it," R. 564, but it is clear from the context in which the appellant's counsel's statement was made that counsel was directing an objection not at the timeliness of the *Page 1278
State's production of the videotape but at the purported fact that no witness could testify to whether the dish cart had been repositioned for purposes of making the videotape. Thus, this claim is procedurally barred from appellate review, because it is raised for the first time on appeal. Pate v. State,
The appellant filed motions to suppress his statements in the juvenile court during proceedings on the State's motion to transfer him to the circuit court for prosecution as an adult; he filed similar motions to suppress in the circuit court. C.R. 9, 15, 35, 89-90, 93-94. Although he raised several claims in these motions, including one challenging the voluntariness of his statements, he did not raise the claim now raised — that his third statement should have been suppressed because it was made after he told police that he did not want to speak to law enforcement. Nor did he raise this claim at trial. Therefore, this claim is procedurally barred from appellate review. Ayersv. State,
With regard to the appellant's contention that his statements were involuntary, the record shows that the trial judge was furnished with a transcript of testimony taken during the juvenile transfer proceedings and that the parties submitted the voluntariness issue to the trial judge on that transcript. R. 6-8, 21-22, 347-49, 767-74. However, the transcript of the juvenile proceedings is not contained in the record on appeal. " 'It is the appellant's duty to provide this court with a complete record on appeal.' Knight v. State,
The appellant refers us to our opinion in Bailey v. State,
"No expert witness testifying with respect to the mental state or condition of a defendant in a criminal case may state an opinion or inference as to whether the defendant did or did not have the mental state or condition constituting an element of the crime charged or of a defense thereto."
Stated differently,
"Rule 704(b) does not prohibit an expert witness from stating his opinion and reviewing facts from which a jury could determine whether a defendant had the requisite criminal intent. . . . Rather, the rule prohibits an expert witness from testifying that a defendant did or did not possess the requisite mental intent at the time of the crime."United States v. Orr,
This Court addressed an almost identical issue in McCowan v.State,
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the trial court is due to be, and is hereby, affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All the Judges concur.
"The adoption of Rule 704 constitutes a rejection of the corresponding federal rule, under which the ultimate issue rule is abandoned. See Fed.R.Evid.
"There is no intent that adoption of Rule 704 should abrogate preexisting case law liberalizing the application of the ultimate issue rule."
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Nicholas Ramon Wilkerson v. State.
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- Published