Dawson v. State
Dawson v. State
Opinion
On October 17, 1995, a jury convicted Homer Gene Dawson on four counts of distributing a controlled substance in violation of §
At trial, Wanda Gray, an undercover agent of the Colbert County Drug Task Force, testified that she met with Dawson on February 16 and 18, 1993, at an apartment complex in Florence. Gray stated that at those two meetings, which she said lasted at least 30 minutes each, Dawson sold controlled substances to her. While these drug transactions occurred, two officers of the Florence Police Department "staked out" the scene in a van in a lot across the street from the complex. Using hidden microphones, the stake-out officers were able to hear and record conversations occurring inside the apartment; an audiotape of those conversations was played for the jury. The two stake-out officers admitted that they could not see Dawson and Gray during the meetings, but one of those officers, Jim Staggs, did testify that on February 18, the date of the second transaction, from the point where he had parked his vehicle he saw Dawson leave the apartment, enter a vehicle, and drive out of the complex.
After Dawson was convicted and sentenced, his attorney became aware that juror misconduct might have occurred in the case; he petitioned for post-conviction relief. At the hearing on the petition, juror L.C. admitted that after the jury had retired for deliberations he had, without court authorization, gone to the apartment complex where the drug transactions had allegedly occurred. L.C. also confirmed that he had tried to park his automobile in the same location where the police stake-out vehicle would have been parked, in order to determine whether there *Page 474 would have been sufficient light to enable Officer Staggs to identify Dawson leaving the apartment on February 18, as Officer Staggs had claimed he had done. L.C. did not testify as to what conclusions he might have drawn from viewing the scene and said he could not recall whether he had made comments on the subject to his fellow jurors. L.C. did affirmatively state, though, that his improper visit did not influence his decision in the case.
P.B., the jury foreman, stated, however, that juror L.C. had in fact told the other jurors about his viewing of the crime scene. P.B. testified that during deliberations L.C. explained to the other jurors that he had visited the scene and that L.C. expressed to them the opinion that Officer Staggs's location would not have permitted him to see the apartment door so as to be able to identify Dawson. P.B. also stated that L.C.'s remarks did not affect her verdict.
The sole issue presented to this Court for review is whether the Court of Criminal Appeals erred in reversing Dawson's conviction and remanding this case for a new trial based upon juror L.C.'s unauthorized viewing of the crime scene and his sharing with other jurors the information he gathered as a result.
It is undisputed that L.C.'s viewing of the scene violated the trial court's admonition to consider only the evidence presented at trial and that it constituted juror misconduct. However, not every instance of juror misconduct warrants a new trial. Reed v. State,
"The test of vitiating influence is not that it did influence a member of the jury to act without the evidence, but that it might have unlawfully influenced that juror and others with whom he deliberated, and might have unlawfully influenced its verdict rendered."
The state concedes that the Roan test is applicable to the juror-misconduct issue in this case. However, the state contends that the trial court correctly determined that no unfair prejudice against Dawson could have resulted from L.C.'s improper viewing of the crime scene. The state argues that the stake-out officer's identification of Dawson was not crucial to the outcome of the case, and that, in any event, the evidence indicated that L.C. was persuaded from his visit to the scene that the officer could not have identified Dawson from his location. Thus, the state claims, the extraneous information in this case could only be beneficial to the defense. We agree that the juror misconduct in this case does not warrant the granting of a new trial.
In reversing Dawson's conviction, the Court of Criminal Appeals found Ex parte Lasley,
After the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Lasley's conviction, Lasley v. State,
"Application of the rule [that a new trial is required where juror misconduct might have influenced the verdict] cannot in all cases depend entirely upon the jurors' statements that the extraneous information did not affect their verdict.
". . . .
Id."Considering three separate home experiments and the consultation of law books by one juror, we conclude that the jury might have been influenced, notwithstanding the jurors' statements to the contrary. The jurors cannot in every case determine the question of whether they were, or might have been, improperly influenced."
In its opinion in this present case, the Court of Criminal Appeals stated:
Dawson v. State, supra, 710 So.2d at 469-70."[W]e have a situation similar to the situation in Lasley, in which we are not persuaded by the jurors' statements. . . . We must consider the attitude of the juror who decided to become a private investigator of the facts of this case, in total and direct disregard of the orders of the court. What other orders and directions and instructions of the court might the juror have deliberately violated? The extraneous information, even if we believe the juror's statement, 'might have affected' the jurors' verdict."
It could appear from these statements that the Court of Criminal Appeals found that, because one juror disobeyed the trial judge's instructions, other instances of juror misconduct, not proven and not even alleged, might be inferred to support the argument that a new trial was required. However, "[a]t a hearing on a motion for a new trial, the defendant has the burden of proving the allegations of his motion to the satisfaction of the trial court." Miles v. State,
Ex parte Lasley is distinguishable from Dawson's case. Exparte Lasley does stand for the proposition that some kinds of juror misconduct in criminal cases may allow a court to presume prejudice as a matter of law, notwithstanding the fact that jurors deny that any actual prejudice resulted from exposure to extraneous matters. However, presumption of prejudice as a matter of law has generally been restricted to cases in which the jury's consideration of the extraneous facts was "crucial in resolving a key material issue in the case." See Hallmark v.Allison,
In both Lasley and this case, the prosecution argued that the extraneous information considered by jurors could only have benefited the defense, and, therefore, that the prejudice required to justify the granting of a new trial did not exist. However, whereas in Lasley the Court noted that "we do not know the extent of [one juror's] experiment, nor with whom she discussed it," Ex parte Lasley, 505 So.2d at 1264, quotingLasley v. State, 505 So.2d at 1261, the record in this present case discloses more completely the substance of the juror's improper actions and what he said to the other jurors. Given the ambiguous impact in Lasley of the one juror's experiment regarding a "key material issue in the case," a new trial was warranted. See also Ex parte Troha,
We find this case to be more analogous to Reed v. State,
In both Reed and this present case, the trial court investigated juror misconduct, which involved corroborating a police identification of a defendant, and found that the extraneous matters did not prejudice the defendant. In Reed, a new trial was not required even where the juror's unauthorized experiment produced results that were consistent with the officer's identification testimony. Here, the information learned by the unauthorized viewing — information suggesting that the officer would have been unable to identify Dawson — was inconsistent with the officer's testimony in this case; this distinction between this case and Reed reinforces the conclusion that no prejudice could have resulted to Dawson and that a new trial is not required.
Because Dawson failed to show that the juror's viewing of the crime scene resulted in the introduction of facts that might have unlawfully influenced the jury's verdict, a new trial is not warranted.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
HOOPER, C.J., and MADDOX, ALMON, HOUSTON, KENNEDY, COOK, BUTTS, and SEE, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ex Parte State of Alabama. (Re Homer Gene Dawson v. State).
- Cited By
- 51 cases
- Status
- Published