Jackson v. Commonwealth
Jackson v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
Darrell Jackson appeals from the Jefferson Circuit Court's order entered January *61820, 2017, denying his motion to vacate sentence pursuant to RCr
A jury convicted Jackson of first-degree manslaughter and the trial court imposed the sentence of twenty years' imprisonment. We adopt the facts as set forth by the Supreme Court of Kentucky on Jackson's direct appeal:
The facts relevant to this appeal are not contested. Appellant on several occasions sold heroin to Michael Chester and his wife, Ashley. Based upon their ongoing commercial relationship, Appellant agreed to "front" heroin to Chester, meaning that he would supply Chester with a quantity of heroin and then collect the cash payment at a later time.
When notified that Chester was ready to pay, Appellant went to Chester's apartment to collect payment for a recently delivered quantity of heroin. After Chester tendered only partial payment on his account, an argument began and a physical altercation ensued. From an adjoining room, Ashley heard Appellant and Chester quarrelling about money. She heard scuffling sounds she described as "wrestling around" and "smacking." When she heard a gunshot, she ran into the room and saw Chester lying on the floor with Appellant standing over him, his right hand in his coat pocket. She also saw a box cutter tool that Chester carried to work lying on the floor nearby. Appellant fled immediately but was arrested a short time later.
Appellant testified that when he rejected Chester's partial payment and demanded payment in full, Chester grabbed him, shoved him to the floor, and then came at him with what Appellant believed to be a pocket knife. Appellant testified that in order to protect himself, he reached for the gun in his coat pocket and intentionally shot Chester. Appellant said that he then panicked and left the scene.
Although the trial court instructed the jury upon the theory of self-defense, it declined Appellant's request for an additional instruction on the "no duty to retreat" qualification of self-defense codified in KRS3 503.055(3). The jury rejected Appellant's self-defense claim and found him guilty of first-degree manslaughter. The jury recommended the maximum sentence of twenty years' imprisonment and judgment was entered accordingly.
Jackson v. Commonwealth ,
The Supreme Court of Kentucky affirmed Jackson's conviction on direct appeal.
1) that the trial court erred by failing to give the "no duty to retreat" instruction;
2) that the trial court erred during the penalty phase of the trial by permitting the Commonwealth to present evidence of Appellant's juvenile court adjudication for robbery; and *6193) that although KRS 532.055(2)(a) 6 authorized the admission of his juvenile court record, the trial court erred by doing so because the statute is an unconstitutional encroachment upon the prerogatives of the judiciary.
Following his direct appeal, Jackson moved, pro se , for relief under RCr 11.42, asking the trial court to vacate its judgment and conviction on the basis of ineffective assistance of both trial counsel and appellate counsel. In related motions, Jackson also requested an evidentiary hearing, appointment of counsel, and leave to proceed in forma pauperis. The trial court denied Jackson's motions in an order entered on January 20, 2017. This appeal followed.
In his pro se motion, Jackson raised several allegations of ineffective assistance of both trial counsel and appellate counsel. The supplemental brief filed by counsel on Jackson's behalf focused on two issues of ineffective appellate counsel. We confine our review to these two claims. Jackson alleges appellate counsel did not argue: 1) trial counsel's failure to object to the prosecution's flagrant closing argument violations; and 2) juror misconduct. Jackson contends the trial court should have granted an evidentiary hearing on both issues.
When determining whether an evidentiary hearing is warranted under an RCr 11.42 motion, a trial court must consider "whether the allegations ... can be resolved on the face of the record," or if "there is a material issue of fact that cannot be conclusively resolved, i.e. , conclusively proved or disproved, by an examination of the record. The trial judge may not simply disbelieve factual allegations in the absence of evidence in the record refuting them." Fraser v. Commonwealth ,
A movant will only be successful on IAAC claims for "ignored issues" which "counsel must have omitted completely" from the direct appeal. Hollon v. Commonwealth ,
Appellate review concerning IAAC under an RCr 11.42 motion employs an abuse of discretion standard. Bowling v. Commonwealth ,
First, we address Jackson's allegation of appellate counsel's deficiency for having failed to raise the issue of prosecutorial misconduct in his direct appeal. This is not one of the arguments brought in Jackson's direct appeal; therefore, as an omitted argument, the first prong of IAAC, deficiency, has been met. Hollon ,
To succeed, allegations of prosecutorial misconduct during closing arguments must either be flagrant or must meet the three conditions set out in Barnes v. Commonwealth ,
A four-factor test is used to determine when a prosecutor's comments constitute flagrant misconduct requiring a reversal. Dickerson v. Commonwealth ,
Jackson contends the Commonwealth committed prosecutorial misconduct during closing argument. In particular, he maintains the Commonwealth's quotation from the O.J. Simpson trial: "If the glove doesn't fit, you must acquit!" was improper and inflamed the jury.
Jackson also alleges several other instances of prosecutorial misconduct when the Commonwealth misstated the evidence, denounced Jackson's testimony as a lie, commented on Jackson's interview with the police detective, and described Jackson as having "stood over the [victim's] body like a hunter over his prey." None of these incidents can overcome the flagrancy test factors. First, these additional instances do not appear to have misled the jury and were not adequately prejudicial. It is well established during closing argument, the prosecutor may comment on tactics, evidence, and witness veracity and credibility. Dickerson ,
Next, Jackson contends the trial court abused its discretion when it denied his IAAC claim for failure to raise juror misconduct during his direct appeal. As with his prosecutorial misconduct claim, Jackson must meet the prongs of "deficiency" and "prejudice" for the Court to grant him relief. Hollon ,
To prove the alleged juror misconduct resulted in prejudice against him, Jackson must show there is a "reasonable probability that the appeal would have succeeded" had the appellate attorney raised the claim.
We must now review the evidence to determine if it supported the trial court's summary denial of Jackson's motion for an evidentiary hearing on this juror misconduct issue. Jackson's juror misconduct claim is documented in the trial video when the bailiff, who was later sworn to sequester the jury, approached the judge and reported having a familial relationship with one of the jurors. This happened outside the parties' hearing, at the bench on the last day of the four-day trial. The judge thanked the bailiff and did not forward the information to any of the parties. Because the trial court did not act on the information it received, the possibility of juror misconduct cannot be disproved. It does not matter whether the juror omitted the familial relationship with the bailiff intentionally, inadvertently, or with bad faith. The question remaining is whether the juror's conduct in failing to report the familial relationship with the bailiff who sequestered the jury violated Jackson's constitutional right to a fair and impartial jury.
It is likely trial counsel would have investigated this information if he was aware of it because he had asked the venire about relationships with people in "law enforcement" and followed-up when some jurors mentioned having relatives in the police department and prosecutor's office. Although it is speculative to assume this questioning would have occurred, the facts indicate trial counsel was not at fault for failing to ask adequate questions. See, e.g. Moss ,
The Commonwealth argues it is speculative at best for Jackson to allege the juror committed misconduct or was prejudiced against him. We reject the Commonwealth's assertion that Jackson has failed to show the juror was actually biased against him. This assertion is unavailing because the juror's silence prevented discovery of any potential bias or prejudice. A juror's reticence in the face of voir dire questioning creates a "deceptive silence." Gullett v. Commonwealth ,
A review of both the oral ruling and the trial court's written order shows there are no facts in the record to discern which juror was related to the bailiff who sequestered the jury, whether the juror intentionally concealed the juror's familial relationship, how close the relationship *623was, or if the juror was excused as an alternate. These facts are necessary to decide if the juror's failure to disclose his relationship reaches the level of juror misconduct or, ultimately, whether Jackson's right to a fair and impartial jury was compromised. Doubt about a trial's fairness must be resolved in the defendant's favor. Randolph v. Commonwealth ,
It is well-established that evidentiary hearings are critical to resolving juror misconduct cases. See Smith v. Phillips ,
Here, there are material issues of fact which must be resolved, and the trial court heard sufficient juror misconduct allegations to warrant an evidentiary hearing. It is the juror's apparent misstatement or omission during voir dire that prevented Jackson's further inquiry. Sluss ,
Because Jackson's juror misconduct claim cannot be refuted by the record as it stands, and the relief commonly awarded for juror misconduct is an evidentiary hearing which provides some due process relief, this claim would have been more successful than the other failed claims Jackson's appellate attorney argued. Accordingly, Jackson has proven the elements of IAAC and should be awarded an evidentiary hearing because it is the relief he would have received had juror misconduct been raised in his direct appeal.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm in part the Jefferson Circuit Court's order relating to Jackson's prosecutorial misconduct allegations and vacate in part the order denying Jackson's motion to vacate his sentence entered January 20, 2017, and remand for further proceedings including *624an evidentiary hearing on Jackson's juror misconduct allegation.
ALL CONCUR.
Kentucky Rules of Criminal Procedure.
Kentucky Revised Statutes.
We will address the Commonwealth's quotation and reference, although we were able to locate the quote only through our own record review for the purpose of determining the overall fairness of the trial. We remind the parties it is their obligation under Civil Rule (CR) 76.12 to parse the record and provide adequate citation thereto to support their claims and arguments.
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