Tillman v. State
Tillman v. State
Opinion of the Court
Walter Tillman and Clyde Stevenson appeal their convictions of burglary and conspiracy to commit burglary from the Circuit Court of Sunflower County. Tillman was sentenced to five years in prison for the burglary conviction and three years for the conspiracy conviction. Stevenson was sentenced as an habitual offender to seven years for the burglary conviction and five years for the conspiracy conviction. Because we find that the trial court erred in denying Tillman's request for a severance, we reverse and remand his convictions for a new trial. Stevenson's convictions, however, are affirmed.
Chester Campbell testified that on January 9, 1989 he and Stevenson discussed breaking into the Roundaway Grocery after visiting it while hunting in the area. Campbell told Stevenson that he had been in the store with his mother on several occasions and had seen money in the cash register. When they finished hunting, Campbell and Stevenson went to Walter Tillman's house, where Campbell and Stevenson were staying, and discussed burglarizing the store with Tillman. According to Campbell, Tillman asked him if he definitely knew that there were valuable items in the store and Campbell replied that he did. Campbell then asked Tillman if he wanted to go with them and Tillman answered affirmatively.
Campbell testified that he, Stevenson and Tillman rode in Tillman's truck to the Roundaway Grocery later that night. Tillman drove the truck past the store and past a house located near the store in order to make sure no one was nearby. Tillman then backed the truck up to the store. While Tillman stood guard with a .30/.30 rifle and a 12 gauge shotgun, Stevenson broke a window out and entered the store through the window. Stevenson then let Campbell in through the back door. Campbell and Stevenson took several items from the store and loaded them in the truck, including a television set, radios, a .22 pistol and bags of groceries. In all, Campbell testified that they took approximately 45-50 bags of groceries from the store. After Tillman filled his truck with gas from the store's gas pump, they returned to Tillman's house where they unloaded the groceries. On cross-examination, Tillman's counsel successfully brought out the fact that Campbell had also been indicted for burglarizing Martin's Grocery Store in Boyer, Mississippi, on January 10, 1989. Campbell was not allowed to testify that Stevenson was also indicted for the Martin's Grocery Store burglary.
Tillman testified that he and his wife Josephine were separated. He testified that one night in early January, 1989, he was staying at his wife's house when Campbell and Stevenson came by and asked to borrow his truck. Tillman lent them his truck and Campbell and Stevenson kept it all night. Tillman testified that he stayed at his wife's house all night and when he got up the next morning, he found his truck sitting outside his wife's house with the keys in the ignition. When he returned to his house, Tillman saw the groceries, the t.v. and a radio. He asked Campbell where these items had come from and Campbell replied that he got them at a store in the country. According to Tillman, Campbell did not tell him that these items were stolen. Tillman admitted that he took a pack of fish to his wife and children, but testified that he told Campbell and Stevenson that they could not keep anything at his house. When he returned home from work that afternoon, everything had been taken elsewhere. Josephine Tillman and Tillman's son, Walter, Jr., testified that Tillman stayed at Josephine's house one night in early January, 1989, and that Stevenson borrowed Tillman's truck that night.
Stevenson testified that on January 9, 1989, he went to Stella Sutton's (the mother of Stevenson's friend Roger Simpson) house in Indianola at about 5:00 p.m. and stayed until approximately 8:00 p.m. when he went to visit a friend, Michael Scott, in Shaw, Mississippi. He returned to Sutton's house at about 9:30 p.m. and watched videos with her until 3:00 a.m. when he went home to Tillman's house. Stevenson testified that he was not with either Tillman or Campbell that night and did not borrow Tillman's truck. Aaron Nance testified that he and Stevenson were at Sutton's house watching videos until 3:00 a.m. on January 10, 1989. Nance and Stevenson then went to Nance's house where they spent the night.
In Hawkins v. State,
In Hawkins, the two defendants, Hawkins and Amos, were charged with robbery. Hawkins, 538 So.2d at 1205. At trial, a witness for the State identified Hawkins and Amos as the robbers. Hawkins did not testify in his own defense. Id. at 1207. However, Amos testified that he went to the convenience store where the robbery took place with Hawkins and a man named Leroy Murphy. They left in Amos's car and the car had a flat tire.Id. at 1206. Amos testified that while he changed the tire, Hawkins and Murphy went back to the store supposedly to get beer. The Court held that this testimony tended to exculpate Amos at the expense of Hawkins. Id. at 1207. Also, Amos's testimony disrupted the balance of evidence since it helped corroborate the State's witness's testimony that Hawkins was in the store. Therefore, the Court held that the trial court should have granted Hawkins's motion for a severance and reversed Hawkins's conviction. Id. However, the Court held that Amos was not prejudiced by the trial court's refusal to grant a severance since Hawkins did not testify. Amos was able to put on his defense regardless of the severance issue and his testimony exculpated himself at the expense of Hawkins. Amos therefore was not prejudiced by the lack of a severance. Id.; see also Rigbyv. State,
In this case, the evidence offered by the State implicated both Tillman and Stevenson equally in the commission of the crime. Campbell testified that both Tillman and Stevenson helped plan the burglary and actively participated in the burglary. However, the testimony of both of them tended to exculpate themselves at the expense of the other. Tillman testified that he was not with Stevenson or Campbell on the night of the burglary and Stevenson and Campbell borrowed his truck that night. He also testified that when he went to his house the next morning, he saw that Stevenson and Campbell had stored the stolen t.v., a radio and the groceries there and he made them take the items somewhere else. Stevenson, on the other hand, testified that he never borrowed Tillman's truck that night and spent most of the night watching videos at Stella Sutton's house.
We find that Tillman was prejudiced by the trial court's refusal to grant a severance. His defense and Stevenson's defense was obviously in conflict and the jury's immediate impression was that he and Stevenson were obviously lying. If a severance had been granted, the jury would have been able to consider Tillman's defense in light of the State's evidence without first comparing it to Stevenson's defense to make sure the defenses are consistent. *Page 1107 A separate trial would ensure that Tillman was convicted solely on the basis of the State's evidence and not because he and a codefendant had inconsistent defenses. Therefore, Tillman's convictions must be reversed and remanded for a new trial.
MRE 609(a) provides:
(a) General Rule. For the purposes of attacking the credibility of a witness, evidence that he has been convicted of a crime shall be admitted if elicited from him or established by the public record during cross-examination but only if the crime (1) was punishable by death or imprisonment in excess of one year under the law under which he was convicted, and the court determines that the probative value of admitting this evidence outweighs its prejudicial effect on a party or (2) involved dishonesty or false statement, regardless of the punishment.
In Peterson v. State,
Id. at 637.(1) The impeachment value of the prior crime.
(2) The point in time of the conviction and the witness' subsequent history.
(3) The similarity between the past crime and the charged crime.
(4) The importance of the defendant's testimony.
(5) The centrality of the credibility issue.
The State argues that the trial court did not err in not making an on-the-record determination since Tillman and Stevenson did not make a threshold showing that the prior convictions had probative value. In Saucier v. State,
Here, Tillman did not make a prima facie showing that the prior convictions of Campbell and Stevenson had probative value. Stevenson likewise made no initial showing that Campbell's prior convictions had probative value. All that was done by either defendant was Tillman's counsel asked the court for a ruling on whether the convictions were admissible. No one stated why these convictions would have any bearing on the truthfulness of Campbell's and Stevenson's testimony. Therefore, the trial court was not required to balance the probative value and prejudicial effect of these convictions on-the-record.
The remaining assignments of error are without merit.
Because the trial court erred in refusing to grant Tillman a severance, Tillman's convictions are reversed and remanded for a new trial. Stevenson's convictions and sentences are affirmed.
REVERSED AND REMANDED AS TO TILLMAN; AFFIRMED AS TO STEVENSON.
ROY NOBLE LEE, C.J., DAN M. LEE, P.J., and PRATHER, ROBERTSON and SULLIVAN, JJ., concur.
McRAE, J., concurs in result only.
BANKS, J., concurs in result and concurs in Part I and dissents in Part II with separate written opinion joined by McRAE, J.
PITTMAN, J., not participating.
Dissenting Opinion
I concur in the result reached by the majority. I do not, however, agree with Part II of the opinion expressing approval of the trial court's preclusion of impeachment evidence proffered by the defendant. I write separately to explain my disagreement.
The majority concludes that burglary offenses have no probative value as to truthfulness. I believe that such convictions have value. That value can be outweighed by prejudicial effect, as, for example, where the witness to be impeached is charged with the crime of burglary or a similar crime. The apparent genesis of the view that there are felonies which can be considered "non-probative" on the issue of truthfulness is McInnis v.State,
In my view, all felonies committed within the time period specified by the rule have "probative value" for purposes of invoking the Peterson weighing factors. Indeed, the rule at common law was that one who had been convicted of a felony was incompetent as a witness. McCormick on Evidence, Third Edition, § 43, p. 93. Modern rules abandon the doctrine of incompetence but retain the use of felonies as grounds for impeachment. Id. 93-95. Some felonies — aggravated assault, murder and rape — have less impeachment value than others, perjury and fraud, for example. The Peterson mechanism takes that into account.
Burglary is a felony punishable by imprisonment for more than a year. For impeachment purposes, a conviction for burglary is admissible by virtue of the rule, provided that its probative value, a given under the rule and at common law, is not outweighed by its prejudicial effect. This test requires an assessment of the weight of its impeachment value, together with other factors which we have labeled the Peterson test.
Finally, we should note that the impeachment evidence was offered against two persons, one a party, who will not be a party on remand because we order a severance, and the other a witness, who is not a party. Our rule requires an assessment of prejudicial effect upon a party only, not a mere witness. Miss.R.Evid. 609(a)(1). Subject to the broader provisions of Rule 403 where the burden of showing that prejudice outweighs probative value is on the *Page 1109 objector, no weighing is required where the impeachment evidence is offered against a mere witness.
McRAE, J., joins this opinion.
[EDITORS' NOTE: PAGES 1109 — 1117 CONTAINED A WITHDRAWN OPINION.] *Page 1117
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Walter Tillman v. State of Mississippi. Clyde Stevenson v. State of Mississippi.
- Cited By
- 41 cases
- Status
- Published