Everett Moore v. State of Mississippi
Everett Moore v. State of Mississippi
Opinion of the Court
¶ 1. A DeSoto County jury convicted Everett Moore of second-degree murder for shooting and killing Norris Smith. The Circuit Court of DeSoto County, Mississippi, sentenced Moore to thirty years' imprisonment. We reverse Moore's conviction and sentence and remand the case for a new trial because the trial court committed reversible error in denying Moore's proposed circumstantial evidence jury instruction.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 2. On September 29, 2015, at 12:07 p.m., Officer Walter Medford of the Olive Branch Police Department responded to reports of an accident with injuries. Upon arrival at the scene, Officer Medford observed a white Nissan Altima that had collided with a building. Officer Medford testified that he "noticed a black male ... in the driver's seat slumped over the arm rest" who was unresponsive and who "appeared to have a gun shot wound to his head." The window on the driver's side "was broken out." Investigator Roger Hutchins, who is Chief Inspector of the Detective Division of the DeSoto County Sheriff's Department, testified that a badge was found under the driver's seat of the vehicle which identified the victim as Norris Smith. Investigator Hutchins interviewed Smith's wife, who, "right off the bat," said that the shooter was Moore. Over defense counsel's hearsay objection, Investigator Hutchins testified that Smith's wife stated that "there had been an ongoing problem with Mr. Moore accusing Norris Smith, the victim, of having an affair with his wife."
¶ 3. Because the surrounding area where Smith's vehicle was located is heavily industrialized, the DeSoto County Sherriff's Department was able to obtain video surveillance footage from View, Inc.; Anda Pharmaceuticals; McKesson Pharmaceutical Distribution; Syncreon Security Technology; and Williams-Sonoma.
¶ 4. Detective English also took a number of "screen captures of the images that are shown of the surveillance video." That series of screen captures-still photographs of images from various surveillance videos-was received in evidence as Exhibit 29. According to Detective English's interpretation, the screen captures show that Moore, driving west through the Syncreon parking lot, stopped his vehicle briefly. Smith's vehicle then exited Syncreon's parking lot onto Kirk Road. Detective English opined that, "[o]nce [Moore] sees that Mr. Smith has left out the opposite entrance, he starts proceeding to the west exit of Syncreon's property." After Smith's vehicle had driven past, according to Detective English, Moore then drove out of the Syncreon parking lot and onto Kirk Road.
¶ 5. Detective English testified that the screen captures from the Anda Pharmaceutical surveillance show "both vehicles side by side on Kirk Road ...." According to Detective English, the screen captures show Smith's "vehicle ... coming into contact with the curb on the right and Mr. Moore ... slowing down his actions, backing up behind the vehicle to allow Smith's vehicle to keep going forward ... on Kirk Road." The next screen capture, Detective English testified, shows Smith's vehicle "bounce[ ] off of that right curb and [ ] driv[e] down the roadway uncontrollably as Mr. Moore is following behind."
¶ 6. Detective English described the Anda Pharmaceutical surveillance video, which he said showed "Mr. Smith's vehicle slowly come into the intersection almost striking [an] orange 18-wheeler [which] had a green light at the time. Mr. Smith's vehicle went through the intersection, over the curb and down the embankment where it came to a final rest at Prime Automotive."
¶ 7. Various witnesses testified about what they had observed. Ronnie Schuldt said that, as he was driving south on Polk Lane and approaching the intersection with Kirk Road, he was prevented from continuing through the intersection, despite having a green light: "I slowed down and stopped or almost stopped, and the car continued through the intersection heading west and drove up over the curb and then started down; and there was an embankment that goes down to the [Prime Automotive] building." Schuldt, who got out of his own vehicle and walked down the embankment to the driver's side of the car, stated that he saw an unresponsive person slumped over the console with an apparent head wound and that the driver's side window had been shattered. A Prime Automotive employee, Esau Fant, testified that he heard two gunshots and watched a white Altima drive through the intersection and coast down to the Prime Automotive plant. He saw the broken glass and saw that the driver had been shot.
¶ 8. Jonathan Young, an employee of View, Inc., testified that he had turned left onto Polk Road off Kirk Road and "was almost rear ended by a white SUV." Young continued that the SUV, which had a Benton County tag, passed his vehicle in a turn lane and then ran a red light. Young testified that Moore, the defendant, was the person he observed driving the SUV.
¶ 9. Nine to ten hours after the shooting, Moore turned himself in to the police. After reading Moore's
Miranda
¶ 10. Dr. Brent Davis, a deputy chief medical examiner with the office of the Mississippi State Medical Examiner, who was tendered by the State and accepted by the trial court as an expert in forensic pathology, testified that his colleague, Dr. Lisa Funte, actually performed the autopsy but she was unavailable to testify. Dr. Davis testified that he had reviewed and concurred with Dr. Funte's conclusions following Smith's autopsy. He stated that, "[i]n our office, currently all homicides are reviewed and signed off on by each pathologist in the office." Dr. Davis testified that the cause of Smith's death was "[m]ultiple gunshot wounds" and that the manner of Smith's death was "homicide." Moore did not object to any of Dr. Davis's testimony or evidence except for photographs the State offered through him that Moore argued were gruesome and would inflame the jury. The court admitted them, overruling Moore's objection.
¶ 11. A DeSoto County grand jury had indicted Moore for murder but the jury found Moore guilty of second-degree murder. Moore sought a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) or, in the alternative, a new trial, which the trial court denied. Moore was sentenced to a term of forty years, thirty years to be served in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections and the remaining ten years to be served on post-release supervision. Moore timely filed a notice of appeal.
¶ 12. Moore argues on appeal that: (1) the trial court erred by giving a second-degree murder instruction that was not supported by the evidence; (2) the trial court erred in refusing the circumstantial evidence jury instruction Moore had sought; (3) the trial court committed plain error by allowing a forensic pathologist to testify about an expert opinion which was not his own; and (4) the trial court erred by admitting hearsay evidence. We address only the dispositive question of whether the trial court erred in refusing Moore's tendered circumstantial evidence instruction.
ANALYSIS
¶ 13. The State produced no confession or eyewitness to the shooting. Moore proposed a circumstantial evidence jury instruction, but the trial court declined to give it. Moore argues on appeal that he was entitled to a circumstantial evidence instruction.
¶ 14. This Court reviews a grant or denial of jury instructions for abuse of discretion.
McInnis v. State
,
¶ 15. Moore contends that, under
Stringfellow v. State
, a circumstantial evidence instruction " 'should be given only when the prosecution can produce neither eyewitnesses [nor] a confession to the offense charged.' "
See
Stringfellow v. State
,
The video tape shows Moore's car and its relation to the victim's car at the exact place where the shots were fired as evidenced by the glass fragments and shell casings found at that location. An eye witness identified Moore as the one fleeing the scene and another eye witness described how the victim's car appeared to lose control and go off road until it came to rest against the side of a building.
¶ 16. But in
Burleson v. State
, this Court held that, "[w]here the State 'is without a confession and wholly without eyewitness testimony to the gravamen of the offense charged,' the defendant is entitled to an instruction requiring the jury to 'exclude every other reasonable hypothesis other than that of guilt before a conviction can be had.' "
Burleson v. State
,
¶ 17. In the present case, the State has produced neither Moore's confession nor an eyewitness to the gravamen of the offense charged. Here, the gravamen of the crime is the actual shooting of Smith. To remove this case from the circumstantial evidence realm, the State bore the burden of adducing evidence to show directly, and not merely by inference, that Moore shot and killed Smith. This is true, no matter how compelling the inference may be. The State claims that Moore's fingerprints on Smith's car, the video evidence of the vehicles, the broken glass and shell casing, the witness who observed Moore driving past him at a high rate of speed, and the other videos amount to direct evidence that Moore shot Smith. An inference that Moore shot Smith does arise from the evidence. But evidence that implicates the defendant by inference is circumstantial evidence, without regard to how persuasive the inference appears to be. Moreover, the sum of circumstantial evidence, however great it may be-and although often it is sufficient to sustain a conviction-never becomes direct evidence.
¶ 18. The State argues that video evidence can constitute direct evidence of the crime, citing
Golden v. State
. Golden was a cashier at a casino.
Golden v. State
,
¶ 19. But, in both Golden and Haynes , surveillance video had captured the nefarious misdeeds of the parties. In those cases, the video footage captured the gravamen of the crimes as they were being committed. The circumstantial evidence in the present case, albeit copious, does not reach beyond the realm of the inferential. The surveillance videos here showed only Moore's encounter with Smith in the Syncreon parking lot and the close proximity of Moore's vehicle to Smith's just before Smith's vehicle careened out of control. An inference arises from this circumstantial evidence that Smith did, in fact, shoot Moore. But inferences do not amount to direct evidence.
¶ 20. Because the State adduced no direct evidence of Moore's guilt, the trial court's refusal of Moore's sought circumstantial evidence jury instruction was an abuse of discretion. Accordingly, we reverse Moore's conviction and sentence and remand the case to the Circuit Court of DeSoto County for a new trial.
¶ 21. The dissent calls for the abolition of the circumstantial evidence jury instruction. But as the dissent recognizes, that view has been rejected by a majority
of this Court no fewer than five times.
See
Burleson v. State
,
¶ 22. This Court long has stood by the precept that, "[w]here the State 'is without a confession and wholly without eyewitness testimony to the gravamen of the offense charged,' the defendant is entitled to an instruction requiring the jury to 'exclude every other reasonable hypothesis other than that of guilt before a conviction can be had.' "
Burleson v. State
,
¶ 23. The dissent argues that, "the United States Supreme Court says mandatory reversal applies only to a very limited class of fundamental constitutional errors-not one of which is in play here." Diss. Op. ¶ 47 (citing
Neder v. United States
,
¶ 24. In
Stringfellow v. State
,
¶ 25. The
Stringfellow
Court declined to apply harmless error and held that the circumstantial evidence instruction should have been given "to secure protection of the accused's right to a fair trial ...."
Stringfellow
,
¶ 26. Circumstantial evidence instructions exist to ensure that, in cases in which the prosecution is without either a confession from the defendant or an eyewitness to the gravamen of the offense charged, a fair trial is had. A set of facts could arise in which this Court finds the trial court's failure to give a circumstantial evidence jury instruction in a circumstantial evidence case to have been harmless error. But today's case does not present such a fact pattern and we decline to speculate about a hypothetical scenario.
¶ 27. The dissent continues: "[T]he [United States] Supreme Court says circumstantial-evidence instructions are
unnecessary
if the jury is appropriately instructed on the State's burden of proof-'If the jury is convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, we can require no more.' " Diss. Op. ¶ 55. (quoting
Holland v. United States
,
¶ 28. In cases in which the State has neither a confession from the defendant nor an eyewitness to the gravamen of the offense charged, it can hardly be said that requiring the State to exclude every reasonable hypothesis consistent with innocence is a more onerous burden. Circumstantial evidence benefits the State by allowing the jury to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt by inference, as long as the State's evidence excludes every reasonable hypothesis consistent with innocence. Able prosecutors know that a solid circumstantial evidence case is to be preferred over one with an abundance of inebriated, or otherwise dubious, eyewitnesses, or one in which there is a shaky confession of questionable veracity or uncertain admissibility.
¶ 29. The dissent argues that the failure to instruct the jury in this case amounted to harmless error because the evidence against Moore was overwhelming. Diss. Op. ¶ 56. The dissent goes on to accuse the Court of ignoring the harmless error standard: "To completely duck these facts and the overwhelming evidence of Moore's guilt, giving absolutely no analysis of any resulting harm from excluding the instruction, rings hollow and very dismissive." Diss. Op. ¶ 36.
¶ 30. The jury was instructed on first degree murder, second degree murder, and manslaughter. The jury did not find Moore guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of first degree murder.
CONCLUSION
¶ 31. Because the trial court erred by denying Moore the circumstantial evidence jury instruction to which he was entitled, we reverse his conviction and remand the case to the Circuit Court of DeSoto County for a new trial.
¶ 32. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
WALLER, C.J., KING, COLEMAN AND ISHEE, JJ., CONCUR. MAXWELL, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY RANDOLPH, P.J., AND BEAM, J. CHAMBERLIN, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
Various surveillance videos were played for the jury.
Miranda v. Arizona
,
Mississippi Code Section 97-3-19(1)(a) defines "first-degree murder" as: "[t]he killing of a human being without the authority of law by any means or in any manner ... [w]hen done with deliberate design to effect the death of the person killed, or of any human being ...."
Mississippi Code Section 97-3-19(1)(b) defines "second-degree murder" as:
The killing of a human being without the authority of law by any means or in any manner ... [w]hen done in the commission of an act eminently dangerous to others and evincing a depraved heart, regardless of human life, although without any premeditated design to effect the death of any particular individual ....
Dissenting Opinion
¶ 33. The majority throws out the jury's guilty verdict and renders what is tantamount to an automatic reversal of Moore's second degree murder conviction based solely on a harmless instructional error. With respect for the majority, I find this approach is flawed, manifestly wrong, and results in a mischievous outcome.
¶ 34. First, the majority acts on a completely false premise-that there is an "
arguably stricter burden of proof placed upon the state in circumstantial evidence cases.
"
¶ 35. Second, mandating what is essentially automatic reversal for an instructional error, which has zero effect on a jury's verdict is illogical and impractical. Until today, this Court has consistently and very clearly "
rejected the proposition that the failure to give [a circumstantial evidence] instruction can be harmless error
."
¶ 36. But with respect for the majority-this Court is not facing a hypothetical scenario. This is a real murder case. And a unanimous, twelve-member jury found Moore guilty of murdering Smith-a real person. To completely duck these facts and the overwhelming evidence of Moore's guilt, giving absolutely no analysis of any resulting harm from excluding the instruction, rings hollow and very dismissive. It is not the way this Court or any other American appellate court applies harmless-error review. And I do not join in this approach. I would instead apply our traditional harmless-error standard, under which we examine whether the defendant was harmed sufficiently to overturn the jury's verdict.
¶ 37. A third truth is that the United States Supreme Court, every single federal court, and the vast majority of State courts, agree that refusal to give a circumstantial-evidence instruction is not even error at all. And numerous Justices on this Court have heavily criticized and called for the abolishment of circumstantial-evidence instructions
¶ 38. The bottom line is that Mississippi law says "[c]ircumstantial evidence is entitled to the same weight and effect as direct evidence[.]"
¶ 39. For these reasons, I would affirm Moore's conviction and sentence.
I. The Justification for Mandating a Circumstantial-Evidence Instruction is Based on a False Premise
¶ 40. Without question, this Court's current view of circumstantial-evidence instructions is based on a completely false premise-that there is an "
arguably stricter burden of proof placed upon the state in circumstantial evidence cases
."
Fisher v. State
,
¶ 41. In truth, there is just one burden of proof in all criminal cases. The State's burden is to prove the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. More than twenty-five years ago, Justice Banks pointed out the flawed logic of claiming a stricter, more enhanced burden of proof in circumstantial-evidence cases:
The concept of proof beyond a reasonable doubt is fully embodied in our U.S. Constitution. In Re Winship ,397 U.S. 358 ,90 S.Ct. 1068 ,25 L.Ed.2d 368 (1970). In Winship , the Supreme Court held that the reasonable doubt standard was constitutionally required under the Due Process Clause. In making this holding, the Court reviewed: the acceptance of the practice in common law jurisdictions, the long use of the standard by the Court, and the need to reduce the risk of convicting the innocent.397 U.S. at 361-64 ,90 S.Ct. at 1071-73 ,25 L.Ed.2d at 373-75 .
No court, however, has found a constitutional basis for a heightened burden of proof in circumstantial evidence cases. Whether proof is made by circumstantial or by direct evidence, the state must show guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
King v. State
,
¶ 42. Again, it is without question that the State's burden of proof is
not
raised when circumstantial evidence is admitted against the accused.
See
Jackson v. Virginia
,
¶ 43. While the majority of this court apparently prefers and demands a higher burden of proof in circumstantial-evidence-based criminal cases-I cannot join them. Because the Constitution does not recognize and no American court utilizes a "beyond, beyond a reasonable doubt" standard in criminal cases, this false premise should be departed from.
II. Any Instructional Error Was at Most Harmless
A. Harmless-Error Review Applies to Nonstructural Errors
¶ 44. Furthermore, in the majority's view, the trial judge's failure to correctly sift through the eighteen different tests
¶ 45. Instead, it says "[a] set of facts could arise in which this Court finds the trial court's failure to give a circumstantial evidence jury instruction in a circumstantial evidence case to have been harmless error. But today's case does not present such a fact pattern and we decline to speculate about a hypothetical scenario." Maj. Op. ¶ 26. Again, this is not a hypothetical. And merely saying harmless-error review may be appropriate in some circumstantial-evidence cases, but not this one, is not engaging in harmless-error review. It is conceding our past standard is wrong, but still employing it.
¶ 46. This methodology runs afoul of how this Court, and all other American appellate courts, typically review nonstructural, preserved trial errors. In fact, it is totally opposite. The United States Supreme Court has long recognized that " '[a] defendant is entitled to a fair trial but not a perfect one,' for there are no perfect trials."
Brown v. United States
,
¶ 47. This method of appellate review is not novel. Nor is it of recent vintage. Rather, "[p]erforming harmless-error review is commonplace in appellate courts ...."
Gillett v. State
,
¶ 48. Because here there is no structural error, the only logical standard of review is harmless-error review. This was our approach in
States v. State
,
¶ 49. I do recognize the
Stringfellow
majority refused to find harmless error.
Stringfellow v. State
,
¶ 50. But if a fair trial is really the majority's goal, how can it say the trial
was unfair when Mississippi courts recognize "[c]ircumstantial evidence is entitled to the same weight and effect as direct evidence"?
Cardwell v. State
,
¶ 51. Because the majority's approach is not legally sound and is not how this Court, or any appellate court, analyzes nonstructural errors, we should instead apply traditional harmless-error analysis.
B. Harmless-Error Review and the Evidence
¶ 52. Utilizing harmless-error review, it cannot reasonably be argued that giving a circumstantial-evidence instruction would have, in "any[ ] likelihood ... changed the result of the trial."
Smith
,
¶ 53. First, the evidence supporting the verdict was overwhelming. Video evidence, eyewitness testimony, forensic evidence, and Moore's own damning actions doomed him. The day of the shooting, Moore had accused Smith of having an affair with his wife. Moore traveled to Smith's workplace. And a business surveillance video captured Moore sitting in his SUV in the parking lot awaiting Smith. It showed the confrontation between Moore and Smith, then caught Moore climbing into his vehicle and Smith his. It shows Moore's SUV rapidly following Smith's out of the parking lot. Eyewitnesses saw Moore's vehicle pull next to Smith's, then Smith's vehicle careen out of control. Another witness heard the fatal gunshots ring out. After the shooting, Moore "picked up speed and ran the red light." In doing so, he almost crashed into another vehicle. Once Smith's vehicle stopped, Smith's dead body confirmed what everyone had just seen and heard-Moore had pulled alongside Smith and shot him to death. Additionally, when Moore turned himself in, eight hours later, he was driving a different vehicle and had changed into different clothes. Officers determined the interior and exterior of the SUV Moore had driven in the video had just been wiped down with cleaning agents. Officers also found large jugs of cleaning materials in Moore's SUV.
¶ 54. Simply put, in light of this overwhelming evidence of guilt, the lack of a circumstantial-evidence instruction was insignificant. Still, the majority chides this writer for conducting harmless-error review, analyzing the overwhelming evidence of Moore's guilt, and considering the jury instructions as a whole. But that is exactly how this Court reviews nonstructural errors, even where juries have found defendants guilty of lesser offenses.
See, e.g.,
Porter v. State
,
¶ 55. Furthermore, the jury was properly instructed on the burden of proof. And the Supreme Court says circumstantial-evidence instructions are
unnecessary
if the jury is appropriately instructed on the State's burden of proof-"If the jury is convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, we can require no more."
Holland v. United States
,
¶ 56. For these reasons, based on the giving of a reasonable-doubt instruction and the overwhelming evidence of Moore's guilt, there was no substantive harm.
III. Because the Law Makes No Distinction Between "Direct" and "Circumstantial" Evidence, a Separate Circumstantial-Evidence Instruction Should Not Be Required
¶ 57. As already mentioned, another reality under Mississippi law is that "circumstantial evidence is
not
inferior to direct evidence when all the facts are considered."
Bogard v. State
,
¶ 58. That is why the Supreme Court has explained, when compared to direct evidence, "[c]ircumstantial evidence in this respect is intrinsically no different[.]"
Holland
,
¶ 59. As Justice Robertson aptly put it, "the law should not impose a distinction between direct and circumstantial evidence where, at least in the present context, none rationally exists."
Mack v. State
,
Instead, the jury should be "instructed that the law makes no distinction between direct and circumstantial evidence but simply requires that, before convicting a defendant, the jury be satisfied of the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt from all the evidence in the case."
¶ 60. Here, the jury was instructed that, to convict Moore, it had to be satisfied that Moore was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Thus, the jury was properly instructed, eliminating the need for a new trial. Instead of reversing Moore's second-degree murder conviction and remanding for a new trial, this Court should affirm.
RANDOLPH, P.J., AND BEAM, J., JOIN THIS OPINION.
See
Forest Prod. & Mfg. Co. v. Buckley
,
Fisher v. State
,
E.g.,
Burleson v. State
,
Maj. Op. ¶ 24.
Id. at ¶ 26.
Justice Pierce noted "previous members of this Court have recognized and expressed[ ] this instruction is a mere restatement of the reasonable-doubt burden of proof and serves no real purpose, and I am in accord with those who have called for its abolition."
Burleson
,
Cardwell v. State
,
Holland v. United States
,
I do not take this position lightly. I wholeheartedly agree with and abide by the doctrine of stare decisis, under which, "[a] former decision of this court should not be departed from, unless the rule therein announced is not only manifestly wrong, but mischievous."
Forest Prod. & Mfg. Co.
,
Justice Robertsons's "[c]areful, but not exhaustive, research reveal[ed] ... no less than eighteen articulations of the test for determining whether and when the circumstantial evidence burden of proof rule should apply."
Montgomery
,
Under Rule 30.1(c) of the Mississippi Rules of Criminal Procedure, to be reversible, a trial-court error must be prejudicial. See M.R.Cr.P. 30.1(c) ("If no prejudicial error be found, the circuit court [sitting as appellate court] shall affirm and enter judgment in like manner as affirmances in the Supreme Court."). Similarly, in civil trials:
No error in either the admission or the exclusion of evidence and no error in any ruling or order or in anything done or omitted by the court or by any of the parties is ground for granting a new trial or for setting aside a verdict or for vacating, modifying, or otherwise disturbing a judgment or order, unless refusal to take such action appears to the court inconsistent with substantial justice. The court at every stage of the proceeding must disregard any error or defect in the proceeding which does not affect the substantial rights of the parties.
M.R.Civ.P. 61.
While "there are some constitutional rights so basic to a fair trial that their infraction can never be treated as harmless error,"
Chapman
,
Such "structural errors"-as they are called-implicate basic protections, without which "a criminal trial cannot reliably serve its function as a vehicle for determination of guilt or innocence, and no criminal punishment may be regarded as fundamentally fair."
Fulminante
,
Harmless-error review was applied in the following cases:
Avery v. State
,
In fact, the opinion suggests the opposite-there was no harm.
See
Stringfellow
,
I am not the first justice on this Court to point out that no federal court and most state courts have abolished the circumstantial-evidence instruction. Thirty years ago, Justice Robertson cited not only the United States Supreme Court's
Holland
opinion but also listed eleven states' cases as examples of the abolishment trend.
Mack
,
And in 2014, Justice Piece added twenty-one more states and even more cases to that list.
Burleson
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Everett MOORE A/K/A Everett S. Moore v. STATE of Mississippi
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published