David Lee ALLEN v. STATE of Arkansas
CR 83-98
Supreme Court of Arkansas
November 21, 1983
Rehearing denied December 19, 1983.
660 S.W.2d 922
Thomas G. Montgomery, Crittenden County
Stеve Clark, Atty. Gen., by: Theodore Holder, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
GEORGE ROSE SMITH, Justice. The appellant Allen was charged with aggravated robbery with a firearm and with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. At his first trial he was found guilty, but that сonviction was reversed for error in the exclusion of testimony. Allen v. State, 277 Ark. 380, 641 S.W.2d 710 (1982). A second trial resulted in a hung jury. At a third trial Allen was again found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment for the aggravated robbery and to a concurrent six-year term for thе other offense. We find no merit in his arguments for reversal.
The essential facts are that in the course of robbing a convenience store in West Memphis the appellant shot the store clerk four times, not fatally. Details are given in our earlier opinion and need not be repeated.
The first point has to do with the voir dire examination of two prospective
The appellant‘s second argument complains of the trial judge‘s denial of defense counsel‘s request to be allowed to call Allen‘s accomplice, Dorothy Jean Gatewood, for limited testimony. Allen‘s сonfession had been found to be voluntary. Counsel wanted to call Ms. Gatewood to testify only that while Allen was being questioned she was outside the room and heard loud banging and knocking (suggesting mistreatment). The State had not called Ms. Gatewood at this third trial. Counsel knew that Ms. Gatewood had twice denied under oath that she had heard any such noises, but he wanted her to state her denial a third time before the jury so that he could show by a defense investigator that she had made a contrary unsworn statement to him. The court‘s ruling was right. The inconsistent out-of-court statement was not admissible as substantive evidence in a criminal case, because it was not under oath.
A related argument under this point concerns an issue that arose twice during this third triаl of the charges against Allen. The issue first arose on the morning of trial, at a conference in chambers. The defense expressed its desire to call Ms. Gatewood to testify about a discussion outside the courtroom during the second trial a week earlier. Defense counsel stated in support of his request that another witness, Rosemary Bullins, had identified the defendant at the second trial, but after leaving the courtroom she had expressed tо Ms. Gatewood some doubt about her identification. The defense wanted to call Ms. Gatewood to ask her if she had not told Mrs. Bullins during that encounter that the defendant looked different because when he was first incarcerated he had stitches in his mouth as a result of having been beaten by the police. The court ruled that any testimony about stitches would not be relevant unless Allen took the stand and laid a foundation by specifying how and when he got the injuriеs. It is now argued that the court was wrong, because his ruling in effect required the defendant to take the witness stand.
We need not pass upon this argument, for if the court was wrong the error became harmless when the issue arose a second time. During the State‘s presentation of its case the witness Bullins again identified the defendant. On cross examination she admitted having talked to Ms. Gatewood outside the courtroom, but she denied having expressed any doubt abоut whether Allen was the right man. After the State had rested and while the defense was presenting its testimony, defense counsel at a conference in chambers asked permission to call Ms. Gatewood to ask her only about her conversation with Mrs. Bullins. Since counsel said that he did not know what Ms. Gatewood‘s answer would
A third point involves a defense effort to present to the jury a supposed fact that was never supported by testimony. At an earlier trial the prosecutor had asked a State witness, Officer Presley, during a Dеnno hearing, if he knew that after Allen was questioned he had been taken to a hospital because he complained about head injuries (implying mistreatment). The witness had then answered, “No, sir, I didn‘t know what area,” and appаrently had said that the examining doctor found nothing except arthritic pain in the patient‘s neck. Defense counsel wanted to interrogate Officer Presley about the possibility of head injuries, with no basis for the questioning excеpt the assumption in the prosecutor‘s question at the Denno hearing. The court correctly ruled, in chambers, that there was no good faith basis on which counsel might go into the supposed head injuries.
In the fourth point, a minor one, the court was not in error in ruling that the prosecutor did not make an improper closing argument in responding to defense counsel‘s closing argument, in which he had said to the jury, “Why didn‘t the State call Dorothy Jean Gatewood?” Wе think the defense argument opened the door to a response by the State.
Fifth, it is insisted that possession of a firearm by a felon is an offense included in aggravated robbery, so that only the latter conviction should be permitted to stand. Not so. The Criminal Code provides that one offense is included in another if the lesser is established by proof of the same or less than all the elements required to establish the commission of the offense chargеd.
Allen‘s last argument questions the admissibility of a pistol that was ballistically shown to have fired the bullets that wounded the store clerk. The State‘s proof showed that Allen and Ms. Gatewood entered the storе together and committed the robbery, that the clerk was shot, and that a police officer found the pistol in a trash can in Memphis after an interview with Ms. Gatewood. The witness Bullins identified the pistol, stated that it belonged to Ms. Gatewood, and testified that she had seen Ms. Gatewood with the weapon a week before the robbery. Upon that train of proof the pistol was properly admitted into evidence.
No prejudicial error is shown eithеr in the points that are argued or in the other abstracted objections, which we have considered under Rule 11 (f).
Affirmed.
PURTLE, J., dissents.
JOHN I. PURTLE, Justice, dissenting. The defense sought from the beginning of appellant‘s three trials on this incident to bring out evidence that аppellant was subjected to physical violence by the interrogating officers prior to his one paragraph confession. We reversed the first conviction. A mistrial because of a hung jury was declared in the seсond. The first two
