Lead Opinion
FOR THE COURT:
¶ 1. A ' Panola County jury convicted James Douglas Willie of deliberate design murder. He now appeals the conviction and raises the following issues: (1) that the trial court erred in allowing the State’s ballistic expert to give definitive testimony matching bullets from the crime scene to a gun linked to Willie; (2) that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to object to the ballistics testimony; (8) that the jury returned a guilty verdict against the overwhelming weight of the evidence; and (4) that the trial court improperly answered a question submitted by the jury. We hold that the judge erred in answering a question posed by the jury during deliberations and reverse Willie’s conviction and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings.
FACTS
¶2. Nebraska resident Tom Schlender, age seventy-four, was killed while traveling on U.S. Interstate 55 (1-55) through Panola County, Mississippi, to pick up his grandson at a Bible college in Pensacola, Florida. Trooper Robert Anderson of the Mississippi Highway Patrol discovered Schlender’s body. Anderson testified that he received a call at 1:46 a.m. on May 8, 2012, to work a one-vehicle accident on I-55 near the Pope-Courtland exit. He- arrived at 2:07 a.m. and observed a red Ford pickup truck in the southbound lane with its driver’s side against thé guardrail in the median. The truck’s doors were closed. Anderson' opened the passenger’s-side door to talk to the driver, who was bloodied and had no pulse. Anderson noticed that the truck’s engine was running and the transmission was in drive.
¶ 3. Kit Wingert, a crime scene analyst with the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, processed the crime scene. Wingert testified that the driver/victim had apparent gunshot wounds to his right hand, front left shoulder, back left shoulder, and the right side of his body. He testified that the truck’s front passenger’s-side and driver’s-side windows were broken out and there was a projectile defect on the passenger’s-side mirror. Five bullet holes were in the post between the driver’s-side door and the back door; two of the bullets had penetrated into the cab. Four nine-millimeter shell casings were found on I-55' several hundred feet north of the truck’s resting place. Wingert collected a projectile and- projectile fragments from several places inside the truck. He testified that the projectiles had come from the driver’s side of the truck. The medical examiner testified that he 'had identified
¶ 4. Albert Perkins of the Panola County Sheriffs Department testified that Willie’s mother lived about two and a half miles from the Pope-Courtland exit. Candace Rattler testified that she had been in a burgundy Chevrolet automobile with Willie in Tunica County, Mississippi, on May 15, 2012. Rattler testified that Willie had a gun with him and fired .it twice before putting it-in the glove compartment. Rattler could not identify Willie in the courtroom and testified that, in May 2012, Willie was heavyset and had braids. The State calle,d Bernadette Logan, a detective with the Tunica County Sheriffs Department. Logan testified that, in May 2012, Willie had been heavyset with braids, but since that time he had lost a substantial amount of weight and had changed his hairstyle.
¶ 5. Logan testified that, after talking with Rattler, she had recovered two nine-millimeter shell casings from Johnson’s Bottom Road in Tunica County. Another detective testified that he had found a burgundy Chevrolet vehicle at Willie’s apartment with a black, nine-millimeter, Ruger pistol in the glove compartment. The gun was unloaded, but a loaded clip was found over the driver’s-side sun visor.
¶ 6. Cedric Davis of the Tunica County Sheriffs Department testified that he had interviewed Willie on May 15, 2012. Davis testified that, at that time, Willie was heavier and wore two dreadlocks. Davis said that Willie had told him that the gun had been in his possession for approximately two weeks and that he had purchased it for his protection.
■ ¶7. Brian Mclntire, a forensic analyst with the Mississippi Crime Laboratory, was accepted as an expert in forensic firearm identification. Mclntire testified that he had examined the gun, the four shell casings found on 1-55, the bullet and fragments found in the truck’s cab, the two shell casings from Tunica County, and the bullets submitted by the medical examiner. Mclntire further testified that, in his'expert opinion, the four shell casings found on 1-55 were fired in the gun, two projectiles from the truck’s cab were fired in the gun, the two bullets collected by the medical examiner were fired in the gun and the two shell casings from Tunica County were fired in.the gun. He testified that some of the projectile fragments collected from the truck’s cab had the same class characteristics as the gun, but he was unable to identify them positively as having been fired in the gun.
¶8. Mclntire also testified about the methodology he used to reach his conclusions. He explained that, first, he test-fired the gun in the laboratory to produce test-fired bullets. He then examined the “test fires” to become familiar with their class characteristics and individual characteristics. Mclntire testified that “class characteristics” are the characteristics common to all firearms with the same model number and that the Ruger’s class characteristics were nine-millimeter caliber, six lands and grooves, and a right-hand twist. Mcln-tire testified that individual marks or striations are left on the bullet and cartridge case when a gun is fired, and that the “individual characteristics” are unique to a specific firearm. By using a comparison microscope to compare the individual characteristics of the test fires to the individual characteristics of the bullets associated with the crime, he said he was able to determine whether a particular projectile or shell casing was fired from a particular weapon. His results were reviewed by an
¶ 9. Willie did not challenge Mclntire’s qualifications or his conclusions. He presented no opposing expert testimony. On cross-examination, defense counsel asked whether Mclntire had a margin of error for his results. , Mclntire responded that he had no margin of error but admitted that he is not infallible.
¶ 10. Willie testified and denied that he had killed Schlender. He testified that he had purchased the gun “off the streets” in Memphis, Tennessee, for his protection. He admitted that he had told investigating authorities that he had purchased it approximately two weeks before he was questioned, but he stated that the word “approximately” meant that he could have had it for days, weeks, or months. On cross examination, Willie testified that he had bought the gun on May 13, 2012, after the murder. Indeed, his defense at trial had nothing to do with challenging the State’s assertion that the gun in question was the murder weapon. Instead, he testified that he did not possess the gun until after the crime, and that the real murderer must have sold the gun after committing the murder.
DISCUSSION
I. Whether the trial court erred in allowing the State’s ballistics expert to testify that the shell casings and bullets were fired by the gun recovered from the car belonging to Willie’s girlfriend.
¶ 11. Willie argues that the trial court erred in permitting Mclntire to testify conclusively that the shell casings'and bullets came from Willie’s gun. Willie argues that Mclntire should have been allowed to testify only that the bullets and shell casings were consistent with having been fired from the pistol. He further contends that Mclntire’s testimony should have been so limited because a consensus exists within the scientific and legal communities that bullets and shell casings cannot be matched to a specific firearm with absolute certainty.
¶12. Mississippi Rule of Evidence 702, which governs the admissibility of expert testimony, provides:
[i]f scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
M.R.E. 702. Under Rule 702, expert testimony must be both, relevant and reliable. Corrothers v. State,
¶ 13. Willie contends that Mcln-tire’s testimony matching the bullets and shell casings to the gun associated with Willie was unreliable because the science of forensic firearm and toolmark identification does not permit identifications to be made with absolute certainty. However, Willie did riot object to Melntire’s testimony. A party who believes expert testimony to be inadmissible is required to make a timely objection to the admission of such testimony into evidence. Hyundai Motor Am. v. Applewhite,
Error may not be predicated upon a ruling which admits or excludes evidence unless a substantial right of the party is affected, and .... [i]n case the ruling is one admitting evidence, a timely objection or motion to strike appears of record, stating the specific ground of objection, if the specific ground was not apparent from the context ....
M.R.E. 103(a)(1). If the complaining party fails to object to expert testimony, then error predicated on its admission is procedurally barred from consideration on appeal. Brown v. State,
II. Whether Willie’s trial counsel rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel in failing to object to the testimony of the State’s ballistics expert.
¶ 14. As we hold above, the failure of Willie’s trial counsel to object to the ballistics testimony bars the issue - from consideration on appeal. Willie next argues that the failure of his trial counsel to object amounts to ineffective assistance of counsel in violation of his constitutional right to counsel. We disagree.
¶ 15. Both the United States Constitution- and the Mississippi Constitution provide a defendant a right to the effective assistance, of counsel. U.S. Const. Amends. VI, XIV; Miss. Const. Art. 3, § 26; Strickland v. Washington,
¶ 16. In Neal v. State,
¶17. After a George County jury convicted him of capital murder and sentenced him to death, Fred Spicer sought post-conviction relief in Spicer v. State,
He is either going to die in prison, which is a death penalty, and the State is going to support him forth [sic] the next 50 years until he dies, with our tax dollars, or he will die sooner. Either way, it’s a death penalty. And I submit to you, why should he be allowed to sit for the next 50 years and watch TV and have friendships- and to have associations and to have hope and to have all the things that living people have when Edmond Hebert is dead?
Spicer,
¶ 18. In Cole v. State,
¶ 19. Relying on Neal, Spicer, and Cole, we hold that the decision not to object to the form of the prosecutor’s questions to the State’s expert falls within the scope of trial strategy and did not constitute defective representation.
III. Whether the jury returned a guilty verdict against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
¶ 20. Willie next contends that the jury’s verdict was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Appellate review of the denial of a motion for a new trial based on the weight of the evidence requires the Court to view the evidence in a light most favorable to the verdict, and the verdict will be disturbed only “when it is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence that to allow it to stand would sanction an unconscionable injustice.” Bush v. State,
¶21. Willie argues that the verdict is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence because the testimony of the ballistics expert was improper. His contention amounts to nothing more than an attempt to demonstrate error on a matter as to which he failed to object at trial.
Raising objections in a motion for new trial which should have been made at trial has never been thought to cure the failure to object at the proper time. Barnett v. State,725 So.2d 797 , 801 (Miss. 1998). It is axiomatic that a litigant is required to make a timely objection. Id. We have-repeatedly held that if no contemporaneous objection is made, the error, if any, is waived. Walker v. State,671 So.2d 581 , 597 (Miss. 1995) (citing Foster v. State,639 So.2d 1263 , 1270 (Miss. 1994)). This rule’s applicability is not diminished, even in a capital case. Id.
Smith v. State,
IV., Whether the trial court erred in answering a question from the . jury.
¶ 22. During deliberations, the jury submitted a note' to the trial judge asking, “Sir, can we say he is guilty of having the gun without saying he is guilty of murder.” The. trial judge responded by writing, “No,” on the note and sending it back to the jury. The only charge against'Willie at trial, and the only charge as to which the jury was instructed and could have found him guilty, was deliberate design murder. No second gun charge was lodged against Willie. On appeal, Willie contends that the trial judge’s response equates to a peremptory instruction if the jury found Willie guilty of a gun charge. He contends that the judge’s response to the jury’s question amounted to instructing the jury that no, it could not find Willie possessed the gun without also finding him guilty of murder.
¶23. Rule 3.10 of the Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court Practice provides as follows:
If the jury, after they retire for deliberation, desires to be informed of any point of law, the court shall instruct the jury to reduce its question to writing and the court' in its discretion, after affording the parties an opportunity to state their objections or assent, may grant additional written instructions in response to the jury’s request.
Accordingly, we review the trial judge’s additional written instructions in response to a question from the jury for an abuse of discretion. See also Galloway v. State,
¶24. In appeals involving notes from juries, we often quote Girton v. State,
*1277 One of the most nettlesome problems faced by a circuit judge is an inquiry from the jury when it has retired to reach its verdict. The ensuing colloquy between the judge and jury, or instruction resulting therefrom, or both, have been one of the grounds of many appeals to this Court.
We really cannot lay down hard and fast legal principles to govern the myriad circumstances in which a problem may arise.
The patient and attentive judge has heard the evidence, following which he has diligently endeavored to instruct the jury on every possible relevant aspect of the case to guide this body in its deliberations. Having done so, and while he, the parties, and their counsel await the verdict, the judge is called upon to answer some question a juror has about the case. '
What is he to do? In deference we offer some common sense suggestions.
Our first recommendation is that the circuit judge determine whether it is necessary to give any further instruction. Unless it is necessary to give another instruction for clarity or to cover an omission, it is necessary that no further instruction be given.
Of course, a circuit judge may realize such a necessity even in the absence of an inquiry from the jury, and under such circumstances quite properly may give the jury additional written instructions. See Wages v. State,210 Miss. 187 ,49 So.2d 246 .(1950).
The second recommendation requires the trial judge to constantly bear in mind that justice in every trial requires communication and understanding. Unless words are clearly understood, there is only a communication of sound, or worse, a distinct possibility of the receiver of the information placing a different meaning on what is spoken or written than the author meant. This is critical in any communication from the circuit judge to the jury, or between the judge and jury.
Therefore, a judge should make absolutely certain he understands precisely what is meant in any inquiry from the jury. Unless he is quite certain precisely what the jury means in its inquiry, how can the judge know he is responding properly? .
Girton,
THE COURT: All right. I got a note ' from the jury and the jury has a question. And it says, “Sir, can we say he is guilty of having the gun without saying he is guilty’ of murder?”
So, I’m going to respond, “No, you cannot,” and send it back.
Mr. Walker?
MR. WALKER: Well, Judge, that would be a lesser included charge, possession of a firearm by a felon.
MR. CHAMPION: They—there’s no proof in front of them of that.
. THE COURT: Well, there’s been—
MR. CHAMPION: Plus, they have no—
THE COURT:—no lesser included instruction, no—I mean, this is simple murder—
MR, WALKER: I understand,’Judge.
THE COURT:—and it’s going to be either a guilty or not guilty or hung jury.
MR. CHAMPION: I think, the response will be, “You must find him either guilty or not guilty of murder.”
THE COURT:. Okay. I’m just going to say, • No, you cannot. You can just ei*1278 ther—murder—you know, guilty or not guilty. Okay. (Wrote on note.)
One word response, “No.” I figured the more I write, the more I’ll confuse them. All right. Pee Wee, if you’ll hand that back to them.
BAILIFF JOHNSON: All right, sir.
¶ 25. Like the Girton Court, we cannot be sure what the jury meant by its question. Girton,
¶26. The State, on the other hand, argues that the issue is barred by Willie’s failure to object at trial and otherwise lacks merit because Willie was not on trial for possessing the firearm. The State argues that any further response from the trial court would have confused the jury, as it indeed was not possible for the jury to convict Willie of possessing the gun. The State further contends that the jury instructions read as a whole properly instructed the jury.
¶ 27. As the case appears via the record on appeal, either interpretation of the intent behind the jury’s question—Willie’s or the State’s—is possible. Ironically, the trial court’s and the attorneys’ focus on the possibility that the jury wanted to consider a conviction for possession of a firearm and an acquittal for murder originated with Willie’s trial counsel, who spoke first after the trial judge read the question to the attorneys. Willie’s attorney suggested that possession of a firearm would be a lesser included offense, which in turn caused the trial court and prosecutor to discuss the absence of any such charge against Willie. After the discussion of the lesser-offense possibility ended, and the judge indicated he would respond with a simple, “No,” no one present discussed the possible effect, raised today, that the jury would take the judge’s response to indicate that a finding of possession of the firearm would necessitate a conviction for murder.
¶28. Because Willie’s counsel failed to object to the judge’s response, the issue is barred from review absent plain error. See Fitzpatrick v. State,
¶ 30. We have held that it is plain error to allow a jury instruction that permits the jury to find a defendant guilty for reasons other than- guilt as to every element of the underlying crime. Berry v. State,
The Court instructs the jury that each person present at the time, and consenting to and encouraging the commission of a crime, and knowingly, willfully and feloniously doing any act which is an element of the crime, or immediately connected with it, or leading to its commission, is a principal.
One who aids, assists and encourages a transfer of cocaine is a principal and not an accessory, and his guilt in nowise depends upon the guilt or innocence, the conviction or acquittal of any other alleged participant in the crime. Therefore if you believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Merlinda Berry did willfully, unlawfully and feloniously do any act which is an element of the crime of transfer of cocaine, as defined by the Court’s instructions, or immediately connected with it, or leading-to its commission, then and in that event, you should find Merlinda Berry guilty of transfer of cocaine1 as charged in the indictment.
Id. at 570 (¶4). In Berry, the State—as does Presiding Justice Randolph in his separate opinion—responded that other instructions instructed the jury as to the elements of the crime. Id. at 571 (¶5).
¶31. The Berry Court acknowledged two other cases, Simmons v. State,
In this case, however, we find that reading the instructions as a whole did not cure the error resulting from the improper instruction. The jury was in fact informed of the elements of transfer of cocaine and the State’s burden of proof in this case in instructions other than S-3. The problem with the offending instruction is that it appears to give the jury an additional option of finding the defendant guilty if shé committed only one element of the crime without even finding that the crime was ever completed. Even if the jury read all of the instructions together, they could still- be misled into believing that Instruction S-3 was merely another option in addition*1280 to the choice of finding that Berry committed all of the elements of the crime herself. We find that the instruction on an accessory in this case was confusing and misleading, and therefore requires reversal. Brazile v. State,514 So.2d 325 , 326 (Miss. 1987) (“inaccurate and confusing, nature” of instruction requires reversal and remand for a new trial)..
Berry,
¶ 32. Simmons v. State,
The- Court instructs the Jury that each person present at the time, and consenting to and encouraging the commission of a crime and knowingly, wilfully and feloniously doing any act which is an element of the crime, or immediately connected with it, or leading to its commission, is as much a principal as if she had, with her own hand, committed the whole offense; and if you believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the Defendant GAIL RENEE SIMMONS, did wilfully, knowingly, unlawfully and feloniously do any act which is an element of the crime of Kidnapping or Aggravated Assault or Simple Assault, or immediately connected with any one of these crimes, or leading to its commission, then you shall . find the Defendant, GAIL RENEE SIMMONS, guilty of Kidnapping or Aggravated Assault or Simple Assault or any one or all of these crimes.
Id. at 1203-1204. The Simmons Court affirmed the ■ conviction and, in doing so, noted that other instructions informed the jury of the State’s burden to prove every element of the crime. Id.
If S3. In the later case Hornburger v. State,
The Court instructs the Jury that each person present at the time, and consenting to and encouraging the commission of a crime, and knowingly, willfully and feloniously doing any act which is an element of the crime or immediately ' connected with it, or leading to its commission, is as much a principal as if he had with his own hand committed the whole offense; and if you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the ■ defendant, Gregory Homburger, a/k/a Greg Homburger, did willfully, knowingly, unlawfully and feloniously do any act which is an element of the crime of'burglary of a building, or leading to its commission, then and in that event, you-should find the defendant guilty as charged.
Id. at 514. Although, like the Simmons Court, the Homburger Court affirmed the conviction, unlike the Simmons Court, the Homburger Court held the trial court erred in giving the instruction at issue. Id. at 515. However, the Court, citing other jury instructions that required the jury to find the defendant guilty' of each element beyond a reasonable doubt, held the error had been harmless. Id.
¶ 34. In another, later case styled Liggins v. State,
*1281 Identifiable differences exist between the two instructions. In Homburger, the jury was charged that if the requirements of the instruction were met, it normatively “should” find the defendant guilty. In the instant case, the jury was charged that it “shall” find Liggins guilty. Further, Homburgef s instruction required consent to be deemed a principal and found guilt to derive from an act which is an element of or leads to the commission of . the crime. On the other hand, the instant case’s instruction did not require consent for principal status while it deemed guilt to stem from an act immediately connected with the crimes, as well as an act which is an element of or leads to the commission of those crimes.
Both instructions are objectionable in their effect. In Homburger, it was pointed out that “[instruction S—8] basically says if you find [the defendant] did any act which is an element of the crime of burglary, you shall find [the defendant] guilty as charged.” Hornburger,650 So.2d at 514 . As Liggins objected at trial, S-3 “lessens the burden of the State to prove every element of a crime by suggesting that if they can show any act which is an element of the crime, then the instruction directs them to find the defendant guilty.” Liggins basically argued that the State must simply show an act which is an element of the crime, rather than prove every element, to require a jury to find a defendant guilty. We found that the instruction in Hom-■burger was harmless error because of its sufficient sister instruction and because the term “should” was used'as opposed to the “shall” utilized in the instant case. Further, Homburgef s instruction required a greater burden on the state to prove the necessary elements, whereas the instant case’s instruction, lessened the state’s burden. Homburger is not this case. It is reversible error in this ease.
Liggins,
1135. Like Berry, Simmons, and Homburger, the trial court in the case sub judice instructed the jury on all of the elements of the crime. However, the instant case is more like Berry, and less like Simmons and Homburger, in that the trial judge’s instruction to the jury in response to the jury’s note gave the jury an “additional" option” of finding Willie guilty of murder if the jury also thought him “guilty” of possessing a gun. Again, the trial judge’s answer to the jury of “No,” combined with the jury’s question, effectively communicated to the jury that no, it could not find Willie “guilty” of having the gun without also finding him guilty of murder. Like the Berry Court before us, we hold the trial judge’s supplemental instruction to the jury, in response to the jury’s note, was “confusing and misleading, and therefore requires reversal.” Berry,
¶36. In,short, the judge’s supplemental instruction in the case sub judice, like the troublesome instructions in Berry and Liggins, did not leave a hole in the understanding of the jury that could.be filled in by other instructions,.but actually contradicted the other instructions to the jury. It should not have been suggested to the jury that they must find Willie guilty of murder if they found him “guilty” of possessing the gun, because—at the least—such an instruction contradicted the correct instruction informing the jury it must find him guilty of the elements of deliberate design murder. ‘When a jury is given instructions which are in hopeless
¶ 37. We pause for a moment here to reiterate the suggestion of the Girton Court, that trial judges confronted with a note from the jury do what they can to be sure they understand what the jury truly intends to ask. Girton,
CONCLUSION
¶ 38. Willie failed to object to the testimony of the State’s ballistics expert and therefore is barréd from raising its admissibility on appeal. The failure to object was a strategic decision; accordingly, it does not rise to the level of ineffective assistance of counsel. Because Willie did not object to the ballistics evidence, he cannot contend that his conviction is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence because the ballistics evidence comprised much of the evidence against him. However, because the trial court’s supplemental instruction to the jury, given in response to the jury’s note, allowed the jury to find Willie guilty of murder if the jury found he possessed the gun used in the murder, we reverse his conviction and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶ 39. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. A detailed description of firearm and tool-mark identification methodology is provided by United States v. Monteiro,
Concurrence Opinion
CONCURRING IN PART AND IN RESULT:
¶40. While I agree with Justice Coleman’s decision that this case must be reversed and remanded due to the improper supplemental jury instruction, I disagree with its conclusion that trial counsel’s failure to object to the conclusory testimony of the State’s firearms identification expert can be deemed trial strategy. Brian Mcln-tire testified that the firearm in Willie’s possession matched the projectiles and fragments in evidence. Mclntire rendered these opinions in absolute terms, instead of to a reasonable degree of certainty in the field, as required by this Court’s precedent. Because Mclntire’s testimony was the sole evidence linking Willie with Tom Schlender’s murder, the failure to object was highly prejudicial. I would hold that trial counsel’s failure to object to the con-clusory nature of Mclntire’s firearm identification testimony constituted deficient performance that prejudiced Willie, violating his federal, and state constitutional rights to the effective assistance of counsel. Therefore, I respectfully concur in part and in the result.
¶ 41. The United States Constitution and the Mississippi Constitution provide that a defendant has a right to the effective assistance of counsel. U.S. Const. Amends. VI,
¶ 42. The defendant bears the burden to show that counsel’s performance was .deficient because it “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.” Id. at 688,
¶ 43. The defendant also must show that counsel’s error adversely affected the defense. Id. at 692,
¶ 44. As a preliminary matter, I observe that this Court has held that claims of ineffective assistance of counsel generally should be raised during post-conviction proceedings. But we may address a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on direct appeal if the issues presented are based on facts fully apparent from the record. M.R.A.P. 22(b); Archer v. State,
¶ 45. I now address whether Willie has shown that trial counsel’s failure to object to Brian Mclntire’s conclusory testimony was deficient performance. Mclntire’s exact testimony, in response to questioning on direct examination, that various shell casings, bullets, and fragments admitted into evidence had been fired in the handgun recovered from Willie, is informative in this regard.
¶ 46. With respect to the first of the four shell casings found on 1-55, Mclntire rendered the following testimony:
Q. And were you able to form an expert opinion as far as that shell casing compared to that gun?
A. I did.
Q. And what is your expert opinion?
A. The shell casing that is in State’s Exhibit 25 was fired in the gun that is in State’s Exhibit 43.
¶ 47. Regarding the second shell casing found on 1-55, Mclntire testified:
Q. And what is your expert opinion?
A, The shell casing that’s in State’s Exhibit 24 was fired in the gun in State’s Exhibit 43.
¶48. Mclntire testified as follows regarding the third shell casing from 1-55:
*1284 Q. What is your expert opinion, please?
A. The cartridge case in State’s Exhibit 29 was fired in the gun in State’s Exhibit 43.
¶49. And, regarding the'fourth shell casing found on 1-55, Mclntire testified:
Q. And what is your expert opinion? A. The casing that is in State’s Exhibit 30 was fired in the gun in State’s Exhibit 43.
Q. So all four shell casings that were recovered on Interstate 55 were fired from that gun?
A. That’s correct.
¶50. Mclntire also gave his opinion about the shell casings recovered in Tunica County:
Q. And the two shell casings that were recovered in Tunica County were fired from that gun?
.A. That is correct.
¶ 51. Next, the prosecutor asked Mcln-tire about projectiles and fragments recovered from the victim’s truck. Regarding a projectile collected from a rubber door seal inside the front driver’s door, Mclntire testified as follows:
Q. Okay. And were you asked to compare that item of evidence to this particular firearm?
A. I was.
Q. And were you able to form any kind of expert opinion as to whether or not that was fired from that particular gun?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Okay. And what is your opinion?
A. The projectile that is in State’s Exhibit 38 was fired in the gun in State’s Exhibit 43.
Q. Okay. So this bullet recovered from inside the vehicle was fired in that gun?
A, That’s correct.
¶ 52, Regarding a group of projectile fragments collected from inside the driver’s-side rear door of the truck, Mclntire testified as follows:
A.,.. The copper jacket fragments that were marked as 6E and 6F, both of those were fired in the gun in State’s Exhibit 43,
The—so we’ve got G and H left. .,, The one that was labeled 6H, it was a copper jacket' fragment and I was able to say that it beared [sic] the same class characteristics as the firearm in State’s Exhibit 43 but I was not able to positively identify that one- fragment as being fired in State’s Exhibit 48.
¶53. Regarding a copper jacket fragment found on the floor of the truck, Mclntire gave the following testimony:
Q. And were you able to form an expert opinion?
[[Image here]]
A. The copper jacket fragment that is in State’s Exhibit 42 bears class characteristics consistent with the firearm in State’s Exhibit 43.1 could not positively identify it and—I could not positively include or exclude it as being fired in State’s Exhibit 43 due to its mutilated . condition.and the lack of individual characteristics.
¶ 54. Mclntire also rendered expert opinions about two projectiles collected by the medical examiner, stating: .
Q. The last line of the medical examiner’s label lists-this as a bullet from right shoulder.
[[Image here]]
Q. And do you have an expert opinion as far as that exhibit is concerned?
[[Image here]]
A. The projectile that is in State’s Exhibit 62 was fired in the gun in State’s Exhibit 43,
*1285 Q. So the bullet found in Mr. Schlen-der’s right shoulder was fired in that gun?
A. That’s correct.
[[Image here]]
Q. All right. I’m going to finally hand you—which has crime lab 11, State’s Exhibit 58. Okay. Where does that indicate that it came from?
A. The medical examiner’s label lists the last line as a bullet from body bag.
[[Image here]]
Q. And do you have an expert opinion as far as that exhibit is concerned?
A. I do.
Q. And what is that expert opinion?
' A. The bullet that is in State’s Exhibit 53 was fired from the gun in State’s Exhibit 43.
¶ 55. Then, the prosecutor embarked upon a final line of questioning that presented to the jury a summation of Mcln-tire’s expert opinions as follows:
Q. Brian, I know you—we’ve done a lot of asking questions and you’ve done a lot of answering questions. And just so we can clear this up for the jury, did you examine the gun that was located in Tunica County?
A. I did.
Q. And did you compare that gun to these two shell casings that were recovered in Tunica County?
A. I did.
Q. Did these two shell casings match this gun?
A. Yes, sir. Those two shell casings were fired from that gun.
Q. Were you asked to compare the four shell casings that were recovered on Interstate 55 to this gun that was recovered from James Willie in Tunica County?
A. I was.
Q. And were the four shell casings that were recovered on Interstate 55 shot from the gun recovered from James Willie?
A. The four shell casings were fired from that gun.
Q. And were the items—not all of them, but the majority of the items that were recovered from inside Tom Schlen-der’s truck that was found on Interstate 55 fired from the gun that was recovered from James Willie?
A. Two of the projectiles that were recovered from the truck were fired from the gun; and the fragments beared [sic] class characteristics with the gun.
Q. And was [sic] exhibits that were recovered from the body of Tom Schlen-der.during the postmortem examination fired from the gun belonging—or recovered from James Willie?
A, The metal fragment had no comparison value, but the other two projectiles that were submitted from autopsy were fired from the gun in State’s Exhibit 43.
. ¶ 56. The above testimony shows that the prosecutor elicited from Mclntire numerous opinions in absolute terms that the projectiles and fragments in evidence matched the gun found in Willie’s possession. Then, in a summary and highly con-clusory manner, the prosecutor and the witness reiterated the same testimony. Throughout all of this testimony, Willie’s counsel remained silent.. Counsel’s failure to object reflects a failure to recognize that this Court has placed limitations upon the level of certainty that experts may ascribe to their opinions.
¶57. This Court has held that, in civil cases, an expert witness’s opinion must be stated to a reasonable degree of probability in the witness’s field of expertise. Univ. of Miss. Med. Ctr. v. Lanier, 97 So.3d
¶ 58. Other courts have recognized that, due to limitations inherent in the field of firearm identification, an expert cannot reliably testify in absolute terms that a bullet was fired from a specific firearm. In United States v. Taylor,
¶ 59. But, because the process of determining that a match exists is subjective, the court found deficiency in the standards controlling the technique’s operation. The court explained:
Arguably the biggest obstacle facing any firearms examiner is that there is no such thing as a “perfect match.” Even two bullets known to have been fired consecutively from the same gun will display some differences. See Alfred A. Biasotti, A Statistical Study of the Individual Characteristics of Fired Bullets, 4 Forensic Sci. 34, 44 (1959). Even more problematic, bullets fired from different guns may have significantly similar markings, reflecting class or sub-class, rather than individual, characteristics. The practice in the field, therefore, as embodied in the [Association of Firearm and Toolmark Examiners (AFTE) ] Theory of Identification, calls on examiners to declare an identification only “when the unique surface contours of two tool-marks are in ‘sufficient agreement.’ ”
The AFTE Theory, thus, does not provide any uniform numerical standard examiners can use to determine whether or not there is a match and, indeed, Mr. Nichols indicated in his testimony that most AFT examiners do not. use any numerical standard. Instead, the AFTE theory is circular. An examiner may make an identification when there is sufficient agreement, and sufficient agreement is defined as enough agreement for an identification. See Monteiro,407 F.Supp.2d at 370 . The conclusion that there is a match between a recovered bullet and a particular gun is, therefore, necessarily a subjective one, “... held in the mind’s eye of the examiner and ... based largely on training and experience in observing the difference between known matching and known non-matching impression toolmarks.” Monteiro,407 F.Supp.2d at 362-63 [internal quotation omitted].
Id.
¶ 60. The district court identified an additional relevant factor. The court observed that, because the firearm examiner usually is provided only one suspect weapon and recovered projectiles, what occurs is basically an evidentiary “show-up,” not a blind test. Id. at 1178. The court stated that “[t]he problem with this practice is the same kind of'problem that has troubled courts with respect to show-up identifications of people: it creates a potentially significant ‘observer effect’ whereby the examiner knows that he is testing a suspect weapon and may be predisposed to find a match.” Id. at 1179. ..
¶ 61. The district court in Massachusetts concluded that an experienced firearms examiner using peer-reviewed methods could testify that a bullet was or was not fired from a particular firearm. Id. at 1180. But, due to limitations on reliability, a firearms expert would not be allowed to testify that “that he can conclude that there is a match to the exclusion, either practical or absolute, of all other guns. He may only testify that, in his opinion, the bullet came from the suspect rifle to within a reasonable degree of certainty in the firearms examination field.” Id.
, ¶ 62. Similar conclusions were reached restricting a firearm and toolmark examiner from making conclusory statements in United States v. Glynn, 578 F.Supp.2d 667 (S.D.N.Y. 2008), United States v. Monteiro,
Because an examiner’s bottom line opinion as to an identification is largely a subjective one, there is no reliable statistical or scientific methodology which will currently permit the expert to testify that it is a “match” to an absolute certainty, or to an arbitrary degree of statistical certainty. Allowing the firearms examiner to testify to a reasonable degree of ballistic certainty permits the expert to offer her findings, but does not allow her to say more than is currently justified by the prevailing methodology.
Monteiro,
¶63. In addition to these cases calling conclusory firearm identification testimony into question, this issue has arisen in this Court. This Court had before it an attack on the certainty of an expert’s conclusion that two distinct groups of bullets were fired in the same gun in Manning v. State,
The science regarding firearms examinations does not permit examiner testimony that a specific gun fired a specific bullet to the exclusion of all other guns in the world. The examiner could testify •.to that information, to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, but not absolutely. Any individual association or identification conclusion effected through this examination process is not based on absolute certainty but rather a reasonable degree of scientific certainty. As with any process involving human judgment, claims of infallibility or impossibility of error are not supported by scientific standards.
Ex. E to Supplement to Motion to Stay Execution and Set Aside Convictions, Second Motion for Leave to File Successive Petition for Post-Conviction Relief, And Motion in the Alternative for Other Forms of Relief, Manning v. State, No. 2013-DR-00491-SCT. ¶64. The letter also stated that “we are notifying the governor’s office, attorney general’s office, and the defense, as well as the Innocence Project and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers of the errors.” Id. This Court denied Manning’s request for hearings on the reliability of expert' testimony on firearms identification, but granted other relief to Manning, including staying his execution." Manning v. State,
¶ 66. Mclntire’s expert opinions" were stated in terms of absolute certainty, not in terms of a reasonable degree of certainty in the afield of firearms identification. Melntire testified that the final step in his examination was to view a bullet or shell casing known to have been fired, from a
¶ 67. The prosecutor did not frame his questions properly, i.e., to a reasonable degree of certainty in the field of firearm identification, and the witness did not so qualify his opinions. Considering the totality of the circumstances, no conceivable trial strategy could have been served by defense counsel’s failure to object to Mcln-tire’s conclusory testimony. An objection would have given the trial court the opportunity to limit Mclntire’s conclusions to a reasonable degree of certainty in the firearms examination field. See Parvin,
¶ 68. Further, I would hold that counsel’s failure to object was prejudicial to Willie because “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Strickland,
¶ 69. Defense counsel did choose to ask Mclntire -about his margin of error on cross-examination and thereby elicited the answer that Mclntire was not infallible. Such brief and vague testimony was not likely to have had much impact upon the weight of Mclntire’s many unqualified conclusions that the bullets and shell casings collected by investigating officers matched Willie’s pistol. But had counsel objected and had the trial court properly limited Mclntire’s conclusions to a reasonable degree of certainty in the field, the impact of the sole evidence against Willie would have been reduced significantly, especially if followed by effective argument- on this all-important topic. The jurors would not have been exposed to purportedly • scientific
¶ 70.1 would hold that Willie was denied his constitutionally guaranteed right to the effective assistance of counsel. U.S. Const. Amend. VI; U.S. Const. Amend. XIV; Miss. Const. Art. 3, § 26. Therefore, while I agree that this case must be reversed and remanded due to the improper supplemental jury instruction, I would find that additional reversible error occurred because Willie received constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel.
KING, J., JOINS THIS OPINION.
Concurrence Opinion
CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART:
¶71. When taken in isolation, the jury’s question may have been ambiguous. But our precedent requires more. As caselaw is legion, nó citation is required for the principle that when read together and taken as a whole, if the instructions given fairly announce the law of a case, there is no basis for reversible error. Following that undisputed principle, it cannot be fairly argued that in this case, under these circumstances, the trial court erred. Given the facts found in this record, reversal is not mandated.
¶ 72. In today’s appeal, not a single instruction given has been challenged as an incorrect statement of the law. There is nothing in the judge’s response that incorrectly stated the law. He did not enlarge, restrict, or modify any of the instructions given. We can only rely upon what is stated in the transcript and the defendant’s arguments because the physical note bearing the jury’s query and the judge’s response is not part of this record. What are part of this record are the twelve instructions the trial court gave to the jury—nine by the court (C1-C9), two by the State (S1A and S2), and one by the defendant (D2). S1A provided:
S1Á
The Defendant, JAMES DOUGLAS WILLIE, is charged with the crime of Murder.
If you find from the evidence in this case, beyond a reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of evéry other reasonable hypothesis consistent with innocence, that:
1.) The deceased, Thomas Schlender, was a living person; and
2.) On or about May 8, 2012 ... [the Defendant], without authority of law, did shoot with a firearm and kill [Schlender] with the deliberate design to effect the death of [Schlender], then you shall find the Defendant guilty of Murder.
If the State has failed to prove any one or more of these elements beyond a reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of every other reasonable hypothesis consistent with innocence, then you shall find the Defendant not guilty.
After receiving instructions from the court, during its deliberations, the jury submitted a note to the trial judge, which is not a part of the record before us. According to the transcript, the note asked if the jury could “say [Willie] is guilty of having the gun without saying he is guilty of murder.” According to the transcript, the judge responded by writing, “No.” Again, the judge’s written response is not in the record. Willie argues that the query and re
¶73. Whether the judge’s limited response should be considered an additional written instruction, or a simple response to a jury inquiry, is debatable. Whether his response was an additional written instruction or not, it is beyond question that S1A was before the jury and was a sound instruction. Thus, the jury was properly instructed that it could not convict Willie of murder unless it found beyond a reasonable doubt that Willie deliberately shot and killed Schlénder without authority of law. “The jury is presumed 'to have followed the trial court’s instructions.” Galloway v. State,
¶ 74. As recognized by Justice Coleman, this Court noted that an inquiry from the jury during deliberations is “[o]ne of the most nettlesome problems” faced by our judges, and recognized that “[w]e really cannot lay down hard and fast legal principles to govern the myriad circumstances in which a problem may arise.” Girton v. State,
In deference we offer some common sense suggestions.
Our first recommendation is that the circuit judge determine whether it is necessary to give any further instruction. Unless it is necessary to give another instruction for clarity or to cover an omission, it is necessary that no further instruction be given.
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The second recommendation requires the trial judge to constantly bear in mind that justice in every trial requires communication and understanding. Unless words are clearly understood, there is only a communication of sound, or worse, a distinct possibility of the receiver of the information placing a different meaning on what is spoken or written than the author meant. This is critical in any communication from the circuit judge to the jury, or between the judge and jury.
Therefore, a judge should make absolutely certain he understands precisely what is meant in any inquiry from the jury. Unless he is quite certain precisely what the jury means in its inquiry, how can the judge know he is responding properly?
Id. at 572-73. In Girton, a juror sent the following statement to the judge:
To me the State has not proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Girton was put into a position of having his back to the wall, pushed into a comer and made to take some sort of action to protect his life, family or home. The action he took may not have been proper, but it might have been the only action he felt he could take at the time. Some of the other Jurors tell me I am not following the law as it was laid out for us (And there is what, I believe to be a period) My feel*1292 ings, if I am wrong, please show me at what point I am failing and I could possibly change my opinion.—signed Boyd Goodnight.
Id at 571. The'judge responded as follows:
The State does not have to prove that the acts of the Defendant were reasonable. It is a question of fact for the Jury to determine. The reasonableness of his acts are factual questions. Apply the written instructions to the facts as you determine them to be.
Id, at 572. We noted that, in that case,
the circuit judge may have understood precisely what Juror Goodnight meant. While this Court believes we have some understanding of what was troubling this juror, we must at the same time concede we are not sure.
If the juror was indeed resolving an inquiry on a certain principle of law as appears from this record, and as the circuit judge apparently understood it, the principle of law had already been thoroughly covered in the two previous instructions. Also, as we have noted, we cannot be sure what this juror meant.
Id. at 573. This Court recognized that,
because the meaning of the juror’s inquiry was not completely free from doubt, it would have been preferable for the circuit judge to see that the meaning was unquestionably clear before making a determination whether a response was necessary. Further, even the meaning ascribed by the circuit judge to the inquiry required nothing more than a court direction to follow the instructions.
Id. at 575; Nevertheless, we found no error in the. trial court’s response, as there was “absolutely nothing about either the inquiry or the circuit judge’s response which would induce an otherwise doubtful juror to return a verdict of guilty.” Id.
¶ 75. As so aptly addressed by the well-seasoned and experienced jurists, unanimously accepted and stated in Girton, we should not lay down hard and fast legal principles to govern every circumstance that might give rise to a jury inquiry during deliberations. That Court offered common-sense suggestions, all the time giving due deference to the trial judge. In this case, the judge determined it was necessary to answer the jury’s inquiry. He reached that decision after conferring with both the district attorney and defense counsel. In this case, the judge believed he understood what the jury was asking. The judge and attorneys for the defendant and the State considered the inquiry as regarding a lesser-included offense. The judge’s response was proper in this case—the jury could not find Willie guilty of a crime for which he was not charged and on which it received no instruction. While a better response may have been to simply inform the jury that it had already been properly instructed and to refer to the instructions given, I cannot say that the trial judge abused Ms discretion in responding as he did. See id. at 575, In the words of the Girton Court, while we may “have some understanding of what was troubling this jur[y], we must at the same time concede .we are not sure.” Id. at 573. In any event, there is “absolutely nothing about either the inquiry or the circuit judge’s response which would induce.an otherwise doubtful juror to return a verdict of guilty,” on the charge of deliberate-design murder. See id. at 575. Instruction S1A instructed the jury to find the defendant not guilty if the State failed to prove any one of the listed elements of deliberate-design murder beyond a reasonable doubt. See Instruction S1A (requiring a finding that Willie deliberately shot and killed Schlender without authority of law beyond a reasonable doubt in order to. convict).
¶ 77. In Berry v. State, the jury was given contradictory instructions, which had been filed and given to the jury before deliberations began. Berry v. State,
¶ 78. If the cases cited by Justice Coleman can offer us guidance, it is that each case must be decided on the facts of that case alone, applying the law consistently. Contrary to these accessory-instruction cases, the instructions actually given in this case were not contradictory. It is only when a “spin” is advanced of other possibilities, as argued by the defendant’s able counsel, that error is suggested. The jury was clearly instructed that the State had to prove each and every element of deliberate-design murder beyond a reasonable doubt. When the jury asked if it could convict Willie for possessing a gun without finding him guilty of murder, the trial judge specifically responded with “No,” if we rely on the transcript. The attorneys pointed out during the bench conference that the jury was given no instruction regarding possession of a firearm. The jury asked a yes or no question. Can reasonable jurists not agree that it would have been improper for the judge to have responded in the affirmative?
¶ 79. Justice Coleman correctly concludes that Willie’s failure to object to the judge’s response bars us from reviewing this issue absent plain error,
¶ 80. In this case, there is sufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict convicting Willie of deliberate-design murder. Faced with record evidence, we cannot say that the verdict “resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice.” See id. See also Haynes v. State,
¶ 81. In sum, reading the judge’s response to the jury’s inquiry in connection with the instructions given results in a clear announcement of the law applicable to this case. The judge’s response did not lessen the State’s burden of proof one iota, nor did it give the jury an “additional option” of “finding Willie guilty of murder if the jury also thought him ‘guilty’ of possessing a gun,” as posited by the defendant and accepted by Justice Coleman’s opinion. Coleman Op. ¶ 35. The judge’s responsé correctly told the jury that it could not find Willie guilty of possessing a gun—a crime with which he was not charged and on which the jury was not instructed. I would find the trial judge’s actions proper. Even if I assumed the trial judge erred, the result would be no different. No error is so “plain, clear, or obvious” as to warrant reversal.
WALLER, C.J., MAXWELL AND BEAM, JJ., JOIN THIS OPINION.
. See Coleman Op, ¶ 28 (citing Fitzpatrick v. State,
