Charles McQuarter was convicted of grand larceny, Miss. Code Ann. §
I. Whether appellant was denied effective assistance of counsel by his prior counsel's failure to conduct professionally reasonable pretrial and background investigations into obvious and highly relevant exculpatory evidence, facts and available character witnesses and other omissions;
II. Whether the in-court identification of appellant by State's witness Susan Kyzar was improperly prejudicial, tainted and overly suggestive;
III. Whether the trial court erred in denying appellant's motion for a directed verdict where no evidence presented by the State of Mississippi established grand larceny, in that neither the quantity nor the value of the property allegedly taken was established;
IV. Whether the trial court erred by coercing the jury to reach a verdict in this cause by stating, "If you are unable to agree upon any specific verdict unanimously the Court will be forced to declare a mistrial", after the jury had asked the court for further clarifying instructions?
Susan Kyzar, a behind-the-counter attendant, identified appellant in-court as the thief; however, she could not identify appellant from pictures the day after the theft. She testified the accused walked away with 12-14 cartons of cigarettes which sold at retail for $10.96 per carton.
Sam Norwood, a customer, got a good look at appellant who bumped into Mr. Norwood as appellant made his escape. Mr. Norwood made a positive in court identification of appellant as the culprit. On direct examination, he approximated appellant left the premises with 11 or 12 cartons. When pressed on cross-examination, he insisted that the thief got away with no less than 10 cartons and perhaps as many as "fourteen or sixteen" cartons.
Richland police officer Bo Webb testified he interviewed both Kyzar and Norwood the day following the crime and showed to each a four-photograph array. One of the photographs was a picture of appellant. Norwood was able to identify appellant from the photographic array while Kyzar was not.
Counsel for appellant called three witnesses in appellant's defense in the following order: appellant's daughter, Yolanda, his wife, Betty, and appellant, himself.
Yolanda McQuarter, a first year student at Jackson State University, testified that she had been watching Monday night football with appellant, her mother and little brother in the family's Jackson home at the time of the alleged larceny in Richland and that her father, appellant, was home in Jackson the entire evening of the alleged larceny.
Betty McQuarter also testified that appellant had been at home all evening in Jackson watching football on the night of the alleged larceny in Richland. She also testified that appellant never went out at night without her.
McQuarter testified that he had been at home in Jackson watching football with his family on the night of the alleged theft in Richland. He asserted on direct and cross-examination that he had never been to the Fast Lane Convenience store in Richland.
I. Whether appellant was denied effective assistance of counsel by his prior counsel's failure to conduct professionally reasonable pretrial and background investigations into obvious and *687 highly relevant exculpatory evidence, facts and available character witnesses and other omissions?
(A) counsel's failure, prior to trial, to investigate and inquire about appellant's background or the availability of willing character witnesses who could have testified favorably in his behalf;
(B) the failure of counsel to object to the in-court identification made by Susan Kyzar and to question Kyzar about her inability, shortly after the crime, to identify appellant from a series of four (4) photographs shown to her by Richland police officer, Bo Webb; and
(C) the failure of trial counsel to bring out the fact that Kyzar recorded the license plate number of the perpetrator's motor vehicle and that said automobile belonged to another black who had a long and turbulent criminal history.
This state recognizes a strong but rebuttable presumption that counsel's conduct falls within a broad range of reasonable professional assistance. Gilliard v. State,
II. Whether the in-court identification of appellant by State's witness Susan Kyzar was improperly prejudicial, tainted and overly suggestive?
We are aware that this alleged error is a portion of the ineffective assistance claim. Our holding that this issue was not properly preserved for presentation on direct appeal in no way affects subsequent proof, if any, of ineffective assistance involving this issue.
CONVICTION OF GRAND LARCENY AND SENTENCE OF FIVE YEARS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, FOUR YEARS SUSPENDED, ONE YEAR TO SERVE, AFFIRMED.
ROY NOBLE LEE, C.J., HAWKINS, P.J., PRATHER, ROBERTSON, SULLIVAN, ANDERSON and PITTMAN, JJ., concur.
BLASS, J., dissents without written opinion.
