Three North Carolina juries have found the petitioner, Ronald F. Jackson, guilty of robbery. The North Carolina Court of Appeals reversed Jackson’s first conviction for a new trial.
State v. Jackson,
The district court then granted Jackson’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. 1 It held that the State of North Carolina had “deprived [Jackson] of the constitutional right to a fair trial” because (1) the trial judge at the petitioner’s second trial excluded the favorable results of a polygraph examination administered by an agent of the North Carolina Bureau of Investigation and (2) in response to Jackson’s request for the subpoena of twelve out of state witnesses at state expense pursuant to North Carolina General Statutes § 15A-813, the trial court limited him to five out of state witnesses from the Bennettsville, South Carolina area. We reverse.
At the time of the petitioner’s second trial in which the polygraph issue was determined adversely to Jackson, the results of polygraph examinations were inadmissible in North Carolina. E.g.
State v. Jackson,
As an indigent utilizing North Carolina General Statutes § 15A-813, the petitioner sought to subpoena twelve out of state witnesses at state expense to testify at his third trial. The trial court stated that the petitioner had listed eleven out of state witnesses who were necessary to prove his alibi defense that he was in Bennettsville, South Carolina at the time of the robberies. 2 The trial court found “as a fact that all eleven witnesses would testify to substantially the same thing; . . . and that the ends of justice would be met if this court were to issue an order compelling the attendance of five witnesses from the Bennettsville, South Caroliha area.” The court did not state its reason for limiting the petitioner’s out of state witnesses to one geographical area.
The North Carolina Court of Appeals, in Jackson’s third appeal, saw “no proof by defendant that the testimony of these additional witnesses (the seven who were not subpoenaed) would not be cumulative.”
State v. Jackson,
The petitioner suffered no constitutional prejudice from the absence at his third trial of at least six of the seven witnesses whom the trial court did not subpoena. 3 The petitioner’s brother, Jimmy Jackson, testified voluntarily. Mike Strickland (not subpoenaed) would have given testimony equiva *374 lent to that of Garland Barrett who was subpoenaed and present at the trial. Barrett, however, was not asked by the defense to take the witness stand.
The testimony of Jackson’s employer, Gary Carpenter, in the first trial was read into evidence at the third trial. Mrs. Carpenter’s testimony would have been to the same effect as her husband’s. The substance of both their testimony would have been that Jackson was at work at or near the time of the robbery. Clayton Springs, who lived in Topeka, Kansas, would have testified similarly to Charles McDuffie. The trial court did subpoena McDuffie, a North Carolina resident, who stated that he did not attend the trial because he could not drive. No issue of his absence was made at the trial and he was not sent for. Cleo Brennan’s testimony would have placed the petitioner in Bennettsville at the same time as did Aaron Brown’s testimony — at the approximate time of the robbery. Brown was neither a relative nor a close friend of the petitioner. We think the State did not violate the petitioner’s constitutional rights by failing to subpoena these six cumulative witnesses. Any difference in the quality of the testimony of those present and absent was not of constitutional dimensions. See, e.g.,
United States v. Gallagher,
The judgment of the district court is
REVERSED.
Notes
. Reported at
. The trial judge apparently believed that the petitioner had requested only eleven out of state witnesses, while the record shows that he sought the testimony of twelve.
There was another witness whom the trial court refused to subpoena, Benjamin F. Thomas, III, an agent of the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division. His testimony would have been to the effect that another man had told him that he (the other man) and another had committed the robberies for which Jackson was convicted.
The defendant made no other effort to have Thomas come to the criminal trial, and the trial judge, probably correctly, remarked that Thomas would not have had to be subpoenaed in any event since he was a law enforcement officer. The trial court’s remark is corroborated by the fact that Thomas attended the habeas corpus proceeding in the district court without subpoena.
Viewed in one light, this is merely alibi testimony and cumulative, but viewed under
Chambers v. Mississippi,
. The seventh being Thomas. See footnote 2.
