The appellant was convicted of delivering marijuana, and he was sentenced as an habitual offender to imprisonment for twenty-five years. He asserts two points for reversal. First, he contends evidence which could not have been admitted against him at the time the crime was committed was made admissible by legislation which became effective before he was tried. He argues the legislative act making the evidence admissible is ex post facto legislation as it was applied in his case and is thus prohibited. We conclude the legislation did not violate U. S. Const., art. 1, § 10, which provides that no state shall pass any ex post facto law. We also conclude -that the provision in Ark. Const, art. 2, § 17, that no ex post facto law shall be passed, was not violated.
The appellant’s second point is that the court erred in restricting his right to impeach through cross-examination one of the state’s witnesses. We find the appellant has not shown the court abused its discretion in limiting the cross-examination.
The facts bearing on the first point are not disputed. Sylvester Easter had been apprehended by police for stealing a video cassette recorder. Easter testified that as part of a “deal” with Detective Lancaster of the Magnolia Police Department he agreed to “make buys” of marijuana. Lancaster concealed a transmitter on Easter and then, from a distance, he observed Easter approach the appellant and two other persons at the appellant’s residence while listening to their voices on a receiver in a car. A tape recording of the conversation was produced at the trial, but it was virtually unintelligible. Lancaster testified, however, about what he heard Easter and the appellant saying to each other in the course of the drug transaction in which Easter purchased marijuana from the appellant.
The drug transaction, which both Easter and Lancaster described on the witness stand, occurred on January 18,1986. On that date there were in effect Acts 666 and 705 of 1985, codified as Ark. Stat. Ann. §§ 41-4501 through 41-4509 (Supp. 1985). Section 41-4502 provided that evidence derived from an intercepted oral communication was not admissible as evidence in a court unless the interception had been authorized by a circuit court upon application by the prosecutor, § 41-4503, and the application granted pursuant to the strict guidelines of § 41-4505. An “oral communication” was defined in § 41-4501(2) as one “uttered by a person exhibiting an expectation that such communication is not subject to interception under circumstances justifying such expectation.” It is clear that Lancaster did not comply with the statutes prior to intercepting the appellant’s conversation with Easter, and that § 41-4507 made his actions and failure to comply with the statutory requirements a felony.
On April 30, 1986, Act 1 of 1986 became effective. It repealed Acts 666 and 705 of 1985, and it purported to repeal them “ab initio.” The appellant was tried on May 9, 1986. Lancaster’s testimony was admitted over the appellant’s objection that the repeal of the law, which would have precluded its admissibility at the time of the crime, was ex post facto legislation.
1. Ex post facto legislation
The appellant urges that the change in the law affecting his case was substantive rather than procedural because the repealed law had made it a felony for anyone to receive “oral communications” in violation of the act. Thus he contends that because the act purported retroactively to relieve Lancaster from being accused of a felony the appellant’s substantive rights were affected. His explanation is that he has lost the protection he would have had from the law making Lancaster’s conduct feloneous. He cites no authority for this oblique rationale, and we know of none.
In support of his argument that the evidence of his conversation overheard by Lancaster is inadmissible, the appellant cites Kring v. Missouri,
The appellant also cites two cases from United States Circuit Courts of Appeals following Kring v. Missouri, supra. In United States v. Henson,
Government of the Virgin Islands v. Civil,
We find nothing in Kring v. Missouri, supra, or Government of the Virgin Islands v. Civil, supra, which would require reversal here. We do not have a defendant who has lost a defense or been subjected to a trial in which “less evidence” in any direct sense is required for conviction than would have been required at the time of the offense. (In part 1 .b. of this opinion we consider the relative nature of the term “less evidence.”) Nor are we persuaded by U.S. v. Henson, supra, for in that case, the law deemed ex post facto required the introduction against a testifying accused of certain facts which might not have been introduced had the law extant at the time of the offense been applied. That is not the situation before us now. Rather, we are faced with the question whether admission of certain evidence of clearly admissible facts violated the ex post facto prohibition.
a. The United States Constitution
In deciding whether Article 1, § 10, of the United States Constitution invalidates the law in question here, we are; of course, governed by the decisions of the United States Supreme Court. In Calder v. Bull,
In Hopt v. Utah,
Huckaby v. State, supra, is not the same as the case before us. Here, we are not dealing with a mere expansion of a class of witnesses who may testify. The change in the law with which we are confronted had nothing to do with whether Lancaster could testify. Rather, it dealt with what he could say. Thus we turn back to the Supreme Court cases to determine how they have handled the particular question presented by statutes which purport to make admissible, evidence which would not have been admissible at the time the offense was committed. The prime example appears in Thompson v. Missouri,
If persons excluded, upon grounds of public policy, at the time of the commission of an offence, from testifying as witnesses for or against the accused, may, in virtue of a statute, become competent to testify, we cannot perceive any ground upon which to hold a statute to be ex post facto which does nothing more than admit evidence of a particular kind in a criminal case upon an issue of fact which was not admissible under the rules of evidence as enforced by judicial decisions at the time the offence was committed. [171 U.S. at 387 ]
The Supreme Court has thus departed from the broad statement of Calder v. Bull, supra, that a law taking effect after the time of the offense and before the trial permitting testimony which would not previously have been admissible is ex post facto legislation.
We hold the United States Constitution does not invalidate the repealer in question here. Thompson v. Missouri, supra, interpreting Article 1, § 10 is squarely in point, and it has not been overruled.
b. The Arkansas Constitution
The precise question before us now has not been the subject of any previous decision interpreting Ark. Const. art. 2, § 17. In Potter v. State,
We have held that when a change in the law between the time of the offense and the time of the trial affects the definition of the crime it is prohibited by our constitutional prohibition against ex post facto laws. See Ex parte Jackson,
Certainly a person has the right to be guided in his actions by the law at the time he acts. Does he have the same right to be tried on the basis only of evidence admissible against him at that time? Although we are not required to follow it in our interpretation of the Arkansas Constitution, we are persuaded by the logic of Thompson v. Missouri, supra. The change in the law in this case did not make any fact admissible to prove the crime alleged which would not have been admissible at the time of the crime. Rather, it made admissible testimony which would not have been admissible at the time of the crime.
In Culbertson v. Virginia,
In another often-cited, elderly case, Hart v. Alabama,
While we could not condone legislation criminalizing an act after its perpetration or retroactively increasing the punishment, we can find no reason to hold that a person who commits a crime has a right to rely on rules of evidence in effect at the time of the crime which govern not the facts which may be proven but the manner in which those facts are ascertained by a witness. Evidence rules must be judged on their own as to whether they are fairly designed to get at the truth. We are not dealing here with any privacy or due process argument. If the evidence admitted in this case was fair on the day of the trial, it was fair on the day the crime was committed, and from the perspective of ex post facto legislation the appellant had only the right to expect fair treatment beyond his right not to have the elements of the crime, or the provable facts, changed. The Arkansas Constitution does not prohibit the evidence admitted in this case.
2. Limited cross-examination
Easter had testified he participated in the drug buy because of the deal he made with the police. In cross-examination, the appellant’s counsel sought to go into detail with respect to the stolen video cassette recorder. The prosecutor objected on the basis that Easter had admitted the theft and the circumstances of his participation in his direct testimony and that cross-examination on the point would waste time.
The appellant contends he was entitled to let the jury know, for example, the value of the video cassette recorder so that the jury would know the degree of punishment Easter might face if he had failed to testify. The appellant did not make a proffer of what he might have shown by cross-examination. But even had he done so, the trial court did not abuse his discretion by limiting the cross-examination. The basic impeaching point had been admitted by the witness.
. . . [W]hen the main circumstances from which the bias proceeds have been proven, the trial judge has a discretion to determine how far the details, whether on cross-examination or by other witnesses, may be allowed to be brought out. After all, impeachment is not a central matter, and the trial judge, though he may not deny a reasonable opportunity to prove the bias of the witness, has a discretion to control the extent to which the proof may go. He has the responsibility for seeing that the sideshow does not take over the circus.
E. Cleary, McCormick’s Handbook of the Law of Evidence, pp. 88-89 (3d ed. 1984). The limits of cross-examination lie within the trial judge’s sound discretion, and we will not reverse absent an abuse of that discretion.
Affirmed.
