This case arose from the abduction and rape of a young woman on the morning of January 23, 1976. As she left her apartment to catch a bus to work, two men forced her into a car and drove to the Kenilworth Landfill where both of the men raped her at gunpoint and took forty cents from her purse. Subsequently, both appellants were found guilty by a jury of armed kidnaping, 1 armed rape, 2 armed robbery, 3 and carrying a pistol without a license. 4 On appeal, appellant Smith alleges that the trial court committed reversible error (1) in excluding expert testimony on the psychological principles underlying eyewitness identification and expert testimony concerning a polygraph examination; and (2) in failing to admit direct evidence at trial tending to incriminate another person who looked like appellant Smith. Appellant Washington argues that his motion for judgment of acquittal should have been granted. 5 Both appellants contend that the trial court improperly communicated with the jury outside the presence of aрpellants or their attorneys. We affirm the convictions.
It is well established that a “trial judge has broad discretion in the matter of the admission or exclusion of expert evidence, and his action is to be sustained unless manifestly erroneous.”
Salem v. United States Lines Co.,
Similarly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to admit tеstimony by an examiner concerning the results of a polygraph examination of appellant. Because of the authoritative quality which surrounds expert opinion, courts must reject testimony which might be given undue deference by jurors and which could thereby usurp the truthseeking function of the jury.
See Douglas v. United States,
D.C.App.,
Appellant Smith also contends that the trial court committed reversible error in failing to admit
direct
evidence which tended to incriminate a person who had been convicted of a previous rape and who looked somewhat like appellant. He argues that such evidence is admissible “when it tends to show that someone similar in appearance to defendant was perpetuating criminal activity similar to the charges at trial.”
United States v. Hallman,
The complainant testified that after she had been raped by the driver, she noticed a green checkbook beside her on the seat. She thought that it might help her identify her assailants, and so she tried to hide it under her coat. As she did so, she observed the name “Ronald M,” but she was unable to determine whether the “M” was a middle initial or the first letter of a last name. She did not gеt a further look at the checkbook because the passenger discovered it when he got into the back seat to rape her, and he placed it in his pocket after upbraiding the driver for “leaving things behind.” All of the preceding testimony was presented to the jury. In addition, the parties entered into a stipulation, which was read to the jury, to the effect that a person named Ronald Malcolm had been convicted of a rape which had occurred in the District of Columbia on December 17,1975, approximately five weeks prior to the present incident, and that Malcolm had been in the city six days after complainant had been raped. Moreover, photographs of both Malcolm and appellant were available for the jury to make comparisons of their features. Nevertheless, appellant Smith contends that these measures were inadequate, and that the trial court should have admitted testimony by one оf the women who had been raped by Malcolm in December 1975, which would have allegedly revealed certain similarities between the two incidents. Following a hearing outside the presence of the jury at which one of the victims of the December rape testified, the trial court found, however, that there were not “sufficient similarities between the incidents . to permit a detailed reference to the matter involving [the rape of which Ronald Malcolm had been found guilty].”
Once a trial judge has determined whether the proffered evidence is
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relevant, and once he has weighed the probative value of that evidence agаinst its potentially prejudicial impact, his judgment will not be overturned unless he has abused his discretion.
Punch v. United States,
D.C. App.,
Appellants contend, finally, that the trial court improperly communicated with the jury without notifying either appellants or their counsel. The record reveals that the jury began deliberating late in the afternoon of Friday, March 4, 1977, after five days of trial. On Monday, March 7, the second day of deliberation, the court received two notes from the jury. At approximately 3 p. m. thаt day the judge informed counsel that he had received a lengthy note from the jury, but that he had not read it because he suspected that it might contain inappropriate information. He advised counsel that he had, however, asked a law student who had no connection with the case to read it, and that the notе revealed the numerical division of the jury at that time. 7 The court therefore was returning the note to the jury with the following communication:
This note has not been read.' I did not read it because of its obvious length. I have asked someone to read it and have been informed that you have mentioned your number in this note. You may not do that again at any time. You may send me a note that does not contain any information about your number.
About an hour later, at approximately 4 p. m., the court received a second note indicating that the jury was unable to reach a unanimous decision. The judge did not respond to this note; instead, without informing aрpellants or their counsel of this second communication, the court shortly thereafter excused the jury until the next morning.
At 12:47 p. m. the following day the jury returned a verdict of guilty and, after being polled, was excused. At that time the court informed counsel of the second note from the jury. He explained his reasons for not earlier informing counsel of this communication as follows:
[It] was simply a note which said that they were unable to reach a unanimous decision which told me absolutely nothing. I know that that is the case as long as they have not returned a verdict. They did not at all indicate that they were deadlocked. They simply informed *1361 me that at that time they had not been able to reach a unanimous verdict which as I said, it told me nothing that I didn’t already know. .
A defendant and his counsel have a right to be informed of all communications from the jury and to offer their reactions before the trial judge undertakes to respond.
Rogers v. United States,
Dеspite the importance of the right of an accused person to be present at every stage of the trial, a failure to comply with Rule 43 does not require automatic reversal and may in the proper circumstances be harmless error.
Rogers v. United States, supra
at 40;
United States v. Diggs,
All parties here were aware from the first note (and from the fact that the jury had not yet returned a verdict) that there was in fact no unanimity among the jurors at 3 p. m. on March 7. This alone would not have been unusual, for the trial had been long and fairly complex. When the jury communicated with the judge at about 4 p. m., the court did not respond to their note but instead, shortly thereafter, excused the jury for the day. Although the jury indicated merely that they had not yet reached unanimity, we note that if at this stage a deadlock had been apparent, an appropriate supplemental jury instruction would have been permissible.
Winters v. United States,
D.C.App.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. D.C.Code 1973, §§ 22-2101, -3202.
. D.C.Code 1973, §§ 22-2801, -3202.
. D.C.Code 1973, §§ 22-2901, -3202.
. D.C.Code 1973, § 22-3204.
. The trial court may not enter a judgment of acquittal if the evidence produced at trial is such that a reasonable juror could fairly conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was guilty.
(James) Williams v. United States,
D.C.App.,
We find ample evidence in the record to support submission of this case to the jury. The complainant, who had training as a portrait artist, had a good opportunity to observe appellаnt Washington at close range both during the rape and prior to it, for while she was being driven to the landfill appellant Washington was in the passenger seat and turned to face her when talking to her.
He argues, however, that descriptions of the passenger given by the complainant did not fit him. This contention is frivolous. He allegеs that she once stated that the passenger, unlike himself, had reddish-brown hair, yet the complainant’s testimony directly contradicts this assertion. Moreover, although she stated that the passenger did not have a beard and he testified that he had worn a beard for several years, there is no real inconsistency since the complainant stated that at the time of the rape the passenger had a couple of days’ stubble from not shaving, and appellant Washington subsequently characterized such stubble as a “beard.” Furthermore, the complainant twice identified appellant Washington from photographic arrays (once tentatively and once positively), she selected him from a police lineup, she spontaneously identified him as one of her abductors when she saw him in a courthouse hallway prior to a pretrial suppression hearing (both appellants were at that time free on their own recognizance), and she idеntified him at trial. Such identification testimony was sufficient for the jury reasonably to conclude that the defendant was one of her assailants.
See (Nathan) Williams v. United States,
D.C.App.,
. Although the trial court in the present case did not hold an evidentiary hearing to ascertain the content of the desired testimony as had occurred in Dyas, the substance of the proffered testimony was sufficiently presented in pretrial motions for the judge to make an informed ruling on the issues.
. The jury’s inadvertent revelation of its numerical division, without inquiry from the court, did not provide automatic grounds for a mistrial.
Compare Jackson v. United States,
D.C.App.,
. Appellant Smith contended at trial (in an argument which appellant Washington joins on appeal) that they were prejudiced by the failure of the court to inform them of the second note until after the verdict because such knowledge would have “re-enforced what my intentions were this morning,” namely, to move for a mistrial, “based on both the length of the deliberations by the jury and the fact that contrary to the specific instructions of this Court, the
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jury had sent to this Court information indicating not only that they were unable to reach a verdict but an actual division.” Defense counsel failed, however, to act on these intentions. In light of the fact that the defense counsel admitted that in his own mind there were sufficient grounds to request a mistrial “even without the knowledgе” of the second note, and counsel’s failure nonetheless to make the motion, it would be speculation on our part to assume that counsel would have acted any differently if he had possessed knowledge of the second note. Moreover, the trial court explicitly stated that “in a case which has consumed as much time as this case did,” the court would have refused to grant a mistrial if the motion has been made on these grounds. Given the length of the trial in this case, and given the fact that the jury’s inadvertent revelation of its numerical division would not in this case have provided grounds for a mistrial,
see
note 7, infra, it was well within the trial court’s broad discretion to have so ruled.
See Illinois v. Somerville,
