By the verdict of a jury appellant was found guilty of the Class A felony of Robbery in the First Degree under Count I, and also of Armed Criminal Action under Count II. As a persistent offender, he was sentenced to consecutive terms of life and 30 years imprisonment on each count respectively. No question is presented as to the submissibility of the state’s case.
In Point I, appellant contends thаt the trial court erred in sustaining the state’s objection to his opening statement in which his counsel attempted to outline evidence favorable to him as it would be developed
The state’s case against appellant, who was never identified by the victims, the Nicholsons, depended on the testimony of two witnesses. In opening statement the prosecutor told the jury that it would hear from Rosemary Davis who had dated appellant for some period of time. On Friday evening, September 21 (1984), shortly before dusk, he came to her house and later left and was gone for several hours, returning after dark after he committed the crime. He told her what he had done, bragging that he had robbed a house in the area, and told her about the crime in detail. The police found that the unusual typе of silverware had been sold the day after at a pawn shop in Kansas, and they found out who sold it.
The prosecutor also told the jury that it would hear from Sharon Murphy, whom he discussed during voir dire [as to whether any venireperson would bear a prejudice or bias against the testimony by reason of her not being charged in Kansas in exchange for her testimony at this trial, she being involved in the crime. This procedure is permissible under State v. Roseman,
During a long colloquy before the court, appellant’s counsel stated: “Your Honor, the Court’s ruling puts me in a position of not being able to make an opening statement unless I produce witnesses on this offense. That’s the effect of the court’s ruling. The defense has no obligation whatsоever to produce any witnesses and I fail to see that informing the jury about the facts which we intend to be proven not only through cross-examination of the State’s witnesses but through depositions already taken in this case, these are facts that the defense is entitled to have shown and they’re entitled to be shown during
During direct examination of Rosemary Davis it was brought out by the state substantially what it had told the jury on opening statement, but additionally when she first talked to the police she told them she knew nothing about the crime because she was scared and had been raised to keep her mouth shut. Later she talked to the police again and told them what she knew about the crime. On cross-examination, appellant brought out that Rosemary had been dating him for about 6 months in 1984, but it was not a serious relationship. It was also brought out that she told the police, on October 19, 1984, that she had sold some stolen property in Kansas, but she did not get it from Jack Hamilton, and that an unknown suspect had given it to her. She is a sister of Sharon Murphy, who had been arrested by that date. She knew that Sharon was pregnant at that time with triplets by one Dennis Coxe; that shе was on probation; and that there was at least one case pending against her in Kansas and another one which had not been filed. She knew that if Sharon had gone to trial on the cases, and been found guilty she could have ended up in the Kansas State Penitentiary for a good many years, and if her probation were revoked in Jackson County, Missouri, the triplets would have been born in jail there. On another later occasion, the police told Rosemary that if she did not cooperate with them it could result in her child being taken away from her by the Division of Family Services, she having had a similar experience in the past. One detective told her, as well, that she could be charged with this offense in Kansas, but she was not so charged, and her sister never ended up going to jail, and her probation was not violated that Rosemary knew of.
On direct examination Sharon Murphy testified that appellant phoned her at the Silver Leaf Tavern where she was a barmaid shortly after September 21, 1984, and asked her if she would like to make some money. Later, he picked her up and they went to her sister’s house and picked up a silver set, and they took it to Precious Metals on Metcalf (in Kansas) and she sold it for $150 or $160. Later, appellant told her how he committed the robbery — tied up the man with tape and had the woman show him where the property was. He loaded it in their car and drove it down to his car where something spooked him and all he had gotten was the silver set and $600. Sharon was charged with felony theft by the Kansas authorities, but an agreement was made with the prosecutor in Kansas that if she testified truthfully in this case the Kansas case would be dismissed and she would not be charged with having sold the silver. The Kansas case was in fact dismissed. Sharon also admitted having been convicted of the misdemeanor of stealing under $150, for which she was given probation from March, 1983, tо March, 1985, when she was discharged.
Appellant’s counsel extensively cross-examined Sharon about these events. She admitted that it was a condition of her probation that she not commit any crimes, and it was also a condition that she report any arrests within 48 hours. She did not report either matter to Judge Romano, or to her probation officer, and she was asked if shе was aware that if Judge Romano knew about them, her probation could have been revoked and she could have spent a year in the county jail. She testified that she did not know that, but she was aware that she could have been found guilty in Kansas and ended up in the penitentiary in that case. She was asked if she was able to have her babies (the triplets) and never go to jail or the penitentiary, but stated that was not the reason she came to testify against appellant, and that she was told that if she willingly came to truthfully testify in this case, the (Kansas) charges would be dropped. It is not exactly clear, but apparently there were two felony charges in Kansas.
It has long been the rule that the primary purpose or function of an opening statement is “to inform the court and the jury in a general way of the nature of the case, the outline of the anticipated proof and the significance of the evidence as it is presented. State v. Fleming,
Clearly, in this case the defendant's proffered opening statement, as revealed by the lengthy colloquy before the court, was what he would develop on cross-examination of the state’s two witnesses, a matter of argument at that stage of the trial, which is prohibited by the foregoing cases. It transcends the purpose of the opening statements which is to inform the court and jury what each party expects to prove by introduction of evidence in support of the charge or defense. Although where а defendant will not testify and has no other evidence or testimony there may be no basis for an opening statement on his part, the ruling does not prevent the statement of what he expects to prove as a defense if he will have evidence. Point I, under the posture of this case, is overruled.
Although it would be error not to allow cross-examination of a witness to show bias favoring another person, as by protecting him, State v. McClure,
By Point III appellant claims the trial court committed error in failing to sustain his motion to quash the jury selected in this case because the state “systematically” used its peremptory challenges to remove the only three black persons among the venire following voir dire and challenges for cause. In his point aрpellant contends that such “systematic” exclusion denied him “a fair cross-section of the community on his jury and denied him due process of the right to jury trial under the Missouri and United States Constitutions.” (Emphasis added.) Appellant here is white; the venire persons struck were black. He relies on Batson v. Kentucky,
In his oral motion to the trial court after the peremptory challenges were made to quаsh the jury panel, counsel for appellant stated as reasons: “That the panel does not constitute a jury of defendant’s peers. It does not constitute a fair and impartial jury because the State, in the exercise of its peremptory challenges, struck the only three people who were qualified to serve as jurors in this case [they being three blaсk persons].” In his motion for new trial, appellant alleged: “This systematic exclusion of blacks from jury service through the use of peremptory challenges violated the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to a fair and impartial jury drawn from a cross-section of the community as well as
Const.Mo. Art. I, § 22(a) (1945), provides: “Thаt the right to trial by jury shall remain inviolate; provided that a jury for the trial of criminal and civil cases in courts not of record may consist of less than twelve citizens as may be prescribed by law, * * Const.Mo. Art. I, § 18(a) (1945), provides: “That in criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right to appear and defend, in person and by counsel; * * * and [to have] a speedy public trial by аn impartial jury of the county.” It is apparent that appellant did not raise in the trial court “at first opportunity” any violation of his right to public trial by an impartial jury under either provision of the Missouri Constitution so as to preserve the issue for review under these representative cases from other jurisdictions which have applied their state constitutional provisions relating to trial by a fair and impartial jury as a counterpart of Const.U.S.Amend. VI: People v. Wheeler,
The judgment is affirmed.
All concur.
