Frank Robert Patterson appeals his conviction for murder. He argues the trial court erred (1) in admitting a witness’s statement to police; (2) by requiring Patterson’s presence during the videotaping of a witness’s testimony; and (3) by refusing to charge the jury on proximate cause. We affirm.
FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Patterson was accused of murdering his girlfriend, Sharon Clark, by beating her to death. Clark and her friend, Mary Richardson, walked to Patterson’s home where the three of them drank for several hours. Later that night, Clark and Richardson decided to leave despite Patterson’s insistence Clark should stay. As Richardson and Clark walked away, Patterson began striking Clark repeatedly with a blunt instrument.
Richardson screamed at Patterson to stop hitting Clark. She ran to a neighbor’s house for assistance. When Richardson returned to the scene, she saw Clark lying on the ground motionless. Richardson ran down the street and flagged down a police car in the neighborhood. Richardson led the officer to Clark’s location. Patterson, with his clothes bloody, returned to the scene while the officer was there. He admitted he had beaten Clark and was arrested.
Clark was taken to Richland Memorial Hospital where she was placed on a respirator and immediately rushed into the first of her two surgeries. Clark’s skull was cracked in multiple places, and she had skull fragments in her brain. She lost a significant amount of blood due to the severity of her head injury. Clark’s prognosis was poor; she was taken
The grand jury indicted Patterson for murder. Due to medical reasons, Richardson’s testimony was videotaped. At the hearing, Patterson requested that he be allowed to waive his presence. The trial court refused his request. At trial, the jury found Patterson guilty of murder, and the trial court sentenced Patterson to life without parole.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In criminal cases, the appellate court sits to review errors of law only and is bound by the factual findings of the trial court unless clearly erroneous.
State v. Wilson,
On review, we are limited to determining whether the trial judge abused his discretion.
State v. Reed,
I. Rule 106, SCRE
Patterson claims the trial court erred in admitting Richardson’s entire statement to police on redirect examination. We disagree.
The State and defense counsel agreed to take Richardson’s testimony by video before trial. Richardson testified that while she was talking to police on the night of Clark’s murder, Patterson returned to the scene, walked up to Clark, pointed to her and said, “You see that right there? I did that.” On cross-examination, defense counsel elicited from Richardson that she believed the accuracy of her account of the murder to police was very important. Richardson indicated she carefully read her statement to police before she affixed her signature. Defense counsel then handed Richardson her statement and asked if Patterson’s admission was included in the statement. Richardson conceded her statement to police did not include Patterson’s admission. On redirect examination, the State argued defense counsel had, by cross-examining Richardson on her statement, opened the door to admit Richardson’s entire statement to police. Despite objections from defense counsel that Richardson had merely been asked about an omission in the report, the trial court allowed Richardson to publish the statement in its entirety.
Significantly, Richardson’s testimony on redirect examination was not played for the jury. At trial, the defense stated:
Ms. Pringle: Your Honor, I’ll go ahead and put on the record with respect to the next witness who is a Mary Richardson, we have stipulated with the Solicitor’s Office previously that Ms. Richardson’s testimony may be admitted by videotape, previously taped testimony 2002. Your Honor, we of course obviously have no problem with the admission of the videotape in lieu of her testimony even though it is our understanding that she may be available to testify; with one caveat, Your Honor, that we have agreed to cut the tape off at the end of cross-examination. Mr. Cathcart indicates that he is going to just walk right up there and turn it off as soon as the end of cross.
Mr. Cathcart: I believe the area she is talking about is the redirect by the State.
(Emphasis added.) The record indicates that the videotape was played for the jury. No objection was made at the conclusion of the taped testimony.
Initially, we note the issue of whether Richardson’s statement to police was properly admitted into evidence is not properly before this Court. Pursuant- to the parties’ stipulation, the jury never heard Richardson publish her statement. Although counsel timely objected to publication of the statement at the time Richardson’s testimony was being taped, at trial, the videotape was played without objection by the defense. Objecting to admission of a statement during pretrial video testimony does not preserve an issue for review.
Cf. State v. Fletcher,
Adverting to the merits, we find the trial court properly ruled Richardson’s statement to police was admissible. Rule 106, SCRE provides:
When a writing, or recorded statement, or part thereof is introduced by a party, an adverse party may require the introduction at that time of any other part or any other writing or recorded statement which ought in fairness to be considered contemporaneously with it.
Rule 106 was promulgated by Order of the Supreme Court and became effective September 3, 1995. See Editor’s Note, Rule 106, SCRE. The Rule restates the common law rule of
As the South Carolina Supreme Court explained in
State v. Taylor,
“The text of Rule 106, SCRE, is substantially similar to Rule 106 of the Federal Rules of Evidence. Rule 106, Fed.R.Evid., is based on the rule of completeness and seeks to avoid the unfairness inherent in the misleading impression created by taking matters out of context.”
In
Cabrera-Pena,
the State elected to use a witness to elicit portions of the defendant’s conversation.
Patterson argues that because the inquiry referred to an alleged omission by Richardson as opposed to an affirmative declaration in the statement, Rule 106 does not apply. We disagree.
After eliciting testimony from Richardson regarding how careful she was in giving police a correct depiction of the events that led to Clark’s murder, defense counsel in essence insinuated Richardson’s statement to police was incomplete. The defense put Richardson’s statement to police at issue, and fundamental fairness required the entire statement be admit
Finally, even if the trial judge had erred in admitting the entire statement, Patterson has failed to demonstrate any resulting prejudice because the jury never heard the statement. An error not shown to be prejudicial does not constitute grounds for reversal.
See State v. Preslar,
II. Presence During Videotaping of Witness Testimony
Patterson argues the trial court erred by requiring his presence during the videotaping of Richardson’s testimony. Patterson maintains he was severely prejudiced by Richardson’s claim that he was smiling during the commission of the murder. We disagree.
Patterson made no objection after Richardson’s video testimony was played for the jury, and, therefore, this issue is not preserved for review. To preserve an issue for appellate review, a contemporaneous objection must be made when the evidence is offered.
See State v. Mitchell,
Even if the issue were properly preserved, we find the trial court did not err by requiring Patterson’s presence during the videotaping of Richardson’s testimony. Patterson’s reliance on Rule 16, SCRCrimP is misplaced.
Rule 16, SCRCrimP provides:
Except in cases wherein capital punishment is a permissible sentence, a person indicted for misdemeanors and/or felonies may voluntarily waive his right to be present and may be tried in his absence upon a finding by the court that such person has received notice of his right to be present and that a warning was given that the trial would proceed in his absence upon a failure to attend court.
Apodictically, a criminal defendant has a constitutional right guaranteed by the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to be present at trial.
See
U.S. Const. amend. VI;
Illinois v. Allen,
The conduct of a criminal trial is left largely to the sound discretion of the trial judge, who will not be reversed in the absence of a prejudicial abuse of discretion. “The general rule in this State is that the conduct of a criminal trial is left largely to the sound discretion of the presiding judge and this Court will not interfere unless it clearly appears that the rights of the complaining party were abused or prejudiced in some way.”
State v. Bridges,
Further, the alleged prejudicial statement was made during recross-examination and was not played for the jury. Patterson could not have been prejudiced by testimony the jury never heard. An error not shown to be prejudicial does not constitute grounds for reversal.
See State v. Preslar,
III. Jury Charge
Patterson contends the trial court erred in refusing to charge the jury on proximate cause because there was evidence Clark’s death was due to her removal from life support. We disagree.
The law to be charged must be determined from the evidence presented at trial.
State v. Knoten,
To warrant reversal, a trial court’s refusal to give a requested jury charge must be both erroneous and prejudicial to the defendant.
State v. Reese,
Patterson relies on
State v. Matthews,
The sixteen-year-old decedent in
Matthews
was shot in the head and pronounced dead after being transported to a hospital. Her kidneys were harvested and donated for transplantation. The appellant, Earl Matthews, argued the doctors prematurely declared the victim dead. Matthews maintained the removal of her kidneys was a superseding cause of death which relieved him of liability for her murder.
In
Jenkins,
the victim had a rare, fatal reaction to the dye used in performing an arteriogram — a common procedure administered to determine the extent of injuries to the major blood vessels.
Unlike the present case, both
Jenkins
and
Mattheivs
involved a medical procedure between the appellant’s crime and the victim’s death. In
Matthews,
the appellant claimed the removal of the victim’s kidneys was a superseding cause of death. In
Jenkins,
despite appellant’s contention that the victim’s reaction to the dye was the cause of death, the South Carolina Supreme Court found no prejudice in the trial court’s failure to charge the jury as requested. The court found “one who inflicts an injury on another is deemed by law to be guilty of homicide where the injury contributes mediately or immediately to the cause of the death of the other.”
Jenkins,
Because Clark showed signs of improvement, Patterson avers the doctors prematurely removed Clark’s ventilator and feeding tube. The evidence shows Clark was operated on within thirty minutes of her arrival at the hospital due to the severity of her injuries. Dr. Raymond Bynoe testified when Clark was brought to the hospital, “she [had] lost at least a
“Courts have confronted whether a victim’s removal from life support renders a homicide verdict against the weight of the evidence and have rejected the contention that there was insufficient evidence to support a conviction[.]”
State v. Pelham,
The trial court refused Patterson’s jury charge on proximate causation, finding the mere fact Clark was withdrawn
The trial court has a duty to instruct the jury only on an issue that is supported by the evidence.
Knoten,
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the conviction of the appellant for murder is
AFFIRMED.
