Defendant appeals his conviction for first-degree murder, asserting (1) that the trial court should not have allowed a rifle into evidence because it was seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Chapter I, Article 11 of the Vermont Constitution, and (2) it was plain error for the trial court to permit expert testimony on the manner of the victim’s death. We affirm.
Driving alone with a suspended license and after he had been drinking, defendant pulled into a driveway late at night. A police officer, who had noticed that one of defendant’s headlights was out, followed and turned on his blue lights. Defendant got out of the car and shut the door, and then reentered the car to turn on the lights so that he and the officer could inspect them. When he got out of the ear again, he left the door open, allowing the officer to see a rifle protruding from under the driver’s seat. The officer smelled alcohol and asked defendant to perform a dexterity test, which he failed. The officer arrested defendant for driving under the influence and driving with a suspended license. A pat-down search of defendant revealed a pipe and a bag of marijuana, and defendant was handcuffed and placed in the cruiser of another officer who had arrived at the scene. Without obtaining a warrant, the officers seized the rifle and briefly searched the car, which they then had towed away. They learned later that defendant was a murder suspect in the death of a friend, whose body was discovered subsequent to the arrest.
In
Cady v. Dombrowski,
Article 11 offers free-standing protection from unreasonable searches and seizures in Vermont. See
State v. Savva,
Defendant next argues it was plain error for the court to allow the medical examiner to give expert testimony that the victim died by homicide, not suicide. He asserts that this testimony offered more of a legal than medical conclusion, and impermissibly intruded upon the role of the jury. See Reporter’s Notes to V.R.E. 704 (“trial court is free to exclude testimony that gratuitously tells the jury what conclusion to reach”). We disagree. The testimony was not a comment on defendant’s guilt or innocence. If the jury believed that a crime had been committed, it still had to decide the ultimate question of whether defendant was at all involved in the homicide. In this respect, the case differs from
State v. Pinero,
In the instant ease, the jury was free to reject the contested testimony, and was so instructed. The admission of the evidence was neither error nor plain error.
Affirmed.
