Following a jury trial, appellant was convicted of armed burglary, false imprisonment, armed robbery, and one count of sexual battery with a deadly weapon. Appellant raises two points on appeal, those being: (I) Whether the state’s and trial court’s action in dismissing the first jury pool deprived appellant of his rights to due process, to a fairly and randomly selected jury, to be present at all critical stages of the proceedings, and to the assistance of counsel; and (II) Whether the trial court erred in imposing habitual offender sentences on appellant’s convictions which are either first-degree felonies punishable by life or life felonies. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
Regarding Point I, the record shows that following the filing of a defense motion for new trial, an assistant state attorney not connected with appellant’s case filed a “Disclosure of Information to the Court” revealing that as she was leaving the court on February 5, 1990, she noted that the jury venire assembled for voir dire in appellant’s trial
... did not appear to be a highly educated jury. A well-educated jury was desirable based on the complicated and technical nature of [appellant’s] pending case.
According to the disclosure, the assistant state attorney then approached the bench
In response to this eleventh-hour disclosure by the assistant state attorney, defense counsel filed an amended motion for new trial arguing that the state attorney’s actions had denied him a fair trial and that the court’s dismissal of the first jury pool was tantamount to granting the state an unlimited number of peremptory challenges. In denying the motion, the trial court observed that all the jurors in the pool were qualified and that any panel pulled out of that group would have been a legal panel. Accordingly, the court observed that appellant was not deprived of any due process “by using Panel A or Panel B.”
Initially, we observe that much of appellant’s argument on appeal was not presented to the trial court and therefore is not preserved for review. Hill v. State,
It is axiomatic that to justify a new trial, a defendant must establish that the alleged error seriously affected the fairness of his trial and that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the motion. Atkins v. State,
In the instant case, as noted by the state, appellant does not assail the juror summoning process or the master list from which prospective jurors in the community were drawn. He does not allege that any juror selected from the second venire was unqualified to serve. Indeed, following selection of the jury, defense counsel noted for the record that he was satisfied with the jury. With that in mind, we stress that we are not minimizing the potential for prejudice that the assistant state attorney’s outrageous conduct may have caused under other circumstances. However, appellant’s claim herein rests solely on the exchange of one indistinguishable venire from another. The trial court indulged in creative analogy on this point which we quote below but do not necessarily endorse as applying in all situations. In holding that this exchange had no bearing upon the randomness of the jury selection process the court observed:
When the first panel was excused there isn’t any question it was excused because of the false statement by the prosecutor. But when they were excused they went back in the pool, like you would release a bucketful of minnows back into the pond. When they called for the panel the second time, my analogy would be you pick up the bucket and scoop from the same pond a second time. You might get all the same ones you dumped out. You might win the lottery next week, too. The odds are good you won’t do any of those. The odds are equally againstyour scooping again and getting none of the same. Most likely you would get some of the same ones, some different ones. But be that as it may, it’s the pond that is in question. If the pond is full of people who has been found to be qualified to be jurors, then any panel pulled out of that group is a legal panel. And the defendant is not deprived of any due process by using Panel A or Panel B.
Similarly misguided is appellant’s argument that the dismissal of the venire was tantamount to the exercise of unlimited peremptory challenges by the state. As the state argues, peremptory strikes are challenges to individual prospective jurors following a voir dire examination. Here, the trial court did not by its dismissal of the venire in order to attend to a perceived emergency grant any particular challenge. In that the court dismissed the venire for a reason which it believed to be legitimate, case law cited by appellant holding as reversible error per se a court’s grant of peremptory challenges in excess of those permitted by law is irrelevant to this case. Compare Sanders v. State,
Implicit in appellant’s argument is rank speculation that the first jury pool would have provided him a more favorable jury. Appellant does not assert any prejudice to him as a result of the dismissal of the first venire and his trial by jurors selected from the second venire. No allegation is made that the evidence against appellant was marginal. There is no evidence in the record that the jurors who sat in appellant’s case were unqualified, and no evidence that the selection of the jurors from the second venire as opposed to the first affected the verdict. In short, appellant has completely failed to establish that the dismissal of the first venire affected the fairness of his trial, and therefore no abuse of discretion is shown in the trial court’s denial of his motion for new trial.
Turning to appellant’s second argument regarding his sentences, appellant maintains that the habitual felony offender statute does not apply to first-degree felonies punishable by life or to life felonies, citing to this court’s decision in Gholston v. State, 16 F.L.W. D46 (Fla. 1st DCA Dec. 17, 1990). However, recently, this court receded from Gholston in Burdick v. State,
IS A FIRST DEGREE FELONY PUNISHABLE BY A TERM OF YEARS NOT EXCEEDING LIFE IMPRISONMENT SUBJECT TO AN ENHANCED SENTENCE OF LIFE IMPRISONMENT PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS OF THE HABITUAL FELONY OFFENDER. STATUTE?
Nonetheless, we continue to hold that section 775.084, Florida Statutes, does not apply to life felonies. See Johnson v. State,
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED for further proceedings.
