David White was indicted on a charge of First Degree Murder. He was convicted in the Circuit Court, Perry County, Virgis M. Ashworth, J., of First Degree Manslaughter and sentenced to ten years in the state penitentiary. He filed an appeal in forma pauperis with the Court of Criminal Appeals. On February 28, 1975, the case was transferred to the Supreme Court.
The questions presented for decision are whether or not there was a proper arraignment; whether or not White’s due process rights to a fair trial were abridged by the failure of the prosecution to make a transcript of the grand jury minutes and testi mony, and by the conduct of the prosecution at the trial; whether or not certain expert testimony was properly admissible; and whether or not there was sufficient evidence properly in the record to sustain the verdict.
White’s version of the facts of the case, which the State adoрts, is as follows:
The Uniontown police were called to the Flame Club in Uniontown during the early morning hours of May 19, 1973, to investigate a shooting. They found the body of Lewis Fields lying in a side room adjoining the main barroom; a butcher knife was grasped in Field’s right hand. There were no witnesses to the actual shooting.
Evidence presented at the trial showed that the deceased had been shot several times by forty-five caliber bullets. The parties stipulated that the shots were fired by the defendant.
Evidence was also introduced that the deceased had been rowdy and abusive to customers of the club and that the appellant, who was a partner in the operation of the club with his mother, had to chastise the deceased about his behavior on several occasions that night.
The only testimony directly involving the shooting was given by the appellant. White testified as to Fields’ rowdiness and to his rebukes of Fields. He stated that at approximately 3:00 A.M. Fields began to curse some of the female customers of the club. In response to Fields’ demands, White entered the “Black-Light Room;” Fields then grabbed him, pushed him against a wall, drew a knife from under his shirt, and advanced оn him in a threatening manner. White testified that he backed against the wall, felt for his gun, pulled it out and fired as Fields moved toward him with the knife. White then fled and threw the gun into a creek. The following Monday, May 21, 1973, White, in the company of his attorneys, surrendered himself to the police and made a written statеment. White was not advised of his rights since his attorneys were present.
During the opening statement the District Attorney contended that the knife was placed in the hand of the decedent. In the closing statement he said the defendant ran a “beer joint.” In both instances the trial judge gave curativе instructions.
At the trial, to bolster his contention of self-defense, White presented several witnesses to testify as to his good character and to corroborate his version of what had transpired before and after the shooting.
The State presented testimony by the law enforcеment personnel who had investigated the shooting and by the State toxicologist who had examined the embalmed body of the deceased. After being qualified as an expert, the toxicologist gave his opinion in response to a hypothetical question that the deceasеd would have dropped the knife he was holding if he had been struck in the arm by three forty-five caliber bullets.
On November 29, 1973, the defendant was found guilty. On March 8, 1974, a hearing on the defendant’s motion for a new trial was held. The defense intro1 duced evidence as to the bad reputation of the decedent and urged that a new trial be granted. The motion was denied.
The State contends that there was no failure of arraignment since the judgment entry showed arraignment, plea, and trial. It argues that there was no error in failing to produce the grand jury testimony and minutes, since there was no statute requiring it to be recorded. The State further contends that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in allowing the State toxicologist to testify as an expert, in permitting the prosecution to ask the hypothetical question it did, and in allowing thе expert’s answer. The State argues lastly that it carried its burden in proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Arraignment Issue
The contention that there was error because of no formal arraignment is without merit. The judgment entry showed arraignment, plea, and trial. White did not plead to some unknown charge. He entered his plea of not guilty, and was present when the indictment was read to the jury.
Miranda Warning
Once a police investigation has ceased to be a general inquiry and has begun to focus on a particular suspect, when there has been a shift from the investigatory stage to the acсusatory, the right to counsel attaches.
Escobedo v. Illinois,
Discovery Issue
In Alabama there is no statute requiring that testimony before a grand jury be recorded. The latest pronouncement is
Gaines v. State,
Conduct of Prosecutor
No citations are necessary to establish that a criminal trial is not a “sporting event” and that the prosecutor has a duty to be fair and impartial. Erroneous insistences and prejudicial conduct on the part of district attorneys tend unduly to prejudice and bias the jury against the defendant. It is not permissible for the solicitor to make an emphatic statement
Expert Testimony and Hypothetical Questions
Where there are questions which inexperienced jurors are not likely to decide correctly, there is a necessity to admit opinion and conclusions of those specially skilled or experienced in the particular field; that is, experts who can give better opinions on a given state of facts.
Kirkland v. State,
Generally an expert can give an opinion based on personal knowledge, or based on a hypothetical question, or on a combination of hypothetical question and facts within his own knowledge. If the expert bases his opinion on his personal knowledge, he must first testify to the facts within his own knowledge upon which the opinion is based.
Brown.
The criterion for admission of expert testimony is that the witness, by study, practice, experience, or observation as to the particular subject, should have acquired a knowledge beyond that of ordinary witnesses.
Kitchens,
supra;
Thomas v. State,
In Alabama an expert is allowed to testify whether certain facts could or would cause a result, but not whether they actually did.
Carpenter v. Walker,
An expert may also give an opinion in response to a hypothetical question; the question must embrace facts supported by the evidence and relating to the matter upon which the expert opinion is sought. The facts may be proven or assumed; the hypothetical question is inadmissible if the factual foundation is nebulous. For the purpose of the question, the facts are assumed to be true. The truth of the facts assumed is for the jury; it must determine whether the basis upon which the hypothetical rests has been established. An aсcurate statement of Alabama law is found in
Harden v. State,
The State is on point in arguing that the qualification of expert witnesses and the form of hypothetical questions are matters within the discretion of the trial court judge. If the requisite predicate is laid for the expert testimony, and if the expert is duly qualified, he can give an opinion as to the cause of a wound and its effect.
Smith v. State,
Burden of Proof, Sufficiency of the Evidence
The burden is never on the defendant to еstablish his innocence; if the evidence raises reasonable doubt as to his guilt, he should be acquitted.
Hubbert v. State,
Circumstantial evidence alone is enough to support a guilty verdict of the most heinous crime, provided the jury believes
A trial judge has the power to grant а motion for a new trial if the verdict is contrary to the great preponderance of the evidence, or if there is newly-discovered evidence.
Davis v. State,
Exclusion of Evidence of Reputation of Decedent
Finally, White argues that certain evidence as to the victim’s bad reputa
tion was excluded. The law in Alabama is found in
Headley v. State,
We have searched the record and find no error.
Affirmed.
