Wesley Wayne WILLIAMS, Appellant, v. STATE of Oklahoma, Appellee.
No. F-94-741.
Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma.
April 16, 1996.
Rehearing Denied May 13, 1996.
915 P.2d 371
CONCLUSION
To the extent Valley View is liable with the original tortfeasor driver for the same injuries, i.e. there is some shared common liability for harm caused by Marjorie‘s hospital fall,
Further, assuming no common liability exists among the original tortfeasor driver and Valley View for some or all of the injuries or harm resulting from Marjorie‘s hospital fall and the hospital is alone liable for some or all of said harm based on the view Valley View‘s misconduct rose to the level of independent or intervening acts sufficient to cut off the liability of the driver for the hospital‘s harm-causing negligence, although the UCATA would not apply to such extent because of the lack of common liability, the same result would obtain under the release at issue in this case. In such event, an independent and separate cause of action would exist against Valley View for the harm caused by its independent and intervening acts or omissions and under no reasonable interpretation could the release here be considered a discharge of Valley View because the harm it would have caused could not then be said to arise out of the original automobile accident which necessitated medical treatment and Marjorie‘s hospital stay. It was, therefore, improper for the trial court to grant summary judgment in favor of Valley View whether or not
Accordingly, the Court of Appeals’ opinion is VACATED and the judgment of the trial court granting summary judgment in favor of appellee is REVERSED and this matter is REMANDED to the trial court for further proceedings.
All Justices concur.
Robert H. Macy, District Attorney, Ray Elliott, Assistant District Attorney, Oklahoma County Courthouse, Oklahoma City, for the State at Trial.
Lee Ann Jones Peters, Capital Direct Appeals Division, Oklahoma Indigent Defense System, Norman, for Appellant on Appeal.
W.A. Drew Edmondson, Attorney General of Oklahoma, William L. Humes, Assistant Attorney General, Oklahoma City, for Respondent on Appeal.
OPINION
CHAPEL, Vice Presiding Judge:
Wesley Wayne Williams was tried by a jury and convicted of Murder in the First Degree (Counts I and II) in violation of
On October 2, 1993, Williams shot and killed Ronald Harris and Timothy McCain. Williams claimed self-defense. On October 1, Harris came to Williams‘s house to see Harris‘s sister, Sharon Roe, who, along with her son, was staying with Williams. The men argued and Williams ejected Harris from his property at gunpoint. Harris, Roe and her son went to a friend‘s house where Williams‘s friend Wesley Owens told Harris and Roe that Williams was a bad man who had killed his own father. Owens warned Harris and Roe to stay away from Williams. Harris complained about Williams all evening. He said Williams would not get away with pointing a gun at him and asked several people where he could find a gun. That night Owens warned Williams that Harris was trying to find a gun to kill him.
The next day Williams and Roe were in the fenced yard when Harris and McCain arrived. Williams, who is disabled and walked with a cane, met McCain and Harris, who was on crutches, at the porch. Roe testified Williams unlocked and opened the gate, everyone went in the house, and Williams asked her to take her son upstairs so the three men could talk. As soon as Roe got upstairs she heard four shots. She ran downstairs, saw Harris and McCain dead, and asked Williams what he had done. At preliminary hearing Roe testified Williams said it was “them or me“. At trial Roe testified Williams said he would kill Harris if Harris returned to the house. Roe did not see a weapon near either victim. Roe went upstairs again, heard a fifth shot, and heard Williams say, “He wasn‘t dead all the way.”
Williams testified Harris and McCain drove in through the open gate and pushed their way into the house while Roe immediately went upstairs. Williams said when he entered, McCain pulled up a gun and Harris was holding the shotgun Williams kept by his door. When Williams saw McCain‘s .38 he drew his own .9 millimeter semi-automatic weapon and began shooting. Williams told Roe it was “them or me“. He took McCain‘s .38 and the shotgun from Harris and packed them in the car.
Williams and Roe fled with her son to Corpus Christi, Texas. They spent the night, then decided to return to Oklahoma City. Their car broke down in Bellmead, Texas. Williams left the .9 millimeter near a dumpster at a local motel. Officers later found a .38 in a nearby field. Roe contacted a friend who alerted authorities; Williams was arrested and returned to Oklahoma. 1
We begin with the reversible error addressed in Proposition II. Williams claims the trial court violated his privilege against self-incrimination and infringed on his right to the assistance of counsel by ruling that he had to take the stand before presenting evidence of self-defense. Williams stated several times on the record that he did not intend to testify and would only do so because the trial court required him to take the stand in order to present self-defense. In the many rulings made on this issue, the trial court insisted that Williams was not required to take the stand but seemed convinced that, in order for Williams to claim self-defense, someone present at the crime had to testify as to Williams‘s state of mind. Whether intentional or not, the effect of the ruling was that Williams could not present any evidence of self-defense unless he first took the stand and personally claimed self-defense. The court noted that it could not force Williams to take the stand, but would not admit any foundational evidence of self-defense until Williams took the stand. The court emphasized its belief that it was Williams‘s choice to take the stand. Thus Williams was not allowed to develop any evidence which would support a theory of self-defense by cross-examining State witnesses. Before Williams opened his case, the trial court explicitly ruled that Williams had to take the stand before he could present any witnesses or evidence on the issue of self-defense. This order encompassed more than just evidence of the victim‘s reputation, threats or acts of violence against Williams; it included any statements or other evidence which would support a self-defense claim.
The trial court appears to have based this ruling on a belief that some direct evidence of Williams‘s state of mind was required. This is not the law of self-defense. This Court has held that a defendant may raise self-defense sufficiently to justify an instruction through circumstantial evidence alone.1 In Cordray the defendant did not testify and the State did not introduce any confession, admission or hearsay statement made by the
Self-defense is an affirmative defense which must be raised by the defendant unless evidence in the State‘s case shows the homicide was justifiable.6 Oklahoma law does not require a defendant to take the
The effect of the trial court‘s ruling was to force Williams to testify when he had already stated that he did not wish to take the stand. In a directly analogous case the Supreme Court reversed a trial court where Tennessee law required a defendant to take the stand before presenting witnesses.9 While Brooks arose from legislation passed to address witness sequestration problems, the Court‘s opinion turns on the idea that the requirement the defendant take the stand first or not at all limits his freedom in choosing to take the stand. Any focus on the sequestration issue goes merely to the historical necessity for the Tennessee rule, not the scope of the Court‘s opinion. The Court was concerned with the adverse effect on a defendant‘s freedom to choose if and when to testify and how to most effectively present his case to the jury. As in Brooks, Williams‘s constitutional right to not testify
A trial court cannot explicitly or effectively force a defendant to choose between his Sixth Amendment right to present a defense and his Fifth Amendment right not to testify. The Supreme Court, holding that a defendant cannot be forced to choose between asserting a Fourth Amendment claim and his Fifth Amendment right to silence, said such a choice was not voluntary and explained:
A defendant is ‘compelled’ to testify in support of a motion to suppress only in the sense that if he refrains from testifying he will have to forego a benefit, and testimony is not always involuntary as a matter of law simply because it is given to obtain a benefit. However, the assumption which underlies this reasoning is that the defendant has a choice: he may refuse to testify and give up the benefit. When this assumption is applied to a situation in which the ‘benefit’ to be gained is that afforded by another provision of the Bill of Rights, an undeniable tension is created. Thus, in this case Garrett was obliged either to give up what he believed, with advice of counsel, to be a valid Fourth Amendment claim or, in legal effect, to waive his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. In these circumstances, we find it intolerable that one constitutional right should have to be surrendered in order to assert another.10
Here, Williams was “compelled” to testify in the sense that if he chose not to testify he lost the opportunity to present his self-defense claim. The trial court‘s ruling required Williams to surrender his Fifth Amendment right in order to assert his Sixth Amendment right.
The State appears to agree that self-defense can be established through witnesses other than the defendant and argues that not enough other evidence was present to establish the defense without Williams‘s testimony. This argument begs the central issue
The State attempts to shift this Court‘s focus on review by insisting that Williams‘s evidence was not believable. That is not the point. Whether the evidence was believable is for the jury to decide, not the State or this Court. The question is whether the trial court required Williams to choose between his right to silence and his right to present a defense. Although the State does not address the issue, Williams was prejudiced by being compelled to take the stand against his express wishes. Because Williams was subject to impeachment by prior convictions the jury learned of his unflattering past criminal history. The State used this record against Williams in closing argument, emphasized Williams‘s testimony and said the jury‘s job was to decide whether Williams or Roe was telling the truth. As Williams‘s testimony preceded any other evidence supporting his self-defense claim, the jury may have discounted the other evidence he presented. Given the trial court‘s ruling, 10 (footnotes omitted).
Williams specifically did not wish to put his credibility at issue in this trial, and attempted to exercise his right not to testify. Nothing in Oklahoma law required him to take the stand before presenting any evidence at all of self-defense. The trial court required Williams to choose between his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights. In addition to this insurmountable violation of his constitutional rights, Williams‘s forced testimony prejudiced him by (1) placing his credibility in issue, (2) allowing his prior felony convictions to be elicited, and (3) compelling him to fashion his defense on a pattern dictated by the trial court. This erroneous ruling requires reversal.
In Proposition I Williams argues the trial court‘s exclusion of evidence supporting Williams‘s defense deprived him of his constitutional rights to due process, to present a defense, and to confront witnesses against him. At preliminary hearing Roe testified that immediately after the shootings Williams told her he had to do it, it was either “them or me“. The State filed a motion in limine to keep out all exculpatory statements of self-defense, arguing any out-of-court exculpatory statement would be self-serving and inadmissible.11 During motion hearings the trial court held the matter in abeyance but ruled that Williams could not use this evidence during the State‘s case (see discussion of Proposition II above). After voir dire the trial court ruled this evidence was self-serving and would not be admitted at all. Williams made an offer of proof that Roe would say Williams told her it was self-defense within two or three seconds of the shots. Williams‘s repeated objections and offer of proof preserved this issue for appeal. Williams argues that the statement was admissible as 1) hearsay under one of the hearsay exceptions, 2) part of a confession, and 3) as a prior inconsistent statement to be used in impeachment. He also argues that his Sixth Amendment right to present a defense, questions of fairness, and due process required admission of this statement after Roe‘s other evidence was received.
Williams first claims the statement was admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule. Williams argues the question of admissibility does not end with the fact this statement was self-serving hearsay, because it could be admissible if it falls within one of the hearsay exceptions contained in
Williams claims that the statement was admissible as an excited utterance, as it related to an existing startling event and was made while Williams was under the stress of excitement caused by the event.13 As self-serving statements are inherently untrustworthy, the latter requirement is particularly important; there must be no time for reflection or fabrication.14 Whether a statement
Williams also claims that the statement was admissible as a present sense impression, since he perceived a startling event and gave a virtually contemporaneous explanation for the event. In addition, he argues the statement was admissible as a declaration of existing state of mind. This exception applies where the statement is offered, as here, to prove a state of mind at issue (malice) and the statement relates to a then existing state of mind (Williams said the victims were going to kill him). No precedent is analogous to the facts of this case.17 Williams‘s statement appears to fit within at least the excited utterance and present sense impression exceptions.
The State argues that the trial court specifically found the “them or me” statement did not fall under one of the claimed exceptions to the hearsay rule. This assertion is not supported by the record. Neither the trial court‘s explicit ruling (that the statement was self-serving) nor the cases it relied
The State concedes that “if the killings occurred as Defendant described ... the statement at issue might be the result of a startling event”18 and argues that the evidence does not support Williams‘s self-defense claim. The State also agrees that the statement was virtually contemporaneous with the crime and argues that contemporaneity should be disregarded in this case.19 The State‘s argument seems to be based on the theory that since the State does not believe Williams‘s statement or claim of self-defense, the statement is not admissible. When the trial court made its ruling, no evidence had as yet been submitted, and even if it had the trial court is not the finder of fact. The issue in determining the admissibility of this statement under the hearsay exceptions is not whether evidence supported the truth of the statement. The issue is whether the statement meets the requirements for admissibility under any given exception. If the statement meets these foundational requirements then it should be given to the jury. If the trial court were to impose other requirements after determining a statement falls within a hearsay exception, then the trial court would be improperly
Williams next claims that the statement was admissible as part and parcel of his admission or confession. At trial Roe testified for the first time that, after the shootings, Williams told her he had said if Harris came back he‘d kill him. The trial court would not allow Roe to repeat the “them or me” statement, but she agreed on cross-examination that Williams had made another statement as well. Williams argues that this second “I told you” response, coupled with Roe‘s preliminary hearing “them or me” testimony, equals a confession or admission, which should not be admitted piecemeal. The whole of a defendant‘s statements which are made in the same confession or conversation should be admitted, including a self-serving statement which relates in time and matter to the confession and is trustworthy enough to be admissible under the hearsay exceptions.21 A defendant lacks a meaningful opportunity to be heard where the State may exclude competent, reliable exculpatory evidence bearing on the credibility of a confession when that evidence is central to a defendant‘s claim of innocence.22 Williams argues these statements 1) were made in the same conversation and 2) admitted killing two people. The statements appear admissible under the excited utterance or present sense exceptions. The State does not dispute the settled law of Crawford and
Williams also claims “them or me” should have been admitted as a prior inconsistent statement to impeach Roe. At trial, after Roe testified about Williams‘s “I told you” statement, Williams argued that the “them or me” testimony should be admissible as a prior inconsistent statement used for impeachment. A prior inconsistent statement is admissible to impeach credibility even where that statement would not be admissible in the State‘s case-in-chief.23 For impeachment, the prior statement need not be shown to the witness at the time of questioning, but on request shall be shown to opposing counsel before cross-examination; extrinsic evidence is only admissible if the witness has an opportunity to explain or deny it and the opposing party can question the witness about the evidence.24 In Grayson v. State25 this Court held there had been no prior evidence on the issue, and thus there was no prior inconsistent statement to use for impeachment. The witness in Grayson was not asked about the defendant‘s statements at preliminary hearing but testified at trial that the defendant made a statement
Williams claims this ruling affected his rights to present a defense, to fairness and to due process. Williams argues he was deprived of a fair trial because the jury heard only half of a statement the State never denied Roe said Williams made. Where hearsay evidence is highly relevant to a critical issue in the case, and substantial reasons exist to assume the evidence is reliable, then the hearsay rule should not be used mechanically to defeat the ends of justice.27 By ruling that the statement was inadmissible simply because it was self-serving hearsay the trial court deprived Williams of the opportunity to present evidence which was highly relevant to his defense; indeed, the statement provided the most credible direct evidence of self-defense Williams could offer.
Williams was prejudiced by omission of the “them or me” statement. The State relies on Crawford28 to argue that Williams was not prejudiced since he had the opportunity to subject the State‘s case to “adversarial testing“. However, in Crawford the defense was that the victim was alive when the defendant left and his statements denied all knowledge of the victim or the crimes involved. Here, Williams claimed self-defense and his suppressed statement was a claim of self-defense to a hostile party made immediately after the crime. Although Williams himself testified to the “them or me” state-
In summary, Roe‘s testimony that Williams said it was “them or me” almost contemporaneously with the killings was admissible as either an excited utterance or a present sense impression. After Roe testified about a different contemporaneous statement by Williams, the “them or me” statement was admissible as a prior inconsistent statement for impeachment. After the “I told you” portion of Williams‘s statement was admitted, the “them or me” portion, though exculpatory, should have been admitted as part of that entire statement. Williams‘s rights to due process and a fair trial were harmed by his inability to present evidence highly relevant to a critical issue in the case. Williams was prejudiced by exclusion of the statement. The State‘s arguments otherwise boil down to a defense of the successful trial strategy which prevented anyone other than Williams from repeating any exculpatory statements by Williams claiming self-defense. This strategy ensured that Williams was prevented from presenting otherwise reliable and relevant evidence simply because it
As a result of the errors identified in the guilt/innocence stage of the trial this case is REVERSED and REMANDED for NEW TRIAL.
STRUBHAR, J., concurs.
JOHNSON, P.J., specially concurs.
LUMPKIN and LANE, JJ., concur in results.
JOHNSON, Presiding Judge, specially concurring.
I concur in the Court‘s decision herein to reverse and remand the case for a new trial but I need to specially concur as it relates to such case. It should be made certain that a jury instruction of self-defense can only be made in a case where one of two things occur. The first would be under the general type of case where a defendant takes the stand and testifies as to the self-defense issue. This, quite frankly, is the easiest of the two.
The second would be where there is direct or circumstantial evidence that would allow an instruction of self-defense even though the defendant does not take the stand. This would be in that unusual case where there is clear and convincing evidence of self-defense. In those cases, the court should give the self-defense instruction. This would allow a defendant to preserve their Fifth Amendment right.
LUMPKIN, Judge, concurring in results.
I concur in the Court‘s decision to reverse and remand the case for a new trial due to the trial court‘s denial of Appellant‘s right to examine Sharon Roe about his statement made immediately after the shooting that “it was them or me“. However, I disagree with the Court‘s analysis on when the defense of self-defense can be raised and what evidence can be used to raise the defense.
The Court distinguishes Thompson from the present case in Footnote 7. However, I find it is directly on point. In Thompson, only the defendant and the victim were witnesses to the fatal shooting. This Court held that once the defendant testified to the events occurring immediately prior to and during the fatal altercation, she had sufficiently raised the defense of self-defense and could then present evidence of acts of violence against her by the deceased prior to the homicide.
In the present case, Appellant and the victims were the only witnesses to the crime and therefore the only people who could testify to the events occurring immediately prior to and during the fatal altercation. As the victims were dead, Appellant was the only person who could so testify. Therefore, Appellant could only establish his defense of self-defense by taking the stand and testifying. As Appellant did not want to testify, he had no evidence of self-defense to warrant giving a jury instruction on the issue. If a defendant fails to testify and he is the only one who can provide sufficient, admissible evidence to raise the defense of self-defense, then he fails to testify at his own peril and
The opinion also relies on evidence of threats on Appellant‘s life made by the victims to persons other than Appellant. This evidence is not relevant in establishing the defense of self-defense. Only overt acts, gestures or words spoken by the deceased and communicated to the defendant immediately prior to or during the fatal altercation are relevant in establishing the fear which would form a reasonable ground for the belief that the defendant is about to suffer death or great bodily harm. See West v. State, 617 P.2d 1362, 1366 (Okl.Cr.1980).
Here, the trial court did not order Appellant to testify but did require him to present evidence of self-defense in order to claim the defense of self-defense. Absent Appellant‘s testimony, the evidence was insufficient to raise that defense. There were no prior threats by the deceased on Appellant‘s life communicated to Appellant nor any evidence that the victims were the aggressors. If the victims did commit an overt act which would have provided the basis for the defense of self-defense, the Appellant was the only witness to that act. However, the evidence of the actions of the victims and Appellant immediately prior to the shooting, as related by Sharon Roe, only support a finding of a cold-blooded killing. The only error in this case was a denial of the right of confrontation in the denial of Appellant‘s right to fully cross-examine Sharon Roe.
LANE, Judge, concurring in results.
I join Judge Lumpkin in his special vote in this matter. In addition I would find that Brooks v. Tennessee, 406 U.S. 605, 92 S.Ct. 1891, 32 L.Ed.2d 358 (1972) has no application to Oklahoma. It is authority for the premise that it would be unconstitutional to require a defendant to testify before he can present evidence. Brooks can be distinguished from the present case from a factual standpoint. In Brooks, Tennessee required a defendant to testify first in his case in chief if the rule as to sequestration of witnesses had been invoked. If he did not testify first he could not testify at all, because he would have violated the rule by being present in the
