Robert Morrison v. Commonwealth of Kentucky , 528 S.W.3d 896 ( 2017 )


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  •                                               RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 28, 2017
    TO BE PUBLISHED
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    2015-SC-000712-DG
    ROBERT MORRISON                                                         APPELLANT·.
    ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    v.                     CASE NO. 2014-CA-001818-MR
    HICKMAN CIRCUIT COURT NO. 14-CR-00023
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY·                                                 APPELLEE
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE WRIGHT
    REVERSING AND REMANDING ·
    A Hickman Circuit. Court jury founcf Appellant, Robert Morrison, guilty of
    escape and fleeing or evading police and found him to be a first-degree
    persistent felony offentjer. The trial court sentenced Appellant to fifteen ·years'
    imprisonment.· Appellant appealed to the Court of Appeals, arguing the trial
    court erred in failing to strike a juror for cause, 1 and that court affirmed the
    . trial court. Appellant sought.discretionary review wi.th this Court, which we
    granted. For the reasons.that follow, we reverse the Court.of Appeals and
    r~mand this matter to the trial court~
    i Appellant also argued an unpreserved issue to the Court of Appeals; however,
    that issue is not before this Court.
    .-   '
    . I. BACKGROUND
    The facts underlying the escape· and fleeing or evading charges for which
    Appellant was convicted are not at issue in·. this appeal. Appellant's sol~ issue
    ·_ involvesjury s~lection. ··During voir dire, :a juror, Mrs. Morris reverued that she
    was the mother of the County Attorney, Sue ~llen Morris. The judge called the
    juror to the- bench for a colloquy. She wa:s present d:uring the entirety of the
    following exchange:
    Judge:       .How ya doing today, Mrs. Morris?
    - Juror:      Good.
    Judge:       You are Sue Ellen's mother?
    )
    - Juror:     _Yes.
    .Judge:       Would that cause you any problems today sitting,
    hearing this_ case, and rendering a decision?
    Juror:     · - I don't thjnk so, but I didn;t want- ·
    ·Judge:_     Well, we appreciate ya telling everybody so everybody
    else would know who you were.
    Juror:       _Okay.
    Judge:_      All right.·. -
    Defense:     Judge, r would ask her-·for her to be excused for
    cause. Sue Ellen :ls· the-Ms. Morris-I'm sorry-is the
    attorney who did the preliininary hearing. l just do~'t
    want there to be-albeit an appearance-:-and I don't
    think it cures it by asking her. I think there is
    pressure on her to say she can be unbiased and it's
    just too dose to the case.
    Judge:       All right. ·Commonwealth?
    Prosecutor: I don't have a problem with her sitting.. Like I said, I
    think she is gonna make up her mind.
    2
    Judge:      Okay, Mrs. Morris, Jet me ask you this.~ Has Sue· Ellen
    discussed this particular case·with you at all?
    Juror:       She doesn't discuss cases with me. Which she said
    . she wouldn't want me on a jury. ·
    Judge:       She said she wouldn't want you? That's just cause
    . you're her mama and she's trying to give you a way
    out?
    (All laugh)
    Juror:      I guess. I dot'.l't know ..
    Judge:      She doesn't discuss any case with you?·
    Juror:      No.
    Judge:      In particular, she ·has not discussed this case?
    Juror:      She has not-any cases.
    Judge:     And you don't have any knowledge of this case?
    Juror:      No.
    Judge:     And you don't feel like you have any bias one way or
    the other since Sue Ellen-which she is the County .
    Attorney-she's not in this case. She's not going to be
    assisting [the prosecution] today is she?
    Prosecutor: No.
    Judge:     She's not going to be called as a witness or anything.is
    she?                           · ·
    Defense:   No, Judge.
    Judge:     Alright. Arid you are asking that she be excused for
    cause?
    Defense:   Yes, I am-or even to keep her in reserve. That would
    be okay, too, I guess. But I don't think we're gonna ·
    have any shortage of.jurors today.
    3
    Judge:          What says the Commonwealth?
    Prosecutor: I just don't feel like it's, a problem.
    Judge:             Well, nor do I. Mrs. Morris said she do~sn't know
    anything about this case. She said Sue.Ellen, the
    County Attorney, has not discussed any case with her.
    ·. I do not find that surprising or to be unusual.· I would
    .expect nothing less of Ms. Morris, the County ·
    Attorney .. She wouldn't discuss· a case going to trial.
    Um, M~'am?
    Juror:          Yes.
    Judge:          I 8.m gonna allow ya to remain in box. Doesn't mean
    you wi.11 get·to stay all day,. but I am gonna allow ya to
    remain in. box: Motion overruled.                   ·
    Defense:        Yes Judge.
    Judge:          Thank ya, ma'am.
    As shown above, the court denied the challenge for cause, finding that.
    the juror had no actual knowledge of the case          and that J~ror's daughter, the.
    County Attorney, was not currently involved in the case. The trial court also
    found that though she had been list6d on           a preliminary witness list, the.
    County Attorney was unlikely to be called· as a witness for the Commonwealth_.2
    Later, Appellant used a peremptory strike on the juror in ,question and
    i
    noted, with specifidty, the .name of the petitjuror he would have stricken, if the
    juror in question had been removed for cause. As such, Appellant complied
    with   Gab~ard     v. Commonwealth,_ 297. S.W._3d 844 (Ky. 2009)and properly
    preserired the issue for appellate review.
    2   In fact, the Count}' Attorney was not called as a witness· during the trial.
    4
    II. ANALYSIS ·
    As this Court has noted, "[l]ong-standing Kentucky law .has held that a
    trial court's decision on wheth,er to strike a juror for cause must be reviewed ·
    for abuse of discretion." Shane v. Commonwealth, 
    243 S.W.3d 336
    , 338 (Ky.
    ·2007) (citing Adkins v. Common,wealth,. 
    96 S.W.3d 779
    (Ky. 2003); Pendleton v.
    Commonwealth, 
    83 S.W.3d 522
    (Ky. ·2002)). "The test for abuse of discretfon is
    whether the trial judge'°s deGision was arbitrru}r, unreasonable, unfair,· or
    unsupported by sound legal principles.·" Commonwealth v. English, 993 S.W.2d.
    941, 945 (Ky. 1999)'.
    Kentucky Criminal Rule 9.36(1) establishes the standard a trial court is
    .               .
    required to apply during voir dire: "When there is reasonable ground to believe
    that a prospective juror cannot render a fair and impartial verdict on the
    . evidence, he shall be excused as not qualified." Furthermore, this Court has
    recognized that a defendant's use.of peremptory strikes "is beyond. question a
    · valuable right going to the defendant's peace of mind .and the public's view of
    fairness." Shane, 24·3 S.W.3d at 339.
    Our case law makes it clear that defendants should not be forced to use
    . peremptory challenges to dismiss jurors who should be stricken for cause.
    "[W]hen a .defendant is forced to use a peremptory strike on a juror who has
    not been properly excused for cause, the court has actually taken away from
    the number of peremptories_ given to the defendant by rule of this Court." 
    Id. Appellant .
                     argues that
    .
    the mother-daughter relationship between the
    juror and the County Attorney rendered the juror objectively biased and
    5
    partial. If that relationship standing along was the sole factor, this case would
    be a closer call-and t_hat question remains for another day~ However, after·
    reviewing the video of Appellant's voir dire (as quoted above), it is not the
    familial relationship iri and of itself that tainted this juror. Rather, the ju:ror
    was tainted when she became privy to the bench session on the motion to
    strike her for cause. By explaining the reasoning l?ehind that motion in the
    juror's presence, defense counsel made the juror aware that her daughter had
    conducted the preliminary hearing in this case. As such, counsel telegraphed_
    disqualifying information to the juror, regardless of whetJ;ier she had previously
    been qualified. Since the.juror was not involved in the felony prosecution, and
    never dis.cussed cases with her daughter, without defense counsel's
    · statements, she would have had no· reason to kri.ow that her daughter had ever
    been 'involved in this case.
    As it is, the juror was made aware that her daughter had once stood in
    an adversarial position against Appellant on these charges. The Juror listened
    as defense council .expressed d·oubt that she could be unbiased, .and sl,lggested
    that she was under ·pressure to claim impartiality. Meanwhile·, the prosecutor
    expressed his belief that the juror could be impartial. -The total effect of this
    juror being_privy to the bench session acted to undermine "the mental attitude.
    '                                                   .   .
    '
    of appropriate indifference" that is required of a juror at trial. Gabbard, 297
    s. W.3d at 854. -
    This Court has held: "Irrespective of the answers given on voir dire, the
    court should presume the· likelihood of prejudice on the part of the prospective
    6
    ; .
    juror because the potential juror has such a close relationship, be it familial,
    ,!
    finan_cial or situational, with any of the parties, counsel, victims or witnesses."
    Mont[!o1nery v. Commonwealth, 
    819 S.W.2d 713
    , 717 (Ky. 1991) (quotations
    omitted). We do not depart from that reasoning today, and agree that "[o]nce
    that dose refationship is established, without regard to protestations of lack of
    bias~ the court should ·sustain a challenge for cause and excuse the juror."
    Ward v. Commonwealth, 695 S.W.2d 404,'40.7 (Ky .. 1985).
    The juror in this. case is analogous to the "doubtful jurors"
    .
    for which this
    Court has reversed trial courts for failing to strike. The fact that the
    adversarial post the juror's. daughter occupied was "only" as the- 'attorn~y
    conducting the preliminary hearing is irrelevant. For example, in Ordway v.
    Comrrwnwealth, ·the juror in   qu~stion   was the sister of a victim's advocate who
    was working with the Commonwealth. 391.S.W.3d 762, 782 (Ky. 2013). A
    victim's advocate does not normally testify, advocate, or even speak in front of
    the jury. Yet, this Court noted that "[g]enerally~ the victim's advocate in a
    criminal case tends to be viewed as favoring, on the victim's behalf, retribution
    against the defendant, and thus is generally allied with the interests of the
    prosecutors." 
    Ordway, 391 S.W.3d at 782
    .
    The County AttOrney represented_ the Commonwealth of Kentucky in the
    preliminary hearing and must necessarily be viewed as "allied with the
    interests
    .       of the prosecutors." 
    Id. In. finding
    reversible error due
    .                 .  to the trial
    court's failure to strike the victim's advocate's sister for cause, we stated:
    7
    In recent cases we have indicated that, when there is uncertainty
    about whether a prospective juror should be stricken for cause, the
    prospective juror should be stricken. The trial court should err on
    the side .of caution by striking the doubtful juror; that is, if a juror
    falls within a gray area, he should be stricken.· We have attempted
    to make this fundamental rule clear in a series of cases since
    Shane v. Commonwealth, 
    243 S.W.3d 336
    (Ky. 2007).
    Nevertheless, all too often trial courts, as here, inexplicably put at
    risk not only the resources of the Court of Justice, bl1t the
    fundamentally fair trial they are honor-bound. to provide, by
    seating jurors whose ability to try the case fairly and impartially is
    justifiably doubted.                                       · ·
    
    Id. at 780.
    This Court has recently stated: "[t]rial judges are possessed of great
    authority to enlarge jury pan~ls.or change venues. They don't_ have-to imperil
    . their cases with such miserly voir dire l?ractices." . Sluss v. Commonwealth, 
    450 S.W.3d 279
    , 285 (Ky. 2014). There is no reason for a trial court to imperil. the
    integrity of its proceedings by retaining questionable jurors ..
    After a careful   rev~ew   of the proceedings, we fiqd that the: trial court
    abused its discretion by denying Appellant's motion to       strik~   the juror at issue.
    for cause.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the Court of
    Appeals, and_ remand this matter to the Hickman         Ci~cuit   Court for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    All sittjng. All concur.
    8
    (
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:
    Shannon Renee Dupree
    Assistant Public Advocate
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE:·
    Andy Beshear
    Attorney General
    Gregory C. Fuchs
    Assistant Attorney General
    9
    /
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2015 SC 000712

Citation Numbers: 528 S.W.3d 896

Filed Date: 9/26/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023