Reginald Torlentus Johnson v. State of Mississippi ( 1996 )


Menu:
  •                         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 96-CT-01136-SCT
    REGINALD TORLENTUS JOHNSON
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                               9/11/1996
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                    HON. JAMES E. GRAVES, JR.
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                      HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                        ROBERT M. RYAN
    THOMAS M. FORTNER
    ANDRE DE GRUY
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                          OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: W.
    GLENN WATTS
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                              EDWARD J. PETERS
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                             CRIMINAL - FELONY
    DISPOSITION:                                    AFFIRMED - 6/24/2004
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    COBB, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    This is an appeal after remand to the Hinds County Circuit Court, First Judicial District, for the
    limited purpose of conducting a proper Batson hearing. Reginald Torlentus Johnson was convicted of
    deliberate design murder in September, 1996, and was sentenced to serve life in prison in the custody of
    the Mississippi Department of Corrections. He appealed on the basis that, inter alia, the State used its
    peremptory strikes in a systematic way to eliminate blacks from the jury in violation of Batson v.
    Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    , 
    106 S. Ct. 1712
    , 
    90 L. Ed. 2d 69
    (1986), and Hatten v. State, 
    628 So. 2d 294
    (Miss. 1993). The State used only six of its twelve peremptory strikes, but all six were used to
    eliminate black venire persons. The resulting petit jury consisted of 7 blacks and 5 whites.
    ¶2.     In December, 1998, the Mississippi Court of Appeals held that the State’s racially neutral reasons
    for their strikes were being offered in good faith, and affirmed the trial court. Johnson v. State, 
    754 So. 2d 1178
    , 1179 (¶5) (Miss. 2000). After granting Johnson’s petition for certiorari, this Court applied the rule
    of Hatten v. State, reversed the judgment of the Court of Appeals, and remanded the case for a proper
    Batson hearing, on the sole issue that the trial court neglected to undertake the third step of the Batson
    analysis, by failing to make on-the-record factual findings for each peremptory strike made by the State:
    "We say once again that the rule promulgated in Hatten will be enforced. The judgment
    of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The case is remanded to the Hinds County Circuit
    Court for a hearing and findings pursuant to Hatten and Batson."
    
    Johnson 754 So. 2d at 1180
    , (¶8). The Hatten rule requires the trial court to make on-the-record factual
    findings that each race neutral reason offered by the State for striking a juror is non-pretextual. 
    Johnson, 754 So. 2d at 1180
    ; 
    Hatten, 628 So. 2d at 298
    .
    FACTS
    ¶3.     The new Batson hearing was conducted on May10, 2002. It consisted of direct and cross-
    examination of Glenda Haynes, the assistant district attorney, who along with then-District Attorney Ed
    Peters, had tried the case in 1996. Presiding over the hearing was Circuit Judge Winston Kidd, who was
    not the initial trial judge. Haynes testified that Peters had conducted the voir dire for the State and it had
    been her responsibility to watch, listen, and take notes about what was said and what the prospective jurors
    were doing during voir dire. Her testimony was based on her notes from the trial, her personal recollection,
    2
    District Attorney Peters’s notes, and the transcript of the original proceedings. Judge Kidd actively
    participated in the hearing, asking questions from time to time to clarify details of testimony and interacting
    with the attorneys for Johnson and the State. At the conclusion of the evidence and argument, Judge Kidd
    made oral findings on the record in which he reiterated each reason given by the state for each strike, after
    which he found that the reasons were race neutral. Thereafter, he concluded, in summary fashion, that the
    findings had been made, that the reasons given by the State were sufficiently race neutral under the Batson
    standard, and that the State did not engage in unconstitutional discrimination in the use of its peremptory
    challenges. We affirm that ruling.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶4.     On review, a trial court's determinations under Batson are afforded great deference because they
    are largely based on credibility. McGilberry v. State, 
    741 So. 2d 894
    , 923 (Miss. 1999) (citing
    Coleman v. State, 
    697 So. 2d 777
    , 785 (Miss. 1997)). This Court will not reverse factual findings relating
    to a Batson challenge unless they are clearly erroneous. 
    Id. See also Woodward
    v. State, 
    726 So. 2d 524
    , 530 (Miss. 1998); Lockett v. State, 
    517 So. 2d 1346
    , 1349-50 (Miss. 1987). "This perspective
    is wholly consistent with our unflagging support of the trial court as the proper forum for resolution of factual
    controversies." 
    Id. at 1350. ¶5.
        Johnson asserts that the trial court decision on remand is clearly erroneous. Specifically, Johnson
    argues that the third step in the Batson test requires “factual truthfulness,” that is, the trial judge may not
    simply take at face value the explanation asserted by the State, but each on-the-record findings of non-
    pretext must contain some evidence from the record that supports the reason for the strike. See Hatten,
    
    3 628 So. 2d at 302
    . See also Snow v. State, 
    800 So. 2d 472
    , 479-81 (Miss. 2001) (“Hatten does not
    require literal truth in the reason proffered. It only requires that there be some basis in fact sufficient to allow
    the court to make a reasonable judgment that it is not contrived.”). Johnson contends that the trial judge
    merely made a determination that the reasons were race neutral, as required in step two of Batson, but
    did not make a determination that they were factually truthful and non-pretextual, as required by step three
    of Batson and by Hatten. The following colloquy took place during the hearing:
    THE COURT: So it’s the Defendant’s position that the trial court judge did not
    make a determination that those reasons given for striking juror one on panel one - - is it
    the Defendant’s position that the trial court did not make a determination that those reasons
    were race neutral?
    MR. DeGRUY [Counsel for Defendant]: He made a determination that they were
    race neutral. He did not make a determination that they were factually truthful and that’s
    why we’re back here because we had never gotten to step three and it is impossible to
    make that determination because they failed to make the record at the time - - to raise the
    issue so that a true record could be made.
    ...
    THE COURT: When the Court made a decision to accept those challenges as
    race neutral, don’t you think the Court actually made a factual finding that they were race
    neutral? If the Court accepted the reasons given by the State, even thought the Court did
    not give individual reasons on the record, but if the Court allowed the State to strike these
    individuals, wouldn’t you think that the Court made factual findings?
    Mr. DeGRUY: Absolutely not. I think that’s why the case is back here because
    the Court did not make - -
    The COURT: Because they’re not on the record.
    ¶6.        Haynes testified regarding the State’s six strikes, and Johnson’s attorney provided rebuttal, as
    follows:
    S-1 Panel 1, juror 1, black male, age 40. Haynes testified that this juror did not pay attention
    during voir dire, was not even facing the district attorney as he spoke, and was totally unresponsive.
    4
    Additionally, Haynes testified that she recalled that the juror was turned around in his seat, unresponsive,
    and gave the impression that he didn’t want to be there, even when defense conducted voir dire.
    S-1 rebuttal. Johnson argued that it was his position that during voir dire, this juror was not looking
    away, and that although the record shows that this juror did not respond to any questions, it also shows that
    he was not directly asked any questions, and that there is no evidence to suggest that this juror was
    withholding any information or that he should have answered any questions. Johnson asserted that, when
    subjective reasoning is used, such as no eye contact, inattentive witness, turning away in his seat, Hatten
    requires that a record be made that shows that this actually occurred. Johnson argued that it is incumbent
    on the prosecution to approach the bench at the time a juror’s inattentiveness or questioned demeanor is
    noted, to make a record of the behavior and that the judge should make a factual finding of what was
    occurring at that point, and that since that did not happen in the initial trial, Johnson should get a new trial.
    For reasons set forth infra, we disagree.
    S-2 Panel 1, juror 6, black female, age 52. Haynes testified that she had a full page of notes
    from the initial voir dire which reflected that this juror requested an individual, or private, voir dire due to
    the fact that her sister’s child had been killed and the murder had not been solved. The juror also indicated
    that she would be affected by the fact of the unresolved murder. Haynes stated that she had personally seen
    members of that family in the DA’s office. Haynes’s observation was that the juror’s “whole mannerism
    indicated that she was quite upset”, possibly with all law enforcement, because this murder had not been
    solved.
    S-2 rebuttal. Johnson argued that the State struck this juror because her husband was serving a
    prison sentence, but allowed other white jurors in the same situation to be seated. He stated that this type
    5
    of disparate treatment indicates discriminatory intent, and that even though this reason is objectively race
    neutral, it is not subjectively the reason for the strike. The record reflects that Johnson did not acknowledge
    the other reasons the State gave for this strike.
    S-3 Panel 1, juror 9, black female, age 23; S-5 Panel 1, juror 11, black male,
    age 23; and S-6 Panel 2, juror 1, black female, age 29 - all were struck based on age. Haynes testified that
    she and Peters had an informal policy that all individuals under the age of 30, regardless of race, were
    excluded. She said that this was based essentially upon observation that young people did not seem to
    have a stake in the community and were not mature enough, so they routinely excluded them. On
    questioning by Johnson, she stated that this was not an official, written policy of the District Attorney’s
    office, but rather just a personal one which she and Peters shared based on many years of prosecuting
    cases.
    S-3, 5, and 6 Rebuttal. Johnson offered no rebuttal to S3, nor to S5, basically conceding that
    there was no proof of racial discrimination with regard to these two jurors. However, with regard to S-6,
    he contends that this is a 29-year-old black woman with previous jury experience, and the reason given
    for her strike is an arbitrary age cut-off which is improper. Johnson also points out that the State had
    accepted a 31-year-old white male juror with no jury experience who has a prior conviction.
    S-4 Panel 1, juror 10, black male, age 51. Haynes testified that this juror had indicated that he
    had previously been on a civil jury panel where a police officer was a defendant in a case involving a car
    wreck. The jury awarded a small amount to the plaintiff, after which the judge increased the award.
    Haynes stated that, when asked if he would “follow the instructions of the court” the juror’s “whole
    response indicated that he did not like the fact that the judge had added to the verdict” and for that reason
    6
    might not follow the judge’s instructions in this criminal case. Haynes further testified that “[i]t was the way
    he responded, it was the tone to his voice, and the way he looked at the judge” that made her think that
    the juror was not going to follow the judge’s instructions.
    S-4 rebuttal. Johnson argued that the case was a simple automobile accident which just happened
    to involve a police officer, and claimed that the record reflects that this juror was questioned about the civil
    trial during voir dire, and stated that it would not influence him. Johnson argues that the prosecutor is simply
    electing not to believe this juror, without explaining why.
    ¶7.     Following this testimony on remand, the trial judge addressed each strike, one by one, summarizing
    each time the prosecutor’s testimony and Johnson’s rebuttal, and finding that the reasons for each strike
    were race neutral.
    ¶8.     The trial court made the following findings on remand:
    The Court has reviewed all of the documents filed in this matter and after having
    a Batson hearing pursuant to the Supreme Court’s mandate and after listening to all of the
    evidence at the hearing this morning, the Court is prepared to make an on-the-record
    factual determination on the merits of the reasons cited by the State for its use of its
    peremptory challenges against some of the potential jurors.
    The State used S-1 to strike juror one on panel one. The reason given by the
    State was that that particular juror refused to look at the State, at the prosecutor, when the
    prosecutor was asking questions and that that particular juror did not pay attention and
    was totally turned around and was not facing the prosecutor as he was attempting to ask
    questions. That was the reason given by the State for their use of S-1 in striking that juror.
    The Court finds that the reason given by the State was race neutral and that strike
    will be allowed to stand.
    The reason given by the State for striking juror six on panel one was that that
    particular juror, her sister’s child was killed prior to this trial and from Ms. Haynes, one of
    the prosecutors in this matter, from her observation she found that that particular juror was
    upset with law enforcement and the fact that the murder had not been resolved. And
    7
    further Ms. Haynes had made a check mark on her notes that that particular juror wanted
    to talk in private and the State struck that juror by using S-2 for those reasons.
    At this time the Court makes a factual finding that those reasons given by the State
    for striking that juror were race neutral reasons.
    As to the State’s use of S-3 to strike juror nine, panel one, the Defendant has
    conceded this particular strike by the State. However, the court makes a factual
    determination that Ms. Haynes testified that it was the policy of her and the other attorney,
    who was the district attorney at the time, Ed Peters, who tried this case; she stated that it
    was their policy to exclude individuals under the age of 30. This particular individual was
    23 years old and the State used S-3 to strike this individual.
    The Court makes a factual finding that that strike was race neutral.
    As to juror ten on panel one, the State based its strike upon the fact that it
    appeared that that particular individual was upset that the judge on a case that he had
    served as a juror had added certain damages to a verdict and that the State believed that
    this juror could not follow the court’s instructions even though the Defendant states that
    that particular question was asked as a whole and this particular juror did not state that he
    could not follow the law. The state believed in its analysis that based upon this juror’s
    answers that this juror could not follow the instructions of the court and the State used S-4
    to strike this juror.
    The Court finds that the reasons relied upon by the State in striking juror ten on
    panel one were race neutral reasons.
    As to the State’s striking of juror eleven on panel one where the State used one
    of its peremptory strikes to strike that particular juror, the State struck that juror due to the
    juror’s age, being only 23 years old. And again the Court will take note of the fact that
    Ms. Haynes testified that it was a policy of hers to strike jurors under the age of 30 and
    she struck this juror due to age. And again the Defendant has conceded the striking of this
    particular juror, however, the Court makes a factual finding that this was a race neutral
    reason given by the State for the striking of that juror.
    As to the striking of juror one on panel two, which the State again used as its
    reasons that this particular juror was under the age of 30 and again the State struck that
    juror for that reason alone. However, the Defendant states that this juror was 29 years
    old, close to the age of 30. The Defendant continues to object to the striking of this
    particular juror, however, the Court makes a factual finding that the reasons relied u0on
    by the State were race neutral reasons in that there is case law to support5 that jurors --
    8
    it is proper and clearly race neutral to strike jurors based upon age and the Court will allow
    that strike to stand.
    I believe this complies with the mandate that was given by the Supreme Court and
    this will be the ruling and the order of this Court.
    ¶9.     Johnson argues that clearly Judge Kidd only applied step two of Batson, addressing only the
    articulation of race-neutral explanations for each strike, and thus the instructions of this Court on remand
    to address step three and “make an on-the-record factual determination of the merits of the reasons cited
    by the State for its use of peremptory challenges” has not been followed. While we agree that the wording
    of the trial court’s findings could have been more precise, we nevertheless conclude based on the complete
    record before us and the content of the trial court’s factual findings are sufficient for us to determine that
    there has been no purposeful discrimination by the State’s use of peremptory challenges.
    ¶10.    In Puckett v. State, 
    788 So. 2d 752
    (Miss. 2001), this Court was faced with a less than precise
    finding by a trial court judge after a Batson-related remand, we held that the judge “did not make an on-
    the-record, juror-by-juror review of the specific reasons why he found each peremptory challenge to be
    acceptable, which clearly would have been the better route to take. However, ‘where a trial judge fails
    to elucidate such a specific explanation for each race neutral reason given, we will not remand the case for
    that Batson-related purpose alone. This Court is fully capable of balancing the Batson factors in cases
    such as this one. Contined remand of such cases only wastes the trial court’s limited resources and acts
    to further delay justice.’” 
    Id. at 764. (citing
    Gary v. State, 
    760 So. 2d 743
    , 748 (Miss. 2000)). In the
    present case, as in Puckett, no objection was made by defense counsel, nor was any request made for
    the judge to make a more precise finding (specifically applying step three) at that point.
    9
    ¶11.    The essential inquiry is whether Johnson has met the burden of showing that the State has engaged
    in a pattern of strikes based on race, i.e., whether “the totality of the relevent facts gives rise to an inference
    of discriminatory purpose.” Horne v. State, 
    825 So. 2d 627
    , 635 (Miss. 2002) (citing Randall v.
    State, 
    716 So. 2d 584
    , 587 (Miss. 1998).
    CONCLUSION
    ¶12.    We conclude that Johnson failed to demonstrate that the State’s proffered reasons were pretextual
    and that he has not carried his burden of proving purposeful discrimination. The trial judge found that the
    State’s peremptory challenges were not used in a racially discriminatory manner. The record fully supports
    that finding. In light of the deference accorded the trial court in such findings, the judgment of the Hinds
    County Circuit Court is affirmed.
    ¶13. CONVICTION OF MURDER AND SENTENCE OF LIFE IMPRISONMENT IN
    THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,
    AFFIRMED.
    SMITH, C.J., WALLER, P.J., EASLEY, CARLSON, DICKINSON AND
    RANDOLPH, JJ., CONCUR. DIAZ AND GRAVES, JJ., NOT PARTICIPATING.
    10