Antonio M. Merritt v. State of Indiana

99 N.E.3d 706
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 2018
Docket49A02-1708-CR-1736
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 99 N.E.3d 706 (Antonio M. Merritt v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antonio M. Merritt v. State of Indiana, 99 N.E.3d 706 (Ind. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Najam, Judge.

[1] Antonio M. Merritt appeals his conviction for murder, a felony, following a jury trial, and his adjudication as a habitual offender. Merritt's conviction followed his second jury trial. At his first trial, one witness testified that she witnessed Merritt murder the victim, and another witness testified that he observed Merritt shortly after the murder with the murder weapon, but the jury resulted in a hung verdict. At his second trial, those two witnesses could not be located and did not appear to testify. As a result, the trial court permitted, without objection, their statements from the first trial to be submitted to the second jury.

[2] On appeal, Merritt alleges that the trial court committed fundamental error when it did not sua sponte admonish the second jury to not speculate about the reasons those two witnesses might have been unavailable to testify while their prior statements were being read into evidence. We hold that the trial court had no obligation to make such an admonishment without a request by one of the parties. Thus, we affirm Merritt's convictions.

Facts and Procedural History

[3] In October of 2015, Merritt ran a "drug house" out of his residence in Indianapolis. Tr. Vol. II at 241. Jordan White and Elizie Wombles frequented Merritt's residence and were friends. In the evening hours of October 21 and into the early morning hours of October 22, White, Wombles, and Merritt were at Merritt's residence. Wombles was smoking synthetic marijuana while White sold cocaine to visitors. White brought a revolver to the house, but he left it in the kitchen.

[4] About twenty minutes after White had made his last sale of cocaine, Merritt "told [White] to give him some" cocaine. Id. at 128. White refused, and Merritt became "angry." Id. Merritt went into the kitchen, picked up the revolver, and went into the living room. Merritt began to argue with White, and Wombles left the room and went into the kitchen. Wombles then "heard a gunshot" and "ran out the back door." Id. at 133. Later, another visitor to the house found White dead on the living room floor.

[5] As Wombles fled the scene, Merritt "intercepted" her on the sidewalk. Id. at 134. Merritt had the revolver with him and was "threatening to kill" Wombles and "her kids." Id. at 163, 183. Merritt then had Wombles call her stepson, Connor Hendricks, to give them a ride to Merritt's mother's apartment. In the car, Wombles told Connor that Merritt had just shot White. And, at the apartment, Wombles called her sister, and her sister told her that White had been found dead. Wombles then confronted Merritt and told him, "You killed that boy." Id. at 140.

[6] Wombles' friend, Rusell Church, later picked Wombles and Merritt up from the apartment. Merritt wanted Church to give him and Wombles a ride to Fountain Square in Indianapolis to buy more drugs, and Church agreed. Church observed Merritt with "a larger revolver." Tr. Vol. III at 48. Church further observed that two of the revolver's chambers were empty. On the way out of the apartment building, Church observed Merritt sell the revolver to another person. En route to Fountain Square, Wombles ran out of the vehicle as it was stopped for traffic. Merritt did not pursue her.

[7] On October 27, 2015, the State charged Merritt with White's murder. At his ensuing jury trial, Wombles and Church both testified against Merritt. However, the trial resulted in a hung jury.

[8] Following the hung jury but prior to his retrial, Merritt approached fellow inmate Ryan Ivy and offered Ivy $1,000 to kill Wombles. In an ensuing conversation with Ivy, Merritt stated:

there came a point when the guy, the victim, was ready to leave. [Merritt] said that ... [White] had some and I wanted it. So he said, I shot him in the back. He said, I shot that nigga in the back with my three eight. And he said the bullet bounced around inside of him like a ping-pong ball until it hit his heart. He said that [Wombles] then went for the back door.
* * *
He said that[,] after he shot him, he said that she ran to the back door. He caught up with her and told her that she could stay here with him or-talking about the victim-or go with him....

Id. at 214-15. Merritt also told Ivy that he "sold the gun" outside his mother's apartment. Id. at 216. Ivy informed the local prosecutor of Merritt's statements.

[9] Prior to the commencement of Merritt's second trial, neither Wombles nor Church could be located. As a result, the court declared them unavailable. During the second jury trial, the State moved to have the prior testimony of both Wombles and Church admitted into evidence, which the court permitted without objection. 1 Following the presentation of that testimony, Ivy testified that Merritt had attempted to hire Ivy to kill Wombles.

[10] The jury found Merritt guilty of White's murder, and the trial court adjudicated Merritt to be a habitual offender. The court then entered its judgment of conviction and sentenced Merritt to an aggregate term of eighty-five years. This appeal ensued.

Discussion and Decision

[11] Merritt asserts on appeal that the trial court committed fundamental error when it did not sua sponte admonish the jury to not speculate about the reasons for the unavailability of Wombles and Church. As our Supreme Court has explained:

A claim that has been waived by a defendant's failure to raise a contemporaneous objection can be reviewed on appeal if the reviewing court determines that a fundamental error occurred. The fundamental error exception is extremely narrow, and applies only when the error constitutes a blatant violation of basic principles, the harm or potential for harm is substantial, and the resulting error denies the defendant fundamental due process. The error claimed must either make a fair trial impossible or constitute clearly blatant violations of basic and elementary principles of due process. This exception is available only in egregious circumstances.

Brown v. State , 929 N.E.2d 204 , 207 (Ind. 2010) (quotation marks and citations omitted). "To prove fundamental error," the appellant must show "that the trial court should have raised the issue sua sponte ...." Taylor v. State , 86 N.E.3d 157 , 162 (Ind. 2017).

[12] Further, fundamental error in the evidentiary decisions of our trial courts is especially rare. For example, our Supreme Court has explained that

an error in ruling on a motion to exclude improperly seized evidence is not per se fundamental error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 N.E.3d 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antonio-m-merritt-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2018.