Chancellor Christmas v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 2007
Docket2007-KA-01450-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Chancellor Christmas v. State of Mississippi (Chancellor Christmas v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chancellor Christmas v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2007-KA-01450-SCT

CHANCELLOR CHRISTMAS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/11/2007 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. BOBBY BURT DELAUGHTER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: DONALD W. BOYKIN ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: LA DONNA C. HOLLAND DISTRICT ATTORNEY: ELEANOR FAYE PETERSON NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 04/02/2009 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Chancellor Christmas and three others were indicted for one count of armed robbery

pursuant to Mississippi Code Section 97-3-79 (Rev. 2006) and one count of house burglary

pursuant to Mississippi Code Section 97-17-23 (Rev. 2006). The State also sought an

enhanced penalty pursuant to Mississippi Code Section 99-19-351 (Rev. 2007), as the victim,

Margie Sellers, was over the age of sixty-five years at the time the offenses occurred.

Christmas was tried alone, and the jury found him guilty on both counts and also found that

he deserved an enhanced penalty on both convictions. Christmas was sentenced to serve ninety years for the armed robbery, to be served consecutively to the fifty-year sentence he

received for house burglary. He now appeals these convictions. Finding no error, we affirm.

Issues

¶2. Christmas appeals the following issues: (1) whether the court erred by allowing

identification testimony following a constitutionally impermissible photographic lineup; (2)

whether the court erred by limiting cross-examination of a State witness; (3) whether the

court erred by allowing the State to conduct an improper redirect examination; (4) whether

the jury should have been instructed as to constructive breaking; (5) whether there was

sufficient evidence to support the verdict; (6) whether the trial court erred by denying the

defendant’s peremptory instructions; and (7) whether the trial court erred by denying a juror

challenge for cause.

Facts

¶3. Raymond Echols, one of Christmas’s co-defendants, testified that on the morning of

July 25, 2006, he, Joseph Harris, Travis Thurman, and Christmas were driving a stolen black

Avalanche in and around Edwards, Mississippi.1 Echols stated that Christmas was driving

but was not present when the vehicle was stolen. Echols testified these young men observed

“an old white woman at her mailbox,” and Christmas initiated a plan to break into this

1 Echols, who was fourteen at the time of these offenses, pled guilty, and received a sentence of twenty years, with fourteen years suspended and six years to serve, in exchange for testimony against Christmas.

2 woman’s house. According to Echols, Christmas exited the vehicle, approached the house,

and knocked on the door.

¶4. Margie Sellers testified that she answered the door to a clean-cut, young, African-

American man who asked whether he could go fishing in the pond near her home. She told

him it was not her pond and he would have to ask the owner’s permission. She stated that

the man at her door came from a black truck, with the windows tinted, and she could see “the

forms of two others in the truck.”

¶5. The men then left, drove a short distance up the road, and returned to Ms. Sellers’s

house. Echols testified the men had no intention of going fishing, but planned to rob Sellers.

When they returned to her house, Echols testified that only Christmas and Harris went to the

door. However, Ms. Sellers testified that when she opened her door a second time, there

were three men. Ms. Sellers stated she saw each of their faces, “but as far as taking a good

look . . . I did not.” According to Sellers, one of the men told her that the owners of the home

with the pond were not at home, so she stepped outside her door onto the porch to point the

men to another home. Ms. Sellers testified that when she turned to go back inside her home,

one of the men

grabbed me from behind, put a gun to my head and shoved me on in the house, and he was pushing me. And he said, “where’s the money? where’s the money? I’ll kill you.” And the other came running through and went down to one end of the trailer while he was pushing me toward the other end. I told him – I said, “what money I have is in my purse on the couch. And just take it and leave.”

3 ¶6. Ms. Sellers testified she was then shoved by the man onto the floor in a closet. She

stated that he told her to stay there and then ran out of the room. Once the men left, Ms.

Sellers called 911.

¶7. According to Echols, Christmas was the person who grabbed Ms. Sellers and put the

gun to her head. Echols said that Christmas pushed the victim into the house, and Harris

followed. Echols testified that when Christmas and Harris came out of the house, Harris was

carrying a white purse.

¶8. Meanwhile, the Hinds County Sheriff’s Department was tracking the stolen black

Avalanche through the vehicle’s global positioning system. Deputy Sheriff Andrew

McKinley testified that while he was on patrol, he received a call about the location of the

stolen car. McKinley testified that around the same the time he first observed the Avalanche,

he learned that there had been a house burglary in Edwards and that another unit was

responding to that burglary.

¶9. McKinley testified that he and “other units” made contact with the Avalanche, and a

chase ensued for “maybe a mile, a mile and half.” He stated that after the stolen vehicle

almost crashed into a parked car, it stopped and four males exited the vehicle. According to

McKinley, two of the males ran to the right and two ran to the left. Echols testified that he

and Christmas were the two men who ran to the left, and that Harris and Thurman ran to the

right. McKinley pursued the men running to the left, but did not apprehend either.

¶10. McKinley returned to the vehicle, where other officers were stationed. A man who

lived in the neighborhood approached the officers, claiming that someone had crawled into

4 a space under his house. The officers went to the house and found Harris hiding in the crawl

space.

¶11. Terrell White was also arrested at the scene. White fit the description of one of the

males who had fled the car, and when the deputies approached him, White ran. However,

according to Deputy Sheriff McKinley, White ran because he was carrying narcotics, not

because he was involved in the robbery of Ms. Sellers.

¶12. Hinds County Sheriff’s Deputy Mac James testified that he was called to the location

of the Avalanche to process the vehicle for fingerprints. James testified that he found Ms.

Sellers’s coin purse, as well as her insurance card, in the passenger-side floorboard of the

Avalanche. James further testified that he found two Nike tennis shoes near the vehicle,

although the two shoes were not found together. One shoe was found near the front of a

house, and the other shoe was found in the back yard. James opined they were in separate

locations because “somebody was possibly running – running out of their shoes.”

¶13. The jury also heard testimony from Quincy Ross. Ross shared a home with his mother

and stepfather, his siblings, and Christmas. Ross testified that Christmas came home the

morning of July 25, 2006, without his shoes and that Christmas told him he had lost his shoes

in a chase with police. Ross stated that Christmas told him he had robbed an old white

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