Chisum v. State

616 S.W.2d 728, 273 Ark. 1, 1981 Ark. LEXIS 1311
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 26, 1981
DocketCR 80-213
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 616 S.W.2d 728 (Chisum v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chisum v. State, 616 S.W.2d 728, 273 Ark. 1, 1981 Ark. LEXIS 1311 (Ark. 1981).

Opinions

George Rose Smith, Justice.

Between 7:00 . and 8:00 on the morning of April 9, 1978, Roger Rackley was shot in the chest while he was in a garage in the home of the appellant’s sister, Alta Garrison, at Hector in Pope county. An ambulance was summoned at once, but Rackley died before he could be taken to a hospital. The appellant, Johnnie Lee Chisum, was charged wth second degree murder committed with a firearm and was found guilty of manslaughter committed with a firearm. In appealing from a verdict and judgment sentencing him to confinement for 14 years he argues five points for reversal.

Certain basic facts are not in dispute. Mrs. Garrison, with two other women, was at home when Chisum and Rackley came to the house at about 7:00 a.m. The two men had been drinking and were arguing with each other. After a while both men went into the garage through a connecting door, which one of the women locked behind them. None of the women testified to having heard a shot. In about 15 minutes, however, Chisum beat on a different door, was admitted, and said: “I need help. Roger has been shot.” Rackley was found lying in the garage with a bullet wound in his chest. An ambulance and the police arrived shortly, but Rackley lived only a few minutes.

Two state policemen and the sheriff took a statement from Chisum, at the scene. They testified at a Denno hearing that Chisum was warned of his rights before he signed a waiver form. They realized Chisum had been drinking, but they testified he was capable of making a statement and did so. In the oral statement, as later narrated to the jury, Chisum said that he and Rackley had been up all night. They had ridden around together and done some drinking. At one point they went to Rackley’s house to get two shotguns, to go hunting. They wound up at Alta Garrison’s house, where they went in, took off their boots, and drank coffee. Later they went out on the back steps and were putting on their shoes when, Chisum said, he got hit and heard a shot. Chisum said he looked at Rackley and realized that something was wrong. He picked up “the gun” and carried it out to Rackley’s pickup truck. He also said Rackley had in his belt in the house a gun that belonged to Chisum’s father. He also said they were scuffling, and Rackley shot himself.

In addition to the three officers, one of the women testified at the Denno hearing that Chisum seemed calm: “I do not feel like he was drunk.” An attorney who had been called by Chisum’s father talked to Chisum a little later at the courthouse. As a defense witness he testified: “I never could get him to tell me what occurred. He didn’t — he said, ‘I don’t know.’ He would shake his head. T just don’t know. I don’t remember.’ ” The attorney said that Chisum was incoherent and “evidently had no memory at all of the events of the night before or that morning either.” Chisum himself testified at the Denno hearing that he was drunk when he talked to the officers and did not remember what he told them. He did not testify before the jury.

Chisum first argues that we should set aside the trial judge’s finding that Chisum’s statement, which did not amount to a confession, was voluntary. Although we make an independent determination of the voluntariness of such a statement, we do not set aside the trial judge’s finding unless it is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Degler v. State, 257 Ark. 388, 517 S.W. 2d 515(1974). In our independent review we recognize the trial judge’s superior position in determining matters of credibility. Whitmore v. State, 263 Ark. 419, 426, 565 S.W. 2d 133 (1978).

Here the trial judge’s decision was not clearly erroneous. Chisum’s statement itself shows that he remembered many of the pertinent events. His recollection is corroborated by other witnesses with respect to what happened after he reached his sister’s house. The three officers thought he was able to make a statement. The State’s fourth witness, who was the only Denno witness to see Chisum both before and after the crime, did not think he was drunk. Chisum’s statements to the attorney could well have been motivated by self-interest, as he seems to have remembered things quite well up until the fatal shot and then suffered a complete cessation of memory. On this point reversible error is not shown.

Second, it is argued that there were deficiencies in the prosecution’s chain of custody of certain exhibits: A knife that Rackley had, the pistol used in the shooting, four live and three spent pistol cartridges, and a mutilated slug taken from Rackley’s body at the autopsy. Two possible witnesses, Peyton and Carlton, did not testify, but the trial judge concluded before admitting the exhibits into evidence that even if the chain was not completely unbroken the proof was sufficient to identify the articles.

We find no abuse of discretion. Wickliffe & Scott v. State, 258 Ark. 544, 527 S.W. 2d 640(1975). The jury was free to consider any omissions in weighing the testimony as a whole. The important point is that, although the State’s case was circumstantial, the omissions did not affect vital matters. The State showed that two men who had been arguing heatedly went into the garage together, alone, and within a few minutes one of them was shot and killed. Chisum put the gun in a truck, where the officers recovered it. Trace metal tests indicated that Chisum had carried the gun against his stomach under his belt and had held it in his hand. A similar test at the autopsy indicated that Rackley had not held the gun or carried it in his belt. The slug taken from the body was so damaged that it could not be traced to a particular pistol. Thus the identity of the pistol, of the cartridges, or of the slug was not an essential element in the State’s case, as a fingerprint or blood sample might be in some other situation. The trial judge’s preliminary ruling, admitting the exhibits, was right.

Third, it is argued that the sheriff and his secretary should not have been permitted to narrate statements made by Mrs. Garrison to the sheriff during his investigation of the case. The statements had not been signed by her, but the principal one had been read back to her and acknowledged to be correct. Those matters, however, went only to the weight of the evidence, because the statements were unquestionably admissible for the purpose of impeachment whether she had acknowledged their accuracy or not.

We observe at the outset that the prosecution was mistaken in offering the statements as recorded recollections under Uniform Evidence Rule 803 (5), Ark. Stat. Ann. § 28-1001 (Repl. 1979). That section of Rule 803 merely recognizes the common law rule permitting a witness to use a contemporaneously made memorandum when, as we have quoted, “the witness is totally lacking in present recollection and cannot revive it by stimulation, but there was a time when he did have a sufficient recollection and when it was recorded.” St. Louis S.W. Ry. v. White Sewing Machine Co., 78 Ark. 1, 93 S.W. 58, 8 Ann. Cas. 208 (1906). Instances of the proper application of Rule 803 (5) would include the testimony of a witness who bought an appliance and wrote down its serial number or who had a traffic collision and wrote down the other motorist’s license number. Mrs. Garrison’s detailed accounts to the sheriff were not within the rule.

Even so, we will not reverse a trial judge’s ruling, even though he gave the wrong reason, if the ruling was right. Moose v. Gregory, 267 Ark. 86, 590 S.W. 2d 662 (1979); Reeves v. Ark. La. Gas Co., 239 Ark. 646, 391 S.W.

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Bluebook (online)
616 S.W.2d 728, 273 Ark. 1, 1981 Ark. LEXIS 1311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chisum-v-state-ark-1981.