Claude Earn Carter v. Dewey Sowders, Warden, Northpoint Training Center

5 F.3d 975
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1993
Docket91-6419
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 5 F.3d 975 (Claude Earn Carter v. Dewey Sowders, Warden, Northpoint Training Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claude Earn Carter v. Dewey Sowders, Warden, Northpoint Training Center, 5 F.3d 975 (6th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

MERRITT, Chief Judge.

Claude Earn Carter appeals the denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Petitioner was convicted of possession of marijuana and trafficking in LSD. Central to his conviction was the testimony of Charles Elam, Jr., a paid police informant. Elam's video deposition was taken in the absence of both petitioner and his counsel, and the deposition was later admitted, over petitioner’s objection, at trial. Because petitioner did not waive his constitutional rights under the Confrontation Clause to confront his accuser and subject his testimony to cross-examination, the deposition did not bear adequate indicia of reliability for admission at trial. We therefore reverse the district court and grant the petition.

*977 I.

Charles Elam was a salaried narcotics agent with the Dyersburg, Tennessee Police Department, earning $150/week. According to Elam’s deposition testimony, Elam and Billy Driskell purchased marijuana and LSD from petitioner at a house trailer in Kentucky on November 3, 1985, and returned to Tennessee. Elam then took a group of Tennessee police officers to Kentucky and showed them the trailer where the drugs were purchased. The trailer was searched under warrant November 5, and Carter was arrested while working in the fields near the trailer. He denied ownership of marijuana found in the trailer, or that he had ever met Elam.

Carter was indicted by the Logan County, Kentucky, Grand Jury on December 27,1985 for the drug offenses and for being a first degree persistent felony offender. He was arraigned January 17,1986, and the trial was set for April 24 of that year. In preparation for trial, the Commonwealth moved March 4 to take a videotape deposition of Elam, giving no specific ground. A second motion was filed March 17, this time alleging that a pretrial deposition was necessary, since the Commonwealth could not secure the attendance of Elam, a Tennessee resident, at Carter’s trial in Kentucky. The court granted the motion. On April 14, the Commonwealth subpoenaed three Kentucky police officers to appear at Carter’s trial ten days later. No subpoena was issued for Elam, nor were other efforts made to secure his attendance. On April 23, Carter’s trial was continued from April 24 to September 25, 1986. The next day, the Commonwealth filed an ex parte petition, pursuant to Tennessee’s Uniform Non-Resident Witness Act, to secure the attendance of Elam for the purpose of deposing him May 15, 1986. The court granted the petition within a day. There was no deposition on May 15. Instead, the Commonwealth filed another ex parte petition, this time pursuant to Oklahoma’s Uniform Non-Resident Witness Act, to secure Elam’s presence in Kentucky to depose him June 30. The petition was granted the same day.

On June 5, the prosecutor wrote Carter’s counsel, Louis Waller, notifying him of Elam’s deposition on June 30 and stating that the “deposition will be read, at [Carter’s] trial” in September. According to Waller’s statement at the June 30 deposition, he did not receive the notice until June 20. He then sent a letter to Carter, informing him of the deposition and stating “you may wish to be present.” Waller received. no response to the letter or to several subsequent phone calls made prior to the deposition. The trial court specifically found there was “no evidence that [Carter] had notice that he was suppose [sic] to be there.”

The deposition was held as scheduled June 30. Waller appeared, but told the prosecutor that he could not effectively represent Carter without his presence. He further indicated that he intended to withdraw from the ease. He then left the deposition, but not before pointing out to the prosecutor that if Elam could be compelled to come to Kentucky for a deposition, there was no reason why he could not be present for trial in September. The prosecutor proceeded to depose Elam in the absence of petitioner and his counsel, and without any cross-examination. Two days after the deposition, the Commonwealth moved for a ruling on the admissibility of the deposition at trial in lieu of live testimony.

In preparation for the new September 25 trial date, the Commonwealth issued subpoenas for seven witnesses September 8. Elam was not among them. The- court having granted Waller’s motion to withdraw, new counsel was appointed for Carter September 9. The following day, the court continued the trial to January 5, 1987. Approximately one week later, Carter’s-new counsel moved to quash Elam’s deposition, on the grounds that Carter was denied his constitutional right to confront his accuser at the deposition. The motion was not denied until trial, almost four months later.

On December 18, 1986,. less than three weeks prior to trial and more than five months after Elam’s deposition, the prosecutor wrote Elam in Oklahoma notifying him of the new trial date and stating he “would like for [him] to come back to Kentucky in order to testify in person.” On the same day, the *978 prosecutor wrote the Logan Circuit Court Clerk, asking that a subpoena be issued for Elam. The letter to Elam was returned to the prosecutor because of an expired forwarding order, and the subpoena was issued bearing the same address, but was' not served. The prosecutor made a one-minute phone call to Oklahoma December 26, a four-minute phone call to Union City, Tennessee December 31, and four days prior to trial, on January 2, 1987, nine phone calls to Oklahoma lasting a total of sixteen minutes, in an effort to locate Elam. 1

The trial commenced January 6, 1987. Immediately prior to trial, Carter’s counsel stated on the record that although his motion to quash Elam’s deposition had been argued, it had not been transcribed, and he reiterated his objections to its admission. He argued that the absence of Carter at Elam’s deposition denied him his right to confront his accuser. He also emphasized to the court that the Commonwealth had used the Uniform Non-Resident Witness Act to procure Elam’s attendance at his deposition, but had not made a similar effort to obtain his presence at trial. The motion was overruled and the deposition was read as the Commonwealth’s first witness. One of the police officers also testified concerning what Elam had told him prior to taking them to Kentucky to show them the trailer. The trial court overruled petitioner’s objection to introduction of this hearsay testimony.

The jury found Carter guilty of possession of marijuana and trafficking in LSD, and of being a first degree persistent felony offender. Carter appealed. The Kentucky Supreme Court upheld his substantive convictions, but reversed his first degree persistent felony offender conviction due to insufficient evidence. Carter v. Commonwealth, 782 S.W.2d 597, 602 (Ky.1989). After his petition for writ of certiorari to the United States Supreme Court was denied, 497 U.S. 1029, 110 S.Ct. 3282, 111 L.Ed.2d 791 (1990), Carter filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the district court, which was denied November 1, 1991. Carter .filed a Motion for Certificate of Probable Cause in this Court March 10, 1992, which we granted April 15, 1992.

II.

Petitioner’s claims on appeal all revolve around Elam’s testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F.3d 975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claude-earn-carter-v-dewey-sowders-warden-northpoint-training-center-ca6-1993.