Coney v. State

653 So. 2d 1009, 1995 WL 2423
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 5, 1995
Docket80072
StatusPublished
Cited by135 cases

This text of 653 So. 2d 1009 (Coney v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coney v. State, 653 So. 2d 1009, 1995 WL 2423 (Fla. 1995).

Opinion

653 So.2d 1009 (1995)

Jimmie Lee CONEY, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.

No. 80072.

Supreme Court of Florida.

January 5, 1995.
Rehearing Denied April 27, 1995.

*1010 Bennett H. Brummer, Public Defender, and Howard K. Blumberg, Asst. Public Defender, Eleventh Judicial Circuit, Miami, for appellant.

Robert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen., and Anita J. Gay, Asst. Atty. Gen., Miami, for appellee.

PER CURIAM.

We have on appeal the judgment and sentence of the trial court imposing the death penalty upon Jimmie Lee Coney. We have jurisdiction. Art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. We affirm.

Jimmie Coney set his putative jailhouse lover ablaze. Coney was incarcerated in the Dade Correctional Institution (DCI) serving a 420-year sentence for sexual battery, robbery, burglary with assault, and attempted murder, all arising from the assault of a twelve-year old girl in 1976. While at DCI, *1011 Coney's homosexual lover, Patrick Southworth, spurned him. Coney obtained a key to Southworth's cell, entered at about 5 a.m., April 6, 1990, doused him with a flammable liquid, and set him afire. Southworth was burned over a large portion of his body, remained conscious for several hours, lapsed into unconsciousness, and died the following day. No one saw the crime take place except Southworth, who awoke when the liquid was splashed on him. An empty "butt can" was found under Southworth's bunk, and a shoebox containing empty soda cans, tissue paper, and cell keys was found in a garbage container near the fire. The cans contained trace amounts of a flammable liquid and the keys fit Southworth's cell door.

A prison official testified at trial that Southworth told him shortly after he was burned that when he felt the liquid poured on him he looked up and saw James Coney. He said Coney set him on fire because he, Southworth, is a homosexual. The paramedic who treated the victim testified that Southworth told him that his lover set him on fire because he, Southworth, left him. The prison officer who accompanied Southworth to the hospital testified that Southworth told him that Jimmie Coney did it because he, Southworth, would no longer have sex with him.

Inmate Young testified that a week before the murder Coney asked him to get some lacquer thinner from the prison auto shop. Young gave him the liquid in a soda can. Inmate Hoover testified that Coney and Southworth were often seen together touching and that Coney introduced Southworth to Hoover as "his boy," i.e., his homosexual lover. On the day before the murder, Coney seemed angry at Southworth and told Hoover, "I'm going to get that motherfucker... . I'm going to burn his ass." Coney's cellmate, inmate Jones, testified that at 4 a.m. on the night of the murder, Coney awoke, took the shoebox later found near the fire from under his bed, poured paint thinner from two soda cans into a "butt can," left the cell, and returned later announcing, "got the key."

Coney was convicted of first-degree murder and arson. The State put on the following witnesses during the penalty phase: Former Assistant State Attorney Jacobs testified concerning the details of Coney's prior rape of an eighteen-year-old woman who had car trouble. Coney abducted her, bit her on the face and leg, and raped her. Next, a young woman testified that Coney forced his way into her house when she was twelve years old and sexually assaulted and strangled her, leaving her for dead. The woman's mother testified concerning her daughter's condition when she, the mother, arrived home following the assault. Coney, in turn, put on eight witnesses, including relatives who testified concerning his childhood and upbringing. The jury recommended death on the first-degree murder charge by a seven-to-five vote, and the judge imposed death, finding five aggravating and no mitigating circumstances.[1] The judge imposed a thirty-year consecutive sentence on the arson charge. Coney appeals his convictions and sentences, raising ten issues.[2]

Coney first claims that the trial court erred in failing to give a requested jury instruction on dying declarations. As noted above, three State witnesses gave key testimony concerning Southworth's statements to them before he died; two testified that Southworth said that Coney did it. Defense counsel requested the following instruction:

*1012 A statement claimed to have been made by the deceased, Patrick Southworth, has been placed before you. That statement is claimed to have been made while Patrick Southworth was conscious of immediate and impending death. Such a statement should always be considered with caution and be weighed with great care to make certain that Patrick Southworth was conscious of immediate and impending death.
Therefore, you must determine from the evidence that Patrick Southworth's statement was made while he was conscious of immediate and impending death.
If you conclude that Patrick Southworth's statements were not made when he was conscious of immediate and impending death, you should disregard it.

The court refused to give the instruction, concluding that it would be error to do so.

This Court addressed this issue in Soles v. State, 97 Fla. 61, 119 So. 791 (1929), wherein we ruled that it would be error to give a special instruction on dying declarations:

"That the judge is to pass on the preliminary condition necessary to the admissibility of evidence is unquestioned. It follows, as of course, that, since a consciousness of impending death is according to the foregoing principles legally essential to admissibility, the judge must determine whether that condition exists before the declaration is admitted.
"After a dying declaration, or any other evidence has been admitted, the weight to be given to it is a matter exclusively for the jury. They may believe it or may not believe it; but, so far as they do or do not, their judgment is not controlled by rules of law. Therefore, though they themselves do not suppose the declarant to have been conscious of death, they may still believe the statement; conversely, though they do suppose him to have been thus conscious, they may still not believe the statement to be true. In other words, their canons of ultimate belief are not necessarily the same as the preliminary legal conditions of admissibility, whose purpose is an entirely different one. It is, therefore, erroneous for the judge, after once admitting the declaration, to instruct the jury that they must reject the declaration, or exclude it from consideration, if the legal requirement as to consciousness of death does not in their opinion exist. No doubt they may reject it, on this ground or any other; but they are not to be expected to follow a definition of law intended for the Judge."

Id. at 64-65, 119 So. 791 (citations and emphasis omitted) (quoting 3 John Henry Wigmore, Wigmore on Evidence § 1451 (2d ed. 1923)).

Whether a hearsay statement is nevertheless reliable and admissible because it was made with the knowledge of impending doom is a legal question for the judge. Once the judge decides in favor of admissibility, the statement passes into the realm of the trier of fact to determine weight, character, and credibility, and it would be error for the judge to comment on it. See Fenelon v. State, 594 So.2d 292, 294 (Fla. 1992) ("[T]he judge should not invade the province of the jury by commenting on the evidence or indicating what inferences may be drawn from it.").[3]

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Bluebook (online)
653 So. 2d 1009, 1995 WL 2423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coney-v-state-fla-1995.