Darryl B. Walker v. J.O. Davis, Warden

840 F.2d 834, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 3513, 1988 WL 18316
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 23, 1988
Docket86-7547
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 840 F.2d 834 (Darryl B. Walker v. J.O. Davis, Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darryl B. Walker v. J.O. Davis, Warden, 840 F.2d 834, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 3513, 1988 WL 18316 (11th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

JOHN W. PECK, Senior Circuit Judge:

Petitioner Darryl B. Walker appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. This appeal presents the question of whether petitioner’s state court conviction was rendered fundamentally unfair due to the conduct of the prosecuting attorney acting both as prosecutor and witness. This issue must be viewed in light of the failure of petitioner’s trial counsel to make a specific objection concerning this matter.

I

Petitioner-appellant Darryl B. Walker is an Alabama prisoner serving a life sentence for the murder of Charles Phillips. The theory of the prosecution at trial was that Walker had been hired by Phillips’s wife and Lloyd Phelps to commit the murder. The State’s first three witnesses testified as to the location of the victim’s body and to the cause of death. Sam Evins next testified that he had been contacted by Phelps and Phillips’s wife to find a “hit man” to murder Charles Phillips. His search for a “hit man” led him to Walker. He testified that he and Phelps discussed the idea with Walker and that on the day of the murder he saw Phelps give Walker *836 some money. Evins acknowledged that he would have testified differently and would have testified in Ms. Phillips’s behalf if she had paid him off as promised. The next and final witness for the State in its case in chief was the District Attorney and prosecutor for the case, James A. Hendrix. Hendrix testified that Walker confessed to the murder in his office and Hendrix then related the details of that oral confession to the jury. Hendrix also testified as a rebuttal witness at the conclusion of defendant’s case.

Walker testified in his own defense. He stated that his “confession,” which occurred several months before trial, was a part of a plan agreed upon by Hendrix and himself. Walker claimed that it was manufactured by Hendrix in order to convict Sharon Phillips. (Mrs. Phillips was subsequently tried and acquitted prior to Walker’s trial.) Walker testified that he had been in jail for a considerable period of time and that the District Attorney had ample information to convict him on drug charges. Walker stated that Hendrix promised him that, if he testified in a fashion designed to convict Mrs. Phillips, Walker would be sentenced under the Alabama Youthful Offender Act, and, as a result, his sentence would be no greater than three years. Walker and Hendrix were the only two witnesses who gave testimony regarding the confession.

The District Attorney conducted all portions of the trial except his own examination and the initial portion of the State’s closing argument. Assistant District Attorney David Whetstone filled in for Hendrix only on those two occasions. Whetstone’s portion of the closing argument was primarily to highlight the difference in the credibility of the witnesses, particularly emphasizing Hendrix’s twenty-one years of elected service to the community.

After the adverse jury verdict Walker challenged his state court conviction through the Alabama state court system. Walker raised on direct appeal the two issues advanced in his habeas corpus petition. He claimed that his conviction was based upon an improperly admitted confession, and secondly that the conviction was based upon the improper testimony of the prosecution. 1 The state criminal court of appeals declined to address the merits of the issue of the prosecutor testifying as a witness because of petitioner’s failure to object at trial. Walker v. State, 386 So.2d 762 (Ala.Crim.App.1980). Walker then filed a writ of habeas corpus petition in district court. The United States Magistrate found that the case involved “a gross violation of the advocate-witness rule” but concluded that the trial was not rendered fundamentally unfair, which is the required test in such a review of a state court conviction. The district court affirmed the magistrate’s recommendation.

Walker's alleged confession occurred several months before his trial. The District Attorney knew from that date that he would be a critical witness in the government’s case and, in fact, Hendrix discussed it at the pre-trial suppression hearing. In fact, Hendrix and Walker were the only two witnesses to give testimony concerning Walker’s alleged confession. 2 As stated by the magistrate, “The critical issue before the jury was resolution of the conflicting accounts of the confession.” The credibility issue was further complicated when Hendrix cross-examined Walker concerning what Walker actually told Hendrix in their meeting. The following exchange occurred:

Hendrix: During the course of your statement to me, do you remember telling me that Phelps pulled up in the driveway?
Walker: Yes sir I do.
*837 Hendrix: Is that when he let you out of the car?
Walker: Yes sir I remember you telling me that. I remember you telling me that and I repeated it to you.
Hendrix: I told you that? And then you are saying that you repeated it to me?
Walker: Yes, sir.
Hendrix: You are lying.

Following the defendant’s case, the District Attorney was again called as the only rebuttal witness. Hendrix began his testimony without being asked a question. When the defendant’s counsel made an objection to Hendrix’s narrative, Hendrix responded to the Judge from the witness stand in explanation. After identifying several pictures, Hendrix again testified without responding to a question from Whetstone:

Now, the only thing I have to say in rebuttal is that I never told this man what to say. This man told me what happened and I questioned him about what had happened.... And I never told him the things that he was to say, because I just would not do that. He either did it or he didn’t do it. I did not put anything in his mouth.

Whetstone then asked Hendrix questions that elicited information concerning Hendrix’s “twenty-one years of service for the people of this county.”

District Attorney Hendrix began his part in closing argument with the following comments:

Hendrix: May it please the Court and Ladies and Gentlemen of the Jury: Let me start off by telling you that I want to apologize to you to start off with for taking the stand in this case. I don’t usually do it. And it’s the first time that I have ever testified in my life in a murder case. And I am sorry that the circumstances arose to where I felt compelled to do it.
But there just wasn’t anyone else to do it and tell the story that he told. I felt that you were entitled to the benefit of hearing that other story.
Now, that’s the reason that I took the stand. And I apologize to you for having to get that involved in this case, but I felt like I had to do it.

Hendrix then proceeded to comment on some of the evidence offered during trial:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
840 F.2d 834, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 3513, 1988 WL 18316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darryl-b-walker-v-jo-davis-warden-ca11-1988.