Ferguson v. State

137 So. 3d 240, 2014 WL 465700, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 84
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 2014
DocketNo. 2013-KA-00114-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 137 So. 3d 240 (Ferguson v. State) 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
Ferguson v. State, 137 So. 3d 240, 2014 WL 465700, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 84 (Mich. 2014).

Opinion

DICKINSON, Presiding Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. In this aggravated-assault conviction, James Marco Ferguson challenges the sufficiency of the State’s evidence that he used a knife during the assault, the trial court’s denial of a proposed jury instruction on his competence to testify, and the trial court’s refusal to admit evidence of the victim’s drug use. Ferguson also raises ineffective assistance of counsel. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Katrina Barnes and Ferguson met in October 2010 and became friends. On March 22, 2011, Ferguson took Barnes and her son Jacob to McDonald’s, where Ferguson gave Barnes twenty dollars to pay for food, telling her to keep the change of approximately three dollars. Ferguson then took Barnes and Jacob home, informing them that he had to leave but would return shortly, which he did some time before 9:00 p.m.

113. Around midnight, as Barnes and Ferguson watched television, the doorbell rang. Ferguson refused to let Barnes answer the door, and then accused her of stealing his money and pushed her into a walk-in closet, demanding that she give him back his money. Ferguson then stabbed her in the head and face three times before the knife finally broke and fell to the floor. Ferguson hit Barnes in the head with her radio, then her blow dryer, and then her curling iron — all of which broke from impact.

¶4. Although Ferguson did not deny that he assaulted Barnes that night, he did deny that he stabbed her with a knife or that he hit her with any of the aforementioned objects. He admitted punching Barnes in the face with his fist, and he claimed the lacerations resulted from her broken glasses. Barnes testified that she lost consciousness during the attack. Her son found her the next morning and phoned the police.

¶ 5. The grand jury indicted Ferguson for aggravated assault, and the jury found him guilty. Ferguson, through appellate counsel, raises the following issues: (1) [243]*243that the trial court erred in denying Ferguson’s motions for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict; (2) that the trial court erred in refusing to grant one of his proposed jury instructions; and (3) that the trial court erred by refusing to admit into evidence drug paraphernalia found in Barnes’s apartment. Ferguson also has filed a pro se supplemental brief, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel.

ANALYSIS

The trial court did not err by denying Ferguson’s motions for a directed verdict or JNOV.

¶ 6. We review both the denial of a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) and the denial of a directed verdict de novo.1 Both implicate the sufficiency of the evidence, and this Court will reverse a conviction “only where, with respect to one or more of the elements of the offense charged, the evidence so considered is such that reasonable and fair-minded jurors could only find the accused not guilty.” 2 This Court must “consider all of the evidence — not just the evidence which supports the case for the prosecution — in the light most favorable to the verdict.”3

¶ 7. The grand jury indicted Ferguson for aggravated assault under Section 97-3-7(2)(a), which provides, in pertinent part, that:

[a] person is guilty of aggravated assault if he ... (ii) attempts to cause or purposely or knowingly causes bodily injury to another with a deadly weapon or other means likely to produce death or serious bodily harm.4

¶ 8. Ferguson claims that the State presented insufficient evidence to support a finding that he assaulted Barnes with a deadly weapon. He concedes that Barnes testified that he assaulted her with a knife, and a police detective testified that he found a knife at the crime scene. But Ferguson argues that the State needed more than the victim’s testimony to establish that he used the knife, and that the lack of his fingerprints or DNA on the knife undermines Barnes’s testimony.

¶ 9. In Goff v. State, we held that “[a] lack of biological and fingerprint evidence does not preponderate against the verdict so as to sanction an unconscionable injustice.” 5 And in Withers v. State, the appellant argued that a lack of conclusive physical evidence precluded his conviction for statutory rape, and therefore, the trial court committed reversible error by denying his motion for JNOV.6 We rejected Withers’s argument and stated:

Withers’[s] argument about a lack of conclusive physical evidence or eye witness testimony to the actual crime is based upon [an] incorrect assumption that the prosecution needed conclusive evidence in support, of a conviction. Withers is not entitled to give himself the benefit of inferences from alleged conflicts or gaps in evidence.7

Likewise, we conclude that the State was not required to provide Ferguson’s DNA [244]*244or fingerprints on the knife in order to present sufficient evidence to support his conviction for aggravated assault.

¶ 10. Also, it is well established that a person may be found guilty based on nothing more than the uncorroborated testimony of a single witness.8 Here, the State introduced more evidence than the uncorroborated testimony of a single witness. A police detective testified that he found a knife on the floor of the closet during his investigation. Dr. Couvillon, who performed Barnes’s initial medical evaluation, further corroborated Barnes’s testimony, opining that the lacerations on Barnes’s face were consistent with knife wounds.

¶ 11. Reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, we must conclude that the evidence presented at trial sufficiently supported a finding that Ferguson assaulted Barnes with a knife.

The trial court did not err by refusing to grant jury instruction D-3.

¶ 12. The trial judge denied jury instruction D-3, which read as follows:

The Court instructs the jury that the accused, is competent to testify as a witness on his own behalf, and that the testimony of James Marco Ferguson, should be considered as that of any other witness you have heard in this case and given such weight, faith, and credit you think proper.

Our well-settled standard of review of a trial judge’s decision to refuse certain jury instructions is abuse of discretion, and

jury instructions are to be read as a whole, with no one instruction to be read alone or taken out of context. When read together, if the jury instructions state the law of the case and create no injustice, then no reversible error will be found.”9

¶ 13. Also, we have held that a defendant is

entitled to have jury instructions given which present his theory of the case; however, this entitlement is limited in that the court may refuse an instruction which incorrectly states the law, is covered fairly elsewhere in the instructions, or is without foundation in the evidence.10

¶ 14.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 So. 3d 240, 2014 WL 465700, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-state-miss-2014.