Garden v. State

815 A.2d 327, 2003 Del. LEXIS 58, 2003 WL 177167
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 24, 2003
Docket125, 2001, 162, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 815 A.2d 327 (Garden v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garden v. State, 815 A.2d 327, 2003 Del. LEXIS 58, 2003 WL 177167 (Del. 2003).

Opinion

WALSH, Justice:

This is a direct appeal from the Superior Court’s imposition of a sentence of death upon the appellant, Sadiki Garden (“Garden”). Garden challenges his convictions on various procedural and evidentiary grounds but also asserts that the trial judge erred in overriding the jury’s recommendation in the weighing phase of the punishment determination. While we find no error in the guilt phase, we conclude that the trial judge erred in his consideration of the weight to be given to a jury’s determination that the aggravating factors did not outweigh the mitigating circumstances. Accordingly, we affirm Garden’s convictions but reverse the imposition of the death penalty and remand this matter to the Superior Court to permit the trial judge to apply the appropriate standard for override of a jury’s recommendation in a capital case.

I

Garden was indicted for a series of offenses arising from the December 17, 1999 robbery of Vince Marge and Karen Hama as well as the December 18, 1999 attempted robbery of John Weilbacher, Stephanie Krueck, and Denise Rhudy. The latter incident resulted in the murder of Denise Rhudy. These crimes, committed on successive days and following the same pattern, occurred in a parking lot behind the Bottlecaps restaurant located on Eighth Street in Wilmington, approximately a block away from Garden’s apartment.

Three individuals were implicated in all of these crimes, Garden and two codefend-ants, Christopher Johnson (“Johnson”) and James Hollis (“Hollis”). Both Hollis and Johnson entered into plea agreements with the State and testified against Garden at trial. Garden’s defense below was identity. He challenged the credibility of Hollis and Johnson as well as the reliability of the eyewitnesses who testified that Garden was the one who shot Denise Rhudy. Garden maintained that the only crimes he was guilty of involved use of credit cards stolen during the December 17 robbery.

The evidence at trial proved the following sequence of events. On the night of December 17, Garden picked up Hollis and Johnson in a minivan and the trio drove around, eventually returning to Garden’s apartment. Garden and Johnson, who was armed with a handgun, then decided to go looking for someone to rob. Hollis, an amputee who walks with crutches, remained in the apartment. Garden and Johnson walked around the area searching for victims. They came upon Vincent *332 Marge and Karen Hama in a parking lot at Eighth and Orange Streets. Johnson, the gunman, demanded money from Marge and Hama while Garden stood watch. After taking Marge’s wallet and Hama’s purse the pair ran back to Garden’s apartment. Garden, Johnson, and Hollis then went shopping using the stolen credit cards, first stopping at a gas station, then going to Walmart.

The next night, December 18, Garden again picked up Hollis and Johnson, and the three spent the evening driving around, drinking and smoking marijuana. Eventually, they decided to try their hand at robbery again, and they returned to the same area near Garden’s apartment. This time, Hollis stayed in the car while Johnson and Garden, who was now carrying the gun, went looking for potential robbery victims. Johnson and Garden came upon Weilbaeher, Krueck and Denise Rhudy who had just parked, in the lot at Eighth Street and were about to go to Bottlecaps.

As Krueck and Weilbaeher were getting out of the vehicle, Garden approached them, pointed the gun, and demanded money. Johnson hung back, acting as a lookout. Both Weilbaeher and Krueck responded that they did not have any money. Garden then leaned in the front of the car, on the passenger side, and confronted Denise Rhudy, who was still sitting on the driver’s seat. .When Rhudy, too, refused to give Garden any money, he shot her twice. One bullet struck her in the chest and the other in the neck. Either shot would have been fatal and Denise Rhudy died at the scene.

Johnson ran off as soon as he heard the gunshots. Garden, too, started to run away but then stopped, turned, and fired one shot at Krueck before running to join Johnson and Hollis. The bullet went through Krueck’s jacket, but did not hit her. The three men then drove to a party. Police apprehended Hollis, Johnson, and Garden three days later. At trial, Garden was acquitted of the attempted murder of Stephanie Krueck, but convicted of all other charges stemming from the events of December 17 and 18.

At Garden’s trial, Krueck and Weilbacher testified that Garden was the individual who shot Denise Rhudy. Both testified to a high degree of confidence in their identification of Garden as the shooter. To attack these identifications, Garden submitted expert testimony on the unreliability of eyewitness identification, particularly cross-racial identification, as occurred here. The trial court admitted the bulk of the expert’s testimony, but refused to allow him to testify that the degree of confidence an eyewitness espouses has no relationship to its accuracy. The trial court also refused to instruct the jury that they could consider the cross-racial nature of an eyewitness identification in evaluating the accuracy of that evaluation.

In addition to various robbery and weapon charges, Garden was convicted of one count of intentional murder and one count of felony murder arising out of the robbery charge. Following the guilty verdicts, a penalty hearing was conducted. The jury was instructed, as required by 11 Del. C. § 4209(e)(2), that a statutory aggravating factor had been established by its verdict that the murder was committed during an attempted Robbery First Degree. The jury was instructed to weigh all aggravating factors against mitigating circumstances and recommend for or against the death penalty. As instructed, the jury determined unanimously, and beyond a reasonable doubt, that the State had established a statutory aggravating factor. The jury also found, by a vote'of 10 to 2 that, as to the Intentional Murder count, the “aggravating circumstances did not outweigh the mitigating circumstances.” As *333 to the Felony Murder charge, the jury reached the same result with a vote of 9 to 3.

After conducting his own analysis of the circumstances of the offenses and the defendant’s character, the trial judge declined to follow the jury’s recommendation and imposed the death penalty. This appeal followed.

II

Garden contends the charges stemming from the December 17 robbery and credit card use should have been severed from the charges stemming from the December 18 crimes. Garden argues that the decision to try these charges together caused him substantial prejudice because it affected his decision not to testify in his own behalf. Garden claims that he would have testified in his own behalf as to the murder charge, but for the fear that the State would then introduce the fact that he initially lied to police regarding the events of December 17, but later confessed. The trial court denied Garden’s pretrial motion to sever, finding that the events of December 17 and 18 were part of the same robbery scheme and that evidence of the December 17 crimes would be admissible in his trial for the December 18 murder and vice versa, so no prejudice resulted. State v. Garden, 2000 WL 33114325 (Del.Super.Nov.1, 2000). The State asserts that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Garden’s motion to sever.

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Bluebook (online)
815 A.2d 327, 2003 Del. LEXIS 58, 2003 WL 177167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garden-v-state-del-2003.