Giles v. United States

432 A.2d 739, 1981 D.C. App. LEXIS 322
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 8, 1981
Docket79-101
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 432 A.2d 739 (Giles v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giles v. United States, 432 A.2d 739, 1981 D.C. App. LEXIS 322 (D.C. 1981).

Opinions

HARRIS, Associate Judge:

Appellant was charged in a single-count indictment with second-degree murder while armed, D.C.Code 1973, §§ 22-2403, -3202, for the stabbing death of her [741]*741common-law husband. In a jury trial, appellant was convicted of the lesser-included offense of manslaughter while armed. She challenges the trial court’s admission of an out-of-court statement made by the decedent to a co-worker that appellant had stabbed him once before. She also challenges the propriety of the trial court’s cautionary instruction limiting the jury’s use of the hearsay statement to appellant’s state of mind.1 We conclude that the hearsay statement should not have been admitted and that the instruction, as given, was erroneous. Nonetheless, on analysis of all the facts and circumstances of this case, we find the errors to have been harmless. Accordingly, we affirm.

I

In the early morning hours of March 19, 1978, in the apartment which they shared, appellant stabbed her common-law husband, Howard Graves. He died at the scene. Appellant gave inconsistent versions of the events leading up to the killing and of her actions immediately thereafter. Officer Stephen Young arrived at the apartment in response to a radio run shortly after 1:00 a. m. Appellant told him that Graves had been out that evening while she was visiting friends in a neighboring apartment. When Graves returned, she said, “I didn’t notice anything was wrong with him. He sat down on the couch and I gasped and then I noticed that he was cut.” She then volunteered to Young that she and Graves “had been fussing and arguing all night.” She told essentially the same story to Officer David Davis, adding that Graves was her uncle. She repeated this version a third time upon questioning at the scene by homicide detective Warren Donald. After interviewing the neighbors with whom appellant claimed to have spent the evening, Donald advised appellant of her rights and placed her under arrest. She then admitted that the decent was not in fact her uncle but was her common-law husband, “[t]hat they became involved in an argument and she stabbed him.”2

Detective Donald questioned appellant again about two hours later at the homicide office, where she agreed to provide a written statement. In it, she stated that she and Graves were “kind of man and wife.” On that evening, she said, Graves had been out. When he returned after midnight, he asked her for some money so that he could go back out. She ignored his request. “One thing led to another. We started arguing and then fighting and the next thing I knew, I picked up this knife and I stuck Howard with it.” Appellant elaborated:

[742]*742I don’t know who hit who fist, but I know we started struggling. He slapped me a couple times and I hit him a couple times and he pushed me up against the wall and we were in the living room. I ran in the kitchen to get this big stick that I keep there, but the stick was not there. So, I just picked up the next best thing I saw, the knife, and I told him he had better never put his hands on me. He looked at me like he believed that I was playing and he started walking towards me, so, I stuck him in the chest with the knife.

Appellant then fled from her apartment, intending to “run away,” but quickly returned when she remembered that her two-year-old daughter was still there and she realized that “the police would figure out that I did it.” She then went to a neighbor’s apartment where she called for an ambulance.

By the time of trial, appellant had refined her narration in an effort to provide support for her claim of self-defense. She testified that on the evening in question, she and Graves had gone to a party at a neighbor’s apartment across the hall.3 When they returned home, they began arguing about her failure to get his car fixed. Tempers flared. They called each other names; then Graves slapped her “and started choking [her] and banging [her] head up against the wall.” In fact, claimed appellant, Graves choked her so hard that her face became numb and she could not hear.4 She managed to free herself by kicking him in the groin, and ran to the kitchen. She testified:

I didn’t see the stick that I generally keep in the kitchen corner, so I saw the knife laying on the sink and I just picked the knife up and I told him not to come near me. I told him, “Howard, don’t come near me.” And, he kept coming toward me, like this, with his hands like that. I told him not to come near me, and the next thing I just hit him one time with the knife.5

Then, she threw the knife into the sink and turned the water on because she could not stand the sight of blood. After doing that, she ran across the hall to call for an ambulance.6

[743]*743There was no dearth of evidence that the relationship between appellant and Graves had been a stormy one. Appellant testified that they had argued regularly and that, on occasion, their verbal arguments had escalated to the point of physical abuse. The testimony of other witnesses established that the use of force, or threats of force, was not one-sided. Appellant’s brother and sister, Ace and Brenda Williams, and the decedent’s nephew, William Graves, all had witnessed a particular altercation between appellant and Graves. See note 4, supra. All three testified that appellant had held an iron in her hand which, said Brenda Williams, she threatened to throw at Graves. He, in turn, threatened appellant with a bottle of bleach. Brenda Williams was present another time when appellant and Graves “was at each other.” On that occasion, Graves pinned appellant to the bed, holding down her hands. The moment he let go of her, “there was a powder box sitting on the dresser and she picked the powder box up to throw it at him, but the powder flew everywhere.” According to Brenda Williams, Graves retaliated by striking appellant with a belt. On cross-examination, however, she conceded that Graves was not a mean man and did not act mean in the absence of extreme provocation.

II

In the rebuttal portion of its case, the government introduced the testimony of Eugene Thompson, who had been a coworker of the decedent for about three years. Thompson said that he recalled a day in the fall of 1977 when Graves was not using one of his arms. When asked what Graves had told him about the arm, Thompson testified: “Well, he had said that Betty [appellant] had stabbed him in the right arm with a knife and he said he couldn’t raise it up too much. He raised it up, like that, and he said he had to go to the doctor with it.” 7 The trial judge gave an immediate cautionary instruction to the jury, as follows:

Now, members of our jury, we would instruct you that with regard to this evidence, that you receive it also for a limited purpose. You will receive it for [the] purpose of determining motive, intent, and state of mind. You do not receive it and you may not regard it as proof of the fact that Ms. Giles, if you accept that testimony, was guilty of the charge at hand, only as a reflection of her state of mind, her motive and intent.

In her final charge, the trial judge again instructed the jury with respect to Thompson’s testimony:

You have also heard a hearsay report of a prior act of violence by Ms. Giles against Howard Graves.

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Bluebook (online)
432 A.2d 739, 1981 D.C. App. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giles-v-united-states-dc-1981.