Hutcherson v. State

243 So. 3d 855
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJuly 7, 2017
DocketCR–15–1166
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 243 So. 3d 855 (Hutcherson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutcherson v. State, 243 So. 3d 855 (Ala. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The appellant, Antonio Dontae Hutcherson, was convicted of burglary in the first degree, a violation of § 13A-7-5, Ala. Code 1975; robbery in the first degree, a violation of § 13A-8-41, Ala. Code 1975; and robbery in the second degree, a violation of § 13A-8-42, Ala. Code 1975. The circuit court sentenced Hutcherson to 20 years' imprisonment for each conviction; these sentences were split and Hutcherson was ordered to serve 5 years' imprisonment followed by 5 years' supervised probation. The sentences were to run concurrently. The circuit court ordered Hutcherson to pay $150 to the crime victims compensation fund.

The record indicates the following pertinent facts.1 In 2014, Henry LaFonda Calhoun *861spent Christmas day with his family in the Crescent East apartments in Tuscaloosa. Around 10:00 p.m., Calhoun went to Dionysius Paige's residence at the same apartment complex. Calhoun had been staying with Paige for several months while Calhoun was separated from his girlfriend. Calhoun slept in a recliner in the living room, Paige slept on the sofa, and Paige's cousin slept in the only bedroom in the apartment.

Sometime during the night, Paige was awakened by a "kicking noise" and opened the front door to determine the source of the noise. (R. 22.) When Paige opened the door, Jonathan Williams, whom Paige only knew as "Munchie," approached the door and asked if Paige had been "with some dude out there." (R. 23-24.) Paige told Williams that he had not "been with anybody doing anything out there earlier that night." (R. 24.) Without any warning, Williams barged into the apartment and began punching Paige in the face. Paige observed more men entering the apartment and fled to the bathroom and locked the door. Inside the bathroom, Paige could hear a "rumbling noise" that sounded like the men were "doing something" to Calhoun. (R. 26.)

Calhoun woke up when he heard Paige arguing with someone at the front door. Calhoun heard Williams "swinging, telling [Paige] he can get some." (R. 47.) Calhoun heard Williams talking about a man named "J5" and asked what was going on. (R. 48.) Williams then turned and punched Calhoun in the eye and Paige ran away to the bathroom. Calhoun, who was lying in the recliner at the time, attempted to get up; however, Williams jumped on him and continued to punch him in the face. Someone else entered the apartment and said, "[w]e got this," and began to punch Calhoun so that Williams could kick down the bathroom door and get to Paige. (R. 50.) A third man told the man who was punching Calhoun to "check his pockets." (R. 50.) The men took $50 in cash and a "[h]alf ounce of reefer" out of Calhoun's pockets. (R. 67.) Calhoun, whose eye had swollen shut from the attack, lost consciousness and woke up on the couch. Calhoun testified that he felt like he might have been hit with an object during the attack. Calhoun telephoned 911; however, he let Paige and Paige's cousin finish the conversation with the 911 dispatcher.

Although Calhoun was unable to see clearly during the attack because of the injury to his eye, he heard one of the men yell repeatedly that, "[w]e got [Calhoun]." (R. 51.) Calhoun testified that he recognized the voice as Hutcherson's voice and said that he was "one hundred percent positive" in his identification. (R. 52.) Calhoun testified that he had known Hutcherson since Hutcherson was a child and that he considered Hutcherson family because Hutcherson's uncle had a child with Calhoun's sister. Calhoun testified that Hutcherson and Williams were very close friends and "[i]f you see one, you see the other one." (R. 60.) Calhoun testified that he saw both of them together earlier on the day of the incident. When asked whether he believed that Hutcherson was in the apartment with Williams during the attack, Calhoun answered that there was "[n]o doubt in [his] mind." (R. 60.)

Following the attack, a bloodstained piece of a cinder block was found in the apartment; the unbroken block had been sitting on a table inside of the apartment before the attack. Calhoun sustained "a knot" on his head and a cut that required several stitches to close. (R. 54.) Calhoun *862testified that his eye was seriously injured and swollen from the attack. Calhoun testified that he was released from the hospital a few hours following the incident but had to return later that day because he "had bleeding on the brain." (R. 55.) Calhoun stated that he still experienced headaches and could only "half see" out of the eye that was damaged in the attack. (R. 55.)

Hutcherson called Williams to testify in his defense. Williams admitted that he was inside the apartment at the time of the attack and said that the only people inside the apartment with him at that time were "Raheem Davis, Dionysius Paige, and Henry Calhoun." (R. 92.)

During the prosecution's cross-examination of Williams, Williams admitted that he had pleaded guilty to the crime. Williams testified that he and Paige got into an argument over gambling on the night of the incident. Williams testified that the argument turned into a physical altercation. According to Williams, the physical altercation started on the front porch and carried into the apartment. Williams said that he punched Paige several times before Paige ran to the bathroom. When Calhoun asked what was going on, Williams turned and punched him in the face several times, including one punch that hit Calhoun's left eye. After attacking Calhoun, Williams kicked open the bathroom door and resumed his attack on Paige.

Williams admitted that he had known Hutcherson from Alberta City for three or four years at the time of the incident. According to Williams, Hutcherson was unconscious about a block away from the apartment on the night of the incident. Williams testified that he and Davis had encountered Hutcherson lying on the curb but were unable to wake him until after they had left Paige's apartment.

After both sides rested and the circuit court instructed the jury on the applicable principles of law, the jury found Hutcherson guilty of burglary in the first degree, robbery in the first degree, and robbery in the second degree. Hutcherson filed a timely motion for a new trial in which he alleged, among other things, that his attorney had rendered ineffective assistance at trial. After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the circuit court issued a written order denying Hutcherson's motion for a new trial. This appeal followed.

I.

Hutcherson reiterates his various claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel raised in his timely motion for a new trial. Specifically, Hutcherson argues that his trial counsel was ineffective because his counsel: failed to request a limiting instruction on Williams's guilty-plea-colloquy transcript; failed to impeach Calhoun with prior inconsistent statements; failed to object to inadmissible evidence; allowed the prosecutor to make improper comments to the jury during closing arguments; failed to object to the use of leading questions by the prosecutor; failed to object to a lack of chain of custody for the cinder block; displayed a lack of preparation and confusion at trial; and allowed improper evidence to be admitted at trial.

" ' " 'It is well established that a ruling on a motion for a new trial rests within the sound discretion of the trial judge.

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Bluebook (online)
243 So. 3d 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutcherson-v-state-alacrimapp-2017.