Jackson v. State

811 P.2d 614, 1991 WL 78890
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 29, 1991
DocketF-88-754
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 811 P.2d 614 (Jackson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. State, 811 P.2d 614, 1991 WL 78890 (Okla. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

LANE, Presiding Judge:

Appellant was convicted of First Degree Murder and sentenced to death after a two stage proceeding in Tillman County District Court, Case No. CRF-88-50. Appellant has raised a number of grounds which he claims warrant relief from this Court, however, we find that because one of the assertions of error requires the reversal of the conviction and a new trial, we need only consider that claim. The relevant facts of the case will be discussed as necessary in conjunction with the effect of the identified error on Appellant’s fundamental rights.

The problem which requires reversal of this case is a simple one; the State failed to comply with the constitutional requirement that all witnesses in capital cases must be endorsed at least two days prior to the beginning of the trial. Okla. Const. Art. 2, § 20. While it is true that many of our rules of criminal procedure are sometimes difficult to follow or to discern the true meaning, the same cannot be said for this very plainly stated right. Such a simple requirement should have been easily carried out. Unfortunately, the State absolutely, and apparently deliberately, failed to endorse one of its most important witnesses.

The case against Appellant was at best, largely circumstantial. The murder victim was twenty-six year old Gloria Jean Jefferson who had been involved in a somewhat tumultuous personal relationship with Appellant for some time. Jefferson was found dead, having been stabbed at least fifty-nine times, with her head severed from her body. There were no witnesses to the crime, no weapon was found and there was no forensic evidence. The evidence linking Appellant to the crime consisted of a shoe found in the road near the body,- a piece of stationary from Appellant’s place of employment, several cigarettes and a beer can in brands like those found in Appellant’s home.

The problem which we must now address concerns the State’s presentation of Juanita Conley, a sixty-one year old school teacher who was also romantically involved with Appellant, during its case-in-chief at trial. At the time of Appellant’s preliminary examination, Ms. Conley was subpoenaed by the defense as an alibi witness. When she was called to the stand, she was expected to testify in conformity with statements that she had previously given to police and to the State’s investigator that Appellant had been at her house the night of the murder and had not gone out all night.

At the preliminary examination, Ms. Conley changed her story dramatically. Instead of establishing the anticipated alibi, Conley testified that Appellant had come to her house at 11:30 on the night of the murder and confessed that he had just killed Jefferson. She testified that she cut Appellant’s dirty socks into small pieces *616 and flushed them down the commode. The next morning, she drove him to a park in Texas near the Red River, where he threw a small paper bag into a trash can.

Despite the apparent value of Conley’s testimony to the State’s case, the State never moved to endorse her as a witness. On July 22, after the preliminary examination, the State filed an Amended Information with no witnesses named. A witness list filed on July 29, after the court granted Appellant’s Motion for Endorsement of Witnesses, did not mention Conley. Approximately three weeks prior to trial, defense counsel asked the prosecutor if he planned to call Conley at trial. The prosecutor replied that he had not decided but that if he did call her, defense counsel could not claim to be surprised since Conley had originally been his witness. When the trial began, there had been no endorsement.

During his opening statement, the prosecutor told the jury that although the case was circumstantial, the testimony of Juanita Conley would tie all the evidence together. This was the first official notice to the defense that the State intended to call Conley.

When Conley was called, counsel for Appellant objected on the grounds that the witness had never been endorsed. He told the court that although he knew the essence of Conley’s testimony at preliminary, when she was not endorsed as a witness, he had made no preparations with regard to any potential cross-examination.

At the in-camera hearing on Appellant’s objection, the State’s argument was based on whether or not Appellant could establish that he was surprised at the existence of the witness. Appellant argued that the rule established by the Constitution was mandatory and that surprise alone was not the determining factor. He told the court that while not surprised per se that the witness existed, he was surprised that she had been called as a witness, thus he was unprepared to continue. He argued that the rule was designed to protect a defendant from being forced to trial without benefit of preparation time.

The trial court held in conformity with the State’s position that because Appellant had prior knowledge of the witness, he could not claim to be surprised. The trial court refused Appellant’s request for a continuance based on the same reasoning.

The trial court committed absolute error when it agreed with the State that the timely endorsement of a witness in a capital case was not necessary if the defendant had previous knowledge that the witness might be called. That is not the rule and that analysis has no place in determining whether or not the provisions of Art. 2 § 20 have been fulfilled. If the rule could be so easily satisfied, the defense could be faced with the prospect of preparing to examine a multitude of witnesses, none of which are endorsed, but all of which are known to him based on the investigation of the case. Prevention of surprise may be important in cases where the witness in question is absolutely unknown to the defendant, but it is equally important with known witnesses. A defendant in a capital case is entitled to know ahead of time who the witnesses against him at trial will be so that he has the opportunity to plan his trial strategy. Important decisions concerning the manner in which the defense will be presented turn on the anticipation of what the State’s evidence will show. If the defendant does not know ahead of time what evidence he is to face, how can he prepare to refute that evidence?

The approach taken by both the trial court and the prosecutor was a simplistic, overly narrow view of the purpose of the endorsement requirement. At trial, the State argued that the rule applied only to the presentation of surprise witnesses, those witnesses whose existence is not known to the defendant until he is confronted by their testimony for the first time in court. On the other hand, Appellant urged that he had a right to be protected from the “surprise” testimony of a known witness. While we do not disagree with the State’s argument, we also find that the position taken by Appellant is equally valid under the law. The endorsement of witnesses as required by both the *617 statutes and constitution of this state protect a defendant from trial by ambush, whether the ambush comes in the form of a previously unknown witness, or merely through the unknown testimony of a known witness.

The United States Supreme Court has held, in connection with a federal law identical to the Oklahoma Constitution, that the two day endorsement requirement is an important right and failure to comply will result in error. In Logan v.

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Related

Bryan v. State
935 P.2d 338 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1997)
Jones v. State
1995 OK CR 81 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1995)
Medlock v. State
1994 OK CR 65 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1994)

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Bluebook (online)
811 P.2d 614, 1991 WL 78890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-state-oklacrimapp-1991.