Jon S. Miller, Cross-Appellee v. Richard L. Dugger, Cross-Appellant

838 F.2d 1530, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 3054, 1988 WL 12732
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 10, 1988
Docket86-3405
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 838 F.2d 1530 (Jon S. Miller, Cross-Appellee v. Richard L. Dugger, Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jon S. Miller, Cross-Appellee v. Richard L. Dugger, Cross-Appellant, 838 F.2d 1530, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 3054, 1988 WL 12732 (11th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

KRAVITCH, Circuit Judge:

I.

Jon Miller, the petitioner and appellant in this case, was released from jail in Lee County, Florida, on December 22, 1970. 1 That afternoon, Miller took a taxi driven by Margaret Louise Sessions from downtown Fort Myers to Fort Myers Beach. At the Beach Marina, Miller purchased from Stan-di Ollis a stainless steel fillet knife with a six- to eight-inch blade. Miller’s behavior raised suspicions in Ollis, who described Miller as “sort of wild looking,” and in Darrell Coleman, who witnessed the purchase. Coleman decided to follow Miller as he walked across a bridge from Beach Marina to the beach, back across the bridge to the marina, into the Surf Club bar, and finally into another bar called the Mermaid Club. While Miller was in the Mermaid Club, Coleman telephoned the sheriff’s office.

About fifteen minutes later, Miller left the Mermaid Club and got into the back seat of a taxicab driven by Alexandra Todd. Todd drove the cab across the bridge to a trailer that served as the taxicab office, where she and Miller changed cabs. Todd then drove Miller towards Fort Myers. Coleman attempted to follow the taxi, but he was thwarted by traffic, so he went back to the taxicab office to alert the manager, Todd’s husband. Todd’s husband tried to contact Todd by radio, but she did not respond.

That evening Todd’s body was discovered inside her taxi in a parking area near the Lee County Commodity Warehouse. The police found Todd’s body on the right (passenger) side of the front seat. An autopsy revealed that Todd had been stabbed several times in the front and back; one of the stab wounds was six inches deep. Tests disclosed the presence of fresh sperm inside Todd’s vagina. Although the police did not find the murder weapon or any clothing that might have belonged to Miller, they did discover Miller’s palmprint on the steering wheel of the taxicab.

Meanwhile, at about 5:55 P.M. that same afternoon, Miller walked out of a wooded area near Gibson’s Department Store in Fort Myers and approached Joe Roberts in the store’s parking lot. Miller was not wearing a shirt at the time. Miller gave Roberts five dollars and asked him to purchase a T-shirt for him. Roberts did so and then gave Miller a lift into downtown Fort Myers.

Approximately three hours later, Officer Charles Enderle arrested Miller in the Fort Myers bus station. Miller’s clothes were removed at the Lee County jail. His trousers had a large amount of blood on the upper legs; paper money in the pockets also was stained with blood. 2 Enderle testified that at first Miller behaved normally, but at the jail Miller repeatedly told the police that an atomic bomb was about to explode.

Miller was interrogated by David Schmir-ier, an investigator in the State Attorney’s Office, and by Sergeant Harry Morse, of the Lee County Sheriff’s Office. 3 Morse administered Miranda warnings to Miller. Miller first stated, “I receive the vibrations, I mean I received the — the general attitude, and I — and I understood that I could *1533 remain silent, but I understood your attitude, and I — I decided I’d like to [inaudible].” Miller then acknowledged that he understood the rights. Miller proceeded to answer some questions asked by Morse, but his answers for the most part were “Yeah” or “Uh huh.” Later, however, when Morse reminded Miller of his rights, Miller appeared confused and disoriented. As Schmirler and Morse pressed Miller into signing a form stating that he understood his rights, Miller became more passive and uncooperative. Miller did tell the questioners that he remembered taking a taxicab to Fort Myers Beach, having a few drinks, getting into a taxicab driven by a woman, and changing cabs. Miller did not remember anything else that happened until he woke up in a puddle of water, walked to a parking lot, met a young man whom he asked to buy T-shirts for him, and hitchhiked into Fort Myers.

After his indictment for the murder of Alexandra Todd, Miller was adjudicated incompetent to stand trial and was confined for two and one-half years at the Florida State Hospital. 4 On December 14, 1973, the Florida trial court adjudicated Miller competent to stand trial. At trial, Miller relied principally on the defense of insanity. When the state sought to introduce a tape of the statement that Miller had made to Schmirler and Morse during their interrogation of him on the night of Todd’s murder, defense counsel objected because Miller “could not knowingly and voluntarily ...,” whereupon counsel was cut off by the trial court. A few minutes later, defense counsel again objected to the introduction of the tape. The following discussion ensued:

MR. GRACE [Defense Counsel]: If it please the Court, I would be willing to call the officers, Chuck Enderle and Officer Hawkins at his point for the purpose of showing that he didn’t understandingly waive his rights.
THE COURT: This question of voluntariness is a question, if it appears to be voluntary, it’s not a question for the Court, it’s a question for the jury to determine whether or not it’s voluntary; and I think prima facie the State has laid a proper case to introduce this statement, whatever it may be. Prima facie it appears to the Court that whatever was done was voluntary after the full Miranda warning. And I’m going — I think this is a question to be presented to the jury.
MR. COUSE [Prosecutor]: We’d be glad to play the tape for Your Honor if Your Honor would like to hear it prior to ruling on it.
THE COURT: We’re going to have to play it in the absence of the jury in order for us to — .
MR. GRACE: If it please the Court, my objection is going to whether or not the man could freely and voluntarily, assuming therefore he understood it, whether or not he knew what he was doing at the time he said all these things to Sergeant Morse.
THE COURT: Isn’t that a question for the jury?
MR. GRACE: No, sir. No, that’s a question for the Judge, whether he made it freely and voluntarily. Therefore, I would like to call witnesses to show that he wasn’t — .
THE COURT: You can call those witnesses. I think it’s primarily a question *1534 for the jury under proper instructions of the Court. I think prima facie that the State had laid the proper predicate as far as voluntariness is concerned. The ultimate question is for the jury to decide. I think that it is a question for the Court to determine if it’s prima faciely [sic] made and then it becomes a question for the jury. And I rule that it has been made.

The tape of Miller’s statement was played to the jury. Miller also testified on his own behalf. He stated that he had called a cab to the Mermaid Club on Fort Myers Beach, had entered the cab, and had changed cabs with the driver.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
838 F.2d 1530, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 3054, 1988 WL 12732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jon-s-miller-cross-appellee-v-richard-l-dugger-cross-appellant-ca11-1988.