Larry Wayne McKinley v. Fred Smith, Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections, J.D. White, Warden, Kilby Correctional Center

838 F.2d 1524, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 4095, 1988 WL 12729
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 10, 1988
Docket85-7520
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 838 F.2d 1524 (Larry Wayne McKinley v. Fred Smith, Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections, J.D. White, Warden, Kilby Correctional Center) 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
Larry Wayne McKinley v. Fred Smith, Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections, J.D. White, Warden, Kilby Correctional Center, 838 F.2d 1524, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 4095, 1988 WL 12729 (11th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

This habeas appeal involves a case of child abuse which resulted in death. Petitioner, Larry Wayne McKinley, was convicted of murder after the jury disbelieved his story that he had accidentally dropped his four-month-old stepdaughter onto a concrete floor. The sole question presented in this appeal is whether the state trial court denied petitioner due process of law when it refused to grant his request for funds to retain a pathologist to assist his attorney in interpreting the reports of the county medical examiner. The district court concluded that petitioner received due process and denied his application for a writ of habeas corpus. We affirm.

I.

In the early morning of June 27, 1981, fireman were summoned to petitioner’s room at the Holiday Inn Civic Center in downtown Birmingham, Alabama. Petitioner’s four-month-old stepdaughter, Carrie Joann McKinley, was unconscious. Petitioner told the firemen that he had accidentally dropped Carrie onto the concrete floor of the walkway outside his *1525 room. The firemen took her to a local hospital.

At the hospital, Carrie, still unconscious, was examined by Dr. Linda Norton, the Associate Chief Medical Examiner for Jefferson County, Alabama. Dr. Norton found that the child had been severely bruised around her eyes and cheeks. Carrie died a few days later. After the child’s death, Dr. Norton performed an autopsy to determine the cause of death. At that time, she found additional bruises on the child’s right arm, apparently made by a fist. Dr. Norton concluded that the child died from brain swelling resulting from a massive blow to her head. Dr. Norton issued an autopsy report containing these findings, as well as a report of her earlier examination made while the child was still alive.

On July 10, 1981, petitioner was indicted for murder by a Jefferson County, Alabama grand jury. The trial court declared petitioner indigent and appointed him counsel.

On December 11, petitioner moved the court, pursuant to Ala.Code § 15-12-21(d) (1982) (amended 1984), 1 for funds to employ four experts, only one of which is relevant here. Petitioner’s motion stated:

Comes now the indigent defendant, Larry W. McKinley and moves this Honorable Court for an order allowing him to expend state funds in order to hire ... a pathologist. As grounds for said motion, the following is submitted.
4. There are medical reports [i.e., Dr. Norton’s reports,] concerning the death of the victim which are not within the knowledge of the undersigned counsel and it is necessary to obtain the services of a qualified pathologist or similarly trained expert to aid in the interpretation of said medical reports. 2

The court heard petitioner’s motion on January 29, 1982. At the hearing, petitioner’s attorney merely restated his motion: he needed a pathologist to help him understand what Dr. Norton had written in her reports. The court summarily denied the motion. In doing so, however, it instructed the prosecutor to make Dr. Norton available to defense counsel to explain her reports. In addition, the court informed counsel that he was free to discuss the reports with Dr. Norton’s superior, Dr. Brissie, the Jefferson County Medical Examiner, also a pathologist. The court implied in its ruling that if, after consulting with these pathologists, counsel still could not understand Dr. Norton’s reports, the court would reconsider petitioner’s request that the State provide funds for a pathologist. Petitioner’s attorney never contacted either pathologist. Nor did he ever renew his request for funds.

Petitioner went to trial on February 8, 1982. Dr. Norton was the State’s prime witness. She testified as to the nature of the child’s injuries and the cause of death, as revealed in her autopsy and medical reports. She also rendered an opinion as to how the child sustained her fatal injuries. Contrary to petitioner’s claim, Dr. Norton stated that the child did not die from a fall onto a concrete floor:

Barring the history of the child falling from three or four stories out of the *1526 window, and barring the history of a child being thrown from a moving motor vehicle and coming to rest outside the car, the only other instance where this type or this magnitude of damage occurs is when an adult individual or someone of adult statute [sic] takes a child, picks him up by the feet, the legs, waist and uses this child’s head as the end of a whip with their own shoulders as the fulcrum and slams them down into either a hard surface or onto the floor, or slings them across the room.

Following the prosecutor’s direct examination of Dr. Norton, petitioner’s attorney requested the court to permit Dr. Carl Robinson, a Birmingham attorney and physician who was engaged in the general practice of medicine, to cross-examine Dr. Norton. The court denied the request. The reason for the court’s denial was that Dr. Robinson was not an attorney of record for the defendant. Moreover, he had not been present during the voir dire of the jury; had Dr. Robinson been identified as defense co-counsel at the time the jury was empaneled, one or more of the present jurors might not have been selected. Accordingly, petitioner’s attorney cross-examined Dr. Norton. 3

The State rested its case following Dr. Norton’s testimony. Petitioner then put on his defense, calling several witnesses, including himself. He called Dr. Norton to the stand first, and defense counsel examined her as if she were a hostile witness. He tried to get her to retract her opinion that the injuries could not have been caused by a fall, but he was unsuccessful. Petitioner then took the stand and reiterated what he had told the firemen when they arrived at the Holiday Inn — that the child had fallen. The next witness was the coroner of Jefferson County, Jay Glass, a layman. Glass had seen the child after her death and testified that her bruises could have been caused by a fall. At the same time, however, he agreed with Dr. Norton’s opinion that the cause of death, a swollen brain, could not have been produced by the fall petitioner described in his testimony.

Petitioner’s final witness was Dr. Robinson. He had reviewed Dr. Norton's reports and a tape recording of her trial testimony. Dr. Robinson disagreed with Dr. Norton’s opinion concerning the cause of the brain swelling, and stated that a fall probably caused the victim’s head injuries, as petitioner had claimed. 4

The jury rejected petitioner’s explanation and fo.und him guilty as charged. Petitioner moved the court for a new trial on the ground, among others, that the court had erred in not providing him funds for a pathologist to assist in his defense. 5 The court denied his motion and sentenced him to life imprisonment. Petitioner then appealed his conviction to the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
838 F.2d 1524, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 4095, 1988 WL 12729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larry-wayne-mckinley-v-fred-smith-commissioner-alabama-department-of-ca11-1988.