Metts v. United States

877 A.2d 113, 2005 D.C. App. LEXIS 321, 2005 WL 1413849
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 16, 2005
Docket97-CF-271, 03-CO-849
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 877 A.2d 113 (Metts 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
Metts v. United States, 877 A.2d 113, 2005 D.C. App. LEXIS 321, 2005 WL 1413849 (D.C. 2005).

Opinion

DUNCAN-PETERS, Associate Judge, Superior Court.

On November 25, 1996, Anthony W. Metts was convicted by a jury of one count each of assault with a dangerous weapon, 1 aggravated assault while armed, 2 possession of a firearm during a crime of violence, 3 and carrying a pistol without a license. 4 On January 22, 1997, he was subsequently sentenced to two 8-to-24-year terms, a 5-to-15-year term, and a 3ié -to-10 year term, all to be served concurrently. In a pro se motion to the trial court dated April 17, 1998, Mr. Metts alleged ineffective assistance of trial counsel and requested a hearing under District of Columbia Code § 23-110. 5 A new attorney appointed by the trial court subsequently filed a supplement to that motion, and an amendment to the supplement. 6 In two separate Orders, the trial court denied Mr. Metts’s § 23-110 motion. The second Order was issued only after several extensions of time were granted to permit Mr. Metts time to submit affidavits in support of his motion. Mr. Metts appeals his four convictions along with the trial court’s denial of his § 23-110 motion. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I. Evidence At Trial

At Mr. Metts’s trial, the prosecution presented evidence that on April 11, 1996, Lawrence Baylor and Billy Morton entered Mr. Metts’s place of work, “Big Man’s Barbershop.” At the time, Mr. Baylor was romantically involved with Mr. Metts’s ex-wife, Natalie Bolling. When Mr. Baylor and Mr. Metts began to argue about what Mr. Baylor regarded as Mr. Metts’s harassment of Ms. Bolling, the owner of the barbershop told them to leave. Mr. Baylor then exited the shop. Mr. Metts walked to the back of the shop, retrieved his jacket, and then exited as well. 7 Mr. Morton followed Mr. Metts onto the sidewalk outside.

Once outside, Mr. Baylor and Mr. Metts continued to argue, with Mr. Baylor telling Mi\ Metts to stop harassing Ms. Bolling, and Mr. Metts responding that Mr. Baylor could not tell Mr. Metts what to do. Mr. Metts pulled a handgun out of his jacket and fired one round into Mr. Baylor’s stomach. After being shot, Mr. Baylor ran behind a car, and Mi*. Metts fired another shot, which passed through a window but did not hit Mr. Baylor. Although wounded, Mr. Baylor ran down the middle of the street, jumped on the hood of a *116 passing ear, and was carried from the scene. As Mr. Baylor ran down the street, Mr. Metts fired two more shots, neither of which hit Mr. Baylor. After Mr. Baylor left the area on the hood of the passing car, Mr. Metts drove away in a separate car.

In support of its contention that Mr. Metts shot Mr. Baylor, the government presented the testimony of the following witnesses: (1) Ms. Bolling, who testified that Mr. Metts had threatened and harassed her after their relationship soured, and that “he wasn’t willing to accept the fact that I was with someone else”; (2) Mr. Morton, who was standing “knee close” to Mr. Metts and Mr. Baylor when Mr. Metts pulled a pistol from his jacket and shot Mr. Baylor in the abdomen; (3) Mr. Baylor, who was standing three to four feet away from Mr. Metts when Mr. Metts shot him; (4) Cornell Hill, Sr., who was standing in front of his house, situated “approximately a hundred, 150 feet” from Big Man’s Barber Shop, when he observed the shooting, wrote down the license plate number of the car in which the shooter drove away from the scene, and provided this tag number to the police; 8 (5) Cornell Hill, Jr., Mr. Hill, Sr.’s son, who also was outside the Hill residence, and saw “the barber reach in the waist and pull something out and shoot the heavy set guy, Mr. Baylor”; 9 (6) Tyrone Hill, the brother of Cornell Hill, Sr., who heard shots on the day in question and, from the vantage point of the Hill residence, observed Mr. Metts chasing after Mr. Baylor with “his arm or hand extended like he had something in it”; and (7) John Belmar, a friend of the Hill family, who, also from the vantage point of the Hill residence, observed Mr. Metts shooting a heavyset man, then chasing him down the street. 10

Mr. Metts testified at trial that he did not have a handgun in his possession on April 11, 1996, and that after he stepped out of the barbershop Mr. Baylor instructed Mr. Morton to shoot Mr. Metts. 11 Upon hearing this, he pushed Mr. Baylor and ran away. As he ran, he heard one gunshot.

II. D.C.Code § 23-110 Motion 12

In his pro se Motion to Vacate Sentence and Set Aside Conviction, filed with the trial court, Mr. Metts argued that his trial counsel was ineffective because he: (1) neglected to request that the trial Court instruct the jury not to discuss the case during breaks; (2) failed to inform Mr. Metts about a plea offer; (3) failed to interview and/or call parole officer Michael Johnson as a witness; (4) failed to inter *117 view and/or call Shirley Burnett as a witness; (5) failed to call Anthony Pryor as a witness; 13 (6) failed to move with sufficient zeal for a mistrial after Ms. Bolling, while testifying, made reference to Mr. Metts having been in prison; and (7) failed to present available and favorable character testimony on Mr. Metts’s behalf at trial. Mr. Metts attached written statements from Raymond Reid, Rashida Bell, and Phyllis Metts to the supplement to his motion. In an amendment to the supplement, Mr. Metts asserted that, in addition to presenting the above-named witnesses at a D.C.Code § 23-110 evidentiary hearing, he would show that his trial counsel’s poor health prejudiced his defense.

In her November 15, 2001 Order, the trial judge denied most of Mr. Metts’s claims, but granted him additional time to obtain affidavits from potential witnesses he had named in support of his request for a § 23-110 hearing on his ineffective assistance of counsel claim. In an Order dated July 10, 2003, the trial judge denied Mr. Metts’s § 23-110 motion, on grounds that, despite four extensions of time and the appointment of a “Court Certified Investigator,” Mr. Metts had produced only one affidavit from his five prospective witnesses, which affidavit did not support his claim, and presented no “other credible evidence” warranting a hearing.

On appeal, Mr. Metts argues that the trial court erred: (1) by refusing to declare a mistrial, and by giving the jury an inadequate curative instruction, after Ms. Boll-ing stated during her testimony that Mr. Metts had been in prison; and (2) by declining to hold the requested evidentiary hearing and denying Mr. Metts’s § 23-110 motion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
877 A.2d 113, 2005 D.C. App. LEXIS 321, 2005 WL 1413849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metts-v-united-states-dc-2005.