Otha Taylor v. Walter Riddle, Superintendent

563 F.2d 133, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11192
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 13, 1977
Docket76-2451
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 563 F.2d 133 (Otha Taylor v. Walter Riddle, Superintendent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Otha Taylor v. Walter Riddle, Superintendent, 563 F.2d 133, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11192 (4th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:

The petitioner-appellant, a state prisoner convicted of murder, seeks habeas relief, claiming that certain exculpatory statements made by him and admitted in evidence over his objection were obtained in violation of his Miranda rights. The District Court dismissed the petition. We affirm.

The crime of which the petitioner was convicted was singularly brutal. On Saturday, August 30, 1969, an eighty-five year old man, Samuel Campbell, was savagely beaten to death by blows on his head. When he failed to come as usual to his sister’s home for Sunday dinner, the sister went to his house in order to ascertain the reason for his absence. She found his body in a pool of blood. Some of the blood had dripped through the floor into the basement below. There was no bed linen on his bed *135 but obviously at the time of his death the deceased was preparing to go to bed. The sister noticed blood spattered about the room. The bed linen was found in the room, bundled up and covered with blood. In the basement was a mop, which had blood on it, indicating it had been used in an attempt to wipe up the blood.

The petitioner lived in the house with the deceased. Witnesses placed him in the house during the Saturday of the murder. A search of his room at the house revealed the gun of the deceased, with blood all over it, under the pillow in the petitioner’s room. Whether at this time or later, the petitioner’s jacket, pants and socks were located, spattered with blood, is not clear. All of the blood on the petitioner’s clothes and gun, as well as the blood on his fingernails, corresponded in type to that of the deceased.

A bulletin was issued by the law enforcement officers for the apprehension and arrest of the petitioner. He was arrested by a City Police Officer of Roanoke (Virginia) on September 1,1969. No issue is raised of the propriety of petitioner’s arrest. After he was arrested, the petitioner was promptly taken before the Judge of the Municipal Court, was given his Miranda warnings, and advised of the charges against him. No request for any information was made of him by the officers; nor did he say anything. Specifically, he made no request for counsel. Shortly afterwards the County Sheriff arrived at the municipal police station and custody of the petitioner was turned over to the Sheriff, who proceeded to place him in a patrol car for transportation to the county jail. When he was placed in the car, the Sheriff gave him again the Miranda warnings. The petitioner made no request for counsel, and made no statement of any kind. As they rode to the county jail, the Sheriff and the petitioner engaged in some general conversation but it was unrelated to the charges against the petitioner.

It is manifest that up to this point, the petitioner’s Miranda rights had been scrupulously observed by the officers. There had been no coercion of any kind and no pressure to induce the petitioner to make any statement. After he had been brought to the county jail and while he was being processed, the Sheriff was called to the telephone in an adjoining room. While there, he was told by another officer that there appeared to be blood on the petitioner’s fingernails. When the Sheriff returned to the processing room, he commented to the petitioner that there appeared to be blood on his fingernails. 1 His statement was phrased in the form of a simple declaration, not an interrogation, though he no doubt expected some response by the petitioner. The petitioner immediately proceeded to explain that he had gotten blood on his fingernails while he had been “attempting to help Mr. Campbell change the linen on his bed.” He added that, despite the blood on Mr. Campbell and about the room, he went to bed when he was unable to locate any linen for the deceased’s bed. The Sheriff then, in some amazement, said “[d]o you mean to tell me that you went to bed after seeing all the blood on Mr. Campbell?” The defendant answered, “[yjou’ve done asked me a question I can’t answer.” Without any further attempt to inquire into the presence of blood on the accused’s fingernails, the Sheriff turned to an entirely different subject and inquired about the deceased’s gun found in petitioner’s room, covered with blood. The petitioner’s response was that he had taken the gun from under the deceased’s pillow because of his fear that the deceased might shoot him with it. He added that Mr. Campbell was “all right when he left him to go to bed” and that he slept in his room all night thereafter, leaving the house the next morning without looking in on him.

The petitioner bases his claim to relief on the thesis that his exculpatory statements made during his conversation with *136 the Sheriff at the jail, were impermissible as violative of his Miranda rights. His position seems to be that an accused who remains silent, after being given his Miranda warnings, signifies his election to remain silent and may not thereafter be questioned in any way without proof of a clear intelligent and understanding waiver of his right to remain silent. The difficulty with the petitioner’s argument lies in his position that waiver of the right to remain silent may not be implied from conduct but must be affirmatively declared. This argument is contrary to our ruling in Blackmon v. Blackledge (4th Cir. 1976) 541 F.2d 1070, 1072, 2 that where an accused is informed and understands his Miranda rights, and then submits to questioning without objection, he has waived his rights thereunder. That decision is in line with the decisions in other Circuits 3 and followed the ruling by the Supreme Court in Michigan v. Mosley (1975) 423 U.S. 96, 101-3, 96 S.Ct. 321, 46 L.Ed. 313. 4 Nor is there any magic, as the petitioner seems to assume, in the period of time between the giving of the Miranda warnings and the questioning. That again was made clear in Michigan v. Mosley, supra. The critical issue is, as Mr. Justice Stewart stated in Mosley, whether the “person’s ‘right to cut off questioning’ ” was observed. 5

Certainly the admission of the first part of the petitioner’s exculpatory statements was not violative of his Miranda rights. He had been silent after he had been given his Miranda warning, not once but twice. He made no request for an attorney; he did not indicate a desire to exercise his right to remain silent. When the Sheriff was told of the blood on the petitioner’s fingernails, he commented to the petitioner on that fact. It was a natural comment under the circumstances. The petitioner had been arrested for murder. That murder was committed with a blunt instrument, resulting in a great loss of blood by the deceased. The presence of blood on the petitioner’s fingernails necessarily excited the interest of the Sheriff.

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Bluebook (online)
563 F.2d 133, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otha-taylor-v-walter-riddle-superintendent-ca4-1977.