Scruggs v. State

756 So. 2d 817, 2000 WL 116436
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 1, 2000
Docket1998-KA-01344-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 756 So. 2d 817 (Scruggs v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scruggs v. State, 756 So. 2d 817, 2000 WL 116436 (Mich. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

¶ 1. Robert Scruggs was found guilty by an Alcorn County Circuit Court jury of possession of cocaine with intent to sell. On appeal Scruggs argues that peremptory challenges were used against certain jurors for racial reasons, that evidence of a prior sale of cocaine was improperly admitted, that his offered jury instruction on the elements of the crime should have been substituted for the State's, and that a mistrial should have been declared after a witness referred to an audiotape of the drug sale that was destroyed and was not in evidence. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS
¶ 2. The evidence consistent with the verdict is this. On July 21, 1997, Robert Scruggs and some friends were at a vacant lot in Corinth. On the lot were a large concrete slab and two old couches. Shortly after 5:00 P.M., undercover Ripley Police Officer Jeff Medlin and confidential informant Sherry Day went to the lot and purchased five rocks of crack cocaine from Scruggs using a marked one hundred dollar bill. Scruggs offered to sell them cocaine in powder form as well, but they refused. The sale was monitored by two other officers by the use of a body wire worn by Day. The equipment malfunctioned, and the monitoring officers did not hear nor tape the transaction. Medlin and Day reported back to narcotics agent Jeff Palmer at a post-buy meeting. Palmer received the rocks of cocaine and sealed them in an evidence bag. This is not the offense for which Scruggs was tried, but evidence of it was introduced.

¶ 3. About 37 minutes after the buy, Palmer along with other law enforcement officers went to the vacant lot. Scruggs was sitting on one of the couches. One of the officers, Ron Dickey, testified that when he approached Scruggs, he saw Scruggs drop something behind the couch. Dickey told Scruggs to get on the ground. Scruggs refused. Dickey then took his arm and tried to arrest him. After a struggle, which resulted in the couch being flipped off the concrete slab on which it was resting, Scruggs was handcuffed by Officer Dickey and placed in the patrol car. Another suspect also struggled with police and was arrested.

¶ 4. Dickey informed others about seeing Scruggs drop something behind the couch. Agent Palmer found a paper bag containing smaller packages of powder cocaine and crack cocaine. It was for possession of this cocaine with intent to sell that Scruggs was indicted, tried and convicted. A crack pipe was found on another part of the vacant lot. After Scruggs and the other suspect were transported to the Alcorn County Jail in the patrol car, Dickey found a small package of marijuana in the back seat where Scruggs had been sitting. Dickey turned over the marijuana and the contraband found at the lot to Palmer. The contraband in the paper bag later tested positively as cocaine at the Mississippi Crime Laboratory. Agent Palmer also recovered a one hundred dollar bill from Scruggs, which was identified as the bill that had been given Scruggs for cocaine.

DISCUSSION
Issue I: Peremptory challenges
¶ 5. There were 42 individuals in the jury pool, of whom only three were black. One black member of the pool was struck for cause by the court. Only one of the two other black jurors was reached prior to final selection. The State asked to strike that juror also for cause. A review *Page 820 on the record for that challenge for cause appears. The State alleged that the juror was known to have been arrested and charged with sale of a weapon to a minor, a felony charge. Yet when all jurors were asked about prior felony charges, the juror had not admitted the arrest in the voir dire for this case nor in a previous case tried earlier in the week. The court refused to strike this juror for cause. When the challenges for cause were concluded, the trial judge told the attorneys to proceed with the peremptory challenges, apparently without the court's participation, and to give him a list of acceptable jurors by 10:30 that morning. No objection to that procedure was lodged.

¶ 6. The next section of the transcript is the trial judge's inquiry as to whether the parties had decided upon a jury. They announced that they had, subject to an objection to the use of the State's peremptory challenge on the one black juror. The use of peremptory challenges for racially discriminatory reasons is prohibited. Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 88 (1986). The court stated that no prima facie case of discrimination had been shown, relying on the previous explanation by the State as to why they wanted to strike the juror for cause. The issue of a prima facie case is not resolved by noting the reason for the challenge but usually on whether there is a pattern of selective use of challenges in what might appear to be a race-based manner. Since a peremptory challenge was used against the only black reached in jury selection, and since the trial court accepted the strike because he stated that he knew the reason that it had been made, the appellate issue is whether this reason is either racial on its face or there is sufficient evidence that it was a pretext.

¶ 7. The trial judge is to place on the record the reason why he did not believe the strike was racially motivated. Hatten v. State,628 So.2d 294, 298 (Miss. 1993). That he did, in saying that the refusal to answer inquiries about felony arrest was a proper basis for the strike. Previous case law has upheld challenges that focused on educational background, general demeanor, and family members with criminal backgrounds. Lockett v. State,517 So.2d 1346, 1349 (Miss. 1987). The fact that the prospective juror himself had a criminal background and did not admit it is an adequate racially-neutral reason. The judge obviously did not consider it a pretext, and there is no evidence in the record to indicate that he erred.

¶ 8. Scruggs appears to argue that reasons that would not rise to the level of justifying a strike for cause are also insufficient for a peremptory strike. To the contrary, the two kinds of challenges work together. A proper challenge for cause may not always be accepted by the trial court, but conceptually at least all jurors against whom such challenges are valid should be removed. Therefore peremptory challenges are used against jurors who in one party's belief, whether for good, bad, idiosyncratic, or even puzzling reasons, should be removed from the jury. The key is that the reasons cannot be racially motivated. Chisolm v. State,529 So.2d 635, 639 (Miss. 1988).

¶ 9. We find no error in the trial court's acceptance of this peremptory challenge.

II. Admission of evidence of prior sale
¶ 10. Scruggs made a pre-trial motion to suppress the evidence of the actual sale of cocaine to the undercover officers. To emphasize the factual context for the argument, we point out that this actual sale is not the basis of the prosecution. Scruggs was convicted for possession cocaine with intent to sell at the time of his arrest at the vacant lot, thirty-seven minutes after the actual sale.

¶ 11. Among the arguments that Scruggs made at trial was that the arrest was illegal as not being based on probable cause. Those arguments are not renewed as the appellate brief solely focuses on the interplay of Rules of Evidence 403 and *Page 821 404(b). We confine ourselves to that focus also.

¶ 12. Scruggs alleges that evidence of the actual sale was proof of "other crimes, wrongs or acts," and consequently an adequate basis under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 404(b) must be shown for admission.

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Bluebook (online)
756 So. 2d 817, 2000 WL 116436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scruggs-v-state-missctapp-2000.