Secrest v. State

679 A.2d 58, 1996 Del. LEXIS 213, 1996 WL 310024
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 31, 1996
Docket503, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 679 A.2d 58 (Secrest v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Secrest v. State, 679 A.2d 58, 1996 Del. LEXIS 213, 1996 WL 310024 (Del. 1996).

Opinion

VEASEY, Chief Justice:

In this appeal of a conviction for second degree murder arising out of a motor vehicle collision where the central issue at trial was the identity of the driver, we hold that it was reversible error to admit into evidence, over objection asserting the physician-patient privilege, an admission to a treating emergency room physician by the defendant that he was the driver.

We also hold that the State violated Superior Court Criminal Rule 16 by failing promptly to disclose the substance of the opinions to be offered by its expert witness. In view of the reversal of the conviction and the need for a new trial, we need not decide whether the Rule 16 violation constituted reversible error or whether the Superior Court abused its discretion by refusing to grant a continuance for the defendant to present an expert witness in surrebuttal to counter the State’s rebuttal expert. Nevertheless, for future guidance of trial courts and the Bar, we take this opportunity to address the standards relating to a motion for a continuance. Accordingly, we REVERSE the judgment and REMAND for a new trial.

I. Facts

The defendant, Scott Secrest (“Secrest”), appeals the sentence imposed upon his conviction of second degree murder in the death of his friend, Barry Ashworth (“Ashworth”), in an automobile collision. 1 Secrest survived the accident and was found to have a blood alcohol level of .21%, more than two times the legal limit. The jury heard evidence that the Corvette in which Secrest and Ashworth were traveling reached speeds of over one hundred miles per hour before going into a spin and striking a stone wall. Both occupants were ejected from the car when it struck the wall. Ashworth was pronounced dead at the scene, and Secrest suffered serious injuries.

Secrest contended at trial that Ashworth was driving the car at the time of the accident and that the State could not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Secrest was driving. The State offered testimony from numerous witnesses to show that Secrest was the driver. Carlo Rosauri loaned his 1987 Corvette to Secrest on Saturday, September II, 1993, for repairs on the condition that it be returned by 3:30 that afternoon. When the car was not returned by dinner time, Rosauri reported the car as stolen to the Delaware State Police.

Around midnight that Saturday evening, Secrest drove the Corvette to Bogie’s Pub on Kirkwood Highway, where he met Ashworth and two other companions, Loretta and Scott Ludwig. The four remained at the bar until closing time, when the Ludwigs invited Ash-worth and Secrest to their home. Since Ash-worth knew the way, he joined Secrest in the *60 Corvette. The Ludwigs observed Secrest drive quickly, spitting gravel, from the parking lot of the bar, with Ashworth in the passenger seat. Scott Ludwig last saw the Corvette make a U-turn and go “flying” west on Kirkwood Highway in the direction of Newark.

Patrolmen Anthony Scelsi and Tom Mason of the New Castle County Police Department were working an extra-duty job in the parking lot of Alyson’s Restaurant on Kirkwood Highway that night. They were sitting in their patrol cars talking when they heard the sound of squealing tires.. They noticed a Corvette make a U-turn on Kirkwood Highway and head west toward Newark at a high rate of speed. Both officers joined in pursuit. After driving approximately one mile west on Kirkwood Highway, the officers could no longer see the Corvette. They decided to return to Alyson’s.

Patrick O’Neal was working at a Texaco station on Kirkwood Highway that evening. He noticed a Corvette enter the station around 2:00 am. He remembered two young men standing around the car. One of the men walked to the window and paid two dollars for gas while the other pumped the gas. O’Neal did not see who was driving when the car left the station. He did, however, notice the car leave the station with its tires squealing. A short time later he noticed a police car traveling in the same direction.

As Patrolmen Scelsi and Mason were returning to Alyson’s, Mason noticed a Corvette leaving a Texaco station on Kirkwood Highway. The car stopped at the exit from the station for a few seconds. Mason then heard tires squealing and saw in his rearview mirror the headlights extinguished as the car headed north on the street perpendicular to the Highway. Mason reversed back to the road and pursued the car, perhaps five to ten seconds behind. After continuing north on the road, Mason encountered an “eerie fog.” As he drew closer, he saw pieces of Corvette “everywhere.”

He left his vehicle to search for the occupants. He eventually encountered Secrest lying on the grass to the side of the road with his legs folded underneath. Secrest appeared to be in “very bad shape” and “out of it.” 2

Scelsi arrived at the scene shortly after Mason. While surveying the scene, he discovered the body of Ashworth wrapped around the base of a tree some distance from the wreckage. He detected no signs of life.

Corporal James Rossi of the Delaware State Police also responded to the scene and he spoke with Secrest. He asked Secrest if he was alone, and Secrest responded that he was alone and was the driver. Rossi noticed that Secrest was moaning and drifting in and out of consciousness. 3

Secrest was taken to Christiana Hospital by ambulance. Officer Peter Colyvas of the New Castle County Police arrived at the hospital shortly after Secrest. He went to the treatment room, where Secrest was surrounded by five or six medical personnel. Secrest had been placed in a cervical collar, and the trauma team had inserted intravenous tubes. Colyvas overheard Dr. Linda Weidner ask Secrest whether he had been driving. Secrest responded “yes.”

Dr. Weidner initially treated Secrest at the emergency room. She testified that Secrest said he was driving the car. She also asked Secrest his name, the date and his location. He did not know the date or that he was in the hospital. Dr. Weidner testified that she asked these questions to assess Secrest’s neurological functioning and aid in her diagnosis.

The State presented other witnesses who testified regarding statements made by See-rest. Todd Teder, a friend of Ashworth, telephoned Secrest at the hospital two or three days after the accident. Although he said he could not remember the accident, *61 Secrest told Teder, “I’m really sorry, I didn’t mean it.” Teder again telephonéd Secrest at the hospital a few days later, and Secrest told Teder that Ashworth was driving. Scott Ludwig testified that Secrest, while in the hospital, told him “I’m real sorry I killed your friend.” Susan Smoke testified that she spoke with Secrest by telephone while he was hospitalized. She told him, “I can’t believe you killed my friend.” He responded, “I know.” Finally, a week before trial, the owner of the salvage yard where the wrecked Corvette was stored spoke with Secrest. Secrest told him that he was driving at the time of the accident.

Corporal Joseph Maichle of the County Police testified as an accident reconstruction expert.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
679 A.2d 58, 1996 Del. LEXIS 213, 1996 WL 310024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/secrest-v-state-del-1996.