Shephard v. State

66 So. 3d 687, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 101, 2011 WL 692906
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMarch 1, 2011
DocketNo. 2009-KA-00112-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 So. 3d 687 (Shephard 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
Shephard v. State, 66 So. 3d 687, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 101, 2011 WL 692906 (Mich. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

ROBERTS, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Alfred Kirkham and Lawonda She-phard were simultaneously tried for aggravated assault before a jury in the Bolivar County Circuit Court. The jury found them both guilty, but Shephard was convicted as an aider and abettor. Kirkham was sentenced to twenty years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC). Shephard was sentenced to fifteen years in the custody of the MDOC with five years suspended. Aggrieved, Kirkham and Shephard appeal. Kirkham argues that the circuit judge erroneously prohibited testimony regarding the reputation of the victim. Kirkham also argues that the cumulative effect of the circuit judge’s comments prejudiced his right to a fair trial. Finding no error as to Kirkham, we affirm. Shephard argues that the circuit judge erred when it denied her motion to sever her trial from Kirk-ham’s after Kirkham, her co-defendant, unexpectedly implicated her. After careful consideration, we find Shephard’s argument with merit. Accordingly, we reverse the circuit judge’s judgment regarding Shephard and remand Shephard’s case for a new trial.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. The events that led to Kirkham’s and Shephard’s convictions for aggravated [689]*689assault took place during June 2007 in Shaw, Mississippi. The catalyst for their convictions was a dispute between Kirk-ham and Fabian Curry regarding damages to Curry’s car. In March 2007, Kirkham’s brother was responsible for some collision damage to Curry’s car. Curry insisted that Kirkham pay $3,500 for the damage. Kirkham felt as though he should not be required to pay for the damages that his brother caused. Even so, Kirkham tried to arrange for his father to pay for the damage to Curry’s car. When he had not received any money from Kirkham’s father, Curry again demanded that Kirkham pay for the damage to his car. Kirkham adamantly refused. On Sunday, June 24, 2007, there was an altercation between Kirkham and Curry. Kirkham testified that Curry shoved him against a wall and demanded that Kirkham pay for the damage to his car. Kirkham also testified that he left on his motorcycle, and Curry ran him off the road.

¶ 3. It is undisputed that, the next day, Kirkham shot Curry in the chest. Curry survived. Curry and Kirkham described two distinctly different versions of events. According to Curry, he was visiting a friend at the Promise Land Apartments. Curry testified that he left his friend’s apartment to go to a store. Curry went on to testify that he saw Shephard outside and heard Kirkham’s motorcycle. In Curry’s version of events, their confrontation became more heated, and Shephard handed Kirkham a pistol that she had gotten out of Kirkham’s nearby car. Curry testified that Kirkham shot him once in the chest. Curry further testified that Kirk-ham tried to shoot him again, but Kirk-ham’s .38-caliber derringer pistol misfired. Curry’s friends arrived shortly afterward and took Curry to the hospital.

¶ 4. Shephard, who was Kirkham’s girlfriend at the time Kirkham shot Curry, testified that Curry and three of Curry’s friends confronted Kirkham. According to Shephard, Curry punched Kirkham in the face. When Shephard tried to intervene, Curry threatened her too. Shephard testified that Curry implied that he and his friends would arm themselves with pistols. Shephard went on to testify that her aunt attempted to intervene, and during the commotion, she heard a shot and saw Curry on the ground. Shephard testified that she did not give Kirkham a pistol. She also testified that there was not a pistol in Kirkham’s car, which she had been driving.

¶ 5. Kirkham testified in his own defense. His version of events was similar to Shephard’s. Like Shephard, Kirkham testified that Curry punched him in the face and “dashed” beer on him. Kirkham consistently maintained that Curry was the aggressor and that Curry was supported by three of his friends. Kirkham also testified that immediately before he shot Curry, Curry acted as though he was retrieving a weapon from his pants. According to Kirkham, he shot Curry in necessary self-defense.

¶ 6. Kirkham gave a sworn statement to officers with the Shaw Police Department. In that statement, Kirkham did not state that Shephard handed him a pistol. Instead, he said that he “came up with the gun.” However, at trial, he testified, for the first time, that he asked Shephard to hand him a pistol. He also testified that she complied. According to Kirkham, he did not know who owned that particular pistol, but he was aware that Shephard owned one.

¶ 7. Kirkham was indicted for aggravated assault. Shephard was indicted as an accessory-before-the-fact for aiding and abetting in the aggravated assault. Kirk-ham and Shephard were tried together. Ultimately, the jury found both Kirkham [690]*690and Shephard guilty. The circuit judge sentenced Shephard to fifteen years in the custody of the MDOC with five years suspended. Kirkham, who had previously been convicted of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, was sentenced to twenty years in the custody of the MDOC. Aggrieved, Kirkham and Shephard appeal.

ANALYSIS

KIRKHAM’S ISSUES ON APPEAL

I. COMMENTS BY THE CIRCUIT JUDGE

¶ 8. Kirkham claims that the circuit judge made numerous inappropriate comments throughout the entirety of the trial. Kirkham did not object to any of the comments he mentions. However, in his motion for a new trial, Kirkham argued that the cumulative effect of what Kirkham considers to be the circuit judge’s attempts at levity eroded the seriousness of the proceedings and, in the aggregate, result in reversible error.

¶ 9. According to Kirkham:

Beginning in the [circuit court’s] voir dire and continuing throughout the proceedings, the [circuit] court induced laughter from the courtroom. During the [circuit] court’s voir dire, there was laughter reported in the record [on] ten instances. Although a cold record does not explain the basis for the jocularity, some instances were clearly a response to the [circuit court’s] comments. For instance, when a juror answer[ed] “sometimes” to the [circuit court’s] inquiry of whether [the juror was a] friend [of] one of the lawyers, or went to the lawyer’s home, the [circuit] court jested[,] “[a]re you sometimes personal friend or sometimes go to the home? I’m not sure.”

The record indicates that people in the courtroom laughed at the circuit judge’s comment. Additionally, Kirkham points out that there was laughter in the courtroom when, during voir dire, the circuit judge “remarked, apparently to his clerk, that vernacular terminology had changed since his youth.” Kirkham further draws attention to an instance in which, according to Kirkham, a juror “had difficulty expressing whether his knowledge of the witnesses would affect him.” After the prospective juror had attempted to indicate that he was not a friend of any of the parties involved in Kirkham’s trial, the circuit judge said, “[y]ou are not friends with anybody?” Again, the record indicates that there was laughter in the courtroom.

¶ 10. Kirkham also notes that, during the prosecution’s voir dire, the circuit judge drew laughter from the courtroom when he stated, “Bill went to high school with us, too. Didn’t he Tresa?” Furthermore, Kirkham’s attorney asked the jury panel, during voir dire, whether any members of the panel owned a weapon for personal protection.

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Bluebook (online)
66 So. 3d 687, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 101, 2011 WL 692906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shephard-v-state-missctapp-2011.