Thomas v. Commonwealth

864 S.W.2d 252, 1993 Ky. LEXIS 77, 1993 WL 409975
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1993
Docket88-SC-375-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 864 S.W.2d 252 (Thomas v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Commonwealth, 864 S.W.2d 252, 1993 Ky. LEXIS 77, 1993 WL 409975 (Ky. 1993).

Opinions

LEIBSON, Justice.

On March 1, 1987, Grace Back, a 75-year old widow living alone on Sugar Branch in Redfox, Knott County, Kentucky, was slashed to death. Her mutilated body was found lying in the road 150 yards from her house. Her house had been burglarized and burned.

The appellant, Alfred Grayson Thomas, and William David Morton, who was sixteen at the time, were separately charged with her murder, and with first-degree arson and first-degree burglary. Shortly before the trial the confederate, Morton, pled guilty to murder. He then testified as the Commonwealth’s key witness at Thomas’ trial in exchange for the Commonwealth’s recommendation of a 30-year sentence in his case. Thomas was found guilty of wanton murder and first-degree burglary; not guilty of arson. He was sentenced to death for wanton murder and to 18 years’ imprisonment for the underlying felony of first-degree burglary.

Morton provided the gruesome details of the slaying. In his pretrial statement he blamed Thomas, not only as the instigator of these crimes, but also as the sole person wielding the knife against the victim. At trial he persisted in his claim that Thomas was the principal malefactor, but he now acknowledged participating in slashing Mrs. Back. Nevertheless, Morton testified it was Thomas who stated that “we gotta kill her,” who first caught up to the fleeing Mrs. Back, and who first slit her throat. Finally, Morton testified that Thomas “just went crazy on her, just cutting her and carving on her.” Thomas did not testify at trial, but, based on his pretrial statements, the defense theory throughout the trial was Thomas, who had claimed he was too drunk to know what happened, was too intoxicated to have a specific intent to burglarize or to be the ringleader in this criminal episode.

The appeal includes 34 separate assignments of error, as follows:

1) Unduly restricting Witness Morton’s cross-examination.

2) Failure to identify Morton’s two juvenile adjudications for burglary at the penalty phase.

3) Failure to provide, prior to trial, details of the Commonwealth’s deal with Morton.

4) Morton’s testimony on cross-examination that he would “take a polygraph” on his trial testimony.

5) The trial court’s instructions and the prosecutor’s argument suggested to the jurors that their verdict was only a recommendation, and there was an automatic appeal.

6) Morton’s testimony was in part the tainted fruit of a violation of the marital communication privilege.

7) Testimony from another witness, Ronnie Thomas, constituted both marital communication and hearsay violations.

8) Failure to provide funds for an independent psychiatrist.

9) Denial of a psychiatric examination for Morton.

[254]*25410) Accomplice testimony was not corroborated.

11) Insufficient evidence to support a verdict of wanton “felony” murder.

12) A wanton murder instruction predicated on the theory appellant assisted another was improper since the indictment charged Thomas with committing the crime alone.

13) Failure to instruct on the defense of intoxication.

14) Failure to instruct on second-degree manslaughter.

15) Failure to instruct on criminal trespass.

16) Use of inflammatory photographs.

17) Evidence used to elicit sympathy for the victim.

18) Prosecutorial misconduct on closing argument at both the guilt and penalty phases.

19-23) Failure to strike disqualified jurors for cause.

24) Failure to grant a change of venue.

25-28) Errors in penalty phase instructions.

29) Improper cross-examination of Thomas’ pastor at the penalty phase.

30) The penalty phase verdict form was improper because it required imposing the death penalty if the jury found an aggravating circumstance.

31) KRS 532.025(2) (b) is an unconstitutional infringement on judicial power because it specifies that the jury shall be instructed after arguments of counsel at the penalty phase of a death penalty case.

32) The death sentence in this case is unconstitutionally disproportional.

33) Young adults and women were unconstitutionally unrepresented in the jury pool.

34) The effect of cumulative errors deprived the appellant of his constitutional right to a fair trial.

The Majority of this Court has concluded that error has occurred with reference to two issues so substantial and prejudicial that the verdict and judgment must be set aside and the case reversed and remanded for a new trial. These issues are: (1) issues 19-23 with references to jury selection, and (2) issue 5 with reference to the verdict being only a recommendation. With regard to the remaining assignments of error, the Majority has concluded that some are unpreserved and the rest involved no error, or at worst, harmless error. Since we deem it necessary to reverse this case for errors occurring during jury selection and use of the term “recommend,” which will be discussed in detail in this Opinion, it is unnecessary to address the arguments being rejected, as we would do if we intended to affirm the judgment.

I. SPECIFIC CLAIMS OF JUROR SELECTION ERRORS

ISSUE 19: Jurors who stated or implied they would favor automatic imposition of the death penalty upon a finding of guilt.

There were three jurors challenged on this ground: Madison Martin, Marvis Short, and Walter Davidson.

Two of them, Madison Martin and Marvis Short, initially responded in a manner suggesting they were firmly committed to the death penalty upon conviction, but upon further questioning the prosecutor elicited from them responses that suggested they could consider all sentencing options. Furthermore, they were not challenged for cause.

However, the bias demonstrated by the answers of the third juror, Walter Davidson, was strong and unequivocal:

“DEFENSE COUNSEL: I believe you indicated that you had an opinion as to what the appropriate penalty would be if he’s found guilty. Was I right in that?
DAVIDSON: Yes, I do.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: What is that opinion?
DAVIDSON: Death.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Would you be able to consider any other penalty or would death be the penalty that you would feel at this point that you would probably vote for, if you were to find him guilty?
DAVIDSON: I definitely would vote for it.
[255]*255DEFENSE COUNSEL: You would definitely vote for death?
DAVIDSON: Yes.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Your Honor, I would challenge this juror.”

The prosecutor attempted a rehabilitation of this juror by eliciting a positive response to further questions whether Davidson could decide a “proper penalty based on evidence that you heard in the penalty phase.”

This juror had indicated a bias so strong that the prosecutor’s questions did not serve to remove the disqualification.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
864 S.W.2d 252, 1993 Ky. LEXIS 77, 1993 WL 409975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-commonwealth-ky-1993.