Cuzick v. Commonwealth
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
Opinion of the Court by
Appellant, Mark Cuzick, was convicted by a Jessamine County jury of first-degree fleeing and evading, resisting arrest, operating a motor vehicle under the influence, and of being a persistent felony offender. For these crimes, Appellant was sentenced to twenty (20) years imprisonment. He now appeals his judgment and conviction as a matter of right, pursuant to Ky. Const. § 110(2)(b).
Appellant raises four principal allegations of error in the underlying proceeding, to wit: 1) that impermissible testimony was introduced during the sentencing phase of trial; 2) the trial court erroneously permitted narrative testimony to accompany the videos of the police chase; 3) the introduction of the two police chase videos
I. BACKGROUND
Nicholasville police officer Bradley Sapp was driving in a marked police car on December 16, 2006, when he observed Appellantâs car turn south into a northbound lane of traffic, driving the wrong direction. The car came directly at Sapp who veered into the opposite lane to avoid it. Sapp, who was off-duty at the time, turned on his lights, turned on the in-car camera, and began pursuit of Appellant.
Sapp caught up with Appellant, who stopped while still facing against oncoming traffic, and pulled behind him. As Sapp exited his vehicle and began to approach Appellantâs car, Appellant sped away into oncoming traffic. Sapp resumed pursuit, traveling parallel to Appellant in the correct lane and with a spotlight trained on Appellantâs car.
Officer Jason Faddasio and Corporal Michael Fleming responded to Sappâs radio request for assistance. As Fleming arrived in the vicinity, he saw Appellant driving toward him in the wrong lane. Appellant then cut across a steep grass median. All three patrol ears fell in line in a high-speed chase of Appellant. The pursuit continued for approximately three to four miles and reached speeds in excess of eighty-five (85) miles per hour, during which time Appellant was driving erratically and weaving from side to side.
Sapp attempted to execute a ârolling roadblockâ maneuver on Appellant, whereby he positioned his cruiser in front of Appellant and applied the brakes, attempting to slow his vehicle. Appellant, however, veered around Sapp and sped past.
Appellantâs automobile eventually began to smoke from beneath the hood, whereupon he coasted to a halt at a red light in the emergency lane. The three officers then exited their cars with guns drawn and approached Appellantâs car, ordering him to exit the vehicle. Appellant was on his cell phone at the time and ignored the officersâ orders. They ordered Appellant to exit the vehicle three to four more times, and when he would not comply, the officers forcibly removed him from the car.
Appellant was subsequently arrested, charged and tried by a Jessamine County jury. He was found guilty of fleeing/evading police, resisting arrest, driving under the influence and of being a first-degree persistent felony offender, and sentenced to twenty (20) years imprisonment.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Evidence of Prior Burglary Conviction Did Not Exceed Scope of Truth in Sentencing Statute.
In his first allegation of error, Appellant argues that the trial court erred by allowing the Commonwealth to read to the jury, from a 1993 uniform citation, the substance of a prior burglary conviction. Appellant claims that by reading the description of the offense, and in particular mentioning that Appellant used a baseball bat to break the glass on the front door of a commercial building to gain entry, the Commonwealth
During his sentencing phase, the Commonwealth introduced a 1993 uniform citation, among others, as a penalty phase exhibit for the purposes of establishing Appellant as a persistent felony offender. In so doing, the Commonwealth read the following from the citation: â1998 burglary third. Fayette County. Subject utilized a baseball bat. Broke the glass of the front door of Autosound in Lexington and took several items of value. Used force to enter a business and steal from that business.â Appellant argues that by disclosing this information, the Commonwealth went beyond describing the ânatureâ of the offense as permitted in KRS 532.055.
KRS 532.055(2)(a)(2) allows the Commonwealth to introduce relevant evidence of â[t]he nature of prior offenses for which he was convictedâ during sentencing. This Court has held that the type of evidence which may be admitted during the persistent felony offender stage of a bifurcated trial should serve to establish the elements necessary for demonstrating the statutory requirements of being a persistent felony offender. Pace v. Commonwealth, 636 S.W.2d 887, 890 (Ky.1982) (overruled on other grounds by Commonwealth v. Harrell, 3 S.W.3d 349 (Ky.1999)).
We have routinely noted that the Commonwealthâs Truth in Sentencing statute has the overriding purpose of providing the jury with information relevant to delivering an appropriate sentence. See, e.g. Williams v. Commonwealth, 810 S.W.2d 511, 513 (Ky.1991). In that vein, we have held that, generally, this goal can be accomplished while limiting the description of the ânature of a prior convictionâ to a âgeneral description of the crime.â Robinson v. Commonwealth, 926 S.W.2d 853, 855 (Ky.1996).
In Robinson, the Court, by way of demonstration, points to Williams â[a]s an example of the type of evidence that would be admissible ... [and] would be the right type of evidenceâ for demonstrating the ânatureâ of the prior offense. Robinson, 926 S.W.2d at 855.
Rejecting the proposition of establishing a bright line rule as to what the permissible limits of a âgeneral descriptionâ should be, we have held that excessive and protracted testimony which attempts to retry the prior crimes will not be allowed. See id. at 854-855 (finding error where the victim of a prior crime was permitted to testify extensively and at length concerning her injuries and the circumstances surrounding the crime); see also Pace, 636 S.W.2d at 890 (finding error when Commonwealth introduced extensive testimony and âgruesome factsâ about prior felonies and also introduced irrelevant physical evidence during sentencing); Hudson v.
Given this Courtâs endorsement of the theory of an enlightened and well-informed jury in evaluating proper penalties, Mabe v. Commonwealth, 884 S.W.2d 668, 672 (Ky.1994), and the General Assemblyâs intent in ensuring an enlightened jury through KRS 532.055, the Truth in Sentencing statute, Boone v. Commonwealth, 780 S.W.2d 615, 616 (Ky.1989) (quoting Commonwealth v. Reneer, 734 S.W.2d 794, 797 (Ky.1987)), it would seem both counterproductive and illogical to hold that any recitation of facts from the offense is disallowed in describing the general nature of the prior crime. Here, the Commonwealthâs description of the nature of the prior offense was limited solely to the information contained on the citation, namely that Appellant utilized a bat to commit the breaking aspect of the burglary. We do not believe such information runs afoul of even the most stringent and limited interpretations of our intent to keep prior convictions from being retried during the penalty phase.
As a cautionary note we add that, by upholding the admissibility of the information contained on the citation in this case, we do not create a rule that the contents of a citation or other charging document are always admissible during penalty phase. We know that such documents may contain inaccurate or misleading information, as well as information inconsistent with the final judgment. So long as the information is limited to a fair, accurate and general description of the nature of the prior offense, it comports with KRS 532.055 and may be considered by the jury. Here, the testimony merely served to provide a general description of the nature of the prior offense as permitted by KRS 532.055(2)(a)(2). See Robinson, 926 S.W.2d at 855.
Contrary to the dissentâs assertion, Hudson does not announce a bright line rule and we have no intention of overruling any part of it. Indeed, this Court has consistently rejected formulating a bright line rule, opting instead for the more workable flexibility of the rule announced in Robinson, which is that it is permissible to offer a general description of the nature of the prior conviction.
Nor, as the dissent suggests, does Hudson offer up a blanket prohibition of reading from warrants or citations. In fact, all that is clear from the very scant description of the offending testimony in that instance is that it âwas clearly beyond the limitation set forth in Robinson.â Hudson, 979 S.W.2d at 110. Hudson plainly defers to the rule announced in Robinson and so shall we here. There was no error.
B. Narration of the Police Chase Videos.
Appellantâs next argument, which is un-preserved, is that the trial court should not have allowed two police officers to narrate videos played during their trial testimony â the substance of the videos having been captured from cameras mounted in their cruisers depicting the highspeed pursuit of Appellant as he attempted to flee. Appellant alleges that by supplementing the playing of the video tapes at court with narrative testimony his due process rights were denied and thus his conviction must be reversed. We disagree.
Likewise, Officer Bradley Sapp testified in much the same manner. However, the focus of Sappâs testimony was from the perspective of the video obtained from his cruiserâs camera and events relevant to his pursuit. The substance of his testimony highlighted a bumper to bumper incident, which was not on the video tape, and followed a similar question and answer format describing the events taking place on the video. It is significant to note, however, that every statement by both Fleming and Sapp was in direct response to a question asked by the Commonwealth and was describing the actions as they perceived them at the time of the chase.
Appellant points out that no Kentucky case law directly addresses whether an officer can narrate audible video tapes. However, we find that this Courtâs prior rulings concerning crime scene videos and inaudible tapes lend guidance to the issue.
In Mills v. Commonwealth, 996 S.W.2d 473 (Ky.1999), we addressed the issue of whether a police officerâs narrative testimony during the playing of a crime scene video was improper lay testimony. We determined, in Mills, that the proper query for such narrative testimony was whether it complied with KRE 701 and KRE 602. KRE 701 limits testimony by a witness not testifying as an expert to matters â(a) [r]ationally based on the perception of the witness,â and â(b) [hjelpful to a clear understanding of the witnessâ testimony or the determination of a fact in issue.â Moreover, KRE 602 further refines the scope of permissible lay opinion testimony, limiting it to matters of which the witness has personal knowledge. Thus, reading these two requirements in conjunction, we determined that the narration of the video was proper because it âcomprised opinions and inferences that were rationally based on [the officerâs] own perceptions of which he had personal knowledgeâ and âwas helpful to the jury in evaluating the images displayed on the videotape.â Mills, 996 S.W.2d at 488.
Additionally, we have allowed narrative testimony from in court witnesses providing âsimultaneous commentaryâ of crime scene video, see Milburn v. Commonwealth, 788 S.W.2d 253, 257 (Ky.1989), whereas we have found error in pre-re-corded narrative video when such narration contained inadmissible hearsay. See Fields v. Commonwealth, 12 S.W.3d 275, 280 (Ky.2000). Thus, the common thread uniting our decisions on narrative-style testimony of audio and video evidence is that such testimony, like any other, must comport with the rules of evidence.
Therefore, the fulcrum of the matter upon which this issue turns, is whether the witness has testified from personal knowledge and rational observation of events perceived and whether such information is helpful to the jury. In short, does the testimony comply with the rules of evidence? While a witness may proffer narrative testimony within the permissible confines of the rules of evidence, we have held he may not âinterpretâ audio or video evidence, as such testimony invades the province of the jury, whose job is to make
Turning to the complained-of testimony at hand, Appellant has made no specific protest as to any particular portions of Officer Fleming or Officer Sappâs testimony. Here, the videos in question depicted the substance of a high-speed police chase, as captured from the in-car cameras. It is completely reasonable to conclude that the officersâ testimony was not only beneficial to the jury in discerning what was happening on the video, but was in all likelihood necessary. See Mills, 996 S.W.2d at 488. Moreover, and importantly, the officersâ testimony did not interpret the video. Cf. Gordon, 916 S.W.2d at 180. While the testimony was narrative in the sense that it sequentially followed the chronology of the tape, all statements were responsive in nature and were in answer to the Commonwealthâs questions. Narrative testimony is not necessarily interpretive testimony per se. Here, the testimony was explicative of the officersâ perception of the events occurring on the video as they perceived them during the police chase and provided further elucidation of matters of police procedure, etc., which were not readily identifiable from the video standing on its own. Thus, having reviewed the record and determined that the testimony was proper lay opinion testimony which was beneficial to the jury, we find no palpable error.
C. Admission of the Police Chase Videos Was Not Cumulative or Prejudicial.
Appellant next argues, for the first time on appeal, that in playing both police chase videos at trial, the trial court committed reversible error, as the videos were cumulative and caused undue delay. Because, as we have already noted, we believe that the videos and accompanying testimony were germane to the Commonwealthâs pursuit of its prosecution and, thus, were neither cumulative nor overly prejudicial, and for reasons that Appellant did not object to the presentation of the videos at trial, we find no palpable error under RCr 10.26.
Appellant claims that playing both police chase videos did nothing more than âpile onâ duplicative evidence. We disagree. Here, Officer Sapp was the lead car in the high speed pursuit of Appellant. Thus, the images captured from his camera highlight critical information and detail pertinent to the crimes charged. Likewise, the video obtained from Officer Flemingâs car contained footage capturing maneuvers attempted by Officer Sapp, and other information uniquely available from the perspective of the last car in the pack chasing Appellant. Further, during the period of time in which Sappâs car was in front of Appellantâs car, Flemingâs video is the only one depicting the pursuit.
Determinations as to the admission and exclusion of evidence are a matter of trial court discretion. Woodard v. Commonwealth, 147 S.W.3d 63, 67 (Ky.2004). Upon review, we will not overturn a trial judgeâs evidentiary determinations unless his decision was âarbitrary, unreasonable, or unsupported by sound legal principles.â Commonwealth v. English, 993 S.W.2d 941, 945 (Ky.1999).
In conducting the KRE 403 balancing test, trial judges are afforded substantial discretion. See Brock v. Commonwealth, 947 S.W.2d 24, 29 (Ky.1997). Here, as noted, the videos were relevant
D. Defining Reasonable Doubt.
Lastly, Appellant argues that the Commonwealth impermissibly defined reasonable doubt during the selection of the jury. As with Appellantâs prior arguments, this issue is unpreserved and will be reviewed under the palpable error standard, RCr 10.26. Again, Appellant alleges that his conviction should be reversed. We disagree.
During voir dire, the Commonwealth addressed the jury in the following manner:
We have to prove our case beyond a reasonable doubt. So in order to get a conviction, we have to prove each and every element of each and every charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Now, would you all as jurors agree to hold us to that burden and that burden only? To make us prove our case beyond a reasonable doubt and not beyond all shadow of a doubt or not by a mathematical certainty?
RCr 9.56 sets forth the proposition that the jury should not be instructed as to the definition of reasonable doubt. In Commonwealth v. Callahan, 675 S.W.2d 391, 393 (Ky.1984), this Court extended this well-settled prohibition of defining reasonable doubt to all points in a trialâs proceedings. In Johnson v. Commonwealth, 184 S.W.3d 544, 549-550 (Ky.2005), we reexamined Callahanâs prohibition of defining reasonable doubt and determined, under the facts in that instance wherein the Commonwealth attempted to indicate what reasonable doubt was not, error, if any existed, was harmless.
The Commonwealth, in Johnson, 184 S.W.3d at 548-549, indicated to the jury in a colloquy during voir dire that reasonable doubt was not the same thing as âbeyond a shadow of a doubt,â and that the prosecution did not have to prove anything beyond a shadow of a doubt. To that end, we recognized, âin the very case that announced the prohibition against defining reasonable doubt [Callahan ], we held that the prosecutorâs allegedly improper statement, which, at most, attempted to show what reasonable doubt was not, did not amount to a violation of the rule against defining âreasonable doubt.â â Johnson, 184 S.W.3d at 549. (emphasis in original).
More significantly, however, Johnson squarely addressed whether alleged impermissible attempts to define reasonable doubt could be subject to harmless error analysis. Appellant now argues that such error can never be harmless. However, this Courtâs pronouncement in Johnson, in that regard, was clear: while we fundamentally upheld our prior decisions in Callahan and its progeny, we rejected the notion that any such error in defining reasonable doubt was per se prejudicial and not subject to harmless error analysis. See id. at 550-551. â[E]ven if one is convinced that the statement by the prosecutor in this case constituted error, that error was harmless. We have applied harmless error on this precise issue, even in capital murder cases, each time affirming a conviction and sentence of death.â Id. at 550; see also Sanders v. Commonwealth, 801 S.W.2d 665, 671 (Ky.1990);
Thus, despite Appellantâs contention that a violation of Callahan should not be subject to harmless error analysis (and Johnson should be overruled), we are unpersuaded. Appellant offers no legitimate argument for this conclusion and merely cites to Justice Cooperâs dissent for this proposition. However, a majority of the Court considered Justice Cooperâs well-reasoned argument at that time and concluded otherwise. We would be remiss to so freely ignore the doctrine of stare deci-sis and reach a contrary decision here today.
Turning to the complained of statement at hand, it must be noted that Appellantâs claim of error is unpreserved. Even Justice Cooper, in his dissent, was quick to draw a distinction between preserved and unpreserved error as it pertained to alleged attempts at defining reasonable doubt. See Johnson, 184 S.W.3d at 555 (Cooper, J., dissenting). (âUnlike the case sub judice, there was not a contemporaneous objection to the prosecutorâs discussion of the meaning of reasonable doubt in either Caudill or Sanders.â). Indeed, we have recently held that a prosecutorâs comment that âbeyond a reasonable doubt was not equivalent to beyond all doubtâ did not rise to palpable error. Brooks v. Commonwealth, 217 S.W.3d 219, 225 (Ky.2007); see also Rice v. Commonwealth, No. 2004-SC-1076-MR, 2006 WL 436123, at *7 (Ky. Feb.23, 2006) (âTruthfully pointing out that a âshadow of doubtâ is different from âbeyond a reasonable doubtâ is not an attempt to define reasonable doubt. Using examples, however, to point out what is, or is not, reasonable doubt, is.â). Thus, we find no palpable error here.
III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we hereby affirm Appellantâs conviction and sentence.
. It should be noted that although Appellant was nearly deaf and relied on a hearing aid to hear, after officers first ordered him to exit he responded, "I just want to call somebody."
. For purposes of determining what "natureâ means, Robinson announces, "[w]e will look to the definition of 'nature' found in Black's Law Dictionary, 1027 (6th ed.1990): âkind, sort, type, order; general character.' Nature, then, is more generic than specific.â Id.