Legal Research AI

State v. Gibson

Court: Arizona Supreme Court
Date filed: 2002-05-01
Citations: 44 P.3d 1001, 202 Ariz. 321
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37 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF ARIZONA
                                En Banc


STATE OF ARIZONA,             )       Supreme Court
                              )       No. CR 01-0045-PR
               Appellee,      )
                              )       Court of Appeals
                              )       No. 1 CA-CR 99-0837
          v.                  )
                              )       Maricopa County
LARRY LAVELLE GIBSON,         )       Superior Court
                              )       No. CR 96-07148
               Appellant.     )
                              )       O P I N I O N
______________________________)



        Appeal from the Superior Court of Maricopa County

             The Honorable Gregory H. Martin, Judge

                        REMANDED FOR NEW TRIAL


_________________________________________________________________


                    Court of Appeals, Division One
                          Memorandum Decision
                                REVERSED


_________________________________________________________________


JANET NAPOLITANO, Attorney General                          Phoenix
 by Ginger Jarvis, Assistant Attorney General,
     Criminal Appeals Section
Attorneys for Appellee

MARICOPA COUNTY PUBLIC DEFENDER                             Phoenix
 by Charles R. Krull, Deputy Public Defender
Attorneys for Appellant

_________________________________________________________________
C O R C O R A N, Justice (Retired)

                               1. Introduction

¶1          In 1995, Larry Lavelle Gibson (defendant) was charged

with first degree murder for a 1974 murder.                Prior to trial,

defendant gave notice of his intent to introduce evidence that

other persons had committed the crime.           See Rule 15.2(b), Arizona

Rules of Criminal Procedure.           At a pretrial hearing, the trial

court granted the state’s motion precluding evidence that someone

else might have committed the murder.        After a 7-day trial, a jury

convicted   defendant     of   first   degree    murder.    Defendant   was

sentenced to life imprisonment.            On direct appeal, defendant

contended that the trial court erred in precluding evidence of

third-party culpability. In a split decision, the court of appeals

affirmed.    We granted review to clarify the appropriate test for

admission    of   third   party    culpability      evidence.     We    have

jurisdiction pursuant to Arizona Constitution, article 6, § 5(3),

and A.R.S. § 13-4031.

                   2. Factual and Procedural History

(a) 1974 Investigation

¶2          On January 15, 1974, two Phoenix police officers arrived

at 17 East Thomas Road and found the body of Taylor Courtney inside

apartment 13.     The cause of death was three gunshot wounds to the

head. Officials estimated the death had occurred six days earlier.


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The body had been brutalized by the post mortem removal of his

penis,   scrotum,   and   testes.   Further   investigation   uncovered

numerous fingerprints, some bloody, in and around the apartment and

inside the victim’s car.

¶3         During the investigation, two individuals, D.B. and J.W.,

were identified as primary suspects.     Both told officers they had

been with the victim shortly before the murder.      Both gave alibis

that could not be corroborated.     Both knew substantial information

about the crime scene which had not previously been made public.

D.B. pointed to J.W. as the possible perpetrator because of an

alleged sexual relationship between the victim and J.W.’s wife.

J.W. suffered severe mental health problems shortly after the

murder, and police officers noted D.B. was acting extremely nervous

during an interview.

¶4         The victim, D.B., and J.W. were all from the same small

Arizona town.   Defendant was also from that same town.        However,

during the 1974 investigation, officers did not interview, nor

suspect defendant, or know of his existence.

(b) 1995 Investigation

¶5         The case lay dormant until 1995 when officers, with the

help of the Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS),

matched one of the non-bloody fingerprints lifted from the inside

of the front screen door of the victim’s apartment with that of



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defendant.    Defendant was interviewed and denied going to the

victim’s apartment and killing the victim.

¶6         From     April    to   June       1996,   Defendant’s    ex-wife     was

interviewed by police officers on several occasions.                     She told

officers about a package defendant had given her two months after

the murder. Over the course of the interviews, her recollection of

the contents of this package evolved from liver to a poultry neck

to a penis.     Defendant was then charged with the murder.

¶7         At a pretrial hearing, defendant argued that in light of

the limited circumstantial evidence against defendant, the court

should allow evidence of D.B.’s and J.W.’s potential involvements,

specifically:     (1) the times at which D.B. and J.W. last saw the

victim, (2) the false alibis, (3) their overwhelming knowledge

about the crime scene which had not yet been made public, (4) the

extreme nervousness of D.B., and (5) J.W.’s mental health issues

after the murder.           The trial court precluded all inculpatory

evidence about D.B. and J.W.              In his ruling, the trial judge

stated, “there is nothing in the defendant’s proffer that has an

inherent tendency to connect either D.B. or J.W. with the actual

commission of the murder of the victim.                Admitting the evidence

. . . has the real potential to unfairly prejudice the State and to

confuse the jury.”

¶8         At trial defendant was convicted, and on appeal he argued

that   preclusion    of     evidence     pointing     to   D.B.    and   J.W.   was

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inappropriate.     The court of appeals held there was no abuse of

discretion because the evidence did not have an inherent tendency

to connect either D.B. or J.W. with the murder.

                                 3. Discussion

¶9           The court of appeals used an “inherent tendency” test,

which it apparently took from our decision in State v. Fulminante,

161 Ariz. 237, 778 P.2d 602 (1988).        In Fulminante we stated,

       Before a defendant may introduce evidence that another
       person may have committed the crime, the defendant must
       show that the evidence has an inherent tendency to
       connect such other person with the actual commission of
       the crime.     Vague grounds of suspicion are not
       sufficient.

161 Ariz. 237, 252, 778 P.2d 602, 617 (quoting State v. Williams,

133 Ariz. 220, 231, 650 P.2d 1202, 1213 (1982)).

¶10          We do not find, and this court did not intend, a special

standard or test of admissibility to be gleaned from Fulminante.

¶11          In Fulminante the defendant was charged with the murder

of    his   11-year-old   stepdaughter.    The    defendant    attempted     to

introduce     evidence    that   a   neighbor    of   the   victim   drove   a

motorcycle, owned a .357 magnum handgun, previously attempted to

kill a police officer, and was suspected of committing crimes

against children.     The trial court precluded the evidence, and the

defendant was found guilty and sentenced to death.            On the issue of

third-party culpability evidence, we stated that the evidence of

the neighbor’s ability to commit the crime was insufficient by

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itself to connect the neighbor with the murder and therefore found

there was no abuse of discretion.                See Fulminante, 161 Ariz. at

252, 778 P.2d at 617.

¶12         The appeal before us presents the opportunity to clarify

the manner of determining admissibility of evidence of third-party

culpability.      The appropriate analysis is found in Rules 401, 402,

and 403, Arizona Rules of Evidence.

¶13         Initially, the court must determine if the proffered

evidence is relevant. “Relevant evidence means evidence having any

tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence

to the determination of the action more probable or less probable

than it would be without the evidence.”                Rule 401.       “All relevant

evidence is admissible . . . .             Evidence which is not relevant is

not admissible.”         Rule 402.         Once the evidence is determined

relevant,    it    is    admissible    unless      “its       probative      value   is

substantially      outweighed    by   the       danger    of    unfair    prejudice,

confusion    of    the    issues,     or       misleading      the     jury,    or   by

considerations      of   undue   delay,        waste     of    time,    or     needless

presentation of cumulative evidence.”              Rule 403.

¶14         We note that Fulminante did not make reference to Rules

401, 402, or 403.

(a) Rules 401 and 402

¶15         We find the discussion in Winfield v. United States, 676



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A.2d 1 (D.C. 1996), particularly helpful in analyzing relevancy of

third-party    culpability    evidence    in   a   criminal   context.      In

Winfield, the court addressed similar concerns regarding a “clear

link” standard of third-party culpability evidence.               That court

rejected the “clear link” standard because it put the focus on the

third party’s guilt or innocence.         See 676 A.2d at 4.       The court

then concluded that the proper focus should be on “the effect the

evidence has upon the defendant’s culpability” and the evidence

“need only tend to create a reasonable doubt that the defendant

committed the offense.”      676 A.2d at 4 (quoting in part Johnson v.

United States, 552 A.2d 513, 516 (D.C. 1989)).

¶16        Similarly, we find the use of the phrase “inherent

tendency” unhelpful and agree with Judge Gerber’s description of

inherent tendency in his dissent:

      This language is unclear to a fault: for one thing, a
      “tendency” does not “inhere”; for another, such tendency
      seems a matter of weight and credibility of evidence.
      Whatever its meaning, this rule forces a defendant to
      prove to a judge’s satisfaction that another person
      “really” committed the crime or was “largely” connected
      to it.

The   proper   focus   in   determining   relevancy    is   the   effect   the

evidence has upon the defendant’s culpability. To be relevant, the

evidence need only tend to create a reasonable doubt as to the

defendant’s guilt.

(b) Rule 403


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¶17         When applying the balancing test under Rule 403, ARIZONA

PRACTICE: LAW   OF   EVIDENCE should be considered:

      [I]t is first necessary to assess the probative value of
      the evidence on the issue for which it is offered. The
      greater the probative value, of course, and the more
      significant in the case the issue to which it is
      addressed, the less probable that factors of prejudice or
      confusion can substantially outweigh the value of the
      evidence. If the issue is not in dispute, or if other
      evidence is available of equal probative value but
      without the attendant risks of the offered evidence, then
      a greater probability of substantial outweighing exists.
      Because this is a weighing of factors that cannot easily
      be quantified, substantial discretion is accorded the
      trial judge . . . .

           The remaining factors in Rule 403, confusion of the
      issues, misleading the jury, and wasting of time, are
      less frequently the subject of judicial decision.
      Wigmore described them well:

                 The notion here is that, in attempting to
            dispute or explain away the evidence thus
            offered, new issues will arise as to the
            occurrence of the instances and the similarity
            of conditions, new witnesses will be needed
            whose cross-examination and impeachment may
            lead to further issues; and that thus the
            trial will be unduly prolonged, and the
            multiplicity of minor issues will be such that
            the jury will lose sight of the main issue,
            and the whole evidence will be only a mass of
            confused data from which it will be difficult
            to extract the kernel of controversy.

1 Joseph M. Livermore, Robert Bartels, & Anne Holt Hameroff, ARIZONA

PRACTICE:   LAW   OF   EVIDENCE (formerly UDALL   ON   EVIDENCE) § 403 at 82-83,

84-86 (4th ed. 2000) (footnotes omitted) (quoting 2 WIGMORE           ON   EVIDENCE

§ 443 at 528-529 (Chadbourn rev. 1979)); see also 1 MCCORMICK                    ON

EVIDENCE § 185 at 779-785 (4th Kenneth S. Broun ed. 1992).

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¶18         The New York Court of Appeals recently dealt with an

issue similar to that in Fulminante.                        People v. Primo, like

Winfield, dealt with a coordinate catch phrase:                        “clear link.”

Primo said:

      To the extent that the “clear link” standard implies no
      more than an abbreviation for the conventional balancing
      test, it presents no problem. A review of clear link
      cases reveals that the courts would very likely have made
      the same ruling regardless of the nomenclature. “Clear
      link” and similar coinages, however, may be easily
      misread as suggesting that evidence of third-party
      culpability occupies a special or exotic category of
      proof.

753 N.E.2d 164, 168, 728 N.Y.S.2d 735, 739 (2001).

                                 4. Conclusion

¶19         We hold that Rules 401, 402, and 403, Arizona Rules of

Evidence,     set    forth     the   proper        test      for   determining    the

admissibility of third-party culpability evidence.                     This test must

be applied anew to the facts in each case.

¶20         The     judgment   of    the       court   of    appeals    is   therefore

reversed.     The case is remanded for a new trial not inconsistent

with this opinion.



                                _________________________________________
                                Robert J. Corcoran, Justice (Retired)




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CONCURRING:


____________________________________
Charles E. Jones, Chief Justice


____________________________________
Ruth V. McGregor, Vice Chief Justice


____________________________________
Stanley G. Feldman, Justice


____________________________________
Thomas A. Zlaket, Justice



     NOTE: Due to a vacancy on this court and pursuant to
     Ariz. Const. art VI, § 3, the Honorable Robert J.
     Corcoran, Justice (Retired) was designated to sit with
     the court in the disposition of this matter.




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