CHARLES CLIFFORD V. COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
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RENDERED:
NOVEMBER 18, 1999
TO BE PUBLISHED
97-SC-36
CHARLES
CLIFFORD
APPEAL FROM CAMPBELL CIRCUIT COURT
HONORABLE LEONARD L. KOPOWSKI, JUDGE
96-CR-240
V.
COMMONWEALTH
OF
KENTUCKY
APPELLEE
OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE COOPER
AFFIRMING
Following a jury trial in the Campbell Circuit Court,
Appellant was convicted of one count of trafficking in a
controlled
substance
in
the
first-degree.
He then entered a
guilty plea to being a persistent felony offender in the firstdegree and waived jury sentencing.
He was sentenced to ten years
in prison for the trafficking conviction, which was enhanced to
twenty years for the PFO conviction.
He appeals to this Court as
a matter of right. Ky. Const. § 110(2)(b).
I.
Detective
William
FACTS.
Birkenhauer
of
the
Northern
Strike Force had an agreement with Gary Vanover,
informant,
Kentucky
Drug
a police
whereby Vanover would assist Birkenhauer in setting up
drug "sting" operations.
On May 20, 1996, Birkenhauer and
Vanover
set up a meeting with Appellant for approximately 3:oo
p.m. at
Vanover's
apartment.
Birkenhauer
instructed Vanover
to
tell Appellant that he wanted to purchase a quarter of an ounce
of crack cocaine.
Birkenhauer testified that when he arrived at the apartment,
Vanover
answered the door and a female friend of Vanover
present.
Appellant then emerged from the bedroom.
was also
Appellant
told Birkenhauer he had only $75.00 worth of cocaine with him,
because he did not like to carry more than that on his person,
but stated that he could complete the order later that afternoon.
Birkenhauer told Appellant he would take the "75"
later for the rest.
and return
Appellant then went back into the bedroom
and instructed Vanover
to follow him.
When Vanover came out of
the bedroom, he was carrying a baggie of crack cocaine which he
gave to Birkenhauer.
Birkenhauer gave Vanover
the $75.00 and
told him to tell Appellant that he would return later for the
rest.
Vanover
reentered the bedroom, then came back out a few
seconds later and accompanied Birkenhauer outside to his vehicle.
Birkenhauer returned an hour and a half later, but neither
Appellant nor Vanover
was present at the apartment.
Vanover testified that the crack cocaine actually belonged
to him, that he had made the sale to Birkenhauer, and that
Appellant was not involved in the transaction.
testify.
- 2 -
Appellant did not
I
i
Unknown to either Appellant or Vanover,
Birkenhauer was
"wired" with an audio transmitter, and other police officers were
in a nearby apartment with surveillance equipment and a receiver.
One of those officers, Darin Smith, was listening to the
transaction
over
transaction
was
the
receiver.
A tape recording of the
produced, but the trial judge determined that the
recording was inaudible and it was neither admitted into evidence
nor played to the jury.
However,
Smith was permitted to testify
to what he heard over the receiver as the transaction was
occurring.
Smith testified that he saw Birkenhauer enter the apartment.
He then heard four different voices, the first of which he
recognized as being that of Birkenhauer.
He then heard the voice
of another male, the voice of a female, and, then later, a fourth
voice
which "sounded as if it was of a male black."
Smith
testified that he had been a police officer for thirteen years
and had spoken to black males on numerous occasions; and that
based on that experience, he believed the last voice which he
heard was that of a black male.
Vanover is a white male.
Appellant is a black male;
Smith then testified as follows:
Q:
Based on that (Smith's experience), as best you can
recall, I just want you to tell me what you can
recall the conversation you heard between Detective
Birkenhauer, just telling the jury what the male
black said, or the person you believed to be a male
black.
A:
That would
the tape.
would take
would be,
could get
have been the fourth and final voice on
Detective Birkenhauer stated that he
the a75" now and asked how long it
something along those lines, before he
back with the additional drugs.
What was
- 3 -
believed to be a male black responded, fifteen or
twenty minutes or so, I didn't bring it with me, I
left it at my house, you know what I am saying, I
didn't want to have it on me.
Detective
Birkenhauer said, I'll take the "75" now, and we
will hook up later.
On cross-examination,
the
following
colloquy
occurred
between Smith and defense counsel:
Q.
Okay.
A.
Uh, some male blacks have a, a different sound of,
of their voice.
Just as if I have a different
sound of my voice as Detective Birkenhauer does.
I sound different than you.
Q.
Okay,
A.
I don't think that would be a fair and accurate
description of the, you know, of the way the man
sounds.
Q.
So not all male blacks sound alike?
A.
That's correct, yes.
Q.
Okay.
In fact, some of them sound like whites,
don't they?
A.
Yes.
Q.
Do all whites sound alike?
A.
No sir.
Q.
Okay.
Do some white people sound like blacks when
they're talking?
A.
Possibly, yes.
Well, how does a black man sound?
can you demonstrate that for the jury?
II.
LAY
OPINION
TESTIMONY.
Appellant first argues that Smith's testimony amounted to an
impermissible
However,
interpretation
of
an
inaudible
tape
recording.
Smith did not purport to interpret the tape recording.
He testified to what he, himself, heard as the transaction was
-4
-
taking place.
Gordon v. Commonwealth, Ky., 916 S.W.2d
176, 180
(1995) ; see also United States v. Cvlkouski, 556 F.2d 799 (6th
Cir.
1977) (parties to telephone conversations could testify with
respect to those conversations even though the tapes of the
conversations
had
been
suppressed).
Appellant next asserts that Smith should not have been
permitted to express his opinion that the fourth voice he heard
sounded like that of a black male.
A nonexpert witness may
express an opinion which is rationally based on the perception of
the witness and helpful to a determination of a fact in issue.
KRE 701.
A corollary to this rule is the concept known as the
"collective
facts
rule," which permits a lay witness to resort to
a conclusion or an opinion to describe an observed phenomenon
where there exists no other feasible alternative by which to
communicate that observation to the trier of fact.
Lawson,
See R.
The Kentucky Evidence Law Handbook § 6.05, at 275-76 (3d
ed. Michie
1993).
Thus, lay witnesses have been permitted to
testify to the speed of a moving vehicle, Clement Bros.
Constr.
Co. v. Moore, Ky., 314 S.W.2d 526 (1958); the age of a person and
whether that person was intoxicated, Howard v. Kentuckv
Alcoholic
Beverage Control Bd., 294 Ky. 429, 172 S.W.2d 46 (1943); the
degree of physical suffering endured by another, Zogg v. O'Brvan,
314 Ky. 821, 237 S.W.2d 511 (1951); and the mental and emotional
state of another, Commonwealth v. Seso, Ky., 872 S.W.2d
(1994))
Emerine v. Ford, KY., 254 S.W.2d 938 (1953).
441, 444
In Kins v.
Ohio Vallev Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 212 Ky. 770, 280 S.W. 127
- 5 -
(19261,
a witness was permitted to testify that upon arriving at
the scene of a fire, he l'smell[edl gasoline."
In response to the
argument that the witness should have been permitted to merely
describe the odor, not to testify that the odor was that of
gasoline,
the Court held:
Technically,
perhaps, that should have been done, but
the average man would have great difficulty in telling
just how coal oil or gasoline smells, though acquainted
with their odors, and perhaps the best description the
witness could give was to say he knew their odors, and
he could smell coal oil, or he could smell gasoline.
Id
A,
280 S.W. at 130.
In each of the above examples, the witness was permitted to
describe what he observed by use of inference, conclusion, or
opinion.
Whether the collective facts rule would permit a
witness to express an opinion that an overheard voice was that of
a particular nationality or race has never before been addressed
in
this
jurisdiction.
However,
it is not an issue of first
impression.
In Peoole v. Sanchez, 492 N.Y.S.2d 683 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 19851,
a lay eyewitness to a fatal shooting was permitted to testify
that immediately prior to the shooting, he overheard the victim
and the killer arguing in Spanish, and that the killer was
speaking with a Dominican, rather than a Puerto Rican, accent.
Citing Richardson on Evidence, 5 366, at 329 (10th ed. 19731,
the
opinion noted that lay witnesses have been permitted to testify
to inferences of identity as to race, language, visibility and
sounds.
492 N.Y.S.2d at 684.
The court made the following
observation with respect to the subject of accents and dialects:
- 6 -
Accent is a branch of phonetics, which in turn, is
a division of linguistics.
While some writers use
accent and dialect interchangeably, accent relates to
how words are pronounced whereas dialect involves not
only accent but particular speech patterns of a group
or region.
It is clear that lay witnesses can often
detect the distinctive accent related to particular
ethnic or geographic groups.
Thus, a lay witness,
depending upon his experience, could distinguish
between a Yiddish accent and an Italian accent, or
between a Russian and an English accent, or between a
Spanish and French accent.
In addition, within broad
categories, certain more specific accents,
characteristic of [al particular region, may be
For example, the lay witness may be able
ascertained.
to reliably identify the "Brooklyn" accent, as
distinguished from the "Boston" accent, or the
lVSouthernl' accent from the "Cockney" accent.
Human
experience has taught us to discern the variations in
the mode of speech of different individuals.
Id. at 684-85.
More specifically, in Rhea v. State, 147 S.W. 463 (Ark.
1912),
it was held that a witness may recognize and know the
difference
and races.
(testimony
between
voices
of
persons
of
different
nationalities
See also State v. McDaniel, 392 S.W.2d 310 (MO. 1965)
that
robbers
had
African-American
accents
was
admissible to identify the probable race of the perpetrators);
State v. Phillins,
212 S.E.2d
that robbers l'sounded
172 (N.C. Ct. App. 1975) (testimony
like black people talking" was admissible,
because the witness was merely testifying to the dialect that he
heard); State v. Smith, 415 S.E.2d
409 (S.C. Ct. App. 1992)
(testimony of radio dispatcher that caller was a white male,
approximately forty years old, with a "very country and rugged,
scratchy like voice" was admissible even though the witness was
not an expert in voice identification); State v. Kinard, 696 P.2d
603 (Wash. Ct. App. 1985)
(testimony
- 7 -
that
one
burglar
"sounded
I
’
black to me" and another sounded like a young white male, was
held
properly
admitted).
No one suggests that it was improper for Officer Smith to
identify one of the voices he heard as being that of a female.
We perceive no reason why a witness could not likewise identify a
voice as being that of a particular race or nationality, so long
as the witness is personally familiar with the general
characteristics,
accents, or speech patterns of the race or
nationality in question, i.e., so long as the opinion is
l'rationally
based on the perception of the witness."
proper foundation was laid for Smith's testimony.
KRE
701.
A
That
foundation was not eradicated by Smith's admission that the
voices of some black men are indistinguishable from those of
white men and vice versa.
His inability to more specifically
describe or to demonstrate "how a black man sounds" merely proves
the reason for the collective facts rule, i.e., that it would be
difficult or impossible for the witness to give such a
description
or
demonstration.
III.
HEARSAY.
Appellant claims that Smith's testimony was hearsay.
However,
Smith testified that the relevant statements were
uttered by the last voice he heard, which he believed to be that
of a black male, and Appellant was both the last person to enter
the room (according to Birkenhauer) and the only black male
present at the time the statements were made.
Assuming
Appellant
was the declarant, the statements were admissible as admissions
- 8 -
under KRE 801A(b) (1).
Smith
clearly
could
have
identified
Appellant as the declarant had he been familiar with Appellant's
voice.
KRE 901(b) (5); United States v. Robinson, 707 F.2d 811,
814 (4th Cir. 1983); CamDbell
v. Commonwealth, Ky., 788 S.W.2d
260 (1990); Howard v. Commonwealth, Ky. App., 787 S.W.2d
(1989).
When,
as
264
here, the witness is unfamiliar with the
declarant's voice, the speaker's identity may be proven by
circumstantial
153,
170
evidence.
United States v. Espinoza, 641 F.2d
(4th Cir. 1981),
cert. denied, 454 U.S. 841 (1981);
United States v. Martinez, 555 F.2d
1248, 1249-50 (5th Cir.
19771, cert. denied, 434 U.S. 924 (1977); United States v.
Carrion,
States,
463 F.2d 704,
394 F.2d 287, 291 (5th Cir. 1967),
830 (1968); Cwach
1954).
706-07 (9th Cir. 1972); Grosan v. United
cert. denied, 393 U.S.
v. United States, 212 F.2d 520, 525 (8th Cir.
Smith testified that the declarant's voice sounded like
that of a black male.
The fact that Appellant was the only black
male present when the conversation took place was sufficient
circumstantial
evidence
to
satisfy
the
authentication
requirement
of KRE 901(b) (5) and bring the statement within the parameters of
KRE 801A(b) (1).
IV.
SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE.
Appellant asserts the evidence of his guilt was insufficient
to overcome his motion for a directed verdict.
without
Officer
Smith's
corroboration, Detective
However,
even
Birkenhauer's
testimony that Appellant was the one who negotiated the
transaction was sufficient for a reasonable juror to believe
- 9 -
beyond a reasonable doubt that Appellant, not Vanover,
purveyor of the crack cocaine.
S.W.2d
Commonwealth
v.
was the
Benham,
KY.,
816
186 (1991).
V.
LESSER
INCLUDED
OFFENSES.
Appellant claims the trial judge erred by not instructing
the jury sua snonte
on possession of a controlled substance and
facilitation to trafficking in a controlled substance as lesser
included
offenses
of
first-degree
trafficking.
Appellant
did
not
preserve this alleged error by contemporaneous objection or by
tendering
the
desired
instructions.
review as palpable error.
RCr 9.54(2).
RCr 10.26.
He
requests
Although we have held it
to be palpable error to instruct the jury on an offense not
contained in the indictment, cf. Caretenders. Inc. v.
Commonwealth, KY., 821 S.W.2d
83, 86 (19911,
we are unaware of
any authority holding it to be palpable error to fail to instruct
on a lesser included offense of that charged in the indictment.
Regardless,
an instruction on a lesser included offense is
required only if, considering the totality of the evidence, the
jury could have a reasonable doubt as to the defendant's guilt of
the greater offense, and yet believe beyond a reasonable doubt
that he is guilty of the lesser offense.
KY.,
904 S.W.2d
Webb
v.
Commonwealth,
226 (1995); Bills v. Commonwealth, KY.,
S.W.2d 466, 469 (1993).
851
The Commonwealth's theory of the case
was that Appellant brought the cocaine to Vanover's apartment and
sold it to Detective Birkenhauer.
Vanover
Appellant's
theory
was
had the cocaine in his apartment and sold it to
- 10 -
that
Birkenhauer,
mere
and that Appellant's presence on that occasion was a
coincidence.
Since there was no evidence from which a jury
could conclude that Appellant was guilty of either facilitation
or possession of cocaine, but not trafficking in cocaine, he was
not entitled to an instruction on either of those theories.
Commonwealth v. Day,
Commonwealth,
Ky., 983 S.W.2d 505 (1999); Houston v.
Ky., 975 S.W.2d 925 (1998).
Accordingly,
the judgments of conviction and sentences
imposed by the Campbell Circuit Court are affirmed.
Graves,
Johnstone,
Johnstone,
and
which Lambert,
JJ.,
concur.
FOR
Stumbo, J., dissents by separate opinion in
C.J., joins.
APPELLANT:
Brenda Popplewell
307 West Mount Vernon Street
Somerset, KY 42501
ATTORNEYS
Wintersheimer,
J., concurs by separate opinion in which Graves and
Keller, JJ., join.
ATTORNEY
Keller,
FOR
APPELLEE:
A. B. Chandler, III
Attorney General
State Capitol
Frankfort, KY 40601
Courtney A. Jones
Assistant Attorney General
Office of Attorney General
Criminal Appellate Division
1024 Capital Center Drive
Frankfort, KY
40601-8204
- 11 -
RENDERED:
NOVEMBER 18, 1999
TO BE PUBLISHED
97-SC-368-MR
CHARLES
CLIFFORD
APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM CAMPBELL CIRCUIT COURT
HONORABLE LEONARD L. KOPOWSKI, JUDGE
96-CR-240
V.
COMMONWEALTH
OF
KENTUCKY
CONCURRING
APPELLEE
OPINION
BY
JUSTICE
JOHNSTONE
I concur in the majority opinion in all respects, but write
separately
to
dispute
the
dissent's
misguided
assertion
that "the
majority takes a tremendous step backwards with its holding today
and permits prejudice and inference to convict a man where logic
and
objectivity
would not."
That is simply untrue.
The contentious issue confronted by the Court in this case
is whether a lay witness may express an opinion as to the race of
a person from an overheard voice.
contrary,
allowed
Despite any inferences to the
other courts have previously addressed this issue and
such
lay
witness
opinion
testimony.
The
majority
opinion
cites cases in which lay witnesses have been allowed to identify
voices as sounding like white, as well as black, persons.
The adoption of KRE 701 in this Commonwealth signaled this
Court's intention to follow the modern trend clearly favoring the
admission of such lay opinion evidence.
KRE 701 reflects the
philosophy of this Court, and most courts in this country, to
view KRE 701 as more inclusionary than exclusionary when the lay
witness's opinion is rationally based on the perception of the
witness and is helpful to the jury or trial court for a clear
understanding of the witness's testimony or the determination of
a factual issue.
Moreover,
the guidelines set out in KRE 401 and KRE 403
regarding relevance and whether the probative value of relevant
evidence is outweighed by its prejudicial effect are decisions
for the trial court.
Those decisions will not be disturbed in
the absence of an abuse of discretion.
Partin v. Commonwealth,
KY. r 918 S.W.2d 219, 222 (1996).
Sadly, the dissent has spun this evidentiary issue into a
needless
racial
diatribe.
the next millennium, the
It is my opinion that as we approach
majority
opinion
perpetuates
the
time-
honored deference to the discretion of trial judges in this
Commonwealth
and
allows
additional
valuable
evidence
to
be
considered by the diverse group of jurors that serve so
diligently in the Kentucky Court of Justice.
Graves and Keller, JJ.,
join
-2-
this
concurring
opinion.
RENDERED:
NOVEMBER 18, 1999
TO BE PUBLISHED
97-SC-368-MR
CHARLES
CLIFFORD
APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM CAMPBELL CIRCUIT COURT
HONORABLE LEONARD L. KOPOWSKI, JUDGE
96-CR-240
V.
COMMONWEALTH
OF
APPELLEE
KENTUCKY
DISSENTING OPINION BY JUSTICE STTJMBO
With much dismay, I must dissent.
The majority opinion is
not only fundamentally flawed on several levels, but is also
tremendously
disheartening.
The opinion condones the admission
of Officer Smith's testimony that the voice of the fourth speaker
he heard on the tape t'sounded as if it was of a male black."
This testimony not only impermissibly bolstered the testimony of
Detective
Birkenhauer, whose version of events inculpating
Appellant had been called into serious question by the testimony
of the Commonwealth's own informant, but also was incredibly
prejudicial
defense
to
table.
Appellant, the sole black man sitting at the
Additionally,
the testimony was, by Officer
Smith's own admission, entirely irrelevant and probative of
absolutely
nothing.
Thus, it should have been excluded under KRE
403 as being more prejudicial than probative.
I must first object to the basic premise which underlies the
majority's rationale in this case - that a person's race can be
ascertained simply by the sound and cadence of his voice, his
pronunciation of certain words - his accent.
An accent may be
indicative of many things - how a person's parents speak, the
countries,
regions or even neighborhoods in which he has lived,
the schools he has attended, the languages he speaks, his social
class, and even whom he admires.
What it most definitely cannot
indicate is the color of his skin.
Common sense should tell us this.
The quality of a
particular voice is sensed by hearing, just as the appearance of
a person is sensed by sight.
It is simply not possible to
perceive appearance using the sense of hearing.
One might
presume that a particular voice or accent would be indicative of
how the speaker might look.
However,
based
ideas,
solely
on
preconceived
that presumption would be
stereotypes,
and
assumptions,
not on logic or reality.
Race, that is, skin color, must
be
perceived
by
sight.
To
say that a person is capable of ascertaining another's race
solely by hearing his voice is tantamount to saying the one can
"hear a color" or "smell a sound" or "taste a noise."
One can no
more determine that a person's skin is pale, cinnamon, or ebony
simply by hearing his voice, than one can perceive that an
individual will have a British accent, a Portuguese accent, a New
York accent or an Appalachian accent simply by gazing at his
countenance and the color of his skin.
Thus, it was entirely
improper to permit Officer Smith to testify that the fourth voice
on the videotape llsounded
black."
This type of testimony would
be improper in any context, but it is all the more so because the
defendant was the lone black man sitting at the defense table.
-2-
Although Appellant's voice was unknown to both Smith and the
jury,
the overwhelming inference was that Appellant was the
fourth speaker, and thus guilty as urged by Detective
Birkenhauer.
The majority holds Officer Smith's opinion that the voice on
the tape sounded like that of a black man is perfectly acceptable
as lay opinion which is rationally based on Smith's perception,
because "Smith testified that he had been a police officer for
thirteen years and had spoken to black males on numerous
occasions."
As discussed above, I fail to see any rationality to
the notion that one can hear a person's skin color.
Let us, for
the moment, assume that what Officer Smith was inartfully
attempting to say, is that the voice he heard on the tape was
spoken in an accent or dialect which he associated with African
Americans,
for reasons which he could not explain because he was
not a linguist.
entirely
This being so, Smith's
inadmissible
absent
any
observations
showing
speaks with this kind of accent.
that
were
Appellant,
still
himself,
As Smith had never heard
Appellant speak and as Appellant chose not to testify at trial,
there was no way to connect Appellant to the particular type of
accent described by Smith.
with
the
impermissible
Instead, the jury was simply left
inference
that
because
Smith
associated
the voice with African Americans, and because Appellant was an
African American, Appellant must be the person Smith heard.
Smith himself conceded the illogicality and irrelevance of
his own testimony.
Upon
cross-examination,
Smith
acknowledged
not all black men sound alike, nor do all white men.
-3-
He also
I
-
acknowledged that some African American men "sound like whites,11
and that t'some white people sound like blacks.11
In essence,
Smith conceded that Appellant's voice and accent might sound like
the accent Smith associated with African Americans, but that it
might not.
He could say no more, because he had never heard
Appellant's
voice.
Evidence is relevant when it tends to make
the existence of a disputed issue more probable or less probable
than it would be without the evidence.
KRE 401.
Here, Smith's
testimony that the voice he heard sounded like an "African
American
accent" in no way tended to increase the probability
that Appellant was the speaker, because there was no showing that
himself, spoke in the manner described.
Appellant,
testimony
was
prejudicial
to
clearly
irrelevant, yet
undoubtedly
As Smith's
extremely
Appellant, it should have been excluded under KRE
403.
Finally I must take issue with the primary case the majority
cites in an effort to find support for its unfortunate holding.
Somehow,
the majority has improperly broadened the issue before
us to that of whether a lay witness may "express an opinion that
an overheard voice was that of a particular nationality or race."
In so doing, the majority quotes at length from the case of
Peoole
v. Sanchez, 492 N.Y.S.2d
683 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 19851,
a case
which is easily distinguishable from the instant controversy.
There, the question was whether the suspect was speaking Spanish
in a Dominican or Puerto Rican accent.
That case in no way dealt
with the issue of accent as it relates to race or skin color, but
rather as it relates to nationality.
Given that one's accent is
largely affected by the country or region he or she grows up in,
-4-
it is entirely reasonable to permit identification of a
nationality based on a particular kind of accent, so long as the
listener is familiar with the accent of that particular
nationality.
skin,
Such is not the case with the color of a person's
which has absolutely no impact on the way a person speaks.
I find the fact that the majority seems unable to grasp this
obvious
distinction
to
be
extremely
disconcerting.
As we approach the next millennium, the majority takes a
tremendous step backwards with its holding today and permits
prejudice and inference to convict a man where logic and
objectivity
would
Lambert,
not.
C.J.,
joins
this
dissenting
-5-
opinion.
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