Court Opinion

ID: 4412472
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-06-28 17:03:01.044477+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:27:37.433222
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
EUGENE SMITH,

Defendant Below,

Appellant,
Cr. ID No. 1707018039
V.

STATE OF DELAWARE

Plaintiff Below,
Appellee.

Nee eee’ ee ee ee’ ee” ee ee” ee” ee” ee” ee”

Submitted: March 18, 2019
Decided: June 28, 2019

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas.
AFFIRMED

Frances S. Ratner, Esquire, Office of Defense Services, Wilmington,
Delaware, for Appellant.

Jillian L. Schroeder, Esquire, Department of Justice, Wilmington,
Delaware, for the Appellee.

BUTLER, J.
This is an appeal from the Court of Common Pleas. After a jury trial, Eugene
Smith was convicted of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. He appealed both
convictions to this Court, but a previous ruling of the Court determined that the
disorderly conduct conviction was not appealable. We therefore examine here only
the resisting arrest conviction. Finding Smith’s claims unavailing, the Court affirms
the verdict and sentence imposed by the Court of Common Pleas.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On July 24, 2017, two Wilmington Police Officers responded to a call for help
in the 900 Block of West 30" Street. There was a playground with a basketball court
populated by ball players and families with children. Upon arrival, officers observed
a parked SUV occupied by a female passenger, with the door ajar. Mr. Smith was
standing six to seven feet from the vehicle, pointing in its direction and screaming
obscenities. Smith continued screaming obscenities, even as the officers approached
him.

When it was apparent that Smith was arguing with his girlfriend, one officer
stayed with the girlfriend and the other walked Mr. Smith away from the vehicle in
an effort to deescalate the situation. Instead, Smith screamed more obscenities at the
police officer accompanying him. Smith finally calmed down and provided his

name to the officer, but then he refused to supply his birth date.
The officer went to his patrol car to determine Smith’s birthdate. While in his
patrol vehicle, Smith approached the officer in an aggressive manner. The officer
exited the vehicle and told Smith to step back and place his hands behind his back.
In response, Smith told the officer that the officer “couldn’t handle him.” The
officer then attempted to handcuff Smith, resulting in a struggle to bring him under
control. In the course of his resistance, Smith wound up in the passenger seat of the
patrol car, at which point the officer forcibly removed him from the vehicle.

The struggle continued until the officer was on top of Smith and both of them
were on the ground. Once finally handcuffed, Smith was transported to the hospital
as a precautionary measure, where it was determined that he had a rib contusion.

The jury found Mr. Smith guilty of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.
The Court sentenced him to a $100 fine for disorderly conduct. For the resisting
arrest count, Smith received a jail sentence, suspended for probation. Upon initial
review, this Court determined that the disorderly conduct sentence to a $100 fine is
not appealable.! Therefore, the only issues remaining available for review are
certain evidentiary rulings made by the trial court relating to the resisting arrest

charge.

 

' Smith v. State of Delaware, ID No. 1707018039 (Docket Entry 15), (Del. Super.
Ct. Dec. 18, 2018). See generally, Kostyshyn v. State, 2010 WL 3398942 (Del.
2010), Kelsch v. State, 2016 WL 4059233 (Del. Super. Ct. 2016)

2
II. ISSUES RAISED ON APPEAL

Smith argues that the trial court abused its discretion in prohibiting any
testimony regarding a Use of Force Report, or the lack thereof, in association with
his arrest. Smith also says the trial court unfairly restricted him in presenting
evidence of bias of the arresting officer.

Ill. STANDARD OF REVIEW

The standard for reviewing a ruling on the scope of cross-examination is abuse
of discretion.? As a matter of law, a trial court's authority in respect to order of proof
is broad, and appellate courts will not overturn their decisions regarding mode and
order of presenting evidence unless they infringe on a constitutional right or

constitute an abuse of discretion.?

 

2 Hamann v. State, 565 A.2d 924, 928 (Del. 1989), citing McLean v. State, Del.
Supr., 482 A.2d 101, 103 (1984)(“The right of confrontation is not absolute,
however. It is subject to the trial court's discretion regarding scope. D.R.E. 611.

Specifically, cross-examination should be limited to matters raised in direct
examination and those affecting the credibility of the witness. D.R.E. 611(b).”).

3 Tice v. State, 624 A.2d 399, 403 (Del. 1993)(A defendant is not entitled to
determine sequence or admissibility of evidence at trial; relevance and admissibility

are within the discretion of the trial judge), citing Van Arsdall v. State, Del. Super.,
486 A.2d 1, 8-9 (1984) vacated on other grounds, 524 A.2d 3 (Del. 1987).

3
IV. ANALYSIS

A. Use of Force Report

On cross-examination of the arresting officer, Smith’s counsel sought to elicit
testimony concerning a “use of force report.” Smith’s presentation of the issue in the
trial court is part of the problem on appeal, so we review it in some detail.

When defense counsel asked the officer what a use of force report is and to
explain it, the State objected and a sidebar ensued. The transcript reveals the
prosecutor’s objection that “there is no use of force report in this case and we
addressed that beforehand.” When the prosecutor explained that “there wasn’t one
because it wasn’t required in this case,” Smith’s attorney said she knew there was
no report and the trial court thereupon ruled the matter irrelevant.*

Exactly why a use of force report was not required — assuming the prosecutor
was correct in this regard — is not a matter of record. Perhaps the parties “addressed
that beforehand,” but no transcript of that discussion is available for review. Had
the defense wished to preserve some other part of the record, it was up to the defense
to request the transcript. The defense did not make an offer of proof or otherwise
elicit any further testimony concerning the presence or absence of a use of force

report.

 

4 Trial transcript pp. 55-56.
About the most Smith can make of this issue on appeal is to urge that defense
counsel could not “explore why the officers did not file a use of force report and
whether they had abided by department guidelines for these reports.”° The inability
to “explore” department guidelines sounds like the complaint of an inability to go
on a fishing expedition. Counsel made no proffer as to whether departmental
guidelines required the filing of a report and asks us to speculate along with her.
Unless a reviewing court understands that such a report was required under these
circumstances and was not made, there is nothing for this Court to review. Ifa use
of force report is not required, then its absence is irrelevant and the trial court was
quite correct. If a use of force report was required, then Smith needed to make a
record demonstrating that and perhaps relief would be appropriate, assuming it
survived a harmless error analysis. But we need not concern ourselves here with
what might have been, because it was not. Mr. Smith has provided the Court with
no basis to grant him relief and the Court will not speculate its way into a reversal
of the trial verdict.

B. Excluded Testimony of Bias

Also during cross examination of the arresting officer, defense counsel sought
testimony from the officer that he knew Smith from prior occasions. The officer

testified that he “may have had an interaction with him once or twice, but I’m not

 

> Appellant’s Opening Brief at 11
100% sure.”° Defense counsel went no further with the officer concerning any prior
interaction.

But during the defense case, defendant Smith took the stand and testified to
what amounted to an assault by the two police officers involved. Attempting to
account for this version of the event, defense counsel asked:

Q: Now why would, let me ask this question — did you know these

officers prior to this? Or did they know you? I’ll ask you that question.

A: Yes, I seen them. They came to my house

[Prosecutor]: Objection

A: On many a times

Court: Sidebar

At the sidebar conference, the prosecutor objected on general relevance
grounds. Defense counsel laid out that “the issue is that he’s a relative of Jeremy
McDole...the man in the wheelchair who was killed by police...and the police know
that and they trump up charges against him. That’s his point as to why they would
make this up.”’

The Court rejected defense counsel’s arguments under evidence Rules 403(b)
and 401.

Smith says the Court’s rejection of this testimony was an undue restriction of

his right to present testimony of bias by the testifying officer.

 

® Trial transcript, p. 57
’ Trial transcript, p. 81-82
The Court did not intervene in the cross examination of the officer, who
testified he may have seen Smith before but could not be sure. The officer was not
asked if he knew that Smith was related to Jeremy McDole, so there is simply no
testimony that he knew of such a relationship. The trial court correctly recognized
that evidence of an improper bias or motive of the police could not come from the
defendant, since the defendant could only speculate as to the motives or biases of
the police. And while there must be some leeway to permit inferences from
circumstances, the trial judge is well within his discretion to control the cross
examination to prevent it from careening into an overheated contest of wild
accusations having no roots in reality.

Neither was there any evidence, from any quarter, that the testifying officer
was somehow involved in the McDole case. So to follow Smith’s logic, Smith is
immune from arrest for disorderly conduct or resisting arrest, because all
Wilmington police do is lie on the witness stand against him.

If Smith wished to present evidence of some conspiracy of the Wilmington
Police to “trump up” charges against him, perhaps he would make a better case for
its admission. But like his arguments concerning use of force reports, his arguments
are without support in the record. He produced no testimony, by offer of proof or
otherwise, that this police officer had a bias against him, or knew him as a relative

of McDole, or suffered a civil judgment or personnel action because of the McDole
case. There was no evidence of a department wide conspiracy or any animus toward
defendant due to his relationship to Mr. McDole and the Court cannot presume such
bias on his say so. Permitting Smith to espouse his personal view without support
properly belongs in the category of misleading, non-probative evidence that invites
the jury to render its verdict on something other than the merits of the evidence.

If Smith was targeted for arrest because he was McDole’s uncle, and not
because he was acting inappropriately in a public park and then challenging police
officers who were doing their job, then evidence of his being targeted should have
been produced. But “evidence” is not the pure conjecture and wild speculation of
the accused. Beyond that, the defense had nothing. The trial judge was well within
his discretion to curtail the testimony.

V. CONCLUSION

For the reasons set forth herein, Defendant’s conviction for resisting arrest is

AFFIRMED.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Judge Charles E. Butler