DENNIS TAYLOR v. STATE OF FLORIDA , 255 So. 3d 973 ( 2018 )


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  •                NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    DENNIS TAYLOR, DOC #R51908,               )
    )
    Appellant,                  )
    )
    v.                                        )      Case No. 2D16-5268
    )
    STATE OF FLORIDA,                         )
    )
    Appellee.                   )
    )
    Opinion filed September 21, 2018.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Pasco
    County; Susan G. Barthle, Judge.
    James Dickson Crock of James Dickson
    Crock, P.A., Daytona Beach, for
    Appellant.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General,
    Tallahassee, and Michael Schaub,
    Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for
    Appellee.
    ROTHSTEIN-YOUAKIM, Judge.
    A jury found Dennis Taylor guilty of robbery with a deadly weapon. See §
    812.13(2)(a), Fla. Stat. (2014). Taylor now challenges his conviction, raising numerous
    claims—some preserved, some unpreserved—of trial court error and prosecutorial
    misconduct. We reject most of these claims without comment, but we agree with Taylor
    that the trial court abused its discretion by allowing the prosecutor to repeatedly and
    improperly suggest to the jury that defense counsel had influenced the victim to change
    his story between the robbery and trial. And because we further agree that on this
    record, the error was not harmless, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
    Background
    In the early evening of April 26, 2015, Taylor, apparently intoxicated,
    entered a convenience store in Pasco County, walked back to the cooler section, and
    began stuffing liquor bottles into his pockets. The clerk, Raif Bader, confronted Taylor;
    Taylor pulled an object from under his shirt, brandished it at Bader, and warned, "Don't
    you dare." Afraid, Bader returned to the front counter to retrieve his firearm. As Taylor
    walked out the door with one of the bottles, Bader "ordered him to drop his weapon, or
    whatever it was in his hand." Taylor did not drop the object. Security cameras recorded
    the incident.
    Deputies later arrested Taylor in the yard of his house, which was
    approximately one-eighth of a mile from the store. Taylor had a liquor bottle in his hand
    and was intoxicated and belligerent. There were several other liquor bottles on the
    porch. Although the deputies looked along the route from the store to the house and
    around the yard, they found no knife or other weapon. They did not go into the house.
    On the car ride to the jail, Taylor spontaneously volunteered to the lone
    deputy who was transporting him that he was going to jail for stealing a beer. Taylor
    also volunteered that he had had a knife while he was in the store. The deputy did not
    ask Taylor any questions, there was no video or audio recording of Taylor's statement,
    and the deputy did not ask Taylor to write it down despite having a pen and paper in the
    car.
    -2-
    At trial, Bader testified on direct examination that Taylor had pulled "a—I
    don't want to say [a] knife, I would say it's a long spatula, as far as I know." Bader
    testified further, "As far as I remember, it had a round edge, round point, and it's—I
    wasn't thinking of a weapon at the time, I was perturbed but later on as far as I
    remember it, looked like just a spatula, so it was not a weapon." Bader testified that the
    object was "about a foot long."
    The prosecutor asked Bader if he recalled providing a verbal and written
    statement to deputies right after the incident. Bader acknowledged that both verbally
    and in writing, he had indicated that the object in Taylor's hand had been a knife,
    explaining: "At that time—I wasn't concentrating on what he had in his hand, it was an
    object. I assumed it was a knife[.]" Immediately after that acknowledgment, the
    prosecutor asked Bader, "How many times have you talked to the defense attorneys
    since this happened?" And immediately after that, Taylor's counsel objected.
    At sidebar, Taylor's counsel asserted that the prosecutor was "going to try
    to smear me as counsel." The prosecutor responded:
    No, this is impeachment. He's testified to something
    different than what he said, I'm impeaching my witness. I'm
    going to impeach him with the fact that he's spoken to these
    attorneys, including last night, and then all of a sudden this
    object has gone from a knife to a spatula. I think that's a fair
    comment. I think that's fair impeachment.
    Acknowledging that "[i]t's completely fine for attorneys to talk to witnesses, there's a jury
    instruction that says that," the prosecutor continued:
    But that's not what I'm offering it for. I'm offering it for
    impeachment, where all of a sudden he's talked to, he's
    talked to attorneys for the Defendant and now his
    testimony's changed from what he's previously stated.
    -3-
    The trial court excused the jury and heard additional argument, ultimately
    overruling Taylor's objection and concluding that the prosecutor's line of questioning
    was valid impeachment. The court then took a proffer of Bader's testimony, in which
    Bader proffered that he had spoken with defense counsel several times and that he had
    told defense counsel that the object had been about a foot long with a rounded edge
    and no point. Bader proffered further that the object had seemed "wobbly" and not "like
    a long piece of solid metal steel."
    When the jury returned, the prosecutor picked up where he had left off,
    and the following exchange took place:
    Q      Okay. How many times did you talk to the
    defense attorney?
    A      Twice.
    Q      Was one of those yesterday?
    A      Monday, the day before.
    Q      Okay, Monday. And when was the other time?
    A      Two, three weeks ago, maybe.
    Q       Okay. Is that the first time that you remember
    that this all of a sudden was a spatula instead of a knife?
    A      No, no, no, from before.
    Bader then explained that during the incident, he had thought that Taylor
    had a knife, which is what had prompted him to retrieve his firearm. Upon later
    reflection, however, he had thought that it would not make sense for Taylor to have had
    a sharp object tucked into the front of his shirt because it would have cut him, "So that's
    what led me to believe . . . what I saw was actually the spatula, not a knife."
    -4-
    The prosecutor's next question was, "Has the Defendant's mom been
    down to the store to talk to you?" Taylor did not object. When Bader said that he had
    not spoken with her, the prosecutor continued, again without objection:
    Q      Okay. But she's been down to the store?
    A      She talked to another employee.
    Q      About [Taylor's] case?
    A      About [Taylor's] case, yeah.
    On cross-examination, Bader reiterated that the tip of the object had been
    rounded off rather than sharp and that it would not have hurt anybody. He also testified
    that it had appeared "wobbly" to him rather than as a sharp piece of metal.
    Both parties' closing arguments focused on whether the object in Taylor's
    hand had been a knife or a spatula. The prosecutor urged the jury to focus on the video
    and on Taylor's admission to the transporting deputy.
    In response, defense counsel argued that the jury should rely on Bader's
    description of the object as something other than a knife. He also vigorously challenged
    the transporting deputy's testimony concerning Taylor's admission.
    In rebuttal, the prosecutor attacked Bader's credibility regarding his
    inconsistent statements and again urged the jury to rely on the video, to which the
    prosecutor repeatedly referred as "the silent witness." In doing so, the prosecutor
    argued that the video was not "somehow impacted by the Defendant's mother coming to
    the store. It’s not impacted all of a sudden after meeting with Defense counsel two
    times, including yesterday where all of a sudden . . . ." At that point, defense counsel
    objected that the prosecutor was relying on facts not in evidence. Although the trial
    -5-
    court sustained the objection to the extent that the evidence had established that Bader
    had spoken to counsel two days earlier, rather than on the previous day, it agreed with
    the prosecutor that the jury could rely on its own recollection concerning when Bader
    had reassessed the nature of the object in Taylor's hand. The prosecutor apologized
    that he had gotten "a little excited" but then continued:
    I'm sorry, Mr. Bader didn't say he talked to the
    defense attorney yesterday, he said he talked to him
    Monday, so excuse me. But he talked to him Monday, he
    talked to him a couple weeks ago, then all of a sudden, it's a
    spatula. It was a knife when he talked to [the responding
    deputy]; knife, knife, knife, knife, knife. When he wrote out
    the statement for [the responding deputy], knife. But now
    today after family's been by the store, you know, smile and
    wave everything's okay,[1] now it's just a spatula.
    The prosecutor further argued, without objection:
    Mr. Bader . . . his story changes and you can determine from
    your notes, from your memory exactly when it changes from
    a knife to a spatula and why he would want to change that.
    Keep in mind, you know, he said he was visited by
    somebody from the Defendant's family. He wasn't there but
    another employee told him that.
    During deliberations, the jury asked to again view portions of the video in
    which the object in Taylor's hand was visible. Thereafter, it returned its guilty verdict.
    Discussion
    The primary issue in dispute at trial was the nature of the object in Taylor's
    hand. Taylor argues that the trial court abused its discretion by allowing the prosecutor
    to repeatedly suggest through his questioning of Bader that defense counsel had
    1Inhis closing argument, defense counsel had pointed out that Bader and
    Taylor had "smiled and waved at each other" in the courtroom and had argued that this
    showed that Bader had no fear of Taylor.
    -6-
    somehow pressured or persuaded Bader to change his story and further abused its
    discretion by then allowing the prosecutor to reiterate that suggestion during closing
    argument. See Hayward v. State, 
    24 So. 3d 17
    , 29 (Fla. 2009) ("A trial judge's ruling on
    the admissibility of evidence will not be disturbed absent an abuse of discretion. The
    trial court's discretion is constrained, however, by the application of the rules of
    evidence and by the principles of stare decisis." (citations omitted)); Abdulla v. State,
    
    223 So. 3d 276
    , 279 (Fla. 4th DCA 2017) ("Claims of improper closing arguments by a
    prosecutor are reviewed for an abuse of discretion.").
    We agree. "Generally, comments by the State implying that the defense
    tampered with a witness without evidentiary support constitute reversible error."
    Penalver v. State, 
    926 So. 2d 1118
    , 1129 (Fla. 2006). In Penalver, the State had also
    persuaded the trial court that the jury should be permitted to draw an inference as to
    whether a witness who had changed her story "could have been influenced or affected
    by the conversations" with defense counsel. 
    Id. at 1128
    . But the supreme court
    concluded otherwise:
    Evidence that [the witness] Munroe had conversations with
    Penalver's attorney is irrelevant because standing alone it
    does not support the argument that Munroe changed her
    testimony at trial based on these conversations. In fact, as
    Penalver contends, this entire line of questioning could have
    suggested to the jury that Penalver or his attorney exerted
    pressure on Munroe to change her testimony. Such a
    suggestion made without evidentiary support undermines
    one of the foundations on which our criminal justice system
    is premised: equal access by the State and the defense to
    witnesses.
    
    Id. at 1130
    . Here, the prosecutor told the trial court that the very purpose of his
    questioning was to impeach Bader by establishing that Bader's story had "suddenly"
    -7-
    changed after Bader had met with defense counsel. Under Penalver, this was plainly
    impermissible impeachment, and the court abused its discretion in allowing it.2
    The trial court compounded the error by allowing the prosecutor to exploit
    this improper line of questioning during rebuttal closing argument. There, the
    prosecutor continued to suggest that defense counsel had influenced Bader to change
    his story, despite Bader's unequivocal testimony that he had changed his mind about
    the nature of the object before any meeting with defense counsel and the State's utter
    failure to offer any evidence to indicate otherwise. See Abdulla, 223 So. 3d at 280
    (holding that prosecutor improperly implied "that the witness, through speaking with
    defense counsel and Appellant, came up with a defense strategy involving perjury,"
    which could have been reasonably interpreted "as the prosecutor conveying to the jury
    that Appellant and his counsel were complicit in the witness's alleged perjury"
    (emphasis omitted)); see also Tindal v. State, 
    803 So. 2d 806
    , 810 (Fla. 4th DCA 2001)
    ("This court has repeatedly held that it is impermissible for the state to suggest, without
    evidentiary support, that the defense has 'gotten to' and changed a witness's testimony
    or that a witness has not testified out of fear." (citing Johnson v. State, 
    747 So. 2d 436
    ,
    439 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999); Henry v. State, 
    651 So. 2d 1267
    , 1268-69 (Fla. 4th DCA
    1995))).
    We cannot agree with the State's argument that these errors were
    harmless. In assessing whether an error was harmless, we ask if there is a reasonable
    2We      note that although Taylor relies heavily on Penalver and similar cases
    in his initial brief, the State's response brief fails to even mention, let alone distinguish,
    that line of caselaw. Instead, the State supports its perfunctory assertion that the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion with references to a party's general right to inquire into
    a witness's possible biases.
    -8-
    possibility that the error affected the verdict, and it is the State's burden to establish that
    there is not. See State v. DiGuilio, 
    491 So. 2d 1129
    , 1139 (Fla. 1986). We do not
    merely evaluate whether the jury ultimately reached the correct result or whether
    overwhelming evidence of guilt exists. See Ventura v. State, 
    29 So. 3d 1086
    , 1090-91
    (Fla. 2010). Rather, we must determine whether a reasonable possibility exists that the
    jury, in reaching its decision, considered the prosecutor's improper questions and
    argument regarding Bader's contact with defense counsel. See 
    id. at 1090
    ; Rigterink v.
    State, 
    2 So. 3d 221
    , 256 (Fla. 2009) ("Under a proper analysis, we conclude that the
    jury most assuredly, and very seriously, considered and substantially included
    Rigterink's videotaped interrogation in reaching its verdicts. . . . [U]nder these facts, we
    cannot say that the videotape—which should have been suppressed based upon proper
    legal analysis—did not 'contribute to' his convictions."), vacated on other grounds,
    Florida v. Rigterink, 
    559 U.S. 965
     (2010). Our review "requires not only a close
    examination of the permissible evidence on which the jury could have legitimately relied,
    but an even closer examination of the impermissible evidence which might have
    possibly influenced the jury verdict." DiGuilio, 
    491 So. 2d at 1138
    . Further, we must
    view the erroneously admitted evidence and improper argument together and in the
    context of the entire record. See Penalver, 
    926 So. 2d at 1137
     ("[E]ven when we find
    multiple harmless errors, we must still consider whether 'the cumulative effect of [the]
    errors was such as to deny to defendant the fair and impartial trial that is the inalienable
    right of all litigants in this state and this nation.' " (second alteration in original) (quoting
    Brooks v. State, 
    918 So. 2d 181
    , 202 (Fla. 2005))).
    -9-
    The prosecutor's argument not only impermissibly impugned defense
    counsel's integrity but went so far as to imply that defense counsel had committed some
    form of witness tampering. See Howard v. State, 
    152 So. 3d 825
    , 829 (Fla. 2d DCA
    2014) ("It is . . . improper to make any statement during closing argument that
    denigrates defense counsel or the defense strategy, including any comments made to
    suggest that the defense is attempting to perpetrate a fraud on the jury." (citation
    omitted)); Henry, 
    651 So. 2d at 1268
     ("The implication by the prosecutor in this case
    was that the defense 'got to' the witness. That suggests that the defense was engaged
    in tampering with a witness and suborning perjury, both criminal offenses. Such a
    comment is highly irregular, impermissible, and prejudicial."). That the pertinent witness
    was the sole eyewitness to the charged offense made the implication all the more
    damaging.
    Moreover, the prejudice of the improper suggestions was further
    compounded when the prosecutor also suggested through his questions and
    argument—again without any evidentiary foundation—that Taylor's mother had also
    somehow persuaded or pressured Bader to change his story.3 By tying Bader's
    changed story both to his conversations with defense counsel and to Taylor's mother's
    3Taylor did not object at trial to the prosecutor's questions or argument
    concerning his mother. We express no opinion as to whether they constituted
    fundamental error in themselves but consider them, and the rest of the record, as part of
    our harmlessness analysis of the error that we have already identified. See DiGuilio,
    
    491 So. 2d at 1135
     (explaining that the application of the harmless error analysis
    requires an examination of the entire record); see also Whitton v. State, 
    649 So. 2d 861
    ,
    864-65 (Fla. 1994) ("Although Whitton did not object to the first two alleged comments
    on Whitton's post-arrest silence, he argues that the cumulative impact of all three
    comments requires reversal. We agree that we must consider all three comments in
    our harmless error analysis because the harmless error test requires an examination of
    the entire record.").
    - 10 -
    visit to the store—at some unspecified point in time after the robbery, when Bader had
    not even been at the store—the prosecutor improperly insinuated that he knew more
    than he was telling the jury. See Tindal, 
    803 So. 2d at 810
     (explaining that "because
    the prosecutor is an agent of the state," comments suggesting that the defense has
    pressured a witness to change his testimony or to refuse to testify "imply that the
    prosecutor has unique knowledge that has not been presented to the jury").
    In addition, we agree with Taylor that the prosecutor's comments
    impermissibly invited the jury to view Bader's prior inconsistent statements as
    substantive evidence. "Prior inconsistent statements are admissible for impeachment
    purposes so long as the goal is to have the jury 'disbelieve both statements' rather than
    to convince the jury 'that the prior statement is true and the in-court testimony is false.' "
    Abdulla, 223 So. 3d at 279 (quoting Espinoza v. State, 
    37 So. 3d 387
    , 388 (Fla. 4th
    DCA 2010)).4 Here, however, although the prosecutor urged the jury to ultimately focus
    on the video from the security cameras, the obvious implication of his argument was
    that Bader's prior inconsistent statements were the truth, as the video was "the silent
    witness that's not somehow impacted by the Defendant's mother coming to the store.
    It's not impacted all of a sudden after meeting with Defense counsel two times . . . ."
    Finally, the only evidence that could properly support a finding that the
    object was a knife was the video and Taylor's vigorously challenged statement to the
    deputy. And contrary to the State's closing argument, the video is far from dispositive:
    all that can be discerned is a roughly foot-long, flat, and narrow object, the lower part of
    which appears to be a handle and the upper part of which appears to be a silver-colored
    4As   in Abdulla, no exceptions to this general rule are pertinent to this case.
    - 11 -
    metal, all of which could be consistent with either a knife or a metal spatula. The
    resolution is not high enough to establish whether the tip is pointed or rounded.
    Especially given the paucity of the evidence, we cannot say that the jury
    did not consider the prosecutor's improper questioning and argument in ultimately
    finding that the object in Taylor's hand had been a knife. See Penalver, 
    926 So. 2d at 1138
     ("In light of the scant evidence connecting Penalver to this murder [, i.e., a
    photograph from a grainy videotape and "a statement allegedly made by Penalver to
    another inmate that he had a chance of being acquitted because he did not remove his
    mask,"] and the consequent importance of identifying the individual depicted on the
    videotape in sunglasses and hat, we conclude that the improperly admitted evidence
    and the State's suggestion that the defense tampered with or suborned perjury by an
    identification witness meet the cumulative error requirements outlined above and
    require reversal."). We therefore cannot hold that the State has carried its burden of
    showing harmless error when the prosecutor persisted in improperly impeaching the
    only eyewitness, impugning the integrity of defense counsel, and further insinuating that
    defense counsel, as well as the defendant's mother, had committed criminal offenses of
    their own. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
    Reversed; remanded.
    NORTHCUTT and SALARIO, JJ., Concur.
    - 12 -