People v. Phillips ( 2007 )


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  •                                                     SECOND DIVISION
    March 6, 2007
    No. 1-04-2655
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,      )    Appeal from the
    )    Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                  )    Cook County.
    )
    v.                              )
    )
    EZEKIEL PHILLIPS,                         )    Honorable
    )    William G. Lacy,
    Defendant-Appellant.                 )    Judge Presiding.
    PRESIDING JUSTICE WOLFSON delivered the opinion of the
    court:
    Ezekiel Phillips was charged with attempt first degree
    murder, armed violence, and aggravated battery.   This wasn’t the
    first time the defendant had been charged with armed violence and
    aggravated battery.   He had been convicted of those offenses on
    earlier occasions.    Before and during his jury trial, he moved to
    bar use of the prior convictions to attack his believability when
    he testified.   The trial court refused to rule, saying it wanted
    to hear the defendant’s direct examination before deciding.   The
    defendant did not testify.
    The question before us is whether the trial court abused its
    discretion when it refused to rule and, if so, whether the error
    will affect the defendant’s convictions for armed violence and
    aggravated battery.
    For reasons that follow, we hold the trial court abused its
    1-04-2655
    discretion when it refused to rule on the defendant’s motion, but
    that the great weight of authority compels us to decline to
    consider whether the error supports a change in outcome.    We
    affirm the defendant’s convictions; we vacate his sentences and
    remand the cause for a new sentencing hearing.
    FACTS
    We briefly summarize the state of the record at the point
    where the defense again moved to bar use of defendant’s prior
    convictions.
    At trial, the State presented evidence that on June 26,
    2000, the defendant stabbed Daryl Willis.   Willis testified that
    defendant approached him outside a liquor store near Roosevelt
    and Loomis streets in Chicago.   Defendant told Willis he did not
    appreciate how Willis had disrespected him the other day.
    Defendant said, "This is what I do to tough niggers," and stabbed
    Willis in the stomach.   While Willis was on his back, defendant
    attempted to stab him again and cut Willis’ leg.   According to
    Willis, defendant grabbed Willis’ head and put a knife under his
    throat.   A woman grabbed the defendant’s hand and begged him not
    to kill Willis.   Defendant then left the scene.   Laboratory and
    medical reports showed Willis was heavily intoxicated when he was
    treated for stab wounds.
    In her opening statement, defense counsel told the jury the
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    1-04-2655
    evidence would show defendant was acting in self-defense because
    Willis hit the defendant with a two-by-four.    Defense witness
    Cynthia Traylor testified that prior to the confrontation, Willis
    was intoxicated and acting very violently.    She heard Willis tell
    defendant to "suck [his] French Dick" and saw Willis pick up a
    two-by-four and swing it at the defendant.    He struck defendant
    with the two-by-four.    She then saw defendant stab Willis.
    Witness Bridget Godfrey said she saw defendant and Willis
    arguing loudly on the sidewalk.    The defendant told Willis to go
    away and said he did not want to argue.    Willis then picked up a
    two-by-four and began swinging it at defendant.    Godfrey said
    defendant was struck more than once by the two-by-four.      The next
    thing she saw was Willis falling to the sidewalk.    She did not
    see the defendant holding a knife.
    After its eyewitness testimony, the defense renewed its
    motion in limine and asked the court to determine whether
    defendant’s prior convictions would be admissible if he were to
    testify.    The prior convictions were for armed violence,
    aggravated battery, domestic battery, and manufacture or delivery
    of a controlled substance.    The court said one conviction,
    domestic battery, would not come in because it was older than ten
    years.   As to the remaining convictions, the judge said:
    "*** The other three convictions I was told
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    about were three felony convictions and they
    are all within ten years of today, given the
    length of the sentences of those two previous
    cases, so they do meet the first two prongs.
    The third prong is whether the court must
    conduct an analysis as to whether or not this
    evidence of the prior convictions which would
    only be contracted [sic] as to the
    defendant’s credibility is more probative
    than prejudicial, and it is my feeling that
    in order to conduct such an analysis I would
    have to hear all the evidence in the case,
    and until I have heard the defendant testify
    I can’t determine whether it’s more probative
    than prejudicial.   For that reason I would
    rule; but to rule now would be premature,
    which is this court’s opinion, which I know
    the defense disagrees with."
    The defendant then chose not to testify.     The jury returned
    a verdict of not guilty of attempt first degree murder, but
    guilty of armed violence and aggravated battery.     The trial court
    denied defendant’s motion for a new trial and sentenced the
    defendant to life imprisonment for the armed violence conviction
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    1-04-2655
    and five years’ imprisonment for each of the aggravated battery
    convictions, to merge and run concurrently.    The defendant was
    absent at the time the jury returned its verdict and during the
    sentencing hearing.    There is nothing in the record to indicate
    the trial court admonished defendant that he could be sentenced
    in absentia.
    DECISION
    I. Refusal to Rule
    In People v. Montgomery, 
    47 Ill. 2d 510
    , 519, 
    268 N.E.2d 695
    (1971), the court adopted the 1971 proposed draft of Federal Rule
    of Evidence 609.    In Illinois, with age limitations inapplicable
    to this case, a prior conviction may be used to impeach a
    defendant where: (1) the prior conviction was for a crime
    punishable by death or imprisonment in excess of one year, or a
    crime involving dishonesty or false statement; and (2) the danger
    of unfair prejudice does not substantially outweigh the probative
    value of the conviction.    
    Montgomery, 47 Ill. 2d at 516
    ; People
    v. Cox, 
    195 Ill. 2d 378
    , 383, 
    748 N.E.2d 166
    (2001).     In
    performing the balancing test, courts consider:
    " ‘the nature of the prior crimes, ***the
    length of the criminal record, the age and
    circumstances of the defendant, and, above
    all, the extent to which it is more important
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    1-04-2655
    to the search for truth in a particular case
    for the jury to hear the defendant’s story
    than to know of a prior conviction.’ "
    
    Montgomery, 47 Ill. 2d at 518
    , quoting Fed.
    R. Evid. 609 advisory committee notes.
    The trial court uses its discretion when conducting the
    balancing test to determine whether a witness’s prior conviction
    is admissible for impeachment.    
    Cox, 195 Ill. 2d at 383
    .
    Convictions for the same violent crime defendant is on trial for
    should be admitted "sparingly."       People v. Williams, 
    161 Ill. 2d 1
    , 38, 
    641 N.E.2d 296
    (1994).    Failure to conduct a "meaningful"
    balancing test violates Montgomery.      People v. McGee, 286 Ill.
    App. 3d 786, 793, 
    676 N.E.2d 1341
    (1997).
    We do not reach the question of whether defendant’s prior
    convictions could be used to attack his character for
    truthtelling.    Nor are we called on to decide whether the
    defendant’s failure to testify waives review of a trial court’s
    decision to allow use of the defendant’s prior convictions to
    attack his believability.    See Luce v. United States, 
    469 U.S. 38
    , 
    83 L. Ed. 2d 443
    , 
    105 S. Ct. 460
    (1984); People v. Steward,
    
    295 Ill. App. 3d 735
    , 748-49, 
    693 N.E.2d 436
    (1998).      Those are
    not matters for this appeal.    The only issues before us are
    whether the trial court’s refusal to rule until it heard the
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    1-04-2655
    defendant’s direct examination was an abuse of discretion, and,
    if it was, how do we determine what to do about it when he does
    not testify?
    While a criminal defendant’s trial lawyer has the right to
    make ultimate decisions about matters of tactics and strategy,
    the decision about whether to testify "ultimately belongs to the
    defendant," not his lawyer.    People v. Medina, 
    221 Ill. 2d 394
    ,
    403, 
    851 N.E.2d 1220
    (2006).   The defendant’s right to testify
    "is fundamental," not a matter of strategy or tactical decision
    best left to trial counsel.    
    Steward, 295 Ill. App. 3d at 743
    ;
    People v. Daniels, 
    230 Ill. App. 3d 527
    , 535, 
    595 N.E.2d 83
    (1992).   The defendant’s right to testify is grounded in the
    Fifth and Sixth amendments to the United States Constitution.
    Rock v. Arkansas, 
    483 U.S. 44
    , 52-54, 
    97 L. Ed. 2d 37
    , 46-48, 
    107 S. Ct. 2704
    , 2709-11 (1987).
    It necessarily follows that a decision of such grave import
    should be made intelligently, based on relevant and available
    information.   See United States v. Oakes, 
    565 F.2d 170
    , 171 (1st
    Cir. 1977).    In this case, potential use of the defendant’s prior
    convictions, violent in nature and identical to the charges
    against him, had to be a factor that would weigh heavily on the
    decision to testify.
    When the prior convictions are similar to or identical with
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    the charges at trial, the risk of unfair prejudice weighs
    heavily.    
    Williams, 161 Ill. 2d at 37-38
    ; see R. Wissler and M.
    Saks, On the Inefficacy of Limiting Instructions, 9 Law and Human
    Behavior 37, 37-48 (1985).    That is, the defendant in this case
    faced the kind of unfair prejudice that "speaks to the capacity
    of some concededly relevant evidence to lure the factfinder into
    declaring guilt on a ground different from proof specific to the
    offense charged."     Old Chief v. United States, 
    519 U.S. 172
    , 180,
    
    136 L. Ed. 2d 574
    , 588, 
    117 S. Ct. 644
    , 650 (1997).    The risk,
    obviously recognized by the defendant’s lawyer, is that the jury
    would use the prior convictions as proof of the defendant’s
    violent character, an improper purpose.    By taking the stand this
    defendant would have been engaging in a high-stakes gamble.
    By the time defense counsel renewed his motion to bar the
    prior convictions the issues to be decided by the jury were
    clearly drawn.   The court had heard opening statements, cross-
    examination of the State’s witnesses, and the testimony of two
    defense eyewitnesses.    There was no question about it: the
    defendant was not denying he stabbed Willis; he was claiming he
    acted in self-defense because an intoxicated man was striking him
    with a two-by-four.    The court eventually held the evidence
    without defendant’s testimony was sufficient to support self-
    defense instructions.
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    We cannot fathom what more the judge needed in order to
    conduct the balancing test and rule on the admissibility of the
    prior convictions.    The defendant was deprived of the information
    he needed to make an informed and intelligent decision about
    whether to testify.   Few defense attorneys on the plus side of
    Strickland would advise a client to testify without knowing
    whether prior convictions for violent crimes identical to the
    charges in the case would be allowed to attack the defendant’s
    character for truthfulness.   See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    (1984).   The
    defendant’s state of mind was a material issue for his
    affirmative defense of self-defense.    People v. Parker, 194 Ill.
    App. 3d 1048, 1058, 
    551 N.E.2d 1012
    (1990).   Only the defendant
    could provide direct evidence of his reasons for stabbing Willis.
    Montgomery’s exhortation to trial judges to consider "above all,
    the extent to which it is more important to the search for truth
    in a particular case for the jury to hear the defendant’s story
    than to know of a prior conviction," went unheeded.    
    Montgomery, 47 Ill. 2d at 518
    , quoting Fed. R. Evid. 609 advisory committee
    notes.   We find the trial court abused its discretion when it
    refused to rule without first hearing the defendant’s direct
    examination.
    Our decision is based on the particular facts of this case.
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    1-04-2655
    We do not suggest a per se rule.     There may be times when a trial
    court cannot effectively conduct the Montgomery balancing test
    without hearing the defendant’s direct testimony, although it is
    difficult to envision that happening with any frequency.    In most
    cases, as was true in this case, the judge will have heard enough
    or been told enough to find the issue ripe for decision.
    Once having found the trial court abused its discretion by
    refusing to rule, we should determine our next step.    But the
    great weight of authority in this State requires us to say there
    is no next step.   At least, not one that can be taken without
    engaging in speculation and guesswork.
    Our supreme court has never addressed the question of how to
    proceed on review when the trial court refuses to rule on
    admissibility of prior convictions and the defendant then
    declines to testify.   But our appellate courts have.   Six times.
    On each of those six occasions the court has held the defendant’s
    failure to testify eliminates the trial court’s refusal to rule
    as a reviewable issue.   Those cases are:
    (1) People v. Ballard, 
    346 Ill. App. 3d 532
    , 543, 
    805 N.E.2d 656
    (2004) (The harm caused by refusal to rule is speculative);
    (2) People v. Owen, 
    299 Ill. App. 3d 818
    , 824-25, 
    701 N.E.2d 1174
    (1998) (Court’s refusal to rule becomes an issue only after
    defendant has testified and State seeks to offer his prior
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    1-04-2655
    convictions for impeachment purposes);
    (3) People v. Mims, 
    204 Ill. App. 3d 87
    , 96, 
    561 N.E.2d 1101
    (1990) (Defendant’s failure to testify makes the no-ruling issue
    "academic");
    (4) People v. Rose, 
    75 Ill. App. 3d 45
    , 53, 
    393 N.E.2d 698
    (1979) (The trial court was not required to rule on the motion
    until defendant testified);
    (5) People v. Hunter, 
    61 Ill. App. 3d 588
    , 597-98, 
    376 N.E.2d 1065
    (1978) (The court may withhold its ruling on
    admissibility of defendant’s prior convictions until after the
    defendant has testified);
    (6) People v. Barksdale, 
    24 Ill. App. 3d 489
    , 496, 
    321 N.E.2d 489
    (1974) (The trial court should have discretion to
    withhold ruling on motion to bar prior convictions until the
    defendant has testified).
    The federal courts, too, have adhered to the notion that a
    refusal to rule on admissibility of prior convictions until the
    defendant testifies is within the trial court’s discretion and
    nonreviewable on appeal when the defendant does not testify.    See
    United States v. Martinez, 
    76 F.3d 1145
    , 1151-52 (10th Cir.
    1996); United States v. Doyle, 
    771 F.2d 250
    , 254-55 (7th Cir.
    1985).
    Some courts in other states have expressed a strong
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    preference for trial court rulings on prior conviction use before
    the defendant decides whether to take the stand.    See Settles v.
    State, 
    584 So. 2d 1260
    , 1263-64 (Miss. 1991); Apodaca v. People,
    
    712 P.2d 467
    , 473-74 (Colo. 1986); State v. McClure, 
    692 P.2d 579
    , 583-84 (Or. 1984); State v. Porter, 
    674 P.2d 694
    , 695 (Wash.
    App. 1984); State v. Ritchie, 
    473 A.2d 1164
    , 1165 (Vt. 1984);
    People v. Sangster, 
    333 N.W.2d 180
    , 183 (Mich. App. 1983); and
    People v. Sandoval, 
    314 N.E.2d 413
    , 416-17 (N.Y. 1974).
    At times, a court, when declining to review a trial judge’s
    nonruling where the defendant does not testify, will express
    disapproval of the failure to rule.    While the court in 
    Ballard, 346 Ill. App. 3d at 544-45
    , found the refusal to rule was not
    error, it questioned that refusal:
    "What more did the trial court need to know,
    particularly after defense witnesses
    testified? *** We conclude the court should
    have ruled and then defendant could
    meaningfully consider whether to exercise his
    right to testify."
    Still, encumbered as we are by precedent in this State, we
    decline to further review the trial court’s erroneous refusal to
    rule on defendant’s motion to bar use of his prior convictions
    until he testified on direct examination.    See People v. Sharpe,
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    1-04-2655
    
    216 Ill. 2d 481
    , 519-20, 
    839 N.E.2d 492
    (2005) ("The doctrine of
    stare decisis expresses the policy of the courts to stand by
    precedents and not to disturb settled points").   Since this is
    the only issue the defendant raises to attack his convictions, we
    affirm the convictions and move on to other issues in this
    appeal.
    II. Sentencing Hearing
    Defendant contends the trial court erred in sentencing him
    in absentia after failing to admonish him of that possibility.
    Section 113-4(e) of the Code of Criminal Procedure requires the
    trial court to admonish the defendant of the possibility of trial
    and sentencing in absentia, even in the case of a defendant who
    flees before trial.    725 ILCS 5/113-4(e) (West 2002); People v.
    Partee, 
    125 Ill. 2d 24
    , 40, 
    530 N.E.2d 460
    (1988); People v.
    Thomas, 
    216 Ill. App. 3d 405
    , 408, 
    576 N.E.2d 352
    (1991).    In the
    absence of an admonishment, sentencing in absentia constitutes
    error.    
    Thomas, 216 Ill. App. 3d at 408
    .
    The record does not reflect that a section 113-4(e)
    admonition was given to the defendant.   We vacate defendant’s
    sentences and remand the cause for a new sentencing hearing.
    III. Mittimus
    Defendant contends, and the State agrees, the mittimus is
    incorrect because it states defendant was convicted of three
    separate counts of aggravated battery.   At sentencing, the trial
    court ordered the three aggravated battery sentences to merge and
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    1-04-2655
    to run concurrently with the natural life sentence.            The mittimus
    also reflects incorrectly that defendant was convicted of
    unlawful use of a weapon by a felon.        Because we are vacating
    defendant’s sentences and remanding for a new sentencing hearing,
    there is no need for us to correct the mittimus.            It should be
    corrected in the trial court.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the defendant’s convictions.          We vacate
    defendant’s sentences and remand for a new sentencing hearing.
    Affirmed and remanded for resentencing.
    SOUTH, J., concurs.
    JUSTICE HOFFMAN, specially concurring:
    I concur in the result reached by the majority in this case.
    I write separately to articulate my reasons for so concurring.
    The majority takes the position that we are not called upon to
    decide whether the defendant’s failure to testify waives review of
    a trial court’s decision to allow use of the defendant’s prior
    convictions to attack his believability.            Strictly speaking the
    majority    is    correct.    The   trial   court   never    ruled   on    the
    defendant’s motion to bar the State’s use of his prior convictions
    for impeachment purposes.       To my mind, however, "[t]he effect of
    the court’s action was the same as if the court had in fact denied
    the motion without prejudice to renewing it after [the] defendant
    testified."      People v. Rose, 
    75 Ill. App. 3d 45
    , 52, 
    393 N.E.2d 698
    (1979).
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    1-04-2655
    The Supreme Court has taken the position that a trial court’s
    denial of a defendant’s motion in limine seeking to bar the use of
    prior convictions for impeachment purposes is not preserved for
    review unless the defendant testifies.          Luce v. United States, 
    469 U.S. 38
    , 41-43, 
    105 S. Ct. 460
    , 
    83 L. Ed. 2d 443
    (1984).              I am at a
    loss to understand why the result should be any different when a
    trial court declines to rule on such a motion and the defendant
    elects not to testify.
    The Luce Court held that any possible harm flowing from a
    trial court’s denial of a motion in limine to bar impeachment by a
    prior conviction is wholly speculative absent the defendant having
    testified and the prosecution having been allowed to use the
    defendant’s prior convictions to impeach him.             As the Court noted,
    the trial judge might, in the exercise of discretion, alter the
    previous    ruling   and   bar   the    use    of   the   defendant’s    prior
    convictions for impeachment purposes, or the prosecution might
    elect not to use an arguably inadmissible prior conviction.              
    Luce, 469 U.S. at 41-42
    .     The circumstance is no different when a trial
    court declines to rule on such a motion and the defendant does not
    testify.     Whether   the   State     would   have   attempted   to    use   an
    inadmissible prior conviction to impeach the defendant or whether
    the trial court would have allowed impeachment by prior conviction
    are matters of pure speculation.
    The    majority   correctly       holds   that   a    defendant    has    a
    constitutional right to testify, but comes short of declaring that
    15
    1-04-2655
    the trial court denied him that right in this case.            Instead, the
    majority concludes that "[t]he defendant was deprived of the
    information he needed to make an informed and intelligent decision
    about   whether   to   testify."     I    disagree.     The   defendant   was
    certainly aware of his prior convictions and of the risk that the
    State might seek to impeach his testimony by introducing evidence
    of one or more of those convictions.          The decision of whether to
    testify under those circumstances was that of the defendant, not
    the court.    Even if the defense strategy was greatly influenced by
    the risk that the defendant would be impeached with his prior
    convictions, "the court was not required to remove that risk in
    advance."    People v. Mims, 
    204 Ill. App. 3d 87
    , 96, 
    561 N.E.2d 1101
    (1990).     In this case, the question of whether the defendant’s
    prior convictions would be admissible for purposes of impeachment
    never became an issue which the trial court was obligated to
    resolve because the defendant never testified and the State never
    attempted to introduce the convictions.           People v. Ballard, 
    346 Ill. App. 3d 532
    , 543, 
    805 N.E.2d 656
    (2004); People v. Owen, 
    299 Ill. App. 3d 818
    , 824-25, 
    701 N.E.2d 1174
    (1998); see also 
    Rose, 75 Ill. App. 3d at 52-53
    .         Further, the assumption that the trial
    court’s refusal    to   rule   on   the   defendant’s    motion   in   limine
    motivated his decision not to testify is unsupported speculation.
    See 
    Luce, 469 U.S. at 42
    .
    Unlike the majority, I do not feel "encumbered" by precedent
    in this area; rather I completely agree with the earlier decisions
    16
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    of this court holding that a trial court’s refusal to rule on a
    motion   in    limine    to   bar   impeachment        by   evidence   of   a   prior
    conviction is not reviewable.                  It is only when the defendant
    testifies and the State introduces evidence of a prior conviction
    for purposes of impeachment that a claim of error in admitting such
    evidence can be presented to a reviewing court in a concrete
    factual context.        See 
    Luce, 469 U.S. at 43-44
    .           If this court were
    to review a trial court’s refusal to rule on such a motion in
    limine in cases where the defendant elects not to testify, we would
    necessarily be required to engage in pure speculation as to the
    reasons why the defendant did not testify.
    For      these   reasons,      I   concur    in    the   affirmance    of    the
    defendant’s conviction.          Additionally, for the reasons stated by
    the majority, I concur in the vacation of the defendant’s sentence
    and remand of this case to the circuit court for a new sentencing
    hearing.
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