People of Michigan v. Amanda Jenise Hardy ( 2019 )


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  •               If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
    revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                    UNPUBLISHED
    November 26, 2019
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                   No. 339236
    Wayne Circuit Court
    AMANDA JENISE HARDY,                                                LC No. 17-002020-01-FH
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: O’BRIEN, P.J., and BECKERING and LETICA, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Defendant appeals as of right her jury trial conviction of assaulting, resisting, and
    obstructing a police officer, MCL 750.81(d)(1). We vacate defendant’s conviction and remand
    for a new trial.
    I. BACKGROUND FACTS
    On the evening of June 14, 2016, defendant was driven by a friend to a Beyoncé concert
    at Ford Field. At the concert, defendant sat separate from her friend. At some point during the
    concert, defendant was apprehended by two bouncers for acting disorderly. 1 The bouncers
    brought defendant over to Officer Donyale Crutchfield and her partner, Detective Laura Layher,
    and instructed the officers to remove defendant from the venue. The officers handcuffed
    defendant and escorted her to the front door of the building. Once there, the officers removed
    defendant’s handcuffs and instructed her to exit the building.
    Accounts differ about what happened next. According to the officers, defendant refused
    to leave, eventually becoming combative with the officers and striking Officer Crutchfield’s
    face, at which time the officers took defendant to the ground and arrested her while defendant
    shouted profanities. Defendant, on the other hand, contended that she was compliant with the
    1
    Defendant denied that she was acting disorderly.
    -1-
    officers at all times, that she told the officers that she was trying to reach her friend who was still
    in the concert, and that, when defendant turned to face Officer Crutchfield, the officer grabbed
    defendant by the neck and threw her to the ground, causing defendant to hit her head.
    During the prosecutor’s cross-examination of defendant on the second day of trial, the
    prosecutor asked defendant if she intended to sue the Detroit Police Department. After an
    objection from defense counsel, the trial court ended trial for the day and allowed the parties to
    argue the issue the following morning, outside the presence of the jury.
    The following morning, the trial court ruled that the question was relevant and that cross-
    examination on the issue would be permitted. When in front of the jury, the prosecutor
    continued her questioning of defendant:
    [Prosecutor]: [Defendant] when we left off I was asking about you [sic]
    the potential civil suit suing the Detroit Police Department that you may bring.
    Do you recall that question?
    [Defendant]: Yes.
    [Prosecutor]: All right.
    And isn’t it true that you are at the very least contemplating a civil suit
    suing the Detroit Police Officer Crutchfield for what happened on June 14th,
    2016?
    [Defendant]: It honestly never crossed my mind to actually do that. My
    main concern was her and is you know dealing with this.
    [Prosecutor]: All right.
    So would it surprise you to learn that your attorney told me you are filing
    a civil suit against the Detroit Police Department.
    [Defense counsel’s objection omitted.]
    [Defendant]: Could you ask the question again?
    [Prosecutor]: Would it surprise you to learn that your defense attorney . . .
    told me you were contemplating filing a civil lawsuit against the Detroit Police
    Department?
    [Defendant]: Yes.
    [Prosecutor]: All right.
    And you’re aware that um that that potential civil lawsuit would be greatly
    affected by the outcome of this case, correct?
    -2-
    [Defendant]: Could you say that one more time?
    [Prosecutor]: That that civil suit suing the Detroit Police Department
    would [be] greatly impacted . . . or affect[ed] . . . by the outcome of this case?
    [Defendant]: I guess so.
    [Prosecutor]: All right.
    That makes sense to you right?
    [Defendant]: Yes.
    II. PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT
    On appeal, defendant argues that the prosecution’s repeated questioning of defendant
    about a possible civil suit rose to the level of prosecutorial misconduct.2 Defendant also argues
    that the prosecutor committed misconduct by asking a question that implied she had personal
    knowledge about facts not in evidence. We agree that the prosecutor committed misconduct by
    asking a question that implied that she had personal knowledge about defendant’s credibility, and
    therefore vacate defendant’s conviction.
    A defendant preserves a claim of prosecutorial misconduct by objecting to the
    misconduct and allowing the trial court an opportunity to cure the error. People v Stanaway, 
    446 Mich. 643
    , 687; 521 NW2d 557 (1994). Defendant objected to the prosecutor asking “several
    questions” about a potential civil lawsuit, and also objected after the prosecution asked, “So
    would it surprise you to learn that your attorney told me you are filing a civil suit against the
    Detroit Police Department,” arguing that the question was “improper.” These issues are
    therefore preserved.
    “We generally review de novo allegations of prosecutorial misconduct.”         People v
    Pfaffle, 
    246 Mich. App. 282
    , 288; 632 NW2d 162 (2001).
    The test for prosecutorial misconduct is whether the defendant was denied a fair and
    impartial trial. People v Dobek, 
    274 Mich. App. 58
    , 63; 732 NW2d 546 (2007). Issues of
    prosecutorial misconduct are decided case by case, and this Court must evaluate a prosecutor’s
    alleged misconduct in context. People v Solloway, 
    316 Mich. App. 174
    , 201; 891 NW2d 255
    (2016).
    2
    This Court recently explained in People v Cooper, 
    309 Mich. App. 74
    , 87-88; 867 NW2d 452
    (2015), that a fairer label for most claims of prosecutorial misconduct would be “prosecutorial
    error,” while only the most extreme cases rise to the level of “prosecutorial misconduct.”
    However, we will use the phrase “prosecutorial misconduct” because it has become a term of art.
    -3-
    Briefly addressing defendant’s argument that it was improper for the prosecutor to
    repeatedly ask about a potential civil lawsuit, we conclude that the argument has no merit. The
    prosecutor’s questions regarding the civil lawsuit were relevant because they were probative of
    defendant’s credibility. People v Morton, 
    213 Mich. App. 331
    , 334; 539 NW2d 771 (1995)
    (“[W]hether a witness has filed or is contemplating filing a civil lawsuit, the prospects for which
    may be affected by the outcome of a criminal action, is always relevant to a witness’
    credibility.”). “Any party may attack the credibility of a witness.” People v Rodriguez, 
    251 Mich. App. 10
    , 34; 650 NW2d 96 (2002). The prosecutor only twice asked defendant whether she
    was contemplating suing the Detroit Police Department based on what happened in this case, and
    defendant only answered the question once. Because the question properly weighed on
    defendant’s credibility, and because the prosecutor twice asking the question was entirely
    reasonable, we conclude that the prosecutor’s repeated questioning of defendant about the
    potential civil lawsuit did not deprive defendant of a fair and impartial trial.
    We are troubled, however, by the prosecutor’s follow-up question, when she asked,
    “Would it surprise you to learn that your defense attorney . . . told me you were contemplating
    filing a civil lawsuit against the Detroit Police Department?” It is well established that a
    prosecutor may not “convey a message to the jury that the prosecutor [has] some special
    knowledge or facts indicating the witness’ truthfulness.” People v Bahoda, 
    448 Mich. 261
    , 277;
    531 NW2d 659 (1995). This is because a prosecutor’s “suggestions [and] insinuations . . . of
    personal knowledge are apt to carry much weight against the accused when they should properly
    carry none.” Berger v United States, 
    295 U.S. 78
    , 88; 
    55 S. Ct. 629
    ; 
    79 L. Ed. 1314
    (1935). It is no
    surprise, then, that a prosecutor “may not make representations to the jury based on his personal
    knowledge unless he testifies as a witness.” People v Pearson, 
    123 Mich. App. 462
    , 466; 332
    NW2d 574 (1983). See also People v Lusk, 
    225 Mich. 642
    , 644-645; 
    196 N.W. 403
    (1923)
    (explaining that “[p]rosecuting attorneys should not make unsworn statements of facts within
    their knowledge in the presence of the jury”); People v Dane, 
    59 Mich. 550
    , 552-553; 
    26 N.W. 781
    (1886) (“If the prosecutor was cognizant of the fact that the defendant was the man who took the
    money, and wished the jury to be possessed of his knowledge, he should have been sworn as a
    witness, and given his evidence in the usual way, so that the defendant could have the benefit of
    a cross-examination.”).
    While the prosecution’s attempt at impeaching the witness was proper, the way she
    phrased the question was not.3 The question was phrased so as to insinuate that the prosecutor
    had personal knowledge that defendant was contemplating filing a civil lawsuit against the
    Detroit Police Department. The prosecutor phrased the “question” as a statement about a fact
    3
    This is in part because of the special role of prosecutors. As the Supreme Court of the United
    States memorably explained,
    The United States Attorney is the representative not of an ordinary party to
    a controversy, but of a sovereignty whose obligation to govern impartially is as
    compelling as its obligation to govern at all; and whose interest, therefore, in a
    criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be done.
    
    [Berger, 295 U.S. at 88
    .]
    -4-
    (defense counsel had told the prosecutor that defendant was intending to file a civil lawsuit
    against the Detroit Police Department), and asked defendant whether learning of this fact
    surprised her.
    When considered in the broader context of the prosecutor’s line of questioning, this
    conveyed to the jury that the prosecutor had personal knowledge about defendant’s credibility.
    The question immediately followed defendant’s testimony that she was not contemplating filing
    a lawsuit against the Detroit Police Department. The question, phrased as it was, suggested to
    the jury that the prosecutor knew that defendant had told defense counsel otherwise. Put simply,
    the question was asked in such a way so as to convey to the jury that the prosecutor had personal
    knowledge that defendant was not telling the truth about a potential impending civil suit against
    the Detroit Police Department. Accord People v Gotshall, 
    123 Mich. 474
    , 483-484; 
    82 N.W. 274
    (1900) (“The purpose of these questions is too manifest. It was designed to convey to the jury
    the impression that the prosecuting officer believed [the defendant] was guilty of [a series of
    arsons that he was not on trial for].”).4 There can be no question that this was indeed the purpose
    of the question given that the prosecutor, in response to defense counsel’s objection to the
    question, flatly stated, “But defense counsel informed me that she is going to file a civil suit
    pending the adjudication of this litigation.”
    This conduct was clearly inappropriate. See 
    Bahoda, 448 Mich. at 277
    . But to warrant a
    new trial, the conduct must have denied defendant a fair and impartial trial. Dobek, 274 Mich
    App at 63. Based on the facts of this case, we conclude that it did. 5
    This case relied almost exclusively on the credibility of the witnesses: defendant’s
    testimony versus the arresting officers’ testimony. Defendant’s defense was that she did not
    assault, resist, or obstruct the officers in any way. The only evidence she had to support this was
    her testimony, and the only evidence that directly rebutted defendant’s testimony was the
    officers’ testimony. Had the jury believed defendant’s testimony and discredited the officers,
    defendant could not have been guilty.
    It is thus unsurprising that the prosecutor stated during closing arguments that “credibility
    is at the crux of this case,” and then spent almost half of her closing arguing why the officers
    were credible and defendant was not. In doing so, the prosecutor repeatedly suggested that
    defendant was not credible because she was planning to file a civil lawsuit against the Detroit
    Police Department. The prosecutor stated, “[Officer Crutchfield] does not know [defendant],
    4
    On appeal, the prosecution argues that the prosecutor was simply trying to impeach the witness,
    nothing else. But if the sole purpose of the prosecutor’s question was to present a prior
    inconsistent statement, the prosecutor could have asked the question in a way that did not imply
    that she had personal knowledge that defendant was contemplating filing a civil lawsuit against
    the Detroit Police Department.
    5
    As previously noted, defense counsel objected to the prosecutor’s question, arguing, among
    other things, that it was “improper.” Despite this proper objection to the improper question, the
    trial court overruled the objection and failed to immediately give a curative instruction.
    -5-
    she’s not out to get her, she has no personal ax to grind. The defendant however has a huge
    personal interest in how this case is decided.” The prosecutor later stated that defendant
    recorded her injuries, and submitted photos of her injuries as evidence, because the “alleged
    injuries of the defendant would be useful during a civil suit.” The prosecutor followed up by
    stating,
    That’s useful in a subsequence [sic] civil suit. Think about why you are
    here. Think about what you’re being told. And ladies and gentlemen, this comes
    down to credibility.
    And I submit to you that [defendant] is not credible. And she does not
    want to be in trouble and has other interest as well.
    That interest is not in telling you the truth.
    Clearly, the prosecutor knew that this case came down to credibility, and the prosecutor
    hammered on the idea that defendant was not credible because she “has a huge personal interest
    in how this case is decided.” In other words, the prosecutor argued that defendant had a reason
    to lie about being compliant with the arresting officers because she was planning to bring a civil
    suit if acquitted. Standing alone, this argument was not improper, even in light of defendant’s
    denial. But when the jury considered this argument, it also had before it the prosecutor’s
    question implying—as well as the prosecutor’s statement flatly saying—that the prosecutor had
    personal knowledge that defendant was indeed planning to file a civil lawsuit, despite
    defendant’s testimony that she was not. Thus, the prosecutor conveyed to the jury that she had
    personal knowledge that defendant was lying when she said she was not contemplating filing a
    civil lawsuit against the Detroit Police Department, and then argued to jurors that they should
    discredit defendant for that reason. On these facts, we cannot conclude that defendant received a
    fair trial.
    In sum, the prosecutor’s question was clearly improper because it conveyed to the jury
    that the prosecutor had personal knowledge that defendant was being untruthful when she
    testified that she was not planning to file a civil lawsuit against the Detroit Police Department.
    This error was compounded when the prosecutor unambiguously stated that “defense counsel
    informed me that she is going to file a civil suit pending the adjudication of this litigation.”
    Despite defense counsel’s timely objection, the trial court overruled the objection and failed to
    immediately give a curative instruction. As a result, the prosecutor’s improper question and
    statement were allowed to stand before the jury, uncorrected. The prosecutor then argued at
    length that defendant was not credible because she was contemplating bringing a civil lawsuit
    against the Detroit Police Department—the same fact that the prosecutor had insinuated, and
    then unequivocally stated, that she had personal knowledge to be true, despite defendant’s
    testimony that it was not. On this record, the prosecutor’s conduct deprived defendant of a fair
    trial. We therefore vacate defendant’s conviction and remand for a new trial.
    -6-
    Defendant’s conviction is vacated, and the case is remanded for a new trial. We do not
    retain jurisdiction.
    /s/ Colleen A. O’Brien
    /s/ Jane M. Beckering
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 339236

Filed Date: 11/26/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/27/2019