State of Missouri v. Edward H. Pennington, Jr. , 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 717 ( 2016 )


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  •               IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS
    WESTERN DISTRICT
    STATE OF MISSOURI,                                    )
    )
    Respondent,       )
    )    WD78078
    v.                                                    )
    )    OPINION FILED:
    )    July 26, 2016
    EDWARD H. PENNINGTON, JR.,                            )
    )
    Appellant.      )
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri
    The Honorable Justine E. Del Muro, Judge
    Before Division Two: Karen King Mitchell, Presiding Judge, and
    Cynthia L. Martin and Gary D. Witt, Judges
    Edward H. Pennington, Jr., appeals, following a jury trial, his convictions of felony
    resisting arrest, § 575.150,1 and possession of a controlled substance, § 195.202, for which he
    was sentenced to concurrent two-year sentences. Pennington raises two claims on appeal; he
    argues that the trial court erred in both limiting his opening statement and admitting a State’s
    exhibit without a proper chain of custody. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.
    1
    All statutory references are to the Revised Statutes of Missouri 2000, as updated through the 2010
    Cumulative Supplement.
    Background2
    On April 4, 2011, around 11:35 p.m., Detective Hobart Price and Officer Vincent Lolly
    of the Kansas City Missouri Police Department were on patrol when they noticed a silver Lexus
    drive by. The Lexus caught their attention because the rear driver-side door opened and closed
    while the vehicle was traveling 35-40 miles per hour. The officers began following the vehicle.
    While doing so, they saw the door open again, and Detective Price could hear a female voice
    screaming for help. The Lexus slowed to almost a stop, the door opened again, and a woman in
    the backseat leaned out, again screaming for help.
    When the Lexus was nearly stopped, Detective Price jumped out of the patrol car and
    yelled at the driver, through the open door, to stop the car. The driver, later identified as
    Pennington, “took off,” so Detective Price got back into his patrol vehicle, activated the lights
    and siren, and pursued the car. Pennington ran numerous stop signs and drove at speeds
    exceeding 70 miles per hour through residential neighborhoods. At one point, the Lexus crested
    a hill, driving in the oncoming traffic lane, at a speed in excess of 70 miles per hour, and sparks
    flew from underneath the car when it came down. During the entire pursuit, the woman in the
    backseat was waving her arms and asking for help.
    Other officers joined the pursuit, and one was able to deploy a stop stick, which struck
    one of the tires of Pennington’s vehicle. When Pennington attempted to turn right, he lost
    control and slammed the car into a tree. Pennington then jumped from the car and fled on foot.
    He was eventually caught by the officers, but he continued to resist by struggling and refusing to
    put his hands behind his back. One officer deployed a taser to obtain compliance, and the
    officers were able to take Pennington into custody.
    2
    “An appellate court considers the facts and all reasonable inferences derived therefrom in a light most
    favorable to the verdict and disregards all contrary evidence and inferences.” State v. Fritz, 
    480 S.W.3d 316
    , 318
    (Mo. App. S.D. 2016).
    2
    Pennington was then transported to police headquarters for booking. When the booking
    officer placed Pennington’s socks in a property bag, she felt something hard, so she shook the
    sock upside down, and a clear baggie with a white, rock-like substance fell out, onto the counter.
    The booking officer placed the baggie inside an envelope and gave it to her supervisor. The
    supervisor requested the arresting officer’s name, so the booking officer indicated it had been
    Detective Price. The supervisor then contacted dispatch to have Detective Price return to the
    detention area. The supervisor performed a field test on the substance, which showed positive
    for crack cocaine. Detective Price then placed the substance in a bag, heat-sealed it, and marked
    it with his initials, the case number, and the date and time of the sealing. Detective Price placed
    the sealed evidence in the locked property bin where it remained until it was transported by an
    evidence courier to the Kansas City Regional Crime Lab and placed into a secured vault.
    Zachary Skinner, a Forensic Specialist 4 in the Drug Analysis Unit, removed the sealed bag from
    the vault, broke Detective Price’s seal, and tested the substance.       His testing revealed the
    rock-like substance to contain .016 grams of cocaine.
    Pennington was charged as a persistent felony offender with felony resisting arrest,
    § 575.150, and possession of a controlled substance, § 195.202. Before trial, the State filed a
    motion in limine, seeking to exclude testimony from Dr. Marilyn Hutchinson, Pennington’s
    endorsed expert witness whom he intended to call to support a diminished capacity defense. The
    State argued that Dr. Hutchinson’s opinion regarding Pennington’s diminished capacity was
    based upon Pennington’s own voluntary drug intoxication. The trial court sustained the State’s
    motion insofar as it precluded Dr. Hutchinson from testifying that Pennington’s diminished
    capacity was related to voluntary drug intoxication but allowed Dr. Hutchinson’s opinion to the
    extent it was based upon any mental health diagnoses independent of drug usage.
    3
    During Pennington’s opening statement, trial counsel advised the jury that Pennington
    “suffers from several mental health issues:         [m]ajor depression, P.T.S.D., paranoia and
    personality disorder.” Trial counsel noted that Pennington’s medications had been cut off at the
    beginning of 2011, and he had not received medication for nearly four months when the charged
    crimes occurred. Trial counsel suggested that Dr. Hutchinson would testify that, on April 4,
    2011, “Mr. Pennington was not thinking rationally because he was without his meds for so long.”
    Trial counsel began to tell the jury that, once Detective Price encountered Pennington,
    Pennington’s “mental health issues really began to show themselves.” Trial counsel started,
    “Dr. Hutchinson will tell you that his P.T.S.D. came back in the fear—”; but counsel was cut off
    by an objection from the State, arguing that this was not “appropriate testimony of
    Dr. Hutchinson” and was “not in her report.” In response, trial counsel advised the court: “I
    expect her to testify that the reason that he ran from him, ran from the—” but the State again
    interposed, arguing, “That’s not what she says in her report.” The court then advised trial
    counsel, “You have to stick to what’s mentioned in her report. I’m afraid if it’s not in there then
    we can’t do that, okay?” Trial counsel acknowledged the court’s ruling and then continued her
    opening statement, advising the jury: “Now Dr. Hutchinson will come in and she will testify
    about his mental health issues and how that affected his thinking on April 4th of 2011.” She
    concluded the opening statement by asking the jury to “find [Pennington] not guilty of resisting
    of a lawful stop because of his irrational thinking and diminished capacity that Dr. Hutchinson
    will be testifying to.”
    During Dr. Hutchinson’s testimony, she indicated that Pennington suffered from
    post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as a result of witnessing a murder during a prior term of
    incarceration. Dr. Hutchinson further testified that, in her medical opinion, Pennington was not
    4
    thinking rationally when he fled from police.          On cross-examination, Dr. Hutchinson
    acknowledged that Pennington told her the reason he fled was because he believed that
    outrunning the police would give him time to “help out” his daughter before he was arrested.
    In closing argument, trial counsel suggested to the jury that Pennington’s PTSD is what
    caused him to flee from the police, “feeling the fear of going back to prison because of the
    murder he witnessed there.”     The jury found Pennington guilty as charged, and the court
    sentenced him to concurrent two-year sentences. Pennington appeals.
    Analysis
    Pennington brings two points on appeal. First, he argues that the trial court erred in
    limiting his opening statement by sustaining the State’s objection when Pennington tried to tell
    the jury what he believed Dr. Hutchinson would say in her testimony. Second, he argues that the
    court erred in admitting State’s Exhibit 7 (the crack cocaine) because there was an insufficient
    foundation laid insofar as there was a break in the chain of custody. We find no reversible error
    and affirm.
    A. Pennington suffered no prejudice from the limitation on his opening statement.
    In his first point, Pennington claims that the trial court erred in sustaining the State’s
    objection to a portion of his opening statement wherein he attempted to characterize what he
    anticipated to be part of Dr. Hutchinson’s testimony. We disagree.
    “The scope of opening statements is within the discretion of the trial court.” State v.
    Gilbert, 
    103 S.W.3d 743
    , 751 (Mo. banc 2003). “Review is for abuse of discretion.” 
    Id. “Error alone
    does not warrant reversal[; r]eversal requires prejudicial error.”    
    Id. Because “[t]he
    primary purpose of an opening statement is to inform the judge and jury of the general nature of
    the case, so they may appreciate the significance of the evidence as it is presented,” prejudice
    5
    occurs when the defense is “unable to outline the facts supporting [the defense] theory of the
    case . . . [or] provide a context [for the facts] presented.” State v. Thompson, 
    68 S.W.3d 393
    ,
    394, 395 (Mo. banc 2002).
    To begin, it is not clear from Pennington’s argument or the record before us whether the
    trial court’s ruling was in error. While on appeal Pennington argues that his counsel was
    prohibited in opening statement from linking his “mental state on the night of the offense with
    his PTSD and accompanying fear of being arrested and going back to prison—the very site
    where he witnessed the trauma that started the PTSD,” at trial Pennington’s counsel never
    specified the exact testimony she sought to outline but was precluded from mentioning. The
    record reflects only that, after the prosecutor objected to Pennington’s outline of
    Dr. Hutchinson’s testimony including information not included in the doctor’s report,
    Pennington’s trial counsel stated that she “expect[ed] [Dr. Hutchinson] to testify that the reason
    that [Pennington] ran from [Detective Price], ran from the—[.]”                        But trial counsel was
    interrupted by the prosecutor and never finished her thought, so the record does not show the
    reason for Pennington’s flight that trial counsel expected to elicit from Dr. Hutchinson.
    Pennington made no attempt during the opening statement to indicate that Dr. Hutchinson would
    testify that he suffered from PTSD as a result of witnessing a murder during a prior term of
    incarceration. Furthermore, Pennington has not included Dr. Hutchinson’s report in the record
    on appeal. Consequently, we cannot determine whether such an opinion would have been
    admissible evidence and therefore a proper subject of Pennington’s opening statement.3
    3
    We strongly question whether Dr. Hutchinson would have been allowed to testify as to the actual reason
    for Pennington’s flight, as such an opinion would likely have been nothing more than speculation, based upon
    Dr. Hutchinson’s best guess as to what Pennington was thinking. See Goodwin v. State, 
    191 S.W.3d 20
    , 38 (Mo.
    banc 2006) (noting that “witnesses could not have testified to what Goodwin was thinking at the time of the
    murder”). “Opening statements are limited to factual statements that can be proved.” State v. Thompson, 
    68 S.W.3d 393
    , 394 (Mo. banc 2002). During the direct examination of Dr. Hutchinson, Pennington’s counsel made no attempt
    to elicit testimony that Pennington’s flight was linked to the source of his PTSD and the accompanying fear of going
    6
    Regardless of the propriety of the trial court’s ruling, “[e]rror alone does not warrant
    reversal.” 
    Id. at 395.
    “Reversal requires prejudicial error.” 
    Id. An error
    in limiting opening
    statement cannot be deemed prejudicial if, despite the limitation, the defense is still able to
    outline the facts supporting the defense theory and provide a context for the facts to be presented.
    
    Id. Here, Pennington’s
    theory of defense was that, because of his PTSD, he was not thinking
    clearly when he fled; he was merely trying to avoid prison—the place where the incident
    occurred that led to the onset of his PTSD. Pennington’s opening statement advised the jury of
    the diminished capacity defense, Pennington’s mental health diagnoses (including PTSD), and
    his theory that those diagnoses affected his thinking at the time of the crimes. This was
    sufficient to provide the jury with a context in which to view the evidence to support the defense
    theory. Accordingly, we cannot say that Pennington was prejudiced by the limitation placed
    upon his opening statement, even if that limitation was made in error.
    Point I is denied.
    B. The State laid a sufficient foundation for admission of the crack cocaine.
    In his second point on appeal, Pennington argues that the trial court erred in admitting
    State’s Exhibit 7, the crack cocaine, because it lacked foundation due to the State’s failure to
    adequately establish a chain of custody.
    “A trial court has broad discretion to admit or exclude evidence at trial.” State v. Blurton,
    
    484 S.W.3d 758
    , 769 (Mo. banc 2016). “A trial court’s decision regarding the exclusion or
    back to prison. Nor did Pennington elicit such testimony during his redirect of Dr. Hutchinson. It is difficult to
    imagine how Pennington was prejudiced by not being allowed to outline aspects of his expert’s anticipated
    testimony that he did not seek to elicit. Dr. Hutchinson’s only testimony that touched upon a possible link between
    the cause of Pennington’s PTSD, witnessing a prison murder, and his decision to flee the police, came during the
    State’s cross-examination of Dr. Hutchinson. Pennington was able to use this evidence to support his argument in
    closing that there was a link between the source of his PTSD and his decision to flee.
    7
    admissibility of evidence is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.” 
    Id. “A trial
    court abuses its
    discretion only if its decision to admit or exclude evidence is ‘clearly against the logic of the
    circumstances then before the court and is so unreasonable and arbitrary that it shocks the sense
    of justice and indicates a lack of careful, deliberate consideration.’” 
    Id. (quoting Lozano
    v.
    BNSF Ry. Co., 
    421 S.W.3d 448
    , 451 (Mo. banc 2014)).
    “In order to admit exhibits and testimony regarding tests performed on those exhibits, the
    trial court must be satisfied as to the identity of the exhibits and that the exhibits were in the
    same condition when tested as when the exhibits were originally obtained.” State v. Link, 
    25 S.W.3d 136
    , 146 (Mo. banc 2000). “This may be proven by evidence establishing a chain of
    custody, but proof of a chain of custody does not require proof of hand-to-hand custody of the
    evidence, nor proof that eliminates all possibility that the evidence has been disturbed.” 
    Id. “The trial
    court may assume, absent a showing of bad faith, ill will or proof, that officials having
    custody of exhibits properly discharged their duties and that no tampering occurred.” 
    Id. Here, Pennington
    argues that the State failed to establish a sufficient chain of custody
    insofar as the booking officer testified that she gave the substance to her supervisor, whereas
    Detective Price said that he received it from the booking officer. In other words, Pennington is
    relying on the lack of evidence as to how the drugs got back into the hands of the booking officer
    to establish a gap in the chain of custody. However, even if the lack of express evidence
    regarding the return of the evidence to the booking officer could imply a gap in the chain of
    custody, such a gap goes only to the weight of the evidence offered, not its admissibility. See
    State v. Reed, 
    811 S.W.2d 50
    , 55 (Mo. App. S.D. 1991). Further, Pennington has not alleged,
    either on appeal or below, that there was any bad faith, ill will, or proof of tampering; his sole
    complaint has been directed at this alleged break in the chain of custody. But, again, both the
    8
    trial court and this court may properly assume a lack of tampering in the absence of evidence to
    the contrary. 
    Link, 25 S.W.3d at 146
    .
    Furthermore, the alleged inconsistency between the statements of Detective Price and the
    booking officer does not necessarily establish a break in the chain of custody. The booking
    officer testified that standard procedure, when discovering what appear to be drugs, requires the
    booking officer to contact a supervisor for field testing. The supervisor then contacts the
    arresting officer (here, Detective Price) to have the arresting officer return to booking.
    Sometimes the supervisor will field test the substance before the arresting officer returns, but
    other times, the supervisor will wait for the arresting officer’s arrival before field testing. But the
    arresting officer is always required to return—presumably to process any new evidence.
    Detective Price testified that, after the substance field-tested positive for crack cocaine, he was
    given the substance by the booking officer, and Detective Price then heat-sealed it and marked it
    with his initials, case number, and date and time of sealing. Though the booking officer did not
    testify that she directly handed the substance to Detective Price, it is reasonable to infer from the
    evidence that she did so. And, in the absence of any evidence suggesting otherwise, we will
    presume that standard procedure was followed and no tampering occurred. The State established
    a sufficient chain of custody for admission of State’s Exhibit 7.4
    Point II is denied.
    4
    The State also argues that the chain of custody was irrelevant because three witnesses testified at trial and
    positively identified the crack cocaine. Though we agree with the State that, “if evidence can be identified at trial[,]
    there is no need to establish chain of custody,” that proposition applies only where evidence is distinguishable. State
    v. Davenport, 
    924 S.W.2d 6
    , 10 (Mo. App. E.D. 1996). “The chain of custody is . . . necessary when evidence is not
    distinguishable[,] as is the case where items such as drugs are seized.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Here, State’s
    Exhibit 7 was the crack cocaine found in Pennington’s sock. There is no indication that this rock of crack cocaine
    was in any way distinguishable from any other rock of crack cocaine; thus, the State was required to establish a
    chain of custody before the exhibit could be properly admitted.
    9
    Conclusion
    Pennington failed to establish any prejudice from the trial court’s alleged error in limiting
    his opening statement, and the State established a sufficient chain of custody for admission of the
    crack cocaine. The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
    Karen King Mitchell, Presiding Judge
    Cynthia L. Martin and Gary D. Witt, Judges, concur.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: WD78078

Citation Numbers: 493 S.W.3d 926, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 717

Judges: Mitchell, Martin, Witt

Filed Date: 7/26/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024