STATE OF MISSOURI v. MICHAEL DUANE HANCOCK ( 2020 )


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  • STATE OF MISSOURI,                          )
    )
    Respondent,           )
    )
    vs.                                   ) No. SD36022
    )
    MICHAEL DUANE HANCOCK,                      ) FILED: August 4, 2020
    )
    Appellant.            )
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF GREENE COUNTY
    Honorable J. Ronald Carrier, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    A masked man robbed a convenience store at gunpoint at 4 a.m. A mobile
    security guard who saw him exit and glimpsed his gun called 911, reported where
    the armed man was walking, then tracked him from a distance, idling slowly, until
    the robber walked into a wooded area near a homeless camp.
    Police quickly arrived and encountered Michael Hancock walking in the
    dark. He initially ignored them. They called out “Police. Stop.” Hancock ran. The
    police gave chase. One officer gained on Hancock, who turned and pointed a gun.
    The officer fired, wounding Hancock, who was later charged with robbery and
    weapons crimes.
    Identification was the key trial issue. Had Hancock been the masked
    robber?     After four days of trial, a jury said yes, convicting Hancock of all charges
    in just 49 minutes.
    Hancock appeals. He does not contest the sufficiency of proof of his crimes.
    Instead he charges error in excluding gun and voice identification testimony by his
    experts. His claims are not preserved.
    Preservation
    The trial court granted Hancock’s request for Rule 29.11(b)’s full 25 days for
    post-trial motions, but incorrectly announced that deadline as “January 10, 2019,”
    when it was actually January 8.
    Hancock’s new-trial motion included his instant claims, but was filed one
    day late on January 9. At the hearing, the court acknowledged the motion was late
    by rule and that courts generally cannot waive or extend that deadline. In excusing
    the violation anyway, the court opined that court rules were not absolute and that
    Hancock’s counsel relied on the court’s miscalculation.
    We understand the court’s motivation in so ruling, but find no persuasive
    authority for such action. With exceptions inapplicable here, untimely new-trial
    motions preserve nothing for appellate review, even those just one day late that the
    trial court agrees to consider. See, e.g., State v. Anderson, 
    539 S.W.3d 823
    ,
    826-27 (Mo.App. 2017). Complaints in such situations “may be reviewed – if at all
    – for only plain error resulting in a manifest injustice or miscarriage of justice.”
    
    Id. at 827
    .
    Hancock offers no persuasive authority otherwise.          If courts cannot
    purposefully waive or extend Rule 29.11(b) deadlines, and parties cannot rely on
    such intentional efforts, can mere miscalculations fare better? Yet, as next seen,
    Hancock loses anyway as he does not show the abuse of discretion needed to
    prevail had his claims been preserved. 1
    Point 1
    The store clerk (“Victim”) told authorities she recognized the robber, by
    voice, as one of her regular customers. Less than two weeks before trial, Hancock
    sought to endorse a North Carolina professor to testify as an expert on voice
    misidentification (“Voice Expert”). The court denied that request, but ruled that
    Hancock could make an offer of proof at trial, which he unsuccessfully did.
    1   See, e.g., State v. Boss, 
    577 S.W.3d 509
    , 516 (Mo.App. 2019).
    2
    Point 1 claims the trial court prejudicially erred in ruling Voice Expert
    “could not testify and in rejecting the offer of proof done as to her intended
    testimony and thereby prohibited her from testifying at trial before the jury ….”
    We disagree for several reasons. 2
    First, Hancock did not bring Voice Expert to Missouri for trial, citing cost
    concerns, or seek to preserve her testimony for court use via Rules 25.13 and 25.14.
    Instead, at trial, Hancock tendered Voice Expert’s CV, and her opinions by
    affidavit, expressly offering all for their truth, but conceding that he could cite no
    applicable hearsay exception. Given those representations, it was within the
    court’s discretion not to admit the documents. 3
    Next, the court also correctly found the documents did not establish
    § 490.065.2 “reliability.” 4 Hancock’s burden was to proffer expert opinion “based
    on sufficient facts or data” that was “the product of reliable principles and
    methods” and show Voice Expert “reliably applied the principles and methods to
    the facts of the case.” § 490.065.2(1)(b)-(d). For those opinions based on facts or
    data Voice Expert had not personally observed, Hancock also had to show that
    “experts in the particular field would reasonably rely on those kinds of facts or data
    in forming an opinion on the subject[.]”            § 490.065.2(2).     Such foundation
    commonly is laid through the expert’s own testimony, but these documents omit
    2 For reasons not relevant here, the trial judge differed from the judge who had previously
    ruled. Hancock also complains about the first judge’s order, but provides no transcript of
    that hearing, so we have no basis to fault the ruling, which in any event was interlocutory
    and subject to change. We do not even know that Hancock made an initial offer of proof;
    the court’s ruling suggests Hancock did not.
    3 Had Hancock hoped by this method to obtain appellate review of testimony without even
    trying to offer it in an admissible form at trial, he effectively sought an advisory opinion
    this court should not and will not give. Where evidence is excluded by pretrial ruling, as
    here, proper procedure contemplates an attempt to admit the evidence at trial, and if an
    objection is sustained, then an offer of proof. State v. Marshall, 
    131 S.W.3d 375
    , 377
    (Mo.App. 2004).
    4 In 2017, § 490.065.2 was amended to track Federal Rules of Evidence 702-705 and the
    seminal case of Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, 
    509 U.S. 579
     (1993).
    Boss, 
    577 S.W.3d at 517
    ; State ex rel. Gardner v. Wright, 
    562 S.W.3d 311
    , 312
    (Mo.App. 2018). Cases boil those trial-court gatekeeping functions “down to [their]
    essence in a useful three-part test: (1) whether the expert is qualified, (2) whether the
    testimony is relevant, and (3) whether the testimony is reliable.” Wright, 
    562 S.W.3d at 319
     (our emphasis).
    3
    any such assertions. At most, Voice Expert’s CV lists her published writings, which
    “does not necessarily correlate with reliability[.]” Daubert, 
    509 U.S. at 593
    .
    Trial courts act as § 490.065.2 gatekeepers to assure expert testimony is not
    merely relevant, but also reliable. Boss, 
    577 S.W.3d at 517
    . Hancock’s failure to
    lay a proper “reliability” foundation further justifies the court’s rejection of Voice
    Expert’s opinions.
    Finally, even if we found error in excluding this evidence (which we do not),
    we could not find the prejudice, much less manifest injustice, needed for relief.
    Voice Expert offered only general opinions unrelated to any specifics of this case,
    while Victim’s recognition of Hancock’s voice was only a dab of the largely-
    undisputed evidence linking Hancock to the robbery:
    •   The robber wore blue jeans, but otherwise mostly black clothing, a
    black jacket, black mask, and dark footwear. He wore gloves and,
    under his mask, blue-tinted glasses.
    •   He carried a black semi-automatic handgun and a blue and black
    drawstring bag with white logo printing.
    •   He demanded no coins, only bills, which Victim put in the bag in
    sequential order by denomination.
    •   The robber also had Victim put glass “bubble” smoking pipes and
    six packs of cigarettes into the bag.
    •   The robber left and walked north, eventually entering a wooded
    area near the homeless camp where Hancock had been living
    recently and still had belongings.
    •   When police got there, they encountered Hancock wearing a black
    jacket and blue jeans. Gloves were found on his person after his
    arrest. He wore dark footwear.
    •   While fleeing, Hancock dropped blue-tinted glasses.
    •   Hancock brandished, and then dropped when police fired on him, a
    black semi-automatic handgun that fit the holster Hancock wore.
    •   In bushes near where police first sighted Hancock, they found a
    blue and black drawstring bag with white logo printing. Unopened
    cigarette packs lay in and around it.
    •   The bag also contained unused glass bubble pipes, $464 cash sorted
    sequentially by denomination, a stocking cap, and a black mask that
    Victim later identified as the one the robber had worn.
    4
    The state dwelt on these facts so much that just two sentences of its opening
    statement, and less than three sentences of its opening summation, cited Victim’s
    voice recognition. Given this lack of emphasis and the swift jury verdicts, and
    contrasting the state’s strong corroborating evidence with Voice Expert’s non-
    specific opinions, Hancock does not convince us of the prejudice he claims, let
    alone manifest injustice. Point denied.
    Point 2
    Hancock also sought to call gun shop owner Doug Bowen as an expert,
    questioning him out of the jury’s presence as an offer of proof, then urging that his
    testimony would aid jurors in six areas: (1) gun color; (2) barrel length; (3)
    ejection-port color; (4) that Hancock’s holster could be adjusted to fit different
    guns; (5) that the gun recovered near Hancock could be dry fired without a firing
    pin; and (6) what caused the clicking sound when that gun was inserted into that
    holster. As to 1, 2, 3, and 6, the court found Bowen failed both the qualification
    and reliability tests (note 4 supra).     After trial-court prompting, the parties
    stipulated to issues 4 and 5, mooting Bowen’s need to testify to those.
    Point 2 challenges exclusions 1, 2, 3, and 6.      The first three involved
    comparing the size, color, and finish of the robber’s gun in surveillance videos (and
    derived still images) with the gun recovered when Hancock was arrested. Bowen
    admitted he had no training in analyzing guns in surveillance videos, he was
    unaware of any testing for such competency, he used no specialized equipment to
    analyze the videos, and he had no standardized procedure or method for making
    comparisons. He based his opinions on visual observations and common sense.
    The jury could do the same. Expert testimony was not necessary or helpful in these
    regards. See § 490.065.2(1).
    That leaves only Bowen’s opinion why the gun “clicked” when put into the
    holster, a de minimis exclusion not prejudicial, and certainly not manifestly unjust,
    in the context of the whole trial. The parties stipulated that the holster could be
    adjusted to fit different guns. The defense did not object when a witness holstered
    the gun to replicate the click for jurors to hear. The defense got the same witness,
    on cross-examination, to say the click was the sound of pressure or tension holding
    the gun in place. Based on all that, the defense argued in closing that the holster
    5
    could fit different size guns and “[d]oesn’t lock the gun in place.” Hancock does
    not suggest how Bowen’s similar “click” explanation would have changed the
    verdicts, especially given the strength of the state’s evidence summarized in
    Point 1.
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion or plainly err. Point 2 fails. We
    affirm the judgment and convictions.
    DANIEL E. SCOTT, J. – OPINION AUTHOR
    NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, P.J. – CONCURS
    WILLIAM W. FRANCIS, JR., J. – CONCURS
    6