United States v. Eddie Cauley, 697 F.2d 486, 2d Cir. (1983)
United States v. Eddie Cauley, 697 F.2d 486, 2d Cir. (1983)
United States v. Eddie Cauley, 697 F.2d 486, 2d Cir. (1983)
2d 486
12 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. 238
Appellant Eddie Cauley was convicted after a jury trial in the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of New York before Judge I. Leo Glasser
of violating 18 U.S.C. Sec. 111 by assaulting or interfering with Gloria
Morales, a mail carrier for the United States Postal Service, while she was
delivering the mail. Cauley is presently serving his sentence of three years in
prison. On appeal, he argues that the trial judge erred in permitting the
prosecutor to cross-examine Cauley about his prior fights, in instructing the
jury on the specific intent required by the statute and on the burden of proof,
and in denying Cauley's mid-trial request to discharge his attorney and
represent himself. We find that Judge Glasser committed no reversible error,
and affirm the conviction.
I. Background
Morales testified substantially as follows: On October 17, 1981, while she was
delivering the mail to Route 19 in Brooklyn, Cauley, whom she had never seen
before, called out to her to ask whether she had an unemployment check that he
was expecting. It is not uncommon at that time of the month for people in that
area to stop mail carriers to inquire about government checks. Morales
responded, as was her habit, by asking Cauley's address and telling him when
she expected to reach it. After some conversation, she started to continue her
rounds, but Cauley restrained her mail cart. She asked him to let go, but he did
not, and when she tried to move his hand off the handle of the cart, he hit her
face several times with his closed fist. When her feeble attempt to hit back was
unsuccessful, she left the cart to telephone the postal inspectors, and Cauley
retreated.
Shortly thereafter, Cauley was arrested in his sister's apartment, where he was
temporarily residing. Although Morales's and Burton's testimony indicates that
Morales was shaken and bruised, she did not seek medical attention until two
days later, because she hates hospitals. The record of her visit to the emergency
room of Smithtown General Hospital on October 19 shows that her nose was
bruised.
because she was about to step into traffic. According to Cauley: She responded
by stabbing him with her pen and hitting him with both her fists. He had time
only to take one step back and throw up his hands, and in so doing he
accidentally hit her face. Cauley added, on direct examination: "If I intended to
assault this woman, I could have continued and pressed the issue and beat her
to death. Well, you know, beat her up, if that was my intention." He further
volunteered on cross-examination: "Might I add that, you know, I would have
been justified in beating up Miss Morales. I am quite capable of doing so."
Thus, Cauley's defense raised one critical issue--what his intent was in hitting
Morales--and depended for success on whom the jury chose to believe. By its
guilty verdict, the jury indicated its choice.
II. Evidence of Prior Fights
6
The contention that the trial judge improperly admitted evidence of defendant's
prior involvement in fights is obviously a serious one in an assault case in
which the defendant's credibility is the key issue. "[E]vidence of a violent
disposition to prove that the person was the aggressor in an affray" is not
generally admissible. Fed.R.Evid. 404(a) advisory committee note. However, as
the note goes on to explain, subdivision (b) of Rule 404
7
deals
with a specialized but important application of the general rule excluding
circumstantial use of character evidence. Consistently with that rule, evidence of
other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove character as a basis for
suggesting the inference that conduct on a particular occasion was in conformity
with it. However, the evidence may be offered for another purpose ... which does
fall within the prohibition,
8
intent not at issue). Cauley's attorney stated in a pre-trial discussion of the Rule
404(b) evidence that "[w]e are in agreement that intent is the issue here."
Cauley himself made it clear on direct examination that his defense was that "
[i]t was not my intention to beat her up or to hit her at all or to hold--take the
mail cart or anything of that nature." We have found that where the issue is
whether or not defendant participated in the planning of a bank robbery with the
serious intent to go through with it, evidence of his prior involvement with bank
robberies is admissible. United States v. Williams, 577 F.2d 188 (2d Cir.), cert.
denied, 439 U.S. 868, 99 S.Ct. 196, 58 L.Ed.2d 179 (1978). See also United
States v. Cavallero, 553 F.2d 300 (2d Cir.1977) (evidence of subsequent
kidnapping of another victim admissible as probative of intent to kidnap, as
well as of common plan or design). Other courts, too, have found that other
criminal acts are admissible as probative of intent, when intent is an issue in the
case. See United States v. Beechum, 582 F.2d 898, 909-18 (5th Cir.1978) (en
banc) (where defense is that defendant mailman intended to turn in money
taken from the mail, court properly admitted evidence that he had in his
possession credit cards stolen from the mail months earlier), cert. denied, 440
U.S. 920, 99 S.Ct. 1244, 59 L.Ed.2d 472 (1979); United States v. Hearst, 563
F.2d 1331, 1335-37 (9th Cir.1977) (evidence of subsequent participation in
robbery admissible to rebut defense of duress to bank robbery charge), cert.
denied, 435 U.S. 1000, 98 S.Ct. 1656, 56 L.Ed.2d 90 (1978). But defendant
would have us distinguish between the intent that one forms to commit planned
crimes like bank robbery, United States v. Williams, supra, or bribery, cf.
United States v. Benedetto, 571 F.2d 1246 (2d Cir.1978), and the split-second
decision to commit an assault. The Ninth and Fifth Circuits appear to make
such a distinction. See United States v. Bettencourt, 614 F.2d 214, 217 & n. 6
(9th Cir.1980); United States v. San Martin, 505 F.2d 918, 923 (5th Cir.1974).
The argument against Judge Glasser's ruling, then, is that the intent to assault
that was at issue in this case is not the kind of "intent" referred to in Rule
404(b).1
10
We regard this as a difficult issue, but the facts of this case do not require us to
decide it. Whether or not we believe that prior involvement in fights is in this
case or ever could be probative of intent to assault within the meaning of Rule
404(b), we conclude on the record as a whole that Cauley was not prejudiced
by the government's cross-examination.
11
The relevant portion of the trial transcript is set out in the margin.2 The only
information elicited by this cross-examination was that Cauley had been
involved in more than ten fights in his lifetime; that he at first could not recall
the one that immediately preceded his entanglement with Morales; and that a
glance at Government's Exhibit No. 6--an arrest report not shown or identified
to the jury--refreshed his memory. Cauley then refused to discuss the prior
fights any further. When this piece of testimony is compared to the
accumulation of evidence whose admissibility is conceded, it becomes clear
that Judge Glasser's decision to permit cross-examination on the prior fights
was harmless, even if we assume arguendo that it was error.
12
13
But even if all of this, combined with the testimony of Morales, were not
enough to convince the jury of Cauley's guilt, Cauley himself provided the jury
with far stronger evidence than the mere admission that he had been in more
than ten other fights. Even from the transcript, it is easy to see that Cauley's
behavior in court was that of an easily angered man. He described his own
demeanor on the stand as "really biting my tongue and gritting my teeth in
sitting here and going through all this because of something this woman
perpetrated against me ...." He interrupted the cross-examination of Morales
with shouted obscenities and the demand that he be allowed to dismiss his
lawyer and represent himself, and refused to obey the judge's request that he be
seated. His gratuitous remark to the prosecutor that he "would have been
justified in beating up Miss Morales" has already been quoted. The few minutes
of cross-examination spent on the prior fights were devoted mainly to Cauley's
boisterous refusals to answer questions and his disputations over the evidentiary
ruling. He even argued with the judge about what the 404(b) ruling had held.
This demeanor evidence, when combined with the testimony and documents
described above, convinces us that Judge Glasser was right in concluding that
the proof of Cauley's guilt was "overwhelming." Even if the prior fights had
never been briefly mentioned, there is no reasonable possibility that the jury
would have found Cauley not guilty.
15
Senior United States District Judge for the Southern District of New York,
sitting by designation
A I don't recall.
MR. CHAVKIN: May I approach the witness, your Honor?
***
Q (Handing document) Mr. Cauley, I show you what has been marked for
identification as Government's Exhibit number 6. Take a moment to read that
over and see if your recollection is refreshed.
A (Perusing document) I know what this is.
But, your Honor, I thought we had a hearing on it regarding the admission of
evidence such as this; am I not correct?
THE COURT: Well, I have not heard any question, assuming that you would
not enter such question.
I do not know what the next question is.
(The following discussion held at side bar)
MR. CHAVKIN: This is an arrest report, your Honor, as to a fight in which he
was convicted. I will not ask him whether he was arrested for it. I will ask him
whether his recollection is refreshed about the fight.
***
[The court and counsel discussed the permissible scope of cross-examination.]
THE COURT: Continue with your line of inquiry, if that is what you want to
do.
(End of discussion held at side bar)
Q Mr. Cauley, does Exhibit number 6 refresh your recollection?
A Yes.
Would you tell me--apparently are we going back on the established the denial
of the admission of the evidence?
THE COURT: I have not made any ruling with respect to that.
THE WITNESS: I am sure you have and I am sure the record will show that
you ruled on the question of-MR. PASTER: (Interjecting) I will object at this time on the question.
THE COURT: Your objection is overruled.
Q Mr. Cauley, do you recall the circumstances of that fight?
A Yes.
Q And would you tell the jury what happened in that fight?
A Well, I am--I refuse to answer any questions regarding this because--because
of the denial of such evidence by Mr. Glasser to admit such evidence into the
trial.
Q Let me ask one last question.
In that fight were you provoked?
A I don't care to even discuss it.
Q One last question, if you will permit me-A (Interjecting) On grounds that I mentioned to take the fifth.
3