Chambers v. State, 47888

Decision Date04 November 1976
Docket NumberNo. 47888,47888
Citation339 So.2d 204
PartiesGlen Stark CHAMBERS, Appellant, v. STATE of Florida, Appellee.
CourtFlorida Supreme Court

Gerald C. Surfus of Stinnett, Surfus & Martin, Sarasota, for appellant.

Robert L. Shevin, Atty. Gen., and A. S. Johnston, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.

PER CURIAM.

This cause is before us on direct appeal to review the judgment of guilty of murder in the first degree and sentence of death. Article V, Section 3(b)(1), Florida Constitution.

Appellant was indicted for the first degree murder of Connie Weeks in that he unlawfully and from premeditated design to effect her death did strike, assault, and mortally injure her. The jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged, and after sentencing hearing, recommended that appellant be sentenced to life imprisonment since the jury found that sufficient mitigating circumstances existed so as to outweigh the aggravating circumstances. However, the trial judge determined that under the circumstances, the death penalty was appropriate. In his judgment and sentence, the trial judge explained:

'It is the sentence and judgment of this court that you, for your said offense be committed to the Florida State Prison, and that you be sentenced to death, the court finding under Florida Statutes, Chapter 921, that there are no significant mitigating circumstances, and that sufficient aggravating circumstances exist. The defendant, who has a significant history of drug usage, was under the influence of some mental or emotional disturbance, but any such distrubance was selfinduced by the use of illegal drugs and is not a mitigating circumstance. The murder was 'especially heinous, atrocious and cruel.' The victim, a young girl, was brutally beaten by the defendant. Her brain was battered by a continuing, massive, indiscriminate beating.

'The other aggravating and mitigating circumstances contained in Chapter 921, Florida Statutes, are not applicable.'

The facts leading up to the death of Connie Weeks are as follows. Appellant and the victim had been living together for several months. On the evening of January 22, 1975, appellant dragged the victim from the car in which she was sitting in the parking lot of her place of employment, across the parking lot and commenced to beat her. At this time, he was arrested, taken to the Sarasota County jail, and charged with two counts of assault. Later that same evening, the victim went to the police department to bond appellant out. The victim returned with him to their residence where appellant apparently informed her that he was leaving. A vehement argument ensued and the victim was so severely beaten that she died five days later as a result of said beating from cerebral and brain stem contusion. She was bruised all over the head and legs, had a deep gash under her left ear; her face was unrecognizable, and she had several internal injuries.

Appellant contends that a verdict should have been directed for him since the evidence was legally insufficient to prove premeditation. With this contention, we cannot agree. The record before us is more than adequate to support the jury's finding of premeditation. The State posits that the record contains competent sufficient evidence to find that appellant inflicted the mortal wounds with the requisite premeditated intent existing several hours prior to the successful conclusion of his criminal design.

Brenda Austin testified:

'Q (By Mr. Klaus) Did you have an opportunity to see Mr. Chambers again that morning?

'A Yes.

'Q About what time was that?

'A About 11:30.

'Q And where were you when you saw him?

'A Robarts Sports Arena.

'Q (By Mr. Klaus) Okay. Now, she--he looked inside the van. And did he say anything to you while he was looking inside the van?

'A Yes.

'Q What did he say?

'A He asked me where Connie was.

'Q Now, how did he appear to you at that time?

'A Mad.

'Q Okay. Now, did he appear that--did you smell any alcohol or--

'A No.

'Q Did he walk all right?

'A Yes.

'Q How mad was he?

'A Mad.

'Q Real mad?

'A Real mad.

'Q Now, did he say anything to you about Connie?

'A Yes.

'Q What did he tell you?

'A He told me that when I saw her to tell her that he had tore up the house and he was going to tear up her can and then he had taken some money and was going to leave for New York that day, and that if I saw her to tell her that he was going to beat her head in.

'Q And this is during the time that he was mad?

'A Yes.

'Q And, now, you've seen people who have been under the influence of narcotic drugs or alclhol before?

'A Yes.

'Q Did he appear--have you seen Glenn Chambers under those influences?

'A Yes.

'Q Did he appear to be at all under any influence of anything at that time?

'A No. No.'

Joan Berryman, the victim's employer, testified:

'A He drug her the full length of the parking lot, smacking her in the mouth, hitting her in the head, pulling her hair, tearing her clothes off.

'Q Now, let's back up a little bit. You said he dragged her the full length of the parking lot. Can you show the dimensions of this courtroom, or is it longer than this courtroom?

'A It's little longer than this courtroom. Maybe another half as long.

'Q Okay. And for that full distance she was drug?

'A Right.

'Q Was she walking on her own at any time?

'A No.

'Q And how was she drug, again?

'A By her hair and by her clothes.

'Q Okay. Now, can you describe with your--showing us with you hands how he grabbed her and how he hit her?

'A He grabbed her by the head of her hair and he was hitting her in the face. Then she'd fall down and he'd pick her up and he'd pick her up and drag her and kept tearing her clothes and I kept following him and asking him to please don't hit her, please leave her alone.

'Q Did he have anything to say to that?

'A He told me to call the God damn cops.

'Q Did he say anything else?

'A He said because he was going to kill her. He said, 'Go and call the God damn cops because I'm going to kill her.'

'Q Okay. Now, have you ever seen Glenn under the influence of either drugs or marijuana or alcohol?

'A I guess I've seen him under a couple.

'Q Okay. Did he appear that night to be influenced at that time?

'A At that time to me he was angry. He was really, really angry.

'Q Had you ever seen him that mad before?

'A No.

'Q Had you seen him numerous times before?

'A Yes.

'Q Have you ever seen him mad?

'A Not this mad.

'Q But you've seen him mad?

'A Seen him mad.'

Colleen Cole testified:

'A He asked me if I had seen her and I said no. He asked me if I knew where she was and I said no. He said, well, when he found her he was going to kill her.'

As the State submits, appellant by his own testimony admits the terrible beating of the victim and his sole defense is that he did not intent to kill her. Thus the question requiring resolution by this Court is whether there was sufficient evidence adduced at trial, direct or circumstantial, to prove premeditation on the part of appellant at the time he inflicted the mortal wounds. We find that there was sufficent evidence to support the jury's determination of premeditation. Although appellant admits the beating which resulted in the death of Connie Weeks, he submits that his capacity to form premeditation was diminished by the fact that he was under the influence of illegal drugs. The mental condition of appellant at the time of the crime and prior thereto on the day of the crime was thoroughly dealt with in the testimony of State's witnesses at the time appellant made the numerous threats to kill the deceased. The record contains sufficient evidence to contradict appellant's contention that he was under the influence of drugs. As this Court stated in Songer v. State, 322 So.2d 481 (Fla.1975), wherein defendant alleged that he was so intoxicated by drugs as to negate his ability to premeditate the murder:

'Recognizing the established principle that, where a jury's verdict is supported by competent substantial evidence, an appellate court should not substitute itself as the trier of the fact, we accept the jury's evaluation of the evidence; in doing so, we specifically reject Appellant's contention that a defendant's interpretation of circumstantial evidence should be accepted completely unless it is specifically contradicted.'

In Dawson v. State, 139 So.2d 408 (Fla.1962), this Court opined:

'Premeditation may be inferred from the circumstances just as other inferences of fact may be drawn by the jury. Parker v. State, 1940, 142 Fla. 210, 194 So. 484; Crawford v. State, 1941, 146 Fla. 729, 1 So.2d 713; Robinson v. State, 1941, 148 Fla. 153, 3 So.2d 804.

'In this case we think the circumstances were more than adequate to support an inference of premeditation.

'According to appellant's confession Mrs. Clayton threw a hammer at him but he was not struck by it. There is no evidence to indicate that she was armed in any way or that she pursued the encounter beyond grabbing appellant by the collar. He was in the front seat of the station wagon, she in the seat behind him. When found Mrs. Clayton was lying in the back seat with one arm upraised over her head. The medical evidence showed that she had suffered not one blow, but multiple cerebral contusions and skull fractures, all sufficient to produce death; a dislocated left shoulder; and a wound in the left temple extending through and fracturing the jaw and knocking out a tooth.

'Whatever the appellant's state of mind might have been at the beginning of the 'tussling', the number of blows struck, the force employed, the unarmed status of Mrs. Clayton and the other circumstances surrounding the unfortunate indident indicate that there was sufficient time for appellant to have formed the intent to kill Mrs. Clayton and that he did form and carry out this design. The facts established were sufficient to support the inference obviously drawn by the jury that appellant did effect the death of Mrs. Clayton by premeditated design. This would be sufficient to supply this element in...

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