Sims v. State

Decision Date30 May 1990
Docket NumberNo. 113,113
Citation573 A.2d 1317,319 Md. 540
PartiesJeffrey SIMS v. STATE of Maryland. Sept. Term 1988.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Michael R. Braudes, Asst. Public Defender, Alan H. Murrell, Public Defender, both on brief, Baltimore, for petitioner.

Richard B. Rosenblatt, Asst. Atty. Gen., J. Joseph Curran, Jr., Atty. Gen., both on brief, Baltimore, for respondent.

Argued before MURPHY, C.J., and ELDRIDGE, COLE, RODOWSKY, McAULIFFE, ADKINS and BLACKWELL *, JJ.

McAULIFFE, Judge.

Shortly before midnight on 9 September 1986, someone shot and killed Michael Bucino in the parking lot of the 602 Club in Laurel, Maryland. Jeffrey Sims claims that he was not present and did not shoot Bucino, but a jury in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County found to the contrary and convicted him of murder in the second degree. Sims does not contest the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury's finding, but contends that the trial judge erred in refusing to instruct the jury concerning voluntary manslaughter. Sims claims he was entitled to a manslaughter instruction because the evidence fairly generated the question of whether the shooter, 1) acted in hot-blooded response to legally adequate provocation or, 2) was entitled to claim imperfect self-defense. We find no fault with the defendant's attempt to interpose inconsistent theories of defense and mitigation, but hold that the evidence was insufficient to warrant an instruction on manslaughter.

I Facts

The victim, Bucino, was known to his friends as "Bear," apparently because he was six feet three inches tall, weighed 327 pounds, and wore a full beard and mustache. He was a regular patron of the 602 Club, and sometimes volunteered his services in maintaining order and in securing the Club and its parking lot at closing. Bucino arrived at the 602 Club sometime between 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. on September 9, and remained there until the bar closed. He drank about two pitchers of beer during that time.

The defendant entered the 602 Club shortly after 11:30 that evening, and ordered a beer. Although "last call" for drinks had been announced earlier, and the bartender had begun his closing duties, Sims was served a beer because the bartender recognized him. 1 The first words between Sims and Bucino that evening occurred when Sims put a quarter in the jukebox and complained because it did not play. According to Sims, Bucino said, "[T]hey don't play your kind of music." Sims is black and Bucino was white. Sims testified that Bucino had also spoken to him on an earlier date, when they were both at the package store adjacent to the bar. On that occasion, Sims was advised by the clerk that the item he ordered was not in stock, and Bucino gratuitously interjected, "[T]ake what you get, boy."

On the night in question, after the bartender explained to Sims that the jukebox had been turned off for the evening, Sims began talking to an inebriated white female, as well as to another black male who was described as being shorter than Sims. The manager of the bar heard Bucino say to someone, she did not know to whom, "[Y]ou don't put your hands on a woman in here." Shortly thereafter, Bucino told the manager that he did not want any trouble, that Sims had been calling him "obscenities" and "fat boy." Just prior to midnight, Sims, the shorter black male, and the white female left the bar. As they were preparing to leave, Bucino said to the female, "[W]hy are you leaving with them," or words to that effect.

What happened outside the bar was described by two Navy enlisted men who were stationed at nearby Fort Meade, and who had been in the 602 Club earlier in the evening. John Harkness, Jr., testified that he and William Stevenson had gone to another bar in the area, the Tack Room, at about 5 p.m., where they each drank one beer. He said they came to the 602 Club about an hour later, and except for a period of approximately an hour when they were out for dinner, spent the rest of the evening in the 602 Club. Harkness testified he had seen Bucino come into the 602 Club at about 7 p.m. and realized he had seen him earlier that evening at the Tack Room. He said Bucino was "a little bit rowdy" at the Tack Room, but "didn't do anything" at the 602 Club. Harkness and Stevenson left the 602 Club when last call was announced, apparently before Sims entered. They walked across the street to a convenience store, bought soft drinks and potato chips, and returned to Stevenson's car in the 602 Club parking lot. As he was seated in the car talking to Stevenson, Harkness observed two black males and a white female exit the bar. He said the taller male and the female walked along the front of the building to a beige automobile that was parked near the door to the adjacent package store. The shorter black male went in a different direction to a white car. The shorter black male drove the white car to the area of the beige car, where the other two persons were talking. After what appeared to be a brief conversation, the person in the white car drove out of the parking lot. At this point, the female walked back into the lounge. Other evidence indicated she had left her purse on the bar, and had returned to retrieve it.

A few moments after the female re-entered the bar, Bucino came out, and walked to the area of the beige car. By this time, the taller male was in the beige car. When Bucino was within three to seven feet of the car, he appeared to engage the driver in conversation, and at one point was shaking his finger and appeared to be yelling at the occupant. Harkness said, "[I]t looked like an argument," but because he was approximately 50 to 60 feet away, he could not hear what was said. Bucino then turned and started to walk away from the car. He stopped, turned back, and took a couple of steps toward the car. At that point, Harkness's attention was diverted by a light coming on somewhere else on the lot, and he looked away. He then heard two or three "loud cracks" from the direction of the beige car. He immediately looked back, saw the beige car leave the lot "fast." He also saw Bucino lying on the sidewalk near the Club, and saw the female coming out of the Club.

Stevenson's recollection was that he and Harkness had arrived at the 602 Club about 9 p.m., and had remained there until last call, which occurred at about 11:30 p.m. He said Bucino came into the Club at 9:45 p.m. or 10 p.m. Stevenson generally corroborated Harkness's account of what happened in the parking lot, except Stevenson testified that Bucino, when he first approached the beige car, had at one point "lean[ed] over the door." He said that at first Bucino and the occupant of the car appeared to be talking calmly, but "then it looked like they may have been arguing," because Bucino "was kind of shaking his finger at the man in the car." Stevenson said Bucino then turned and walked away from the car, walking about halfway back to the door of the bar. At that point, Bucino stopped, turned around, and began walking back toward the car. Stevenson observed Bucino say something to the occupant of the car, as he approached it, but Stevenson then averted his gaze to speak to Harkness. Stevenson heard what he believed to be a shot, looked back, and saw the flashes of muzzle fire from a gun in the area of the driver's seat of the vehicle as two additional shots were fired. Stevenson testified that at the time the shots were fired, Bucino was four to five feet from the car. He said the beige car then quickly left the lot. Stevenson later identified a car belonging to the defendant's wife as the beige car from which the shots were fired.

The defendant testified that he left the bar at the same time as the white female, although they were not together. He said the shorter black male who had been in the bar with them then drove by in a white car, stopping long enough to invite the female to join him. When she refused, the male in the white car left. The defendant said that at about this time he noticed a tall white male standing by the entrance to the package store. He said the female then returned to the bar, and Sims got in his car, a black Volkswagen "beetle", and left. He said he heard a "pop or something" as he left the parking lot, but paid no attention to it.

II The Requested Manslaughter Instruction

At a bench conference called at the conclusion of all the evidence, the trial judge discussed with counsel the jury instructions to be given. Defendant's attorney asked for an instruction on manslaughter. He said:

I think that the State in its evidence may have triggered the issue of manslaughter. And I would ask the court to instruct the jury and allow them to return a verdict of manslaughter if they feel that the killing of Mr. Bucino was done by my client but may have been done with mitigation.

The prosecutor assumed that the defense request was based on one of two theories: hot-blooded response to a legally adequate provocation, or imperfect self-defense. He addressed both theories, and opined that the evidence was insufficient to generate an instruction on either. Defense counsel clarified his position:

What I'm saying, judge, I don't think this is an imperfect self-defense case at all. I think this is a case where the jury may find that because of the man's size and because of his condition as to sobriety, or lack of same, that his--he's been described as massive. He was described as intimidating.... That the jury may feel, and they are the trier of the fact, that the person responded to these gestures. And that this coming back after he had left, came back in an aggressive-type manner, to be adequate provocation. And I think it's a question for the trier of fact to determine. I think--I don't think it's necessary for my client to substantially put himself at the scene. If the State's evidence, and they're trying to show that he was a criminal agent, and if the State's evidence fairly generates the issue I...

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