Boone v. State

456 P.2d 418, 85 Nev. 450, 1969 Nev. LEXIS 397
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1969
Docket5678
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 456 P.2d 418 (Boone v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boone v. State, 456 P.2d 418, 85 Nev. 450, 1969 Nev. LEXIS 397 (Neb. 1969).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Mowbray, J.:

A jury found Michael Martin Boone and Paul Harvey Baldwin guilty of attempted robbery. They seek a reversal on four *451 grounds: (1) the trial judge erred in permitting two witnesses to the crime to make in-court identifications of Boone and Baldwin; (2) Boone’s sweater, State’s Exhibit “F”, was improperly received in evidence; (3) the victim’s reference to her assailants as “dirty Niggers” constituted prejudicial error for which a motion for a mistrial should have been granted; and (4) the trial judge erred in charging the jury.

On the morning of July 25, 1967, Elsie Bayley went to the First National Bank at the comer of First and South Virginia Streets in Reno, where she made her customary weekly bank deposit. She was walking back to her home on California Avenue and was on the east side of the 300 block on South Sierra Street when she was attacked by two men who grabbed the bag she was carrying. Although Elsie Bayley was then in her eighty-third year, she successfully resisted her attackers and never gave up the bag; but during the straggle she was struck and thrown to the pavement and suffered several bone fractures.

It was at this juncture that George Hogan and his son, Dennis Hogan, came driving by and witnessed the assault. They sensed immediately what was going on, sounded their car hom, and “took after” the two attackers, who ran “like scared rabbits” down an adjacent alley. Another passer-by came to Mrs. Bayley’s aid, helped her to the sidewalk, brought her a chair to sit on, called the police, and made the reference to her assailants that is the basis for appellants’ fourth assignment of error, supra. The Hogans gave pursuit in their car, but only for a short distance, as the two assaulters split up, running in different directions over vacant property. Dennis left the car and followed on foot the defendant who was later identified as Boone, while George, still driving the car, observed the defendant who was later identified as Baldwin attempt to enter a red Mustang automobile. Baldwin was “waved off” by the driver of the Mustang and continued his flight on foot. George then lost sight of Baldwin, but in a few moments saw him driving the Mustang, and again took up the chase, which he pursued without success, although he did take down the license number of Baldwin’s car and give it to a passing patrolman. A few moments later the police stopped the Mustang and arrested Baldwin. Meanwhile, Dennis was in hot pursuit of Boone, chasing him across car lots and over back fences. But Boone finally outdistanced him, and Dennis joined the search in a police car. Actually, Boone had evaded his pursuers by checking into a nearby motel. The desk clerk’s suspicions were aroused by Boone’s appearance and actions: “[H]e was perspiring very freely, and breathing very deep . . . fidgety ... he *452 was in a hurry.” When she noticed a commotion outside the motel, she inquired of a policeman who was on the street the reason for the presence of the police. When told, she remarked, “I think he’s [Boone’s] looking down at you from the room upstairs, sir.” The officer went to Boone’s room, arrested him, and brought him downstairs, where he was immediately identified by Dennis as the man who had attacked Mrs. Bayley.

1. The trial judge did not err in permitting two witnesses to the crime to make in-court identifications of Boone and Baldwin. On the evening of the robbery, the Reno police conducted a routine police line-up and asked the Hogans to be present. Boone and Baldwin were included in the line-up and were identified. The line-up appears to have been properly conducted, with one major exception: Boone and Baldwin were not represented by counsel. They claim they requested counsel.

On June 12, 1967, six weeks prior to the line-up, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled in the landmark Wade, Gilbert, and Stovall cases, 1 that the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution guarantees an accused the right to counsel, not only at his trial, but also at any critical confrontation by the prosecution at pretrial proceedings where the absence of counsel might derogate from his right to a fair trial and where the results might well determine his fate. In Wade, supra, the High Court declared that a police line-up is a critical stage of the pretrial proceedings and that an in-court identification by a witness to whom the accused was exhibited before trial in the absence of counsel must be excluded, unless it can be established that the identification had an independent origin. Because of the rulings announced in Wade, Gilbert, and Stovall, supra, the police line-up of July 25, 1967, was illegal, and the State did not present to the jury any evidence regarding the line-up identifications. But we do not rule as a matter of law that the line-up identifications rendered incompetent the Hogans’ in-court identifications of Boone and Baldwin. Rather, we hold that there is substantial evidence in the record to support the trial judge’s findings that the Hogans’ identifications of the appellants (1) had independent origins, (2) were not tainted by the police line-up identifications, and (3) were therefore admissible. For instance, the record shows that Dennis first met Baldwin at 7 o’clock on the morning of the robbery, in Harrah’s Club, Reno, where Dennis worked as a cashier, and that *453 Dennis assisted Baldwin in completing a credit application form; that he saw Boone during the commission of the crime “from head to foot”; that he chased Boone until Boone evaded him and checked into the motel; and that when the officer arrested Boone in the motel room and, brought him to the ground floor, Dennis was present and identified Boone.

Cross-examination of Dennis Hogan by Mr. Fry, counsel for defendants (appellants herein):

“Q. Well, isn’t it true that you, at first, did not recognize Mr. Boone and did not identify him?
“A. No, it is not true. When he came down, I said ‘That’s the man I was chasing.’
“Q. Right off the bat?
“A. Right off the bat.”

George Hogan identified Mr. Baldwin only. He saw him during the commission of the crime and pursued him by car. During the chase, George observed Baldwin driving the Mustang and saw him at close range at one street intersection when they came face to face in their cars.

Cross-examination of George Hogan by Mr. Fry:

“Q. And then you followed it [the Mustang]?
“A. Then I started to go down California, and the car apparently turned. Now, I felt that he was going to make a U turn. It was just a feeling that I got.
“So I made a U turn at the service station at the comer of Sierra and California. The car came back, the Mustang came back on California and turned down Forest. By this time, I was out on Sierra Street. And when the signal changed, I followed the car down Forest and Tahoe, and then St. Lawrence.
“Q. And it was then that you—
“A. At St. Lawrence and Virginia is when I saw the man.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
456 P.2d 418, 85 Nev. 450, 1969 Nev. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boone-v-state-nev-1969.