Brown v. State

137 N.W.2d 53, 28 Wis. 2d 383, 1965 Wisc. LEXIS 843
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 137 N.W.2d 53 (Brown v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. State, 137 N.W.2d 53, 28 Wis. 2d 383, 1965 Wisc. LEXIS 843 (Wis. 1965).

Opinion

Fairchild, J.

Plaintiff in error seeks a new trial in the interest of justice under sec. 251.09, Stats. He contends that (1) there is an inconsistency between eyewitnesses’ testimony concerning the physical appearance of the robber that gathered the money and their identification of Brown as that robber; (2) prior to their identifications of Brown in a lineup after his arrest and again at the trial, witnesses were shown pictures under such circumstances as to suggest that this identification was induced by the pictures, and (3) the state failed to produce as witnesses all those who had an opportunity to observe the robber who collected the money. These contentions go to the weight and credibility of the witnesses’ identification of Brown as the robber.

[386]*386Plaintiff in error also contends that the trial judge was not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt of Brown’s guilt as evidenced by discussion concerning a lie-detector test after the judgment was announced. In this respect, plaintiff in error contends that this case is ruled by Meyer v. State.1

1. Inconsistency between testimony and identification. On cross-examination each witness who identified Brown as the robber testified that the person who gathered the money was “clean-shaven” or “smooth-shaven.” The record shows that at the trial Brown had a tuft of hair beneath his chin and a thin mustache and that in this respect his face was the same on July 17th, the day of his arrest, and July 15th, the day the robbery occurred. Other testimony indicated that Brown, aged twenty-seven at the time of the robbery, had smooth and beardless cheeks, had been shaved once when he was in the army several years ago, but otherwise he had never shaved. While on the witness stand several witnesses indicated that they were able to detect the facial hair just referred to, but each witness who was present at the robbery positively identified Brown as the man who gathered the money in the course of the robbery.

The record contains no pictures of Brown but we have the benefit of remarks by the trial judge preliminary to the pronouncement of the finding of guilt and further testimony of witnesses concerning Brown’s face. The trial judge stated that he considered the defendant’s facial hair was

“. . . of no compelling consequence. His chin whisker is so inconspicuous as reflected against the color of his face [defendant is a negro] as to be not easily not [sic] observable. His mustache certainly is not of a stand-out variety that one can say it is a mustache. It blends in very completely and perfectly with his complexion. His skin is of the very smooth type.”

[387]*387One of the witnesses testified that she considered Brown smooth-shaven despite the tuft of hair beneath his chin and his thin mustache.

The trial judge was in a position to evaluate the significance of any inconsistency between the witnesses’ descriptions of the robber as smooth-shaven and their positive identification of Brown. He considered the apparent inconsistency to be of no consequence. We cannot say that it renders the witnesses’ identification of Brown, as a matter of law, incredible or insufficient to convince beyond a reasonable doubt.

2. Alleged use of pictures to obtain identification. Plaintiff in error contends that pictures were shown witnesses just before they identified Brown as the robber in lineups after his arrest. He suggests that the witnesses, having just seen Brown’s picture, were led by the power of suggestion to identify Brown as the robber when in reality they were only identifying him as the man whose picture they had just seen.

Four of the five witnesses who identified Brown at the trial testified on cross-examination that they had picked Brown out of one or two lineups on July 17th or 18th. Mary Ann Wittek, a bank teller, picked Brown’s picture out of a group of five or six pictures sometime between the robbery and July 17th, when she picked him out of two lineups. She also saw a picture of Brown before the trial. Beverly Dvorak, also a bank teller, saw Brown’s picture and identified him as the person who gathered the money, picked him out of two lineups the next day, and saw two pictures of him just before the trial. Carl Reichert, a bank customer, testified that he had seen hundreds of pictures on the afternoon of the robbery and had selected one as the man who gathered the money. He was not able to state whether or not this was a picture of Brown. He picked Brown out of a lineup on July 18th, and was shown a picture of Brown before the [388]*388trial. Wilber Evers, bank vice-president, said he did not recall being shown a picture of Brown before he picked Brown out of a lineup.

This record does not support the claim that the witnesses were shown photographs of Brown in such a manner “that the witnesses were given the impression that this was the man who had committed the holdup even though they had not yet identified him in the lineup.” In any event, it would be within the province of the trier of the fact to determine what effect the display of a defendant’s photograph to witnesses prior to their identification of him as on the weight and credibility of their subsequent identification. We find nothing in the testimony with respect to pictures of Brown that would render the witnesses’ positive identification incredible as a matter of law, or insufficient to convince beyond a reasonable doubt.

3. Failure to call all available eyewitnesses. Plaintiff in error pointed out that there were a number of bank employees and customers present at the robbery who were not called by the state. The robber who gathered the money passed very close to six employees who were not called, three tellers in particular. The state does not have the burden to produce every possible witness where, as in this case, there were numerous witnesses.2 Five witnesses positively identified Brown as the man that gathered the money. The failure to call the other witnesses was pointed out by defense counsel in argument to the trial court. Their absence did not raise a reasonable doubt in the mind of the trial court, [389]*389and the fact that they were not called does not, as a matter of law, render the testimony of the others insufficient to sustain the finding of guilt.

4. Discussion concerning a lie-detector test. Plaintiff in error contends that certain discussion of a lie-detector test, after the finding of guilt, but before sentencing, makes this case parallel to Meyer v. State3 where we exercised our discretionary power to reverse and grant a new trial.

In Meyer the trial judge, after finding Meyer guilty, offered him the opportunity to take a lie-detector test. “The court advised Mr. Meyer that if he failed to pass the lie-detector test, he would be sentenced to the maximum term of thirty years. On the other hand, if he passed the test, the court stated it would ‘take it into consideration.’ ” We said that by this statement “the trial judge made ambiguous whether guilt had been established beyond a reasonable doubt.”

We do not find a similar ambiguity in the record now before us.

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.W.2d 53, 28 Wis. 2d 383, 1965 Wisc. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-state-wis-1965.