Cittadino v. State

24 So. 2d 93, 199 Miss. 235, 1945 Miss. LEXIS 284
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1945
DocketNo. 35972.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 93 (Cittadino v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cittadino v. State, 24 So. 2d 93, 199 Miss. 235, 1945 Miss. LEXIS 284 (Mich. 1945).

Opinion

Alexander, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was convicted of robbery with firearms and the judgment, in accord with the verdict of the jury, carried the death penalty. The assignments of error pressed as grounds for reversal are the following: (1) failure properly to identify appellant as a participant in the crime; (2) denial of motions for mistrial on ground of prejudicial rulings; and (3) errors in instructions and sentence which assumed that the firearm exhibited was a deadly weapon.

Appellant was jointly indicted with Walter Henderson and Steve Dindinger under Section 2367 of the Code of 1942, which is as follows:

“Every person who shall feloniously take or attempt to take from the person or from the presence the personal property of another and against his will by violence to his person or by putting such person in fear of immediate injury to his person by the exhibition of a deadly weapon shall be guilty of robbery and, upon conviction, shall be punished by death if the penalty is so fixed by the jury; and in cases where the jury fails to fix the penal *241 ty at death, the court shall'fix the penalty at imprisonment in the penitentiary for any term not less than three years.
‘ ‘ The passage of this Act shall not be held to repeal any existing criminal statute of the state.”

A severance was granted and upon arrignment the joint defendants pleaded guilty, the appellant alone standing trial. The testimony for the state is that the three defendants came to the home of Ernest Bishop near the town of Moselle, and after having made a survey of the premises through the device of repeated inquiries for tools to repair an allegedly disabled car they held up the occupants of the home at pistol point and robbed Bishop of some $11,000, and thereupon securely bound all those present.

The.jury were amply justified in finding that appellant was one of the marauding trio. He was positively identified by Bishop and two other occupants of the house who for a period of about an hour had an opportunity to observe the intruders. Further identification was aided by the testimony of five other nearby residents who saw and talked with appellant the day following the robbery and who, by his manner of dress and mode of travel, were able to identify him as being present in the neighborhood of the crime. Appellant had on his person a substantial amount of money, paid liberally for assistance rendered him in repair of his car, and offered $100 for transportation to a nearby town. Louisiana officers showed appellant’s presence at Independence, Louisiana, in company with the codefendants on the preceding day, and shortly after the robbery found money and guns on appellant’s person and in his home which Bishop identified as having been taken from him. The presence of the three men together at Independence was corroborated by Dindingér who in his testimony admitted his guilt but exonerated appellant from participation. We find no basis for denying to the jury the right to find appellant guilty upon the facts shown.

The next assignment of error concerns the following trial incident. At the conclusion of the state’s case ap *242 pellant moved the trial court to exclude certain objective evidence including guns and bills found upon the person or in the home of appellant, and some clothing which had been found in a suitcase in the rear of the home and place of business of appellant’s mother, next door to his own home. This clothing was identified by several of the witnesses as the same as, or at least similar to, that worn by the appellant at the time of the robbery and on the day following. In sustaining the motion to exclude the testimony the trial judge stated to the jury: “All the testimony that has been introduced here about guns, pistols, etc., that nobody can identify positively, is excluded. You won’t consider that on the trial of this case. The only testimony you will consider in this case about property, is the greenback, the dollar bills and the greenback that have been identified here positively, that is, that the State has identified positively as the property of Mr. Bishop. The other is excluded from your consideration, and you won’t consider it. ’ ’

The Court denied motion for mistrial based on alleged prejudice resulting from, what is asserted to be commentary upon the weight of the evidence by the court in violation of Section 1530, Code 1942. The point of attack is the statement “that the State has identified positively as the property of Mr. Bishop.” The generality of the language makes it less vulnerable to attack. It is true that the Court referred to “the dollar bills and the greenback” as having been “identified here positively” and* later stated “I ruled out everything, Mr. Collins, except these bills that have been identified by both Mr. 'Bishop and other witnesses.” Yet the jury were left to consider such as they found to have met the test of identification. Moreover, we have carefully examined the testimony upon which the offer of the money, the guns, and the clothing was sought and are of the opinion that the exclusion of these was more favorable to the defendant than he had a right to expect. Two of the guns and certain of the bills bearing special markings were “positively identified” by Bishop as those taken from him, *243 and by the arresting officers as those retrieved from the defendant. The clothing discarded and found upon premises adjacent to defendant’s home and identified by numerous witnesses as at least identical to that worn by defendant and was of such circumstantial value as the jury might have appraised. Moreover, the other objects were in fact “positively identified” as the property of Bishop whose testimony was not contradicted but corroborated. These objects were excluded as exhibits and thereby the Court intimated doubt as to their identity in fact, so that the contention now concerns only the residual prejudice arising from their exhibition to the witnesses. We find no prejudicial error in the phrasing by the Court of its ruling made in support of defendant’s motion.

Mistrial was also moved upon the ground that one of the arresting officers stated on direct examination, “Well, to start off with we already had them under investigation before this — ” whereupon the prosecutor interposed “Now you say you already had them under investigation?” Objection thereto was promptly sustained but motion for mistrial was made and overruled. We find no reversible error here. The fact of an investigation is not an unnatural inference from the fact of the arrest which followed even as the indictment and trial presupposed, and the conviction vindicated, prior examination and suspicion. • Appellant’s counsel made numerous inquiries of the officers regarding their “investigation.” There is not clearly implied a reference to any offense other than that here tried and the arrest to which the investigation led.

The last assignments involve the alleged failure of the state to prove that the robbery was committed “by the exhibition of a deadly weapon.” The point is saved in the action of the Court in granting instructions for the state which authorized conviction under the statute by a finding that the firearms used were deadly weapons, and in the court’s action in fixing sentence at death in ac

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 93, 199 Miss. 235, 1945 Miss. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cittadino-v-state-miss-1945.