Clark v. State

348 N.E.2d 27, 264 Ind. 524, 1976 Ind. LEXIS 487
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1976
Docket874S168
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 348 N.E.2d 27 (Clark v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. State, 348 N.E.2d 27, 264 Ind. 524, 1976 Ind. LEXIS 487 (Ind. 1976).

Opinion

DeBruler, J.

Appellant, Steven Ray Clark, was charged by affidavit with physical infliction of an injury by a deadly weapon while engaged in a robbery, Ind. Code § 35-13-4-6, being Burns § 10-4101. In a jury trial, on February 13-15, 1974, appellant was found guilty as charged and sentenced to life imprisonment. He timely filed a motion to correct errors, which was overruled.

On appeal, appellant presents three contentions: that the evidence identifying him as one of the perpetrators of the crime was insufficient; that the court erred in allowing the State to elicit, as evidence of bias, the fact that the father of appellant’s alibi witness had been convicted the previous week; and that five remarks of the prosecuting attorney were so prejudicial as to deny appellant a fair and impartial trial.

The evidence which supports the verdict of the jury shows that William J. Tornatta, a taxi driver, received a call over his radio about 2:00 a.m., August 5, 1973, which directed him to a certain restaurant. The radio informed him that the call had been made from a phone booth, and, as he passed the phone booth closest to the restaurant, he saw that the receiver was hanging loose. At that moment, two men called out to him, and he turned around to pick them up. When he stopped, he was under a street light and the dome light inside his car was on. Appellant got in the back seat and the other man, George Willis Copeland, got in the front. When Copeland told Tornatta to drive down a street and gave him no specific address, Tor-natta became suspicious. He had been robbed three or four *526 times before. Looking in his mirror, he noticed that appellant kept looking around. Finally, appellant directed him to go to a certain corner. When Tornatta reached that corner, he switched on his dome light.

At that point, Copeland pulled a gun from his belt and said this was a stick-up. He poked the gun in Tornatta’s ribs and continued to jab him with it during the whole period of the robbery. Tornatta told Copeland his money was in his shirt pocket, and appellant reached over and got the money out of the pocket. Copeland asked if he had more money, Tornatta held up his moneychanger, and appellant took it. Again asked if he had money, he got out a small coin purse and gave it to Copeland. Asked again, Tornatta gave Copeland his billfold and bankbook. Finally, Copeland asked him if he had a watch, and appellant took it off his wrist. Copeland asked if that was all Tornatta had, and he said it was.

Copeland then ripped the cab microphone out and threw it in the back seat, stomped the radio out of its carrier, and bent back the sealed door of the glove compartment. Then he opened the right hand door and got out. As he got out, he said, “Okay, man,” and appellant struck Tornatta on the head with a blackjack. Appellant then hit him again. Tornatta put his hands over his head, and appellant continued to hit him with the blackjack. Finally, Tornatta grabbed the door, opened it, got out, turned around and just barely kicked appellant on the leg. Appellant and Copeland ran down the street, but Copeland got ahead of appellant because appellant had a hard time running and limped a little. Tornatta estimated that appellant and Copeland were in his cab for about thirty minutes.

Tornatta’s pants and shirt were covered with blood and his head was bleeding badly.' He walked down the street until he found someone who would call the police for him. When the police arrived, they took him to the hospital.

• Appellant’s first argument is that Tornatta’s identification of appellant is unreliable, because Tornatta’s opportunity to *527 observe, description of appellant, and uncertainty make his identification suspect. Appellant notes that it was dark at the time of the robbery, that Tornatta testified positively that Clark was darker than Copeland and yet Copeland is the darker of the two, and that Tornatta also testified that there was always the possibility of an error.

Tornatta was with the two men for thirty minutes. He picked them up under a street light and had the dome light in his cab on when they got in. He was immediately suspicious and watched appellant in the mirror as he drove. He had the dome light in his cab on while appellant and' Copeland robbed him. He saw appellant again when he kicked him and watched him as he ran away. Tornatta testified that he had the opportunity to look at appellant face to face at least three times.

At the hospital, appellant described the two men. He said that both were about 6' 4", one weighed about 200 lbs. and the other about 225 lbs. They wore floppy-brimmed hats, and one wore sunglasses. They were black and were between twenty and thirty years old. While this description was brief, its accuracy with regard to appellant was not challenged.

The testimony to which appellant refers, concerning the possibility of mistaken identification, is as follows:

“Q. Mr. Tornatta, you have told the jury here that in good faith you believe that Steven Clark is the #2 man, isn’t that correct?
' A. Yes, sir.
Q. You could be wrong, though, isn’t that correct?
A. No, sir, I don’t think I am.
Q. Didn’t you make a statement back before that there’s always a possibility ?
A. Yes, sir, I did. When the question was asked — I forget whether you asked it or Attorney Flynn or whether it was Attorney Noffsinger — asked me the question, wasn’t there a possibility of an error? Well, yes, there’s always a possibility of an error, and that was the reply that I gave to the question, but there was no doubt in my mind.
*528 Q. I understand that, but you could be mistaken, isn’t that correct ?
A. Could I be mistaken ?
MR. MONTGOMERY: Yes, sir.
A. There’s always a possibility.
MR. MONTGOMERY: I believe that’s all.
RE-DIRECT EXAMINATION OF WILLIAM J. TOR-NATTA BY JAMES M. REDWINE, DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY:
Q. Mr. Tornatta, is there any reasonable doubt in your mind that the defendant in this case robbed you?
MR. MONTGOMERY: Now, to which I’m going to object to that; that calls for a legal conclusion on the part of the prosecutor; that’s for the jury to decide. The prosecutor used the term reasonable doubt.
BY THE COURT: You want to rephrase your question.
Q. Is there any doubt that the defendant is the man that robbed you on August 5th, 1973?
A. No, sir, there’s no doubt.

Tornatta was wrong about the color of the men’s faces and admitted that there was always the possibility of an error in identification. Although these matters do imbue his testimony with a very slight tinge of equivocation, it is not legally significant here.

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Bluebook (online)
348 N.E.2d 27, 264 Ind. 524, 1976 Ind. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-state-ind-1976.