Cornell v. State

299 N.W. 231, 139 Neb. 878, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 153
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1941
DocketNo. 30851
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 299 N.W. 231 (Cornell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornell v. State, 299 N.W. 231, 139 Neb. 878, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 153 (Neb. 1941).

Opinions

Paine, J.

An oral argument was allowed on the motion and brief for rehearing, limited to one question.

This case was first argued to this court September 24, 1940, and an opinion was released, affirming the conviction, but reducing a sentence of four years to two years. This [879]*879opinion, written by Judge Johnsen (Cornell v. State, 138 Neb. 708, 294 N. W. 851), sets out in detail the facts of the case, and we will not now repeat that evidence.

Upon consideration of motion and brief for rehearing, an oral argument was ordered, limited to the question whether the impeachment of the witness Allison constituted prejudicial error. This supplemental opinion will be confined to that one question.

Stanley Allison was called as a witness by the county attorney, and testified that he was a married man, 22 years of age, his home being Norfolk,'but right at the time of the trial he was running a cement mixer at the high school, at Hoskins, Nebraska. He testified that he had worked', off and on for Howard Cornell, the defendant, in his exchange or second-hand store in Norfolk, but that he was not working for him on January 21, 1989, on which day the information charges defendant received the stolen property. Witness Allison then testified: “I know I was working that day and went home early and went to the show after supper.” He was then asked: “Did you not on the 17th day of February, 1939, in my office, in the presence of E. N. Anderson and Mildred J. Balentyne (Ballantyne), make a statement in answer to the question: ‘Did you work for Howard Cornell in his second-hand store at 200 Norfolk avenue on the 21st day of January, 1939?’ give the answer ‘yes’? A. I don’t remember it. I didn’t see the statement.” The record is then as follows: “Mr. Spillman: Defendant objects to the impeachment of his own witness. The Court: He is taken by surprise. He can impeach his own witness. Proceed.”'

Later in the trial Mildred J. Ballantyne, stenographer in the law office of Mapes & Mapes, testified that she had typewritten exhibit No. 7, and that the statement was read to Mr. Allison after it was typewritten, and she saw him sign it, and then she signed as a witness, as did E. N. Anderson.

Exhibit No. 7 consists of three pages of questions and answers. The questions were asked by the chief of police, and the important information in exhibit No. 7 is that he said that he worked for Howard Cornell, defendant, on the [880]*88021st day of January, 1939; that Lawrence Hale was also working there; that on the evening of that day he saw Lawrence Fischer and Alvin Luikens come into Cornell’s second-hand store, first at 5 o’clock, and again about 7 o’clock, and about 9 o’clock they came back again, and the defendant told him and Hale to bring in “the stuff” from outside the east door. It was' a red wheel and truck tire, 700-17, and they rolled it into the basement, and defendant Cornell told them to take off the wheel and paint it black, and that Stanley Allison and Lawrence Hale and defendant Cornell buffed the number off the tire with a soldering iron, and Cornell gave Allison $5 to give to Luikens, and when they were almost finished with the work defendant Cornell told them it was stolen. The language he used was, as reported by Allison: “He said he wanted to get it done, and get it out of there, because it was hot.” The last question was: “Do you understand that this statement can be used against you? A. Yes.” The exhibit was dated February 17, 1939.

The plaintiff in error in his original brief asked for a reversal upon the record made in the cross-examination of the witness Allison, and the court’s instruction in trying to explain why exhibit No. 7 was received in evidence at all. In the motion for rehearing, it was insisted that the state was not surprised by the testimony of the state’s own witness, Allison, and that the state abused the rules of law as to the admissibility of previous inconsistent statements. These statements are the errors assigned in the briefs of the plaintiff in error.

In the twelfth and thirteenth paragraphs of the motion for a new trial, it was alleged that the court erred in admitting the signed statement of Stanley Allison in an effort to impeach its own witness, and erred in its rulings with respect to said exhibit, changing and modifying its rulings after the exhibit had gone to the jury, which so confused the jury that they thought Allison was the defendant’s witness instead of the state’s witness.

It should be noted that in the motion for new trial no [881]*881objection was taken to the cross-examination of Allison by the state, which is now set out as the prejudicial error. We therefore have before us for consideration only the alleged error set out in the motion for a new trial, of admitting exhibit No. 7 in evidence. The trial court endeavored to cover this matter in instruction No. 10, which reads as follows: “The state was permitted to lay the foundation for impeachment of the witness Stanley E. Allison to show by another witness, Mildred J. Ballantyne, that Stanley E. Allison answered various questions in the office of Andrew D. Mapes, county attorney, on or about February 17, 1939, together with the answers he gave to such questions. This testimony was admitted solely because it may or may not affect the credibility of the testimony of Stanley E. Allison, and it must not be considered by you for any other purpose.” This instruction very properly limited the purpose of exhibit No. 7 solely to its effect on the credibility of Allison. In the oral examination of Allison, all of the important facts of exhibit No. 7 had only been placed before the jury, and the exhibit itself added nothing to that. '

The trial court gave a very complete instruction to the jury on the credibility of witnesses, showing that the weight to be given to the testimony of each of them was a question for the jury to decide, and detailed at considerable length the elements they were to consider in giving weight to the evidence of any particular witness, and no instruction was tendered by the plaintiff in error in regard to the admission of exhibit No. 7.

In the prosecution of a criminal case, the county attorney sometimes finds that a few of the witnesses are not inclined to tell the whole truth, and it has become quite customary, upon his first appearance in the office of the county attorney, to take a signed statement of the circumstances as he then gives them, to the end that the prosecuting attorney can present to the jury all the facts. At the trial, which is sometimes after a lapse of months, if one of the witnesses fails to testify to the facts as originally given, it is quite proper to refresh his recollection from the written state[882]*882ment which was taken, usually in the presence of a witness.

It is argued at some length that the county attorney was not taken by surprise by Allison’s evidence, which was entirely contrary to what he had given in his signed statement. It does not seem necessary that counsel must always arise in open court during the examination of a witness and state that he has been taken by surprise by a statement just made by a witness which is contrary to a written statement which the attorney holds in his hand. By proper interrogatories the counsel has shown that the witness is going back on a written statement which he had given, which in itself proves surprise, as the court stated in the case at bar.

Several references have been made to a cross-examination of the witness Allison.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Martin
178 N.W.2d 573 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1970)
Texter v. State
102 N.W.2d 655 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1960)
Hawk v. Hann
103 F. Supp. 138 (D. Nebraska, 1952)
Moore v. State
23 N.W.2d 552 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
299 N.W. 231, 139 Neb. 878, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornell-v-state-neb-1941.