Dornau v. State
This text of 306 So. 2d 167 (Dornau v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Frederick DORNAU, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
Raymond E. LaPorte of Ragano & LaPorte, Tampa, for appellant.
*168 Robert L. Shevin, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, Michael M. Corin, Asst. Atty. Gen., and H. Tucker Cotten, Legal Intern, Tallahassee, for appellee.
McNULTY, Judge.
Appellant Dornau appeals his conviction of first degree murder in the shooting death of one Mabel Holmes, who was employed as a maid in the home of a prominent Sarasota banker named Addy. We affirm.
The murder occurred in the employer's home while members of the household were out. Evidence was introduced showing that appellant had previously sought to borrow $200,000 from Mr. Addy's bank; and it was, and is, the theory of the state's case that Mabel Holmes was murdered so that appellant could subsequently extort $200,000 from Mr. Addy personally. The murder, it is said, was the first step in the scheme; and it was committed so that appellant could demonstrate, by alluding thereto, the seriousness of the threats he intended subsequently to make in the extortion attempt.
During trial several extortion notes were produced, all of which were sent after the murder and some of which, consistently with the state's theory, obtusely referred to the murder in terms calculated to generate fear of a like fate if the terms of the extortionist were not met.[1] Certain of these notes were found at designated phone booths pursuant to instructions from the extortionist. In an attempt to connect appellant to these extortion notes the state, over objection, introduced two overtime parking tickets which were placed on appellant's car in a metered parking space located near a phone booth in which, on the same day such parking tickets were issued, one of the extortion notes was found. The tickets became ostensibly important in the case because no other evidence tends to place appellant personally at the scenes where any of the extortion notes were found, although there is considerable evidence otherwise connecting appellant to the notes and to the murder itself, as will hereinafter appear.
The tickets were objected to as aforesaid on the grounds that they were illegally found and seized in violation of appellant's Fourth Amendment rights; and, indeed, they had been suppressed on motion prior to trial. Their introduction at trial, however, was during the state's case in rebuttal; and herein lies the basis for the one point on appeal meriting discussion.
Appellant had taken the stand in his case in chief but limited his testimony to the day of the murder and to preceding events. None of appellant's testimony concerned his activities subsequent to the murder, which is the period of time during which the state contends the extortion efforts were made and to which the parking tickets related. It is clear, therefore, that the tickets were not properly the subject of cross-examination, not being within the *169 scope of anything testified to on direct, and, for the same reason, were not properly in rebuttal or contradiction of anything. Accordingly, the state could not rely on the "rebuttal" concept to accomplish indirectly that which the exclusionary rule prohibits it from doing directly. But the error is harmless, as will hereinafter appear.
For now, however, we think the "rebuttal" concept upon which the state relies merits further exploration in the interest of the proper administration of criminal justice. To begin with, we observe that the precise factual structure with which we are here concerned has never been considered in the rebuttal context by the Florida courts. True it is that recently our Supreme Court in State v. Retherford[2] followed Harris v. New York[3] and permitted the use in rebuttal of a confession previously suppressed pursuant to the discipline of Miranda v. Arizona.[4] But the Fifth and Sixth Amendment[5] rights were involved in Miranda, while here we are concerned with a violation of a Fourth Amendment[6] right. If, however, there is a difference between the principles laid down in Retherford relating to the admissibility in rebuttal of statements taken in violation of Miranda and those relating to the admissibility in rebuttal of illegally seized evidence we fail to perceive it. In any case, while the Florida courts have not dealt with our factual situation, the United States Supreme Court has. In Walder v. United States,[7] the defendant took the stand and, on direct examination, stated that "he had never sold any narcotics to anyone and had never even possessed any narcotics." In rebuttal the prosecution was permitted to present evidence that the defendant had previously been found in possession of narcotics, although he was so previously found pursuant to an illegal search. The Supreme Court held that such evidence was properly admitted for the purpose of impeachment. The court said:[8]
"It is one thing to say that the Government cannot make an affirmative use of evidence unlawfully obtained. It is quite another to say that the defendant can turn the illegal method by which evidence in the Government's possession was obtained to his own advantage, and provide himself with a shield against contradiction of his untruths... .
... there is hardly justification for letting the defendant affirmatively resort to perjurious testimony in reliance on the Government's disability to challenge his credibility."
We agree, and see no reason why these principles ought not obtain in Florida. We say this with full awareness of the revised Florida constitutional provisions relating to the right against illegal searches and seizures.[9] Section 12 of the Declaration of Rights, F.S.A., now contains the proviso that "... articles or information obtained in violation of this right (i.e., against illegal searches and seizures) shall not be admissible in evidence" (Italics supplied). But we are of the view that this language was intended merely to incorporate expressly the exclusionary rule first promulgated in Weeks v. United States[10] and made binding on the states in Mapp v. *170 Ohio.[11] Certainly, we think, there was no intent to enlarge the exclusionary rule.
We are of the view, too, that such incorporation of the exclusionary rule must necessarily include all judicial expression and interpretation of the rule existing at the time the constitution was revised, and this would include the "rebuttal" exception enunciated in Walder, supra. Illegally seized evidence may be used by the state, therefore, either within the scope of proper cross-examination or in proper rebuttal.
But having determined, as we have, that the facts here are not within Walder we find that they fall more closely within the ambit of Agnello v. United States.[12] In Agnello, as here, the illegally seized evidence purportedly introduced in rebuttal did not really rebut or contradict anything to which the defendant had previously testified. For this reason it was held improperly admitted. That holding is not, of course, inconsistent with the principles relied upon in Harris or Retherford, supra, wherein illegally obtained confessions were properly
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
306 So. 2d 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dornau-v-state-fladistctapp-1974.