Dwyer v. State

145 A.2d 100, 154 Me. 179, 1958 Me. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 22, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 145 A.2d 100 (Dwyer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dwyer v. State, 145 A.2d 100, 154 Me. 179, 1958 Me. LEXIS 86 (Me. 1958).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

On December 2, A. D. 1937 the petitioner, then on trial for the murder of Dr. James G. Littlefield, retracted his recorded plea of not guilty, pleaded guilty and was adjudged guilty. He was sentenced to life imprisonment and has been continuously confined in execution of that sentence.

On April 8, A.D. 1957 the petitioner sought a writ of error coram nobis and in May, 1957 such a writ was issued. He alleged that his plea of guilty had been wrung from him by the duress and intimidation of Francis M. Carroll, a deputy sheriff, that legal counsel assigned to him by court appointment for his murder trial had been incompetent and that during his detention and trial he had been held incommunicado in derogation of his constitutional rights. A hearing before a justice has been had upon the writ and the petitioner then offered testimony which at the objection of the State was excluded. The petitioner excepted to such a ruling and now after a decision upon the writ affirming the court judgment of December 2, A.D. 1937 prosecutes his exceptions.

After the conviction of the petitioner in 1937, Francis M. Carroll, the deputy sheriff accused by the petitioner of having terrorized and quite reduced the latter to a status of automaton, was in 1938 indicted, tried and convicted of the murder of the same Dr. James G. Littlefield. At the trial of State v. Carroll, E. Walker Abbott, an attorney- who had represented the petitioner in his trial for Littlefield’s murder in 1937, was called by the State as its witness. Abbott died in March, 1953 long prior to the hearing in the present controversy. A transcript of his testimony on direct and cross-examination in the Carroll trial was the evidence offered by the petitioner at his hearing on the writ of error *181 coram nobis and excluded by the court. The content of Abbott’s testimony was such as to make it, if admissible, rationally pertinent to all three of the petitioner’s charges in the instant case. Before the offer of such evidence the petitioner in this proceeding had testified extensively in support of his charges. He had been cross-examined and much testimony, documentary and real evidence of contradictory and impeaching potential had been introduced by the State. The testimony of Abbott was offered by the petitioner as proper to his position that the issues of coercion of Dwyer by Carroll and of the isolation of Dwyer were waged alike both in the trial of State v. Dwyer and in that of State v. Carroll. The Abbott testimony was opposed by the State for the stated reasons that neither the parties nor the issues were the same in the trials of State v. Dwyer and State v. Carroll. Before ruling the justice admitted the record of all the evidence in the case of State v. Carroll on behalf of the petitioner here for the strictly contained purpose of ascertaining the veritable issues entertained in the Carroll trial. The court thereafter upheld the State’s objection and excluded Abbott’s testimony.

The record reveals that quite at the outset of the trial of State v. Carroll the State called the present petitioner as its witness. Dwyer at the very time stood convicted of the murder of Dr. James G. Littlefield by a judgment of record in the very tribunal which was then trying Carroll for the same crime. It has never been doubted or disputed that the court had jurisdiction of the respondent and of the crime in the cast of State v. Dwyer. Yet, at the Carroll trial the State attorney conducting the prosecution, with little ado and summarily, asked the following abrupt questions and, without interference, elicited the following responses:

“Q. Your name is Paul N. Dwyer?
A. Yes, sir.
*182 Q. You are now an inmate of the State of Maine Prison at Thomaston?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did you murder (sic) Dr. Littlefield?
A. No, sir, I did not.
Q. Did you see him murdered (sic) ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Do you know who murdered (sic) him?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Who did?
A. Francis Carroll.
Q. The respondent at the bar here?
A. Yes, sir.”

Prescinding from the form of certain of the foregoing interrogatories and from the propriety of a collateral attack upon an abiding judgment of that same court we may say that the record of the Carroll trial conclusively demonstrates that issues injected by the State and persistently entertained by the court were the innocence or guilt of Dwyer, the duress or spontaneity of his guilty plea made at his own trial some nine months before and the undue sequestration of Dwyer after his arrest. The State assumed and appropriated the dual burden of exculpating Dwyer for the nonce while convicting Carroll and the former effort was logically and correlatively necessary to the latter because of the extraordinary nature of the trial. The testimony of Abbott supplied by the State at the Carroll trial related to avowed coercion and duress by Carroll upon Dwyer from the killing of Dr. Littlefield to the pleading of Dwyer, to the asserted isolation of Dwyer pending trial and to a professed consistency of statements by Dwyer as to his domination by Carroll to the time of Dwyer’s plea. There can be no doubt that the foregoing issues tolerated in the *183 Carroll trial are the matters now in controversy in the case at bar.

The parties arrayed against each other in the current hearing of Dwyer v. State and those of the trial of State v. Carroll are not the same. Nothing could be more obvious. Nor was there any privity in the legal sense between Carroll and Dwyer. However, the State was and is a party in both cases. The State presented E. Walker Abbott as its witness in the Carroll trial and was accorded and exercised a plenary function of direct examination. The State regarded the demonstration of a complete mental ascendancy by Carroll over Dwyer and the impugning of the previously adjudicated guilt of Dwyer as necessary premises to be proved as part of its case against Carroll. We are concerned here with the rules of evidence. The proper object of such a science is truth and its establishment with due acknowledgment and satisfaction of the rights of all parties. Unless the rules are adapted to those ends they fail of their purpose and become rote. The transcript of the testimony given at the Carroll trial by the deceased E. Walker Abbott at the behest of the State was offered by this petitioner in this case. In so far as the fair quest of truth is the objective, the exercise by the State in the Carroll

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Related

State v. Boobar
637 A.2d 1162 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1994)
Commonwealth v. Meech
403 N.E.2d 1174 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 A.2d 100, 154 Me. 179, 1958 Me. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dwyer-v-state-me-1958.