Emil v. State

784 P.2d 956, 105 Nev. 858, 1989 Nev. LEXIS 325
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1989
Docket19431
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 784 P.2d 956 (Emil v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emil v. State, 784 P.2d 956, 105 Nev. 858, 1989 Nev. LEXIS 325 (Neb. 1989).

Opinion

*859 OPINION

Per Curiam:

On June 17, 1984, Charles Emil, appellant’s stepfather, was shot and killed.

Appellant, Rodney Lyn Emil (Emil), was eventually arrested and charged with the murder of his stepfather. Following a trial, *860 the jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree with use of a deadly weapon. After a June 8, 1988, penalty hearing, the jury determined that Emil should be sentenced to death. This appeal followed.

Facts

The facts adduced at trial presented a scenario that commenced on June 17, 1984, when Frederick Woodall, Alan Carmack and Emil met at Woodall’s home for a barbecue. When Emil arrived, he explained that he needed to meet with his stepfather, Charles Emil. Shortly thereafter, Carmack, Emil and Woodall left in Carmack’s pickup truck to go purchase barbecue supplies. At the grocery store, Emil told Woodall that he had to call his stepfather.

After purchasing the supplies, Carmack and Woodall entered the cab of Carmack’s truck and Emil climbed into the truck’s bed. The trio then drove to a desert area south of Tropicana Road on Rainbow Boulevard in Las Vegas. Carmack pulled his truck alongside a white pickup truck parked just off the road. Woodall testified that Emil immediately stood up in the back of Carmack’s truck, pulled a revolver from a paper bag and fired four shots at the occupant of the white truck. The victim moved toward the passenger door and slumped down onto the floor. One of the shots shattered the passenger window.

Woodall testified that when he realized what had happened he and Carmack left the scene as Emil jumped from Carmack’s truck and proceeded to chase them in the victim’s truck. Woodall stated that Emil forced Carmack off the road at gunpoint and then told Woodall and Carmack that their families would be harmed if they ever told anyone about the shooting. Emil then entered Carmack’s truck and the three men drove away, leaving the victim’s truck behind.

Officer Dennis Cobb of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department was the first police officer to arrive at the crime scene. Cobb observed a white male lying on the floorboard of the white truck. The passenger window was broken but no glass fragments were found outside of the vehicle. The registered owner of the vehicle was Charles Emil.

The body in the vehicle was later identified as Charles Emil. An autopsy revealed that the victim had been shot four times. Death was the result of a bullet that passed through the victim’s neck, cutting his carotid artery, causing massive hemorrhaging.

A little over a year after Charles Emil was killed, Woodall, who had been incarcerated for a probation violation, told police officers that he had information regarding the June 17, 1984, *861 Rainbow Boulevard shooting. Woodall testified that he waited a year because he feared for the safety of his girlfriend and their son. When he finally reported the details of the shooting, he also directed a Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department detective, Michael Geary, to the crime scene where Geary discovered broken automotive glass fragments. Woodall also told police that approximately two weeks before the victim was killed, Emil told Woodall that $10,000 could be made if his stepfather was killed.

Martin Koba, who knew Emil, testified that in May or June, 1986, he came upon a group of three or four people, including Emil, and although he was three or four feet away from them, he was able to overhear the conversation and specifically heard a voice that sounded like Emil’s saying something to the effect that “my mother hired my buddy and me to kill my stepfather.” He then heard the same person refer to the purpose for the killing in terms of a possible recovery of insurance policy proceeds.

Guilt Phase

Emil contends that it was reversible error to admit the testimony of Martin Koba without proper foundation during the guilt phase of the trial. He challenges the conversation as analogous to a telephone conversation which is admissible only if the identity of the caller is satisfactorily established by circumstantial or other competent evidence. Longley, 86 Nev. 599, 472 P.2d 350 (1970); King v. State, 80 Nev. 269, 392 P.2d 310 (1964).

Koba knew Emil. Koba testified that in May or June of 1986, he was about four feet away from a group that included Emil, and that he overheard an incriminating statement from a speaker who sounded like Emil. 1

*862 Emil argues that because Koba did not positively identify his voice, proper foundation was not established and that it was error not to exclude Koba’s testimony.

This contention lacks merit. NRS 52.065 provides that “[a] voice, whether heard first hand or through mechanical or electronic transmission or recording, is sufficiently identified by opinion based upon hearing the voice at any time under circumstances connecting it with the alleged speaker.”

Additionally, federal courts interpreting Federal Rules of Evidence 901(a) and 901(b)(5), 2 a rule almost identical to NRS 52.065, have interpreted it according to its plain meaning. See, e.g., United States v. Alvarez, 860 F.2d 801, 809 (7th Cir. 1988) (where government witnesses had considerable opportunity to become familiar with the voices of appellants, attacks on the accuracy of voice identification goes to the weight of the evidence); United States v. Cerone, 830 F.2d 938, 949 (8th Cir. 1987) (“Any person may identify a speaker’s voice if he has heard the voice at any time.”).

Our reading of NRS 52.065, buttressed by federal decisions concerning the similar federal rule of evidence, compels us to conclude that the State laid the proper foundation under NRS 52.065 to admit Mr. Koba’s testimony.

Although Koba’s credibility was subject to challenge, questions concerning Koba’s credibility simply went to the weight to be accorded his testimony and not to its admissibility. See Azbill v. State, 88 Nev. 240, 352 P.2d 1064 (1972).

*863

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17 P.3d 397 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2001)
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Lord v. State
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
784 P.2d 956, 105 Nev. 858, 1989 Nev. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emil-v-state-nev-1989.