Heard v. State

612 S.W.2d 312, 272 Ark. 140, 1981 Ark. LEXIS 1219
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 9, 1981
DocketCR 80-133
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 612 S.W.2d 312 (Heard v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heard v. State, 612 S.W.2d 312, 272 Ark. 140, 1981 Ark. LEXIS 1219 (Ark. 1981).

Opinions

George Rose Smith, Justice.

The three appellants, Ollis and Hollis Heard, twins, and Richard Ferguson, were charged with burglary, with theft of property, and with having two or more previous felony convictions each. At the end of the first stage of a bifurcated trial the court submitted verdict forms only with respect to burglary, overlooking the charge of theft of property. Consequently the jury found the defendants guilty only of burglary. Nevertheless, in the second stage of the trial the jury, without objection, was permitted to fix sentences as follows: Ollis Heard, 20 years for burglary and 10 for theft; Hollis Heard, 10 years for burglary and 3 for theft; Ferguson, 3 years for burglary and 2 for theft. In this appeal from a judgment sentencing all three defendants to imprisonment for both offenses, seven points for reversal are argued.

We need not state the proof in detail, because the sufficiency of the evidence to support the convictions is not questioned. On the night of January 19, 1978, the General Telephone Company office at Stuttgart was broken into, and the company’s safe was taken. The safe was later found in an area near Almyra, about 12 miles southeast of Stuttgart. The safe had been chopped open, checks payable to the company were scattered about near the safe, and a gray metal cashbox was missing.

On the night of the burglary the three defendants, riding together in a pickup truck, had gotten stuck in a ditch about halfway between Stuttgart and Almyra and had been pulled out by a witness for the State. Paint scrapings taken from the safe and from paint marks found on the bed of the truck, when scientifically examined, showed almost conclusively that the safe had been transported in the truck bed. Hollis Heard, the only defendant who testified, admitted that the three men got stuck in the truck that night, but he denied their guilt.

The sheriff, in the course of a different investigation about three months later, obtained a search warrant to search the Heard Twins’ Club in Stuttgart for stolen half-pint bottles of whiskey and stolen bottles of gin. In the course of that search Officer Rosegrant picked up a cashbox under a counter and said, “This looks like the one that come out of the telephone company.” The officers took the cashbox, which was positively identified as the one stolen from the safe.

It is first argued that the State should not have been permitted to introduce the affidavit for the search warrant and the warrant itself, neither of which was shown to the jury, nor the cashbox, because the existence of those three items had not been disclosed by the State during pretrial discovery. This argument is without merit. The abstract does not show a request for discovery, a claim of surprise, or a motion for a continuance. Moreover, the sheriffs return shows that he left a copy of the. warrant with Hollis Heard and that the cashbox was listed as one of the items taken. In the circumstances the trial judge did not abuse the discretion conferred upon him by Criminal Procedure Rule 19.7 in refusing to prohibit the prosecution from using the items.

The second argument questions not only the sufficiency of the search warrant and its supporting affidavit but also the admissibility of the cashbox. Most of the specific objections to the warrant and affidavit now argued were not made below and were therefore waived. Woods v.Pearce, 230 Ark. 839, 327 S.W. 2d 377 (1959). It was objected below that the Heards’ street address was not specifically stated, but that point is without merit and not even argued on appeal. The other objection was that the year in the date of the warrant was shown as 1978 at the top but as 1976 above the issuing judge’s signature. All the evidence, however, shows that 1978 was the correct year; so the discrepancy, as the trial judge ruled, was obviously a clerical typographical error. Such documents are normally drafted by nonlawyers in the haste of a criminal investigation and are to be tested in a commonsense and realistic fashion, not with a grudging or negative attitude. Baxter v. State, 262 Ark. 303, 556 S.W. 2d 428 (1977).

The sufficiency of the supporting affidavit is not properly presented on appeal, because there was no such objection in the trial court. Wicks v. State, 270 Ark. 781, 606 S.W. 2d 366 (1980). Nevertheless, the dissenting opinion makes the flat statement: “There is no affidavit in this case.” We wholly disagree with that conclusion. The printed form for Affidavit for Search Warrant contained three blank lines for the insertion of the facts establishing the grounds for the issuance of the warrant. The facts stated by the sheriff were so detailed that they required 28 typewritten lines on a separate sheet of paper. That paper was signed by the sheriff, who also initialed the note inserted on the form, “See attached statement.” The statement was attached, the sheriff signed the form as affiant, and the jurat was completed by the municipal judge. Hence the statement was incorporated in a simple, practical, and commonsense manner. If there had been any doubt about the authenticity of the attachment signed by the sheriff, he was a witness in the case and could easily have been called to testify. When a matter can readily be clarified in the trial court if a timely objection is made, the failure to object prevents the party from raising the point on appeal. Smith v. Union Nat. Bank of Little Rock, 241 Ark. 821, 410 S.W. 2d 599 (1967).

As to the cashbox, the officers’ conduct met the threefold standard to be deduced from Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443 (1971): First, the plain view doctrine was satisfied, because the officers were acting under the authority of a valid search warrant and had a right to search the premises. Second, the discovery was inadvertent, there being no showing that the officers had hoped to find the cashbox and obtained the search warrant as a subterfuge for entering the premises. Third, Officer Rosegrant at once recognized the cashbox as having probably been stolen in the telephone company burglary. In fact, the informations had been filed only the day before, and Officer Rosegrant obviously knew that such an article had been stolen. In this respect the case differs from Gatlin v. State, 262 Ark. 485, 559 S.W. 2d 12 (1977), where the officers making a similar search had no knowledge of any particular items, so that the incriminating nature of the articles seized could not have been immediately apparent. Here the converse was true. Absolute certainty was not required, else the officers could not have seized heroin, for example, because it might prove to be a harmless powder. A reasonable degree of certainty, precluding fishing expeditions, is sufficient. The cashbox was admissible evidence.

Third, the State was properly allowed to impeach its own witness with regard to a comparatively minor matter. Such impeachment is specifically permitted by Uniform Evidence Rule 607, Ark. Stat. Ann. § 28-1001 (Repl. 1979), and the prosecution complied with Uniform Rule 613 in showing that the witness had made a prior statement inconsistent with his testimony. In fact, the principal objection below was that the State had waited too long before adducing the impeaching testimony on rebuttal, but that is a matter resting within the trial court’s sound discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
612 S.W.2d 312, 272 Ark. 140, 1981 Ark. LEXIS 1219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heard-v-state-ark-1981.