McKee v. State

488 P.2d 1039, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 260
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1971
Docket1273
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 488 P.2d 1039 (McKee v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKee v. State, 488 P.2d 1039, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 260 (Ala. 1971).

Opinion

OPINION

CONNOR, Justice.

Appellant was convicted of the crime of being a convict in possession of a prohibited weapon. 1 On appeal he seeks reversal for certain claimed errors committed in the trial of his case.

I

The main witness against appellant at trial was Miss Billie Dowd. She testified that on July 25, 1969, she was performing her duties in the State Capitol Building in Juneau, Alaska, as a capítol guide. She was seated at a desk in the lobby on the ground floor. Appellant approached her, and engaged her in conversation. At one point he took a knife from his pocket, which he described as a “Mexican toothpick.” He also described how he had stabbed and raped his sister-in-law, and mentioned he was on parole. At some point he kissed Miss Dowd.

Being afraid of appellant, Miss Dowd got into the elevator to go to the fifth floor. Appellant followed her into the elevator. It stopped at the second floor, They both got out, walked around, returned, and continued the journey to the fifth floor. Upon emerging there, appellant was beckoned to by a probation officer. Appellant then took leave of Miss Dowd. The knife was later found in his coat pocket, at the time of his arrest, although the coat was then hung upon a hook in appellant’s apartment. The knife was put in evidence at the trial.

Counsel for appellant objected to portions of the testimony of Miss Dowd on grounds of relevancy. It is urged that it is irrelevant that appellant had either stabbed or raped his sister-in-law, that appellant caused Miss Dowd to be afraid of him, or that he kissed her. None of these things *1041 have to do directly with being a convict in the illegal possession of a knife.

It is true that such evidence normally would be excluded because it would not tend to establish a proposition material to appellant’s guilt. However, as we held in Kugzruk v. State, 436 P.2d 962, 967 (Alaska 1968), “evidence is admissible when it tends to complete the picture or set the stage for the crime for which the defendant is being tried.”

An eye witness to an event should be permitted to testify in a natural manner about what he observed. This ordinarily includes such background facts as where the witness was, how he happened to be there, and what interrelationship he may have had with other persons present at the event about which the witness testifies. Otherwise the testimony of the witness may seem distorted, improbable, or incredible to some degree. To strip away such background evidence may well result in an artificial or false picture of what occurred. Webb v. Commonwealth, 154 Va. 866, 152 S.E. 366 (1930); United States v. Wall, 225 F.2d 905 (7th Cir. 1955), cert. denied 350 U.S. 935, 76 S.Ct. 307, 100 L.Ed. 816 (1956).

In this case the testimony of Miss Dowd covered only a brief period of time. It had at least some relevancy in the sense that appellant’s conduct and his statements, regardless of their truth, might tend to explain why he would be the kind of person who would carry a concealed weapon in a public building and exhibit it to a virtual stranger. The braggadocio quality of appellant’s demeanor does serve to explain why he might engage in such conduct. Without this evidence the jury would have to determine appellant’s guilt in what is virtually an evidentiary vacuum. In that situation there might well be doubts created about whether Miss Dowd ever really saw a knife being displayed to her, or whether she was observant enough to see appellant draw it from his pocket.

The state argued at trial that these occurrences were part of the “res gestae.” We do not rest decision on that basis, with its convenient and enticing obscurity. Wigmore, Evidence, § 1757. We think admissibility rests instead upon a practical principle of testimonial completeness. We hold the admission of Miss Dowd’s entire testimony to be proper.

II

At trial appellant testified on his own behalf. During cross-examination the prosecution was permitted, over objection, to put in evidence the information, charging assault with a dangerous weapon, to which appellant had pleaded guilty in 1966. Appellant assigns this as error on the ground that the nature of the 1966 conviction could not be relevant in proving guilt of the crime for which appellant was on trial. We must look at the particular details of this case to resolve this issue properly.

During cross-examination appellant denied that he had ever stabbed or raped anyone. In answer to a question by the prosecution, appellant said that in 1966 he had merely threatened to do those things. He denied that he mentioned anything about the 1966 episode in his conversations with Miss Dowd. He did admit displaying the knife to Miss Dowd as a “conversational piece.” The 1966 information itself only charges that appellant, while armed with a hunting knife, did “threaten the life of Iris E. Lonning by holding a hunting knife to her throat.”

At oral argument before us the state contended that the 1966 information was admissible to impeach appellant’s testimony because appellant had attempted to minimize the nature of his previous conviction. It is true that when a witness minimizes the nature of a previous conviction, or denies having been convicted, the examining party can overcome this by evidence which tends to establish the precise nature of the previous offense. Christy v. United States, 17 Alaska 107, 261 F.2d 357 (9th Cir. 1958). Even then great care must be taken to assure that the inquiry does not *1042 become diverted into litigating an issue collateral to the case under trial. Little v. State, 79 Okl.Cr. 285, 154 P.2d 772 (1945).

But a careful scrutiny of the record in this case reveals that appellant did not falsify the nature of the precise crime for which he had previously been convicted. He answered correctly when he said that he was convicted in 1966 of only threatening the victim of the assault. At trial the prosecution proposed to impeach appellant by evidence which would have detailed the events surrounding the 1966 conviction. The court properly refused to permit this proof. It was then that the information was admitted in evidence.

We hold that in the circumstances of this case the admission of the 1966 information was error. What was material to the case on trial was that appellant had been convicted previously of a crime which is specified in the statute prohibiting the carrying of certain weapons. Appellant had not lied or equivocated on cross-examination when asked about the nature of the previous conviction. The prosecution contended that appellant was lying when he denied having raped or stabbed the victim of the 1966 assault, but proof of those facts would have been beyond the proper scope of cross-examination or impeachment. Admitting the information into evidence could only serve to focus the jury’s attention upon the details of the earlier offense and possibly to cause them to believe that appellant had raped or stabbed the victim of the 1966 offense. 2

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Bluebook (online)
488 P.2d 1039, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckee-v-state-alaska-1971.