People v. Hallaway

205 N.W.2d 451, 389 Mich. 265, 1973 Mich. LEXIS 103
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1973
Docket6 October Term 1972, Docket No. 53,273-1/2
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 205 N.W.2d 451 (People v. Hallaway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hallaway, 205 N.W.2d 451, 389 Mich. 265, 1973 Mich. LEXIS 103 (Mich. 1973).

Opinion

Williams, J.

I concur with the order reversing and remanding the case for a new trial. Regarding the second issue I concur in part and dissent in part.

I concur with Justice Brennan’s application of the Wade -Gilbert -Stovall cdses to the question of the defendant’s right to counsel at the showup. I would only mention separately here that the differences between Wade and Gilbert are more dramatic than what is suggested by Justice Brennan when he says:

"The Wade case in essence holds that a post indictment pretrial lineup is a critical stage of a criminal prosecution, to which the Sixth Amendment right to counsel attaches.
*269 "The Gilbert case makes the Wade rule applicable to the states by way of the Fourteenth Amendment.” (p 280, infra.)

The dramatic and fundamental difference between Wade and Gilbert is not simply that Gilbert applied the Wade case to a state prosecution. In the first place, Wade was not limited except by the happenstance of facts to "post indictment” identifications. Why? Stovall holds that Wade is not to be applied retroactively and therefore the defendant in Stovall would not get the benefits of Wade — i.e., a lawyer at the one-man showup in the hospital room. The lineup in Stovall occurred hours after defendant’s arrest and long before arraignment much less indictment. Unless Wade applies to preindictment cases, then the "retroactivity” holding of Stovall is dicta. That Wade applies to preindictment cases and that Stovall is not dicta is clear from legions of cases. 4

Gilbert does much more than apply the Wade rule to a state case. The differences between Wade and Gilbert are not in to whom they apply, but in what the consequences are of not having a lawyer and then seeking to admit certain kinds of evidence of identification. Wade involved the courtroom identification, usually called "in-court identification”. Let us call that "Wade evidence”. Gilbert involved a courtroom identification (Wade evidence) plus proof admitted on direct by the prosecution that the defendant had been identified previously — in other words, in-court proof of an out-court identification. Let us call that "Gilbert evidence”.

Wade requires a foundation to be laid in order *270 to admit Wade evidence where there has been a denial of counsel. Wade is designed to insure the reliability of identifications. Gilbert sets up a per se exclusionary rule prohibiting the introduction of Gilbert evidence where there has been a denial of counsel no matter how reliable the evidence may be and regardless of what kind of foundation can be laid. Gilbert is designed to control police conduct, not insure reliability of identification.

While what Justice Brennan says is not inconsistent with what has been written above, I believe, because this is the first time our Court has given any in-depth treatment to these cases, we should give recognition to these fundamental differences.

I dissent from that part of the second issue in which Justice Brennan holds that there was in this case a necessity for a "one man” showup similar to the kind of necessity which existed in Stovall. Justice Brennan recognizes that in Stovall the critical condition of the victim was viewed as an imperative circumstance legitimizing the use of a one-man showup. He then focuses on the part of Stovall which indicated the showup was crucial to the interest of the defendant since the victim was the only person who could exonerate Stovall. He then says:

"Similar necessity existed for some kind of observation of Hallaway by the witnesses in the case before us.” (p 284.)

The necessity Justice Brennan then describes is the fact that the young witnesses were the ones who could exonerate Hallaway. The young witnesses here, however, were not in critical condition in a hospital bed with the possibility that they would be dead before a fair showup or the trial *271 itself and that factor in Stovall is what required the use of the procedure for the interest of the police, and that factor is what also made the use of that showup crucial to the interest of the defendant. I would hold that the use of the one-man showup in this case was denial of due process under the standard of Stovall and require a foundation to be laid before any in-court identification of the defendant by the witnesses who identified Hallaway at the one-man showup. See People v Anderson, 389 Mich 155 (1973).

T. M. Kavanagh, C. J., and Swainson, J., concurred with Williams, J.

T. E. Brennan, J. On March 26, 1968, a recorder’s court jury found the defendant guilty of assault with intent to rob, being armed. This appeal raises certain claims of error in that trial.

Facts

In the early evening of May 24, 1967, a man came to the door of a residence at 3127 Lakeview Street, in the City of Detroit. Representing himself to be from the gas company, the man was admitted and directed to the basement. Shortly thereafter, two other men appeared in the house, both of whom had stockings pulled over their heads. The alleged gas man reappeared, armed with a gun, and announced a holdup. The three occupants of the home, one Delphine Baranek, her mother, and her uncle, were directed to lie on the floor. lAHiile the robbers were still present in the home, the mother and uncle ran out the back door screaming. Thereupon, the robbers took a small duffei bag from one of the bedrooms and fled. The duffel bag *272 contained certain papers, including copies of the income tax returns of Joseph Szalapata, the uncle.

It happened that at this time there was a group of teenagers on the sidewalk on Lakeview Street, somewhere between the Baranek residence and the intersection of Lakeview and Mack Avenue. Three men had walked past them a few moments before the holdup, heading toward Charlevoix and away from Mack. The same three men were seen by the teenagers shortly thereafter, running back down Lakeview at about the same time screams and shouting were, heard from the Baranek residence, and some of the teenagers began running after the fleeing men, who were observed to enter an automobile parked near the corner of Lakeview and Mack.

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Bluebook (online)
205 N.W.2d 451, 389 Mich. 265, 1973 Mich. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hallaway-mich-1973.