Pierce v. State

261 P.3d 428, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 72, 2011 WL 3305376
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 29, 2011
DocketA-10484
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 261 P.3d 428 (Pierce v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierce v. State, 261 P.3d 428, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 72, 2011 WL 3305376 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Earle R. Pierce Jr. appeals his convictions on three counts of robbery, one count of theft, and one count of misdemeanor assault. He contends that his trial was tainted because the State was allowed to introduce evidence that a witness had identified Pierce as the perpetrator of one of the robberies. Pierce argues that the witness's identification of him was the product of improperly suggestive procedures, and that the resulting identification was so unreliable that the introduction of this evidence violated his right to due process of law.

In particular, Pierce asserts that the witness's identification of him was impermissibly unreliable under the test announced by the United States Supreme Court in Manson v. Brathwaite 1 and later adopted by the Alaska Supreme Court in Viveros v. State. 2 Pierce argues in the alternative that, if the circumstances surrounding the witness's identification satisfy the Brathwaite test, we should replace the Brathwaite test with a more rigorous test based on recent scientific research into how police identification procedures can influence a witness's identification of a suspect, as well as the witness's later memory of the suspect.

We conclude that we need not-indeed, should not-reach the merits of Pierce's arguments. These arguments were not presented to the superior court, and the superior court made no ruling on the merits of these claims. Thus, as we explain in more detail in this opinion, the primary issue raised in this appeal does not involve the reliability of the witness's identification of Pierce, but rather the rules that govern the preservation of issues for appeal.

Underlying facts

Pierce was indicted for four separate robberies, and the State wished to try all four charges together. Among the victims of these four robberies, only one victim stated that she was able to identify Pierce. This witness's identification of Pierce stemmed from a photo lineup that was shown to the witness several weeks after the robbery.

In advance of trial, Pierce's attorney filed a motion that was styled, "Motion to Sever Counts [for purposes of trial and] Motion to Suppress [the Eye-witness]} Identification". In this motion, the defense attorney asserted (1) that Pierce should receive a separate trial for each of the four robberies charged in the indictment, and (2) that the witness's identification of Pierce from the photo lineup was the product of "unduly suggestive" identification procedures which resulted in an unreliable identification, and thus the State should not be allowed to introduce evidence of this identification.

With respect to the request for severance of the four robbery charges, Pierce's motion *430 contained a detailed description of the evidence pertaining to each robbery, and the legal reasons why Pierce should be granted separate trials.

But with respect to Pierce's request to suppress the witness's identification of him, Pierce's motion contained no discussion of the pertinent facts. Pierce cited two Alaska appellate decisions for the general proposition that unreliable witness identifications should be suppressed, 3 but Pierce offered no discussion of how this general proposition of law related to the facts of his case. Instead, Pierce's attorney wrote:

[The defense team currently has] no information about any contacts [that the identifying witness may have] had with [the] other [robbery] victims, or what other information [the witness] reviewed before [she identified Pierce in] the photo lineup. [For this reason, it] will be necessary to elicit that information at the ... scheduled evidentiary hearing[.] ... Any further argument [on this issue], therefore, is reserved until after the evidentiary hearing, and Mr. Pierce reserves his right to supplement the briefing [on this issue] following the evidentiary hearing[.]

In other words, even though Pierce's attorney told the superior court that she intended to ask for suppression of the witness's identification, the defense attorney offered no factual or legal analysis in support of this request. Instead, the defense attorney told the court that she would provide the basis for her motion after the testimony was presented at the evidentiary hearing.

The evidentiary hearing on the defense motion took place over a period of several days. The first four segments of the hearing were devoted primarily to the testimony of a series of witnesses. The attorneys presented their arguments during the last segment of the hearing-the portion of the hearing that took place on the afternoon of March 29, 2006.

Although Pierce's attorney presented a lengthy argument to the superior court, that argument was devoted solely to the question of whether the four robbery counts should be tried jointly or separately. During her remarks to the court, the defense attorney did not even mention the question of suppressing the eye-witness identification-much less present any factual or legal argument as to why, given the testimony developed at the evidentiary hearing, and given the pertinent law, the superior court should suppress that evidence.

On April 5, 2006 (ie, one week later), Superior Court Judge Philip Volland issued a fourteen-page written decision dealing with the pending pre-trial motions. In his decision, Judge Volland engaged in a lengthy examination of the facts of the four robberies, and a lengthy analysis of why the four robberies were properly joined for trial. Then, in a footnote on the final page of his decision, Judge Volland cursorily noted that he had "heard no evidence to support any conclusion that [the witness's] identification of Pierce was the result of unnecessarily suggestive police procedure."

As we noted at the beginning of our opinion, Pierce's appellate briefs contain a detailed discussion of the evidence pertaining to the witness's identification of Pierce, as well as a lengthy analysis of why that identification should be deemed unreliable under the Brathwaite test. In addition, Pierce argues at length that, in light of recent research into the psychology of eye-witness identification, this Court should abandon the Brathwaite test in favor of a more rigorous test based on new scientific understanding of how police identification procedures can influence a witness's identification of a suspect, as well as the witness's later memory of the suspect.

(For a general discussion of this latter question, see our decision in Tegoseak v. State, 221 P.3d 345, 350-362 (Alaska App.2009).)

Why we conclude that these issues are not preserved for appeal

Under the law of appellate procedure, a litigant is not entitled to pursue a *431 claim on appeal unless that claim was presented to the lower court, 4 and unless the lower court issued a ruling on the merits of that claim. 5 Pierce's appeal requires us to examine what is meant by "presenting" a claim to the lower court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 P.3d 428, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 72, 2011 WL 3305376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-state-alaskactapp-2011.