Robinson v. State

337 N.E.2d 824, 167 Ind. App. 87, 1975 Ind. App. LEXIS 1410
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1975
DocketNo. 1-175A1
StatusPublished

This text of 337 N.E.2d 824 (Robinson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. State, 337 N.E.2d 824, 167 Ind. App. 87, 1975 Ind. App. LEXIS 1410 (Ind. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Lowdbrmilk, J.

— William Robinson, Jr., defendant-appellant (appellant) was charged with two counts, namely, assault and battery with intent to commit robbery and, Count 2, robbery.

The cause was tried to a jury which returned a verdict of guilty on both counts, after which the trial court pronounced sentence as per statute on each of the counts.

Evidence was presented on a petition to reduce the bond, on a motion to suppress hearing and on the trial itself. The evidence introduced in the two hearings and the trial is relevant to the issues here presented for review.

Edna Wilson, a graying, married woman, age 56, at about 8:30 P.M. on October 16, 1971, was en route to her home in Gwynneville, Indiana, from Rushville, Indiana, via Highway 52 when at a point just east of Arlington, Indiana, the car behind began flashing its lights and honking its horn, which attracted her attention and caused her to pull to the right off the travelled portion of the road and stop to determine what was wrong. The car following her stopped and the driver, a male Negro, approached her car, spoke to her and opened the left door, took the keys and told her to move over. She was slow about this and he hit her forcefully three times on the left shoulder, forcing her to the passenger’s side of the front seat. He also told her he had a gun and would shoot her.

Appellant backed Mrs. Wilson’s car, preparatory to turning around in the highway, and was across the travelled portion [89]*89thereof when Robert J. Macy and a young woman topped a hill behind them and had to bring Macy’s car to a very slow speed to avoid a collision. Mr. Macy testified he saw the appellant and a sliver gray haired woman wearing glasses who he later learned was Mrs. Wilson together in a 1968 or 1969 blue Chevrolet automobile and that a gold 1970 or 1971 Ford Torino with a vinyl roof was setting to the rear of the Chevrolet. Mr. Macy testified he got a good look at the Negro, and Mrs. Wilson said she saw him standing for about thirty seconds just outside her car and could see him from the lights but it was rather dim. She was with him from 45 minutes to an hour and saw him as he left her car.

Appellant, after turning in front of Mr. Macy, then drove down Highway 52 and left the same where he drove a short distance on a county road and stopped the car, after which he pushed Mrs. Wilson over in her seat and took her purse and removed all the money she had therein, which was about $12.00. He then drove her back to where he had originally stopped and after he got out of her car, told her to “get going quick.”

State Trooper Mull investigated this crime and on the evening of the crimé Mrs. Wilson was so upset she would not view the photographs the trooper presented her for identification purposes. Five days later Trooper Mull returned to the Wilson home with seven mug shots, of which she pulled one from the group as- best fitting the description of the person who allegedly attacked and robbed her. This selected picture was that of the appellant.

Thereafter on June 16, 1972, Mrs. Wilson was taken to a bond reduction hearing of the appellant where, prior to the hearing or seeing the appellant, she was handed the original seven mug shots, one of which was of the appellant, and two additional photos, both of which were recent photos of the appellant.

Prior to the hearing Mrs. Wilson picked out the three [90]*90photographs of the appellant and within an hour thereafter in the courtroom she again picked out the three photographs of the appellant. At that hearing she described the appellant as a “slender, six foot colored man and not too dark.” She also said the light was dim when she saw him and she was scared and petrified with fear, as a result of which she avoided looking at her assailant’s face.

Mrs. Wilson testified that her assailant was sitting in the courtroom and acknowledged that he was the only black person in the room.

Approximately nine months later a motion to suppress hearing was had with further testimony as to the photograph procedures used by the State. The evidence there disclosed that the photographs handed to Mrs. Wilson on the night of the alleged offense were from mug shot files of the Indiana State Police Post at Connersville. They were all of Negroes. The evidence disclosed that no attempt was made to cover up or block out any portion of the photographs or information thereon when they were presented to Mrs. Wilson for identification purposes.

In the trial of the cause Mrs. Wilson stated appellant appeared darker than her earlier impression. However she later positively identified him as her assailant, as follows:

“Q. O.K., I will withdraw the question. Mrs. Wilson, in spite of the fact that you have been shown pictures in the past, was the identification you made in court yesterday independent of any pictures you had been shown in the past ?
A. Yes.
Q. So you can independently say the identification you made here yesterday was independent of any pictures or anything that has happened in the past ?
A. Yes.
Q. And there is no doubt in your mind whatsoever that the man that was in your car on October 16th, 1971, is whom ? Which man ?
[91]*91A. The man sitting at that table over there with a white shirt and with glasses, the black man.”

Robert J. Macy, who had stopped within a few feet of Mrs. Wilson’s blue Chevrolet and could see Mrs. Wilson and the appellant in her car with his lights on high beam, testified the appellant looked at him and he got a fairly good look at the appellant with his car lights and that he could identify the man in the Chevrolet car if he saw him again. He then testified that “the man at the table looks quite a bit like the man I saw” and indicated the man he was referring to was the appellant. After an extensive cross examination Mr. Macy testified that at the bond reduction hearing in June, 1972, the picture he finally picked out “was the picture that most described the person that I saw than any other pictures.” At that hearing Macy did not know appellant’s name and was told he did not need to know the name. He testified in the trial that the 1970 or 1971 Torino with the vinyl roof was gold in color. This car was owned by the appellant.

Mr. Macy testified the woman in the blue car was between 50 and 55 and had silver gray hair and glasses and identified her as Mrs. Wilson.

Specifications 1, 2 and 3 of appellant’s motion to correct errors are, (1) the judgment is contrary to law, (2) is not sustained by the evidence, and (3) the judgment was given under influence of passion and prejudice.

Specification 4 was that the appellant was denied a fair trial and his right to due process of law by the court’s denial of appellant’s motion to suppress evidence and for discharge which was filed for the purpose of suppressing the extrajudicial photographic identification of the appellant.

Specifications 1, 2 and 3 will be grouped and treated together. Ind. Rules of Procedure, Appellant Rule 8.3(A) (7).

Appellant’s contention under specification 4 is that the pre-trial identification by Edna Wilson denied appellant due [92]*92process of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
337 N.E.2d 824, 167 Ind. App. 87, 1975 Ind. App. LEXIS 1410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-state-indctapp-1975.