STATE OF MISSOURI v. CODY GENE WORKMAN
This text of STATE OF MISSOURI v. CODY GENE WORKMAN (STATE OF MISSOURI v. CODY GENE WORKMAN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Appellant, ) ) vs. ) No. SD36366 ) CODY GENE WORKMAN, ) Filed: July 24, 2020 ) Respondent. )
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CRAWFORD COUNTY
Honorable Judge Megan K. Seay
REVERSED AND REMANDED
Cody Gene Workman ("Defendant") was charged with first-degree assault and
armed criminal action. See §§ 565.050, 571.015.1 The trial court entered an order
suppressing the voice identification of Defendant made by witnesses, finding law
enforcement's actions were impermissibly suggestive. The State appeals pursuant to
section 547.200. The trial court's order suppressing the identification is reversed.
1 All statutory references are to RSMo. Supp. (2014). Standard of Review
A trial court's ruling on a motion to suppress evidence prior to trial is
interlocutory in nature. This Court's review of a trial court's order sustaining a motion
to suppress "is limited to the determination of whether substantial evidence existed to
support the suppression order." State v. Craig, 550 S.W.3d 481, 483 (Mo. App. W.D.
2018) (internal citation and quotation omitted). The reviewing court is required to defer
to the trial court's factual findings and credibility determinations, but to examine
questions of law de novo. Id. We will reverse a trial court's ruling on a motion to
suppress only if it is clearly erroneous. State v. Holman, 502 S.W.3d 621, 624 (Mo.
banc 2016).
Analysis
Identifications made solely on the basis of a suspect's voice are admissible. State
v. Harris, 483 S.W.3d 488, 494 (Mo. App. E.D. 2016). "Identification testimony is
admissible unless the pretrial identification procedure was unnecessarily suggestive and
the suggestive procedure made the identification unreliable." State v. Middleton,
995 S.W.2d 443, 453 (Mo. banc 1999).
Three witnesses, Mr. Delmain, Mrs. Delmain, and Ms. Enke, overheard a late
night argument while camping at a rural campground, subsequently found their friend
badly injured, and took him to a fire station for emergency medical transport. The
witnesses were unable to identify who the man was that they heard yelling at the
campsite. They were asked to come to the Dent County Sheriff's Department later to
make a statement. Law enforcement proceeded to the campground and located
Defendant in the woods. Defendant was taken for booking at the Dent County Jail,
which is located in the same building as the sheriff's department, in the late night or
2 early morning hours of that same night. The three witnesses arrived a short time after
Defendant was brought to the sheriff's department, unaware that a suspect had been
taken into custody.
Police procedures are impermissibly "suggestive if the witness's identification of
the defendant results from the procedure or actions of the police [] rather than from the
witness's recollections of his or her firsthand observations." State v. Gordon, 551
S.W.3d 678, 682 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018) (internal quotation and citation omitted). We
find the police procedures here were not suggestive because there were no actions or
procedures employed by law enforcement. The witnesses were not given any specified
time to come to the sheriff's department and their arrival while Defendant was being
booked into the jail was completely coincidental. Upon entering the sheriff's
department waiting room, Mr. Delmain and Ms. Enke spontaneously identified the
voice they heard yelling as the same voice they heard earlier at the campground. Mrs.
Delmain said she identified the voice as she was walking down the hall to the interview
room and while she was completing her written statement. Merely being asked if the
voice recognized at the sheriff’s department is the same as they heard earlier at the
campground is not an improper or suggestive question. Each of the witnesses
unequivocally identified the voice in the jail as the same they had heard at the
campground.
The bottom line is, did law enforcement do anything to suggest or cause these
identifications? While the scene at the sheriff's department described by the various
witnesses was certainly confusing, we have scoured the record and do not find that any
law enforcement officer suggested, by word or deed, that the voice the witnesses heard
3 at the sheriff's department belonged to the person that they had heard at the
Because no substantial evidence supports the trial court's conclusion that the
identifications occurred as a result of suggestive police procedure, the trial court clearly
erred in suppressing those identifications. The State's sole point on appeal is granted,
and the trial court's suppression order is reversed.2
MARY W. SHEFFIELD, J. – OPINION AUTHOR
JEFFREY W. BATES, C.J. – CONCURS
DON E. BURRELL, J. – CONCURS
2We note that a trial court's ruling on a motion to suppress is interlocutory and can be revisited by the parties and the court before or during trial. State v. Taylor, 965 S.W.2d 257, 260 (Mo. App. E.D. 1998).
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STATE OF MISSOURI v. CODY GENE WORKMAN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-cody-gene-workman-moctapp-2020.