State v. Barela

578 P.2d 335, 91 N.M. 634
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 1978
Docket3228
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 578 P.2d 335 (State v. Barela) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Barela, 578 P.2d 335, 91 N.M. 634 (N.M. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

.WOOD, Chief Judge.

Defendant appeals his conviction of trafficking in heroin. We discuss: (1) excluded evidence; (2) a refused instruction; and (3) the trial court’s refusal to permit jurors to be questioned concerning reprisals.

Excluded Evidence

The evidence is that defendant sold heroin to a police officer who was working as an undercover investigator. According to the officer, he went to the back door of defendant’s home, gave defendant $10, and was told by defendant to return to his car and wait. The officer observed defendant’s actions in the rear view mirror of his car. Defendant emerged from the front door of his home, crossed the street to a trailer, entered the trailer, emerged from the trailer in a “few minutes”, walked to the officer’s car and delivered the heroin.

The trailer belonged to Reyes Barela, defendant’s brother. The police suspected that Reyes was a major dealer in heroin. The officer knew of this suspicion prior to his transaction with defendant.

Defendant complains of three items of excluded evidence. Each item involves defendant’s effort to divert the trial from an inquiry into defendant’s guilt or innocence and turn the trial into a trial of the undercover officer and the police department.

The first excluded item involves the trial court’s limitation, and subsequent exclusion, of questions on cross-examination of the undercover officer. These questions went to whether the officer had probable cause to obtain a search warrant of Reyes’ trailer. The second excluded item was the tendered testimony of a law school professor that the officer had probable cause to obtain a search warrant.

Defendant’s theory of the case was that the police department had a policy of going after major drug distributors rather than minor ones; that defendant, a drug addict, was “set-up” by the police for the purpose of offering defendant a deal, that the deal would be that charges against defendant would be dropped in exchange for defendant’s cooperation in making a case against Reyes. Defendant contended that probable cause existed to search the trailer, that the failure of the undercover officer to conduct or institute a probable cause search went to the officer’s credibility and thereby fortified the view that the charges against defendant were a “set-up”. In substance, defendant’s claim is that the excluded probable cause testimony would impeach the credibility of the officer.

We note that the tendered testimony of the law professor, offered for the purpose of attacking the credibility of the officer, would have been extrinsic evidence. Such was not admissible. See Evidence Rule 608(b). However, this was not the basis of the trial court’s ruling.

The trial court excluded the cross-examination questions and the tendered testimony of the law professor on three grounds, all of which were correct.

1. The trial court ruled the probable cause testimony was not relevant. We agree. The question of probable cause to search did not have a tendency to prove that defendant had been “set-up” by the officer; that is, that false charges had been brought. Evidence Rule 401. Defendant desired to introduce probable cause testimony on the issue of the officer’s credibility. Whether the officer had probable cause to search Reyes’ trailer does not tend to prove that the officer lied in connection with defendant’s sale of heroin to the officer.

2. Even if relevant, the trial court also excluded the probable cause testimony on the basis that it confused the issues and would mislead the jury. The evidence was properly excludable for this reason. Evidence Rule 403. There was no abuse of discretion in this ruling.

3. Even if relevant, the trial court excluded the probable cause testimony on the basis that probable cause to search Reyes’ trailer was an issue collateral to the charges being tried. The extent to which evidence on a collateral issue is permitted is within the trial court’s discretion. State v. Alderette, 86 N.M. 600, 526 P.2d 194 (Ct.App.1974). There was no abuse of discretion in this ruling.

The third excluded item was the tendered testimony of Dr. Rand. The tender had two aspects. The first aspect would have been testimony that New Mexico law enforcement officials customarily offer “deals” to addicts if they would testify for the State against other offenders or suppliers. Dr. Rand admitted to having no personal knowledge of police procedures and having no specialized knowledge or experience in police procedures. This testimc ny went to his qualification to testify. On this basis, the trial court could properly rule that Dr. Rand was not qualified to testify as to the first aspect. There was no abuse of discretion in this ruling regardless of whether the ruling was based on lack of qualification as an expert or insufficient perception as a lay witness. State v. Brionez, 91 N.M. 290, 573 P.2d 224 (Ct.App.1977); see State v. Ellis, 89 N.M. 194, 548 P.2d 1212 (Ct.App.1976).

The second aspect of the tendered testimony of Dr. Rand went to the social effects of drugs on addicts with emphasis on the susceptibility of an addict to police manipulation because of the addiction. The trial court ruled that Dr. Rand was an expert in the sociological aspects of addict behavior.

Defendant desired to have Dr. Rand testify “as to what heroin addiction is and what reactions individuals have to heroin addiction . . .”; “to explain a condition as prejudicial as heroin addiction to the jury by expert testimony in order to assure ourselves of the absence of bias against the defendant.” The trial court rejected this tender because defendant’s addiction was not relevant, because defendant interjected his addiction into the case and because the jurors, on voir dire, indicated they would not give greater weight to the. officer’s testimony than they would to defendant’s testimony. In excluding this aspect of the tendered testimony, the trial court ruled it was no more than a “pitch for sympathy”. We agree, and hold there was no abuse of discretion in excluding testimony which would have explained heroin addiction. State v. Brionez, supra.

Refused Instruction

Defendant tendered, and the trial court refused, a proposed instruction that would have told the jury that narcotics addiction was not a crime. This issue is argued on two theories; that the instruction would have ameliorated any tendency of the jury to find defendant guilty because he was a heroin addict and it was a theory of the case instruction. The fact that addiction is not a crime says nothing, and the instruction would have conveyed nothing, about defendant’s theory of the case. See the early part of this opinion for defendant’s theory of the case. Nor was any “theory of the case” claim made in the trial court. N.M.Crim.App. 308. The instruction can be viewed as directed to defendant’s credibility. Special credibility instructions are properly refused because the general credibility instruction, which was given, is sufficient. State v. Wise, 90 N.M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
578 P.2d 335, 91 N.M. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barela-nmctapp-1978.