State v. Brown

487 P.2d 946, 94 Idaho 352, 1971 Ida. LEXIS 338
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 3, 1971
Docket10471
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 487 P.2d 946 (State v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brown, 487 P.2d 946, 94 Idaho 352, 1971 Ida. LEXIS 338 (Idaho 1971).

Opinion

McFADDEN, Justice.

Lewis C. Brown was accused by information of the felony of assault with intent to commit murder, I.C. § 18-4015. After trial, the jury returned its verdict of guilty, and the district court entered judgment of conviction of the crime, and imposed a sentence of confinement in the state penitentiary for a term not to exceed three years. This appeal was taken from the judgment of conviction.

The events involved in this charge took place July 4, 1968, in the “Club Orbit,” a bar in Mountain Home. On the afternoon of that date about 2:00 p. m., Richard L. Moss, then an air force sergeant, entered the club with LeRoy Perkins, another air force sergeant. They sat at the bar and ordered beer. They observed two other air force personnel, Sergeant Parker and Sergeant Thornton, who were shooting pool in the bar. Moss and Perkins started playing pool against the other two men, and continued to play for some time that afternoon.

Defendant Brown, a job corps trainee from the Mountain Home Job Corps Center, entered the bar with two of his associates, one of whom was under age and was requested to leave. Brown dropped or threw a glass to the floor, which broke, a piece of the glass striking Perkins, and an altercation broke out between Parker, Moss and the defendant, and continued until it finally flowed out into the street. In the *354 melee, Brown lost his shoes in the bar, and one of his friends returned to recover them. Brown, while outside the bar, threatened Moss, but things quieted down, and Moss and the others went back into the bar, where the pool game continued.

Later in the afternoon Brown returned to the Club, and the fight between the various persons broke out again. Brown issued Moss a challenge to fight, but Moss refused to go outside the bar. Perkins approached Moss and the defendant, and Brown struck Perkins. Brown took a swing at Moss, and Moss countered also with a swing, at which time Moss felt pain in his chest and saw Brown drawing back a knife from his chest. Moss went back to the bar and asked someone to call an ambulance. During the melee, in which others engaged, pool cues were used and broken in their use. Moss and Perkins were taken by ambulance to the hospital in Mountain Home, and later to the hospital at the air base.

Nine witnesses testified for the state. The defendant, who had difficulty in locating some witnesses, called three of his own and recalled one of the state’s witnesses. There were some discrepancies in the testimony of the various witnesses as to specific details as they related to the events which occurred in the bar. The light in the bar was not bright, and the witnesses were situated in different areas in the bar, giving each a different viewpoint of the events.

Trial of the case was held in December, 1968, some five months after the events took place. Two of the state’s witnesses, Sgt. Moss, the victim of the assault charged in the information, and Orville Greer, gave testimony at some variance with testimony they gave at the preliminary hearing. The defendant has assigned error to the failure of the trial court to properly instruct the jury as to the discrepancies in the testimony of these two witnesses at the time each of them was on the stand.

At trial, Greer testified that he was sitting in a corner of the bar and observed defendant “coming through the door with a knife in his hand.” On cross-examination defense counsel questioned Greer to determine if that testimony was at variance with his testimony at the preliminary hearing where he had stated:

“Q. Did you ever see anyone with a knife in there, inside of the building.
A. Not inside the building.”

Defense counsel’s examination pointed out this variance to the jury and thereafter the witness was excused.

In the same vein, Moss was questioned at trial pertaining to his actions toward the defendant just prior to the stabbing 1 and he testified that when Brown approached him during the second melee, Moss, after seeing what had happened to Sgt. Perkins, pushed him at the breast bone. Moss was asked by defense counsel to compare this testimony to the testimony he gave at the preliminary hearing, 2 where he described how Brown approached him, and that he swung *355 at Brown striking him, not with a closed fist, but with the heel of his hand.

Defendant contends that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury at the time the witnesses testified that if a witness testified falsely that they could disregard all of his testimony. From the record it appears that the defendant made no motion for an instruction to be given by the court during the examination of the witnesses. The court did, however, properly instruct the jury that they were the sole judges of the credibility of the witnesses, and it was for them to weigh the testimony, and also instructed them to the effect that if any witness wilfully testified falsely to any material fact they should disregard such false testimony and that the jurors were at liberty to disregard any other testimony of such witness unless it were corroborated to their satisfaction.

In neither instance, i. e., the testimony of Sgt. Moss or that of Sgt. Greer, does there appear any substantial conflict. There certainly is little if any conflict in Moss’s testimony; as to Greer, the record indicates from testimony of other witnesses that Greer did not focus his attention too closely on the events in the bar until after Perkins and Moss had been stabbed and Brown was backing out the door. These facts were made clear to the jury. Discrepancies in testimony and the candor of the witnesses in their testimony are for resolution by the jury. The trial court is not obligated to instruct the jury at the moment testimony is given, and defendant has called our attention to no authority requiring that such an instruction be immediately given when such discrepancies occur. The jury was properly instructed on the law applicable in these circumstances. State v. Boyles, 34 Idaho 283, 200 P. 125 (1921); People v. Holt, 25 Cal.2d 59, 153 P.2d 21 (1944).

Defendant assigns as error certain actions by the prosecution resulting in a witness being unavailable to testify on behalf of the defendant at trial. The missing witness was one Alfred Greeley, a trainee in the Job Corps who was with Brown during the afternoon in question. Attempts were made to locate Greeley in Louisiana, but the officials there were unable to locate or serve him with a subpoena. Another witness, who had left Idaho, Forest Morgan, was located and did testify at trial on defendant’s behalf.

From the record before the court it appears Greeley left the vicinity of Mountain Home very soon after giving a statement to the police who were investigating the incident. There is nothing in the record which indicates that the state was aware that Greeley was about to depart. Counsel retained by the defendant entered the case within three or four days after the defendant was arrested. No application appears in the record for conditional examination of such a witness under the authority of I.C. §§ 19-3101, 3

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Bluebook (online)
487 P.2d 946, 94 Idaho 352, 1971 Ida. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brown-idaho-1971.