State v. Cappo
This text of 345 So. 2d 443 (State v. Cappo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana
v.
Joseph CAPPO.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
Risley C. Triche, Napoleonville, for defendant-appellant.
William J. Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., Barbara Rutledge, Asst. Atty. Gen., Francis Dugas, Dist. Atty., Walter K. Naquin, Jr., Asst. Dist. Atty., for plaintiff-appellee.
DENNIS, Justice.
Defendant, Joseph Cappo, was charged by bill of information with the simple burglary of Paul W. Lefort's residence, a violation of La.R.S. 14:62. At the conclusion of a five day trial, the jury found defendant guilty as charged, and he was subsequently sentenced to serve a term of nine years in the custody of the Louisiana Department of Corrections. On appeal, he urges ten assignments of error for reversal of his conviction and sentence. We reverse on the ground that defendant was improperly prevented from attempting to show corruption of the State's principal witness, Robert Tallent.
Tallent freely admitted that he had been convicted of a bank robbery in Opelousas, Louisiana, for which he had been sentenced in federal and State courts to serve terms of twenty-two and forty years, respectively; he also acknowledged that he had an agreement with the State whereby, in exchange for his testimony against defendant, he would serve no additional time for his involvement in the Lefort burglary. Tallent *444 testified that he and Everett Crawford had burglarized the Lefort residence and that although defendant had not physically participated in the crime, he had provided information about the Leforts and the money which was to be found in their home, and shared in the stolen property. According to Tallent the defendant, a resident of Orleans Parish, said he obtained part of the information from a former public official of LaFourche Parish.
In his opening statement to the jury, defense counsel asserted that Robert Tallent was a professional criminal and a deviously brilliant man who in scheming his crimes developed alternate plans to meet every contingency. Counsel claimed that Tallent's ultimate plan, in case of arrest, was to implicate innocent men and obtain leniency from the State in exchange for assisting in their prosecution. Tallent had allegedly demonstrated a pattern of falsely accusing prominent local citizens of involvement in his crimes throughout the State, and the entire defense was predicated upon proving that Tallent's charges against defendant were part of that pattern.
The State carefully confined Tallent's testimony to a discussion of the Lefort burglary. However, during a lengthy cross-examination, defense counsel questioned the witness about his numerous offenses in this State, including other burglaries in La-Fourche Parish allegedly involving defendant, and focused upon Tallent's identification of the participants in those crimes. The defense then attempted during the presentation of its case to discredit Tallent's testimony, first by showing that he had misrepresented material facts of the other crimes. The State objected on the basis of La.R.S. 15:494 which provides that "[i]t is not competent to impeach a witness as to collateral facts or irrelevant matter." After thoughtfully studying the problem, the court ruled that defense counsel, having elicited testimony as to collateral matters on cross-examination, would not be permitted to contradict that testimony by the production of other witnesses.
Defense counsel was thereafter prevented from introducing evidence to show that Tallent had wrongly accused individuals of participation in other crimes, for the purpose of placing himself in a stronger bargaining position as a potential prosecution witness.
We have previously held that a witness cannot be cross-examined as to any fact which is collateral and irrelevant to the issue merely for the purpose of contradicting him by other evidence. State v. Martin, 310 So.2d 544 (La.1975); State v. Wiggins, 50 La.Ann. 330, 23 So. 334 (1898); Cf. State v. Savoy, 170 La. 803, 129 So. 209 (1930). The rule is designed to avoid unnecessarily prolonging trials and confusing the issues by extended inquiries into extraneous matters. State v. Martin, supra; 3A Wigmore, Evidence § 1002 (Chadbourn rev. 1970). Our fundamental difference with the trial court in this instance relates to the determination of which matters are "collateral."
Facts which could have been shown in evidence for any purpose independently of the contradiction are not collateral. Thus, facts relevant to some issue in the case or otherwise receivable for the purpose of impeaching the witness are provable in contradiction. 3A Wigmore §§ 1003-1005; C. McCormick, Evidence, § 47, pp. 98-99 (Cleary ed. 1972). Defendant argues that the testimony he sought to adduce would have tended to show Tallent's corrupt testimonial intent. La.R.S. 15:492 provides:
"When the purpose is to show that in the special case on trial the witness is biased, has an interest, or has been corrupted, it is competent to question him as to any particular fact showing or tending to show such bias, interest or corruption, and unless he distinctly admit such fact, any other witness may be examined to establish the same." (Emphasis supplied.)
If the excluded testimony was relevant to the impeachment of the witness on one of the grounds enumerated in La.R.S. 15:492 it was not collateral and should have been admitted.
*445 A witness' corruption may be evidenced by conduct indicating a general scheme to make false charges or claims. 3A Wigmore, Evidence, § 963; State v. Foster, 153 La. 154, 95 So. 536 (1923). As noted above, defendant sought to establish Tallent's disposition to make false charges by producing witnesses who would testify: 1) that Tallent had erroneously related details of other crimes in which he had been involved; and 2) that Tallent had falsely implicated innocent citizens in other crimes. We find that the first category of testimony was properly excluded. Although proof that Tallent was in error on these points might tangentially have suggested a willingness to manufacture testimony, its impeachment value was substantially reduced by the other possible explanations for such errors, e. g., poor memory and inability to observe accurately. Because it could not be inferred from a contradiction of Tallent's recital of the details of his other crimes that he was corrupt, we conclude that these matters were collateral and that an investigation into each alleged error in Tallent's testimony would unnecessarily consume the trial court's time and confuse the issues.
However, defendant's second line of attack, to show that Tallent had previously brought false accusations in connection with other crimes, bore directly on the witness' corrupt intention for the case in hand. To any objection that establishing a witness' general disposition to make false charges would not indicate a direct or personal bias against the opposing party, Wigmore would respond:
"It is time that the courts took warning here, and became more liberal. They know, and all know, that the court-room has its quota of false claimants and pretended victims of wrongs; some are children, some eccentrics, some hysterics, some insane, some nymphomaniacs, some conscious blackmailers. It is hard enough, at last, to detect and expose them. To hamper this exposure with the shibboleth `res inter alios acta' is unpractical.
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345 So. 2d 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cappo-la-1977.