State v. Collett

167 P.2d 584, 118 Mont. 473, 1946 Mont. LEXIS 21
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1946
Docket8598
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 167 P.2d 584 (State v. Collett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Collett, 167 P.2d 584, 118 Mont. 473, 1946 Mont. LEXIS 21 (Mo. 1946).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of selling liquor to a minor. His motion for a new trial was denied and he appealed from the judgment and order denying the motion for new trial.

The evidence was in sharp conflict. That which sustains the verdict may be summarized as follows: Three Mexican boys named Valentine Deavilla, Marco Rivera and Isobel Rodriquez, ranging from 11 to 13 years of age and who resided on the “South Side” in Billings, were found in a room at the Butte Hotel in Billings on March 17, 1943. Valentine had been given some money with which to buy shoes. Instead of buying shoes the three boys met and secured a room in the hotel. Isobel was sent out for beer, carrying with him a note written by Marco. He returned with a half gallon and a quart of beer. After this was consumed Isobel was sent for some wine. He again carried a note written by Marco reading, “Please give my son a quart of wine.” Marco signed his brother’s name to the note. Isobel *476 received the liquor from defendant and paid him for it, requesting and receiving a statement from defendant as to the’ cost of the ’wine. Marco accompanied Isobel as far as the back door of defendant’s saloon but did not witness the transaction. The boys had two dogs with them in the hotel room. The dogs started fighting and the hotel manager called the police. Two policemen responded to the call and found the bottle of wine and .beer containers in the room. The boys were ordered to go home but before reaching home the policemen overtook them and brought them to defendant’s place of business. There Isobel stated that defendant sold him the wine and the defendant denied having done so.

The witness Isobel admitted that he had made statements that he did not get the wine from defendant but secured it from some one in defendant’s place of business but explained that he made these statements because he had been told that if he did not say that “some fellow got the wine” for him at defendant’s place of business they Avould send him to the reform school.

The first assignment of error predicated by defendant is that he was unduly restricted in the cross-examination of state’s witness Isobel Rodriquez. On direct examination the witness told of the purchase of the wine and beer from defendant on March 17th and that he was then 12 years of age. On cross-examination counsel for defendant developed th§ fact that on September 4, 1943, two policemen caught the witness and Marco with a bottle of beer in their possession in a South Side alley and that on that occasion he had told the officers that he got the bottle of wine some five months earlier through a fellow in defendant’s place of business. He was then asked: “And this bottle of beer you had, you had stolen from the Pioneer Saloon, had you not.” Tliat question was objected to as improper cross-examination and the objection was sustained. This ruling was assigned as error. Defendant contends that he should have been allowed to impeach the state’s principal witness in this manner. There are several reasons why the court properly sus *477 tained the objection. In the first place a witness may not be impeached by evidence of particular wrongful acts. Sec. 10668, Rev. Codes. It related to a matter entirely foreign to anything developed on direct examination. The rule is that a witness may not be impeached by contradicting him on collateral matters. State v. McConville, 64 Mont. 302, 209 Pac. 987. Also, when defendant interrogates a state’s witness on cross-examination on a matter not touched upon on direct examination, he makes the witness his own and in such a situation the rule is that, subject to certain exceptions not present here, he would have been bound by his testimony and would not have been permitted to impeach the witness on that matter.. State v. Richardson, 63 Mont. 322, 207 Pac. 124. A negative answer by the witness would have ended the inquiry. The rule is grounded upon the premise that the court will not permit a criminal action to be transformed into a proceeding wherein the witness rather than the defendant is placed on trial.

The next two assignments of error are predicated upon the court’s action in overruling defendant’s objections to questions propounded on re-direct examination of Isobel. The witness had admitted that he told a different story — and one which was not true — on another occasion and was then asked whether what he testified to in court was the truth. To this defendant objected. The court did not commit prejudicial error in permitting the witness to answer. True it was in the nature of a self-serving conclusion, but it was but reaffirmation of what the witness promises to do when he takes the oath as a witness. Whether it was the truth or not was for the jury to determine and it is not likely that the jury felt in any way bound by the assertion of the witness that he was telling the truth in court.

The other point complained of arose out of the following proceedings. The witness Isobel had given testimony at a preliminary hearing before the Justice of the Peace. On his re-direct examination portions of his testimony given before the Justice of the Peace were read to him and he was then *478 asked: “Is that what you told the court before?” This was objected to as leading. We fail to see where this question was subject to the objection that it was leading. But if so, it does not follow that the ruling necessitates a reversal of the judgment. Leading questions are sometimes permitted in the discretion of the court in the interests of justice. Sec. 10663, Rev. Codes; and see 70 C. J. 524 and 531, 532. In view of the age of the witness, his lack of education, lack of familiarity with court proceedings and his limited use of the English language as shown by the record, the court did not abuse its discretion in permitting leading questions.

The next question arises from the following facts. On the cross-examination of Isobel he gave an affirmative answer to the following questions: “On or about the 1st day of March, at least some two weeks or better before the date when you say you got this wine, you and Valentine, one or the other of you boys here, had in your possession five half-gallon jugs of beer, one broke in front of the drug store, Mr. Smith and Dewey Brey came up and asked you where you got the beer, you replied that you got it from Casey, and afterward on examination you admitted that you had got it from the X Bar — is not that true?

Counsel for defendant then read extracts from the testimony of the witness given at the preliminary hearing before the Justice of the Peace, which the witness admitted he signed in the presence of the judge and in which he stated in substance that he didn’t remember anything about the incident relating to the beer on or about the 1st day of March. In passing it should be noted from what we have already said that this evidence was inadmissible as bearing upon a collateral matter and should have been excluded. But the question before us is the propriety of receiving evidence offered by the state on redirect examination designed to offset the effect of that thus developed by defendant on cross-examination.

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Bluebook (online)
167 P.2d 584, 118 Mont. 473, 1946 Mont. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-collett-mont-1946.