State v. Cote

235 A.2d 111, 108 N.H. 290, 1967 N.H. LEXIS 173
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 31, 1967
Docket5579
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 235 A.2d 111 (State v. Cote) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cote, 235 A.2d 111, 108 N.H. 290, 1967 N.H. LEXIS 173 (N.H. 1967).

Opinion

*292 Lampron, J.

At about 7:10 A.M. on April 19, 1965, Ernest Bettez and his wife, left their residence located at 150 Fieldcrest Road in Manchester which Was then unoccupied until 12:05 P.M. when Ernest returned. Upon entering he discovered immediately that everything in the bedroom was “all upside down” and that a wall safe in a walk-in closet was gone. Also missing were $50, a Hamilton electric wrist watch, a bed spread, a bottle of wine in a box container, a bottle of whiskey and other articles. Bettez found that a window had been broken in the garage under the house which could provide entrance to the residence above it.

Robert Lemon, who then owned a 1962 blue and white Ford bearing Texas registration plates, picked up Roger Cote, the defendant, that morning and gave him a ride to a club located near the police station in Manchester. Lemon then parked his car nearby and joined his wife at the county courthouse, a short distance away, at about 10 A.M.- Lemon and Cote had agreed to meet at this same club when Lemon had finished at the courthouse. When Lemon returned about 12:30 P.M. he could not find his car or Roger Cote. He testified he had not given Cote permission to use his car nor had he given Cote the keys to it but had them in his own pocket.

At about 11:30 A.M. that same morning, Daniel Boucher was driving to his home on Fieldcrest Road, a short street with five or six houses on it. He slowed his oil truck to allow a blue and white Ford with Texas plates to proceed. He saw two people in the front seat of this car which he later observed turning around on the street to proceed in the other direction, and later saw this car go by again and come to a stop but “didn’t know where it was stopping.”

That afternoon at about 1:30 P.M. a cab driver was called to the Cote home where he picked up the defendant and William Enright. He was directed by Cote to drive them to a sandpit where a new technical school was to be constructed. A Ford with Texas registration plates was there off the road in the sand up to its hubcaps. Cote asked the driver to pull this car out, which he was unable to do. Later that afternoon the Lemons discovered where their car was and the police were called to the scene.

In their investigation the police followed two sets of footprints which led away from this car and discovered the Bettez safe wrapped in a bed spread taken from the Bettez home. Based on his comparison of tire marks, and a large quantity of oil found on *293 the roadway at the Bettez home, a police officer testified that it was his opinion that the Lemon car was the vehicle which made those marks and left that oil at the Bettez residence.

Arthur Breton saw Roger Cote, the defendant, earlier that same afternoon of April 19, 1965, at a club in Manchester. Cote asked him to go to this same sandpit to pull a cár out. Breton went there with his track and found a blue and white 1962 Ford with Texas plates “bogged in sand.” He did not even try to pull it out as he “felt it would be useless.” On the way back Cote offered to sell Breton a Hamilton electric wrist watch which he purchased from the defendant for $15 and extinguishment of a debt of $20. This watch was later identified as the one taken from the Bettez home earlier that day.

The defendant Cote testified that some time after Lemon had left him at a club around 10 A.M. that same morning where he drank liquor, he met William Enright at a cafe where he had a bottle of beer. Enright “asked me if I had an automobile, and I said no, but I did have Mr. Lemon’s car, and I says T don’t have a license.’ He says, T have’ and requested to borrow the car to go over to the west side to see a girl friend of his ... I went with him.” The next thing Cote specifically remembered was “the engine was roaring wide open and the tires were spinning, and I could smell burned rubber and the car was rocking back and forth, and that is what woke me up.” “When-1"started looking around I knew the place. I have lived next to the place for twenty years.”

On cross-examination Cote admitted that his testimony as to the reason why Lemon would give him the key to his car as he had testified was done, “doesn’t make much sense.” He testified that he bought the Hamilton electric wrist watch from Enright for $10 and within a short time thereafter sold it to Breton. He also admitted that when he was asked by the police that evening if he had ever seen that watch “I told them I had never seen it before.” The credibility of the witnesses was for the jury and they could disbelieve the exculpatory testimony given by the defendant. State v. Reed, 106 N. H. 140, 141; Bird v. State, 231 Md. 432.

On the evidence the jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that Cote was present at the Bettez residence when the crime charged was committed; that he was closely associated with the automobile used to commit the crime, both before and after its commission; that he was in possession of a stolen article shortly *294 after the crime was committed; that he was a perpetrator of the burglary at the Bettez residence. State v. Enright, 108 N. H. 227; State v. Rumney, 108 N. H. 40; State v. Amero, 106 N. H. 134; See State v. Santos, 107 N. H. 490. Defendant’s motions based on the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a verdict that he was guilty of the crime charged in the indictment were properly denied and his exceptions thereto are overruled.

During the cross-examination of the defendant, the State was allowed, over objection, to ask him, limited to his credibility as a witness, about his conviction on November 4, 1950 of the crime of breaking, entering and larceny. He was also cross-examined for the same purpose, again over objection, about his convictions for assult, drunkenness, leaving the scene of an accident, driving without a license “a number of times,” wanton damage to property, and “derisive words.”

Defendant argues that his constitutional rights to a fair trial, due process, and equal protection of the law have been violated by permitting his record of prior convictions to be “paraded” before the jury and that his conviction which resulted from prejudice and not evidence should be overturned and a new trial ordered. Defendant further maintains that the rule in New Hampshire permitting “conviction — cross-examination” of defendants is “contrary to the intent of the enabling statute [Laws 1871, 38:1, now RSA 516:33] outmoded, and totally ineffective, in its reliance on limiting instructions to protect respondents against undue prejudice.” Amici curiae supported these contentions.

The law is well established in this State and elsewhere that evidence of prior convictions of crime is inadmissible at a criminal trial either to establish guilt or to show that a defendant would be likely to commit the crime with which he is charged. State v. Travis, 82 N. H. 220; Lane v. Warden, Maryland Penitentiary, 320 F. 2d 179, 181 (4th Cir. 1963); Whitty v. State, 149 N. W. 2d 557, 563 (Wis. 1967); People v. Kelley,

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Bluebook (online)
235 A.2d 111, 108 N.H. 290, 1967 N.H. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cote-nh-1967.