State v. Edmonds
This text of 679 A.2d 725 (State v. Edmonds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE OF NEW JERSEY, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
v.
CALVIN EDMONDS, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*114 Before Judges DREIER, ARNOLD M. STEIN and KESTIN.
Susan L. Reisner, Public Defender, attorney for appellant (Kevin G. Byrnes, Designated Counsel, of counsel and on the brief).
Clifford J. Minor, Essex County Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (Robert L. Cerefice, Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
ARNOLD M. STEIN, J.A.D.
Defendant was found guilty of first degree armed robbery. His codefendant, Charles White, was found guilty of second degree robbery, obviously as defendant's accomplice. We reverse because the identification charge given the jury was so insufficient that it deprived defendant of a fair trial.
On September 23, 1993, at about 2:00 p.m., sixteen-year-old K.C. had a gold chain torn from her neck. She gave the following account of the robbery to police:
I was coming home from school this afternoon in the area of 132 Rhode Island Avenue, when I was approached by two black males. One was dressed in a gray or blue outfit and he had no beard.
The other had a red shirt, black pants, and a beard. The one in gray was on the opposite side of the street, and the one with the beard was diagonally across the street toward me, when he approached me head on he said, "Don't move," then he said, "Give me your chain."
The one with the beard pointed something at my chest. It was not a finger, it was hard. Then he snatched my chain and the two of them ran away laughing.
*115 After unsuccessfully chasing the men, K.C. ran into a store and called the police. Officer Michael Pyszko arrived within minutes. Pyszko and the victim drove around nearby streets until about 3:00 p.m., when she spotted two individuals whom she said had stolen her chain. She made the identification from the police car at some distance from the men. According to Pyszko, White was wearing a "red T-shirt, black pants, [and] some sort of cloth type footwear." Defendant was wearing a "light sweatshirt, long sleeves, and light pants with black sneakers," and "had a beard, no hat." K.C. identified White as the individual who actually snatched the chain. Both men were sitting on White's porch smoking cigarettes. Neither of them had a gold chain in his possession. Defendant had a pair of pliers and a box cutter in his back pocket.
With one clarification, K.C. gave virtually the same description at trial that she had given to Officer Pyszko.
The one who came to me had on a red T-shirt and black sweat pants and a black baseball hat, and the other one across the street had on light-colored blue jeans and a light shirt, I can either guess it was light blue or gray.
She testified:
[T]he one that came up to me, he had a beard, it looked like a couple days' growth, as if he didn't shave.
It wasn't a heavy beard.
Q Okay. So the individual came up to you, it's fair to say was unshaven?
A Yes.
However, K.C.'s trial identifications were completely different to those she gave Officer Pyszko at the arrest scene. This time she identified defendant as her assailant and the codefendant, White, as the person who was standing across the street:
Q Was there any doubt in your mind on September 23 that the individuals you identified were the ones who took your chain?
A There was no doubt in my mind.
Q [K.C.], do you see these two individuals here today?
A Yes, I do.
Q Can you point them out and identify them for the record by the clothing they are wearing today?
*116 A They are right there, the one with the light brown jacket and the other one with the glasses and the gray sweater.
THE COURT: Indicating Mr. Edmonds and Mr. White for the record.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Thank you, your Honor.
Q [K.C.], which of these two individuals is the one who actually crossed the street and took your chain?
A The one with the light brown jacket.
THE COURT: For the record, Mr. Edmonds.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Thank you again, your Honor.
Q The other individual who you identified, he was the one who was across the street?
A Yes, he was across the street.
White testified that he was sleeping until about 2:15 or 2:30 p.m. His sister then asked him if he wanted to watch television. As he was about to sit down in front of the television set, the doorbell rang. Defendant, who was at the door, asked White for a cigarette. White got two cigarettes and went out on the porch, where he and defendant sat for about three to five minutes before the police arrived. White was wearing a red T-shirt, black thin sweatpants and slippers. He had shaved the day before and did not appear unshaven. According to White, defendant was wearing a light-colored T-shirt and blue jeans and he was "[d]irty like you were working up under a car. The grease coming out of the oil pan on you. He was greasy.... Yes, it was all over him." White's sister corroborated her brother's testimony.
Defendant testified that at 2:00 p.m. he was working on his sister's car in the back yard of his house across the street from where White lived. He had been working on the car since about 10:00 a.m. Defendant described the work: "I had to tighten up her transmission line, check the brakes, and I was looking for an oil leak on the car, the switch was bad on the car." He had worked on the car on and off during the early part of the day, stopping to feed breakfast and lunch to his son, whom he was taking care of that day. At about 2:10 to 2:15 p.m., defendant went across the street and asked White for a cigarette. The two sat on the porch between four and eight minutes when Officer Pyszko arrived. While he was sitting on the porch, he was *117 watching his four-year-old son who was on the porch across the street. Defendant claimed that the pliers and the box cutter that were removed from his back pocket were dirty. On rebuttal, Office Pyszko testified that they were clean.
Defendant's sister testified that she had left the car with him that day so that he could repair transmission and brake fluid leaks, and that his clothes were dirty and greasy when she picked him up at the police station.
For his identification charge, the trial judge gave the jury a truncated version of the unnumbered identification instruction in our Model Criminal Jury Charges, dated November 26, 1990. He instructed the jury:
As to identification, where the identity of the person who committed the crime is in issue, again, the burden of proving that identity is upon the State.
The State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a particular defendant is the person who committed the crime.
The defendant has neither the burden nor the duty to show that the crime if committed was committed by someone else, or to prove the identity of that other person.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
679 A.2d 725, 293 N.J. Super. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-edmonds-njsuperctappdiv-1996.