State v. Garceau

170 A.2d 623, 122 Vt. 303
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 2, 1961
Docket1890
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 170 A.2d 623 (State v. Garceau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Garceau, 170 A.2d 623, 122 Vt. 303 (Vt. 1961).

Opinion

Holden, J.

Sometime during the early morning hours of December 15, 1959, two burglaries occurred in the city of Barre. The garage property of the H. G. Bennett Co. Inc. was entered and a *304 1960 white Buick sedan stolen. Another breaking and entry at the club rooms of the Loyal Order of Moose resulted in the theft of an office safe weighing between four and five hundred pounds. The respondent has been charged with these offenses and found guilty on trial by jury. The question presented is whether he has been regularly and fairly convicted.

At about 3 :45 on the morning of the crimes, George Buswell, a night watchman employed by the Cody enterprises at the Moonlight Drive-In Theatre and the adjacent Cody’s Garage on the Bar re-Montpelier Road, was making his inspection tour in an automobile. He observed the stolen Buick about 150 yards from the theatre. Buswell continued into the Cody Garage yard and from there saw the Buick enter the theatre yard and come to a stop in front of two large windows of the theatre building. He observed the lights of the Buick go off. Buswell proceeded to the theatre and drove to about one hundred feet from the Buick. As he approached the stolen vehicle, he saw a man jump out from the driver’s side and disappear around the building. The night was clear and cold. There were neon lights in the vicinity of the Buick. The watchman testified that the man he saw flee from the Buick was wearing light gray trousers and a red jacket. The watchman proceeded to the Buick and there found the stolen safe alongside. He then left the scene to call the Montpelier Police Department.

Some two hours later a police patrol arrested the respondent as he was walking along the Barre-Montpelier Road about three hundred yards from the theatre. The respondent was wearing light gray trousers and a red jacket. Snow was encrusted on his clothing and there were particles of weeds on his clothes and in his hair.

Later at the police station the watchman, Buswell, identified the respondent as the man who fitted the description of the person he saw run from the Buick. At the trial he testified his identification was made entirely from a rear view of the occupant of the Buick, that he could not observe his face and could not tell whether the person he saw was young, old or middle-aged. On cross-examination, the witness said he could not identify the respondent as the man he saw running from the Buick on the morning of December 15.

Investigating police officers traced human foot prints in the snow leading from the Buick to a high board fence to the rear of the theatre *305 building. It appeared that the person who made the tracks had run to the fence and then crawled underneath the barrier. Red cloth fibres were found and removed by a state police corporal from the underside of the fence boards at the point of crossing. The officer was called as a witness for the State. After identifying the fibres and a package found near the Buick, counsel for the State inquired:

Q. Now Corporal Ley, did you ever have a chance to converse with the respondent, Mr. Garceau? A. Yes, sir, I did.
Q. And would you care to tell us the subject of your conversation?
A. Yes, sir. In response to a question while I was talking with Mr. Garceau he told me he had served three different terms in Windsor.

Counsel for the respondent interrupted and moved for a mistrial, indicating to the court that he did not intend to call the respondent to the stand and pointing out that this kind of evidence could not be brought out unless the respondent was called as a witness. He claimed irreparable damage had been done to the respondent’s case.

The court disposed of the motion by stating it believed the question was objectionable before the answer was given and if respondent’s counsel had objected to the question, the objection would have been sustained. Without further comment or caution to the jury, the motion was denied and exception preserved to the respondent. The trial proceeded without further evidence concerning the conversation of the witness with the respondent. The respondent did not testify and put in no evidence at the conclusion of the State’s case.

In submitting the case to the jury the court referred to this incident at the trial. He instructed the jury: “In respect to that — and I feel that I may be compounding an error, and if I am it is available for correction — at one time during this trial there was a remark made about the respondent having served sometime or other time at the State’s Prison in Windsor. That is to be given no consideration whatsoever by you; whether he has or has not served a sentence in the past is not material in this trial and I admonish you to strike it from your minds and give it no consideration whatsoever when you are considering the charges against this respondent at this time.” At the conclusion of the charge, counsel for the respondent, although recognizing the court’s good intentions in trying to eradicate the prejudicial effect of this aspect of the trial, excepted to the charge on the *306 ground that it failed to accomplish this result and added emphasis to the incident.

The motion for mistrial presents the main concern of this appeal. The answer given by the police officer went beyond the scope of the question asked by the examiner. The statement concerning the respondent’s past imprisonments characterized the accused as a hardened criminal and put his bad character and past criminal record squarely before the jury.

It is to be noted that the question presented does not concern prior offenses that may have been connected to the crime charged to establish motive, intent, plan or purpose. Compare State v. Levine, 117 Vt. 320, 327, 91 A.2d 678; State v. Williams, 94 Vt. 423, 430, 111 A. 701; State v. Kelley, 65 Vt. 531, 534, 27 A. 203, 36 Am. St. Rep. 884. Nor is there any question of impeachment of any -witness nor credibility involved under 12 V.S.A.. §1608.

The undeniable effect of the answer given was to brand the respondent as suspect with felonious inclinations. Character is never an issue in a criminal prosecution unless and until the respondent brings it into the trial. And the rule is firmly and universally established that, the prosecution may not initially attack the defendant’s character. State v. Hedding, 114 Vt. 212, 215, 42 A.2d 438; 1 Wigmore, Evidence, 3rd Ed. §57, p. 456; 22 C.J.S. Criminal Law, §676, p. 1067; 20 Am. Jur. Evidence, §325, p. 304.

“In a very real sense a defendant starts his life afresh when he stands before a jury, a prisoner at the bar. * * * Inflexibly the law has set its face against the endeavor to fasten guilt upon him by proof of character or experience predisposing to an act of crime.” People v. Zackowitz, 254 N. Y. 192, 197, 172 N.E. 466, 468.

It is not that character is irrelevant to the question of innocence or guilt, but policy forbids it until the accused has elected to make it an issue.

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Bluebook (online)
170 A.2d 623, 122 Vt. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-garceau-vt-1961.