State v. Goldstein

174 So. 873, 187 La. 353, 1937 La. LEXIS 1177
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 26, 1937
DocketNo. 34291.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 174 So. 873 (State v. Goldstein) 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.

Bluebook
State v. Goldstein, 174 So. 873, 187 La. 353, 1937 La. LEXIS 1177 (La. 1937).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Defendant appeals from a conviction of, and sentence for, receiving stolen goods, and in support of his appeal presents four bills of exception and an assignment of errors.

Bill No., 1. In, the course of his opening statement to the jury the district attorney remarked: “I expect to prove that on a number of other occasions this taxicab driver had carried- this same darkey out to Goldstein’s with stolen property and on each occasion Goldstein paid the taxicab driver.” Counsel for the defendant objected to the statement, on the ground that it was irrelevant and immaterial. In overruling the objection the trial judge instructed the jury, as appears from his per curiam, that under the law the district attorney is required to outline to the jury before beginning with the taking of testimony what the State expects to prove, but that such testimony must necessarily be material to the issues in the case, otherwise, when offered and objected to, the court will then pass upon it and refuse to admit it. The trial judge also instructed the jury that its duty would be to consider only such evidence as the court should rule was admissible and which was actually admitted when offered.

The statement of the district attorney was made to serve as a predicate for the introduction by the State of testimony showing certain acts or conduct on the part of the defendant as would tend to establish his guilty knowledge, the essential element in the offense with which he was charged. Evidence of that character was clearly admissible. Code CrimJProc. art. 446; State v. Colombo, 171 La. 475, 131 So. 464. It was within the province of *357 the district attorney to state ithe facts he expected to prove on the trial ©ff the case. So far as the record discloses, mo objection was made by defendant to any testimony offered \on behalf of the State. And there is nothing in the record to show that the statement was prejudicial to the defendant, or that :it was not properly a part of the opening statement required by article 333 of the ’Code of Criminal Procedure. State v. Bryan, 175 La. 422, 143 So. 362. Hence we find no merit in defendant’s complaint.

Bill No. 2. The stolen property defendant was charged with having in his possession was 1,536 pounds of brass. After the State had rested, defendant’s wife was placed on the stand for the purpose of proving that defendant kept a record of .all purchases of brass made by him, and for the further purpose of identifying the books allegedly showing such purchases. The district attorney objected to the introduction of the books in evidence, on the ground that the witness did not keep the books nor make the entries therein, and on the further ground that a person’s books are inadmissible on his behalf and are in the nature of a self-serving declaration. The trial judge was of the opinion that the witness was not qualified sufficiently to identify the books, she not having kept them, and not knowing their contents; also that the books were inadmissible in that they belonged to the defendant and had been kept by him and were similar to those of a merchant’s books, which are not admissible in his own behalf. Hence he sustained the objection. We do not find that he erred in so doing.

Defendant contends that the books in question were not in the category of merchants’ account books, because they were books that he was required by law to keep as a second-hand dealer. Act No. 309 of 1926, § 4, and Act No. 99 of 1928, § 16, as amended by Act No. 9 of 1934, 1st Ex. Sess. However, we do not find it necessary to pass on the contention.

The testimony of Mrs. Goldstein was that she did not keep the books nor make the -entries .therein; that the books were kept by a Miss Winifred Kelly, who, because of .an operation from which she was suffering, could not be had at the time. Defendant contends that this showing was sufficient to .admit the books in evidence. In support of his contention, he cites Wharton’s Crim.Ev. (2 Ed.) vol. 2, p. 1396, as follows, viz.: “If the entries were made by a clerk or bookkeeper who has since become unavailable as a witness by reason of death, insanity, absence or other causes, the books are admissible on proving the accounts to be in the handwriting of such clerk or bookkeeper and also proving the cause of his unavailability.” But as against this, counsel for the state cites from the same edition,' volume and page of the same eminent authority as follows, viz.: “The doctrine is supported by many cases, that book entries not made by one who has personal knowledge of the transaction, but based upon memoranda or data furnished by others, are not admissible in evidence, without verification by the one furnishing the data and having personal knowledge of the transactions on which it is based, since otherwise the entries, even *359 though made in the regular course of business, and as a part of the duties of the entrant, are not the best evidence, but are in the nature of hearsay.”

The testimony of Mrs. Goldstein offered to show that Miss Kelly was unavailable is vague and inconclusive. It does not ■ disclose the nature of Miss Kelly’s operation, nor does it affirmatively show that Miss Kelly was unable to appear in court or that her testimony, if othewise admissible, could not be taken at her home or at the hospital, wherever she was confined at the time.

Furthermore, the testimony of Mrs. Goldstein does not show that she had any knowledge of the books or of their contents. It does not show that she had any knowledge of the purchase of the brass. Her testimony does not show that the entries in the books were made by Miss Kelly contemporaneously with and from her personal knowledge of the transactions to which they relate, and that they were not based on memoranda or data furnished by some other person. In the absence of such showing, the book entries, even though they may have been made in the regular course of defendant’s business, and as a part of the duties of Miss Kelly, were not the best evidence. ■ They were in the nature of hearsay, and, as such, inadmissible. Hence we think the trial judge ruled correctly in refusing to admit the books in evidence.

Bill No. 3. This bill was reserved to the following statement made by the district attorney in his closing argument, viz.: “That he presumed the reason for placing Mrs. Goldstein on the stand was for the purpose of arousing pity and sympathy and that he felt sorry for Mrs. Gold-stein in her trouble.”

Defendant contends that this statement was presumably made for the purpose .of commenting on the failure of the defendant to take the witness stand and for the further purpose of expressing the opinion of the district attorney that the defendant was guilty.

The per curiam attached to the bill reads as follows, viz.: “The district attorney, in his argument, made no reference whatever to the. failure of Mr. Goldstein to take the witness stand. Counsel for the accused, in his argument, had made an appeal for sympathy, and the remarks of the district attorney were in reply to counsel’s previous remarks. However, the court did instruct the jury to disregard these remarks of the district attorney.

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Bluebook (online)
174 So. 873, 187 La. 353, 1937 La. LEXIS 1177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-goldstein-la-1937.