State v. Grace

2001 MT 22, 18 P.3d 1008, 304 Mont. 144, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 16
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 2001
Docket00-077
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2001 MT 22 (State v. Grace) 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. Grace, 2001 MT 22, 18 P.3d 1008, 304 Mont. 144, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 16 (Mo. 2001).

Opinion

JUSTICE REGNIER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶ 1 After trial by jury, Marc Grace was convicted of robbery and theft in the Eighth Judicial District Court, Cascade County. Grace appeals.

¶2 Grace presents two questions on appeal.

¶3 1. Whether the District Court erred in denying Grace's motion for a new trial based on insufficiency of accomplice corroborative testimony?

¶4 2. Whether the District Court erred by denying Grace's motion for a new trial based on the State improperly vouching for the credibility of a witness?

BACKGROUND

¶5 In April 1998 Marc Grace and his friend Hutch Spangelo were staying together at the Royal Motel in Great Falls, Montana. According to testimony by Spangelo, both men were short of money, and Grace told Spangelo that he was thinking about robbing a bank. On April 10, 1998, Spangelo and Grace traveled to Ulm, Montana, and retrieved a motorcycle that belonged to Grace's friend Rob Turner. Grace told Spangelo that he was borrowing the motorcycle because he needed transportation and he also thought he would use it to rob a bank.

*146 ¶6 Upon retrieving the motorcycle, Grace and Spangelo purchased and installed a new battery so that the motorcycle would run. Grace removed the expired license plate from the motorcycle and told Spangelo that if he used the motorcycle in a robbery that it would be harder for anyone to identify without a license plate. On the same day, Grace also purchased a toy gun that he spray painted black.

¶7 After returning to the Royal Motel later that afternoon, Grace asked Spangelo what he should write in a note that he would give to the bank teller during a bank robbery. Spangelo wrote a note to give to the bank teller during the robbery. Later, Grace left the motel dressed in a blue windbreaker jacket, a pair of blue jeans, white Nike shoe's, and Spangelo's white motorcycle helmet. Grace also wore a large sweatshirt under his jacket, apparently to make himself appear larger than his usual size. Spangelo testified that he did not believe that Grace was seriously intending to rob a bank.

¶8 That same afternoon, April 10,1998, Melony Memanile, Kristine Patton, and Valerie Rawton were all working as bank tellers at Western Security Bank, located on Tenth Avenue South in Great Falls, Montana. All three tellers observed a man enter the bank wearing a motorcycle helmet. Memanile testified that she watched the man move to the island area of the bank, peruse the brochures, and study each of the tellers. The man did not remove his helmet while in the bank. After approximately five minutes he left the bank. Memanile estimated the height of the man at six feet tall and recalled that he was dressed in a blue windbreaker and blue jeans.

¶9 Patton described the man as acting hesitant and recalled that she found it strange that he did not remove his helmet. He spent a few minutes looking at brochures at the center island of the bank, and then left on a black and white motorcycle. Patton noted that the man was wearing jeans and a jacket that zipped. She estimated his height as somewhere between five foot ten inches to six feet tall.

¶10 Rawton confirmed the information provided by Memanile and Patton. After Grace was identified as the robbery suspect, Rawton also confirmed that she and Grace had gone to school together in 1994 and had occasionally socialized. She testified that she had not seen him in approximately a year, but that Grace did match the physical description of the man in the motorcycle helmet who entered the bank on April 10, 1998.

¶11 Spangelo testified that Grace returned to the motel room and was very edgy. Grace then told Spangelo that he went into a bank but realized that he knew one of the tellers, so he grabbed some brochures *147 and left. He then told Spangelo that he was going to “do it now for real.” He mentioned a bank on First Avenue North and left again on the motorcycle.

¶12 Christy Nelson was the manager of the downtown branch of Western Security Bank, located on First Avenue North. Oh April 10,1998, at approximately 4 p.m., Christy was the only teller working in the bank. As Christy was waiting on a customer, she looked out the window and observed a man walking up the sidewalk wearing a large white motorcycle helmet. The man entered the bank and did not remove his helmet. He stood quietly at an island in the middle of the bank until Christy finished with another customer. He then stepped up to Christy's window, still wearing the helmet, and handed her a note. The note said, “I have a gun. No alarm. No one gets hurt. Give me all your 50s and 100s.” The man then said “Just hurry. Hurry. Hurry.” Christy, feeling extremely threatened, gave the man $3,750. He stuffed the cash somewhere in his clothing, turned quickly and ran to the door. The dark visor of the helmet prevented Christy from getting a good look at the man's face. She did recall that he was wearing a blue nylon windbreaker, blue jeans, faded white tennis shoes, and a white motorcycle helmet, and appeared bulky and physically fit. Christy estimated that the man was six foot three inches while wearing the helmet.

¶13 After the robbery, Christy Nelson triggered the alarm. The subsequent police investigation revealed that a male wearing a white motorcycle helmet had been at the Western Security Bank on Tenth Avenue South just prior to the robbery at the downtown bank. Surveillance cameras from the bank on Tenth Avenue South indicated that the physical attributes of the man who entered the Tenth Avenue South bank matched those of the man who robbed the downtown bank and indicated that the robber was approximately six foot two while wearing the motorcycle helmet. The customer at the bank prior to the robbery confirmed the description of the robber. The tellers at the bank on Tenth Avenue South also gave descriptions of the man that matched the physical description provided by Christy Nelson at the downtown bank.

¶14 Spangelo testified that Grace returned to the Royal Motel for a second time and told Spangelo that he robbed a bank. He said that he went into the bank and saw a teller helping a woman. He waited for the teller to be free, and then approached her and handed her the note. He could not remember whether he showed her the gun but said that the teller gave him all of her cash. Spangelo put the motorcycle helmet *148 in a bag and threw it in a dumpster behind a convenience store. Spangelo and Grace then went to the mall. Grace purchased several items, including jeans, a shirt, a wristwatch and boots.

¶15 On April 13,1998, Sergeant Sowell, lead investigator on the case, learned that a man had recently pawned a white motorcycle helmet at a local pawn shop. After retrieving the helmet, he interviewed the man who had pawned the helmet. The man explained that he and his cousin had been looking in dumpsters for moving boxes, found the helmet in one of the dumpsters, and pawned the helmet for $50. DNA samples from the State laboratory indicated that both Spangelo and Grace had worn the helmet, but hair samples found within the helmet were consistent only with Grace.

¶16 A few weeks after the robbery, Grace and Maria Keeney began to date.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 MT 22, 18 P.3d 1008, 304 Mont. 144, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-grace-mont-2001.