State v. Guy

409 N.W.2d 248, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 4562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 14, 1987
DocketC0-86-1842
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 409 N.W.2d 248 (State v. Guy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Guy, 409 N.W.2d 248, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 4562 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

RANDALL, Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment of conviction for aggravated robbery. Appellant alleges insufficiency of the evidence. We affirm.

FACTS

At about 8:55 p.m. on March 27, 1986, Minneapolis patrol officers received a radio transmission report of an aggravated robbery in progress at the Oudal Bookstore. The report was in response to a telephone call made by Douglas Henders, who heard noises in the bookstore located beneath his studio apartment.

Henders said he heard high pitched yelling and unfamiliar “black voices” in the bookstore below. He heard two strangers repeatedly demand money, and heard noises that sounded like blows being struck or objects being thrown. Henders called 911 and gave the operator a “play-by-play” report of what he heard through his floor. Henders testified that about one half minute passed before the police arrived.

When the police arrived at the book store, they observed Anthony Greer, appellant’s companion, walking out of the store. They took him into custody. The officers then entered the building with weapons drawn. They found appellant on the floor, face up, behind a counter. They instructed appellant to get up with his hands raised, and he did so. Police testified he said, “I didn’t rob anybody,” or “I was just laying there resting.”

Toward the back of the store, in what appeared to be living quarters, the police found Justin Oudal sitting on a couch, bleeding from his ears and mouth. His shirt collar was covered with blood, and his pants pockets were pulled out. The room was in disarray, contents from a small closet and from a desk were strewn about the floor. An envelope smeared with blood was found on the floor. Near the location where appellant had been lying on the floor, the police found some change amounting to under $3, Oudal’s gold wrist watch, and a small two pronged spearhead. The spearhead was not tested for blood or fingerprints.

Oudal informed the police officers that two men had entered his business and beat him. He said they took his wristwatch and about $138 from his pockets. Oudal described the men as two black men of unequal size, the smaller of whom beat him and took his belongings. Appellant and Greer were brought back into the store and shown to Oudal, who repeatedly said, “That’s them, that’s the one, that’s them.” Appellant and Greer were then driven away.

At the police station, an inventory of appellant’s possessions indicated he had $3.38. Greer had no money at all. There was no testimony that either appellant or Greer had blood on their clothing, shoes or hands.

Appellant’s version of the facts is the following. Appellant stated that he had been on his way to Goofy’s, a downtown bar, to meet a friend who was going to lend him money. On the way, he encountered *250 his friend, Anthony Greer, who decided to go with him to Goofy’s. As they passed Oudal’s Bookstore, they heard a bumping noise “like someone was tapping.” They saw Oudal standing in the window. Oudal had blood on his earlobe. Oudal opened the door, and appellant and Greer asked him if anything was wrong. Oudal asked them to help him to go to sleep, and appellant and Greer helped him back to his couch. Asked if he was all right, Oudal said he was fine. He just wanted to go to sleep. Appellant and Greer did not hit him, reach inside his pockets, or demand money from him.

As they started to walk back out, appellant testified, they saw the police. Appellant said he became frightened when he saw police and he laid down along the side of the counter. Appellant did not see a watch or a spear point on the floor, and did not have with him or use a spear point that day. Some change fell out of his pockets when he got down onto the floor.

Greer did not testify. However, the investigating officer was allowed to testify, without objection, that Greer told him they had entered the bookstore after appellant suggested “he knew a guy who they could get some money from,”

Oudal was taken to the hospital, where he appeared very disoriented. Oudal told the physician, as he told police at the scene, that he had been assaulted by two black men.

Oudal suffers from Wernicke Kor-sakoff’s syndrome. Symptoms include mental confusion, poor memory recall, ataxia or problems with ambulating, and problems with mechanical eye movement. The syndrome can be caused by chronic use of alcohol or trauma to the brain. When Oudal was examined after the beating, there was no indication of trauma to the brain. The hospital physician testified that Oudal’s mental status, as measured by CT scans and other tests, had not changed significantly from previous examinations. At the hospital, a blood alcohol was taken from Oudal which showed .10 concentration. 1

Oudal's trial testimony was confused. He had difficulty naming members of his family and at one point referred to his watch as a shoe.

Oudal’s son took the stand and testified that on June 1,1986, Oudal told him one of the two men who robbed him was white, and it was the white, shorter man, who beat him. Appellant, a black man, is shorter than Greer. At trial, Oudal again stated that the man who put him on the floor and took his money was white. Oudal was consistent that the smaller of the two men had injured him. Under cross examination, Oudal repeated, approximately four to six times, that his assailant was white. On redirect, the prosecutor was not able to rehabilitate this testimony. During repeated examination by both sides, Oudal persisted in claiming he was beaten by a white assailant, and when asked if his assailant was in court, he testified he could not see him. 2

Appellant was convicted of aggravated robbery and sentenced to 61 months in prison.

ISSUE

Was the evidence, including the inconsistent eyewitness testimony and circumstantial evidence, sufficient to sustain appellant’s conviction?

ANALYSIS

This court must affirm the jury verdict if the evidence is such that the jury, acting with due regard for the presumption of innocence and the necessity of overcoming it by proof beyond a reasonable doubt, could reasonably conclude the defendant *251 was guilty. State v. Hamilton, 289 N.W.2d 470, 476 (Minn.1979).

Oudal’s testimony at trial that his assailant was white introduced a substantial and dramatic contradiction into the State’s case. We must determine whether that testimony by itself created a reasonable doubt and whether the remaining evidence was sufficient to support the conviction. So long as contradictions within the State’s case do not render its proof equivocal, and substantial evidence otherwise exists, the court must not interfere with the verdict. US. v. Higginbotham, 451 F.2d 1283, 1285 (8th Cir.1971) (sheriff who did not see the gun another officer saw may have been facing defendant the wrong way).

Oudal’s testimony

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
409 N.W.2d 248, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 4562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-guy-minnctapp-1987.