State v. Hale

367 P.2d 81, 45 Haw. 269, 1961 Haw. LEXIS 75
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1961
Docket4181
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 367 P.2d 81 (State v. Hale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii 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. Hale, 367 P.2d 81, 45 Haw. 269, 1961 Haw. LEXIS 75 (haw 1961).

Opinion

*270 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

WIRTZ AND LEWIS, JJ.

This case is before the court on Writ of Error to the Circuit Court of tbe Second Circuit.

The defendant was charged with Burglary in the First Degree under an indictment which alleged, in its pertinent portions, that defendant on “the first day of June, 1959, and in the nighttime of said day, did enter the store of another, to wit, Silversword Liquor and Variety Shop, *271 owned and operated by Dee Westbrook and Martha A. Westbrook, * * * with intent to commit larceny therein, * * * and did then and there and thereby commit the crime of burglary in the first degree.”

To this indictment, the defendant entered a plea of not guilty. After a verdict of guilty, the trial court entered its judgment finding the defendant guilty as charged and imposed its sentence of imprisonment from which the defendant brings this Writ of Error.

The evidence showed that at about 7:00 A.M., on the morning of June 1, 1959, as Dee Westbrook drove past his liquor store in his automobile, he noticed broken glass on the ground in front of the store. Upon investigation, he discovered that two sections of the glass window display at the front of the store had been shattered and that a piece of board was lying on the ground nearby. He had checked the store the night before at about 10:30 P.M. and everything had then been in order.

Although Westbrook could not remember the particular pattern in which the liquor bottles had been arranged for display on the shelves behind the shattered glass sections of the window, he was fairly certain that the shelves had been completely filled with very little space between bottles. Surveying the damage, he noticed several spaces between the bottles on the display shelves and sensed that several were missing. He could not say for sure how many but he “could tell a number of bottles had been taken out. [He] just guessed anywhere from four to six, along there; [he] couldn’t tell for sure.” Various bottles were later recovered which were similar to those stocked and sold in the store, although Westbrook could not identify them as being those from the store.

On June 2, 1959, a partially filled bottle of Hiram Walker’s Imperial whiskey was found by the superintendent of Olinda Prison Camp at Dormitory One. Three *272 fragments of glass resembling pieces of a liquor bottle were also discovered in a trash can near the dormitory. On June 4, 1959, an empty bottle of Teachers Highland Scotch whiskey was uncovered by a guard in a toilet tank in the dormitory. The named brands were among those carried in stock in the store. The bottles and fragments were admitted in evidence over objection.

A prison camp inmate, Donald H. Igawa, was permitted to testify, over objection, that at about 8:00 P.M., on May 31, 1959, defendant and an accomplice asked him to go with them to get liquor, but he refused. He further testified that at about 3:00 o’clock on the morning of June 1, 1959, he was awakened by defendant and that he drank whiskey with him from a bottle of Old Forester in the bathroom of the dormitory. Old Forester also was one of the brands carried in stock in Westbrook’s store.

The admissions and confessions of defendant showed that he and an accomplice had sneaked out of the dormitory in Olinda Prison Camp at about 10:00 P.M., on May 31, 1959. They stole a car, and drove around until about 2:35 A.M., on June 1, 1959, when they broke the glass sections in front of the liquor store and took five bottles of liquor. Two of these bottles then were taken by defendant and three by his accomplices. Thereafter, they returned to the prison camp and drank from a bottle of whiskey in the company of Donald H. Igawa.

In these pre-trial statements, defendant identified the piece of board found on the ground in front of the liquor store as the one used to break the glass sections, and the liquor bottles, together with the broken liquor bottle pieces, later placed in evidence, as comprising the bottles and remnants he and his accomplice had taken from the store.

Another witness established that a car had been taken from the home of a resident in Olinda sometime in the *273 early part of the morning of June 1, 1959; that the car was later found about a half mile from the prison camp; and that a smoked Pall Mall cigarette, matches, and portions of a green tax stamp used on liquor bottles were found in the car. Defendant had admitted smoking Pall Mall cigarettes on the night of the offense and that a bottle of liquor had been opened in the car.

Defendant did not testify and did not offer any evidence in his behalf. The court was asked to take judicial notice of the fact that on June 1, 1959, the sun rose at 5:49 A.M.

Defendant first contends that there was insufficient proof of the corpus delicti by evidence aliunde the purported confessions and admissions of the defendant, that the latter should not have been admitted in evidence, and that a verdict should have been directed for defendant. Specifically, it is contended:

“a. There is lack of proof that entry was made by someone with a felonious intent to commit larceny.
“b. There is no proof of the essential element of nighttime.”

The question as to the applicable rule in connection with the quantum of the independent proof of the corpus delicti in this jurisdiction has now been resolved by this court. State v. Yoshida, 44 Haw. 352, 354 P. 2d 986. The rigid rule which requires independent proof of all elements of the corpus delicti before resort may be had to a confession has been rejected and Yoshida, supra, has aligned this jurisdiction with those which support the rule that makes no such requirement, but permits a confession to be relied on to meet and remedy a deficiency otherwise existing in the proof of the corpus delicti if the trustAvorthiness of the confession appears to be assured by circumstances shoAvn by substantial independent evidence. Yoshida, supra, stands for the proposition that a *274 “voluntary confession may be received in evidence even though the corpus delicti is not fully established by independent evidence when the confession and the independent evidence taken together establish the corpus delicti and the truth of the admission or admissions in the confession relied on to augment and complete the proof of the corpus delicti is fortified by substantial independent evidence.”

There has been no modification of the rule that a defendant cannot be convicted on his purported extrajudicial confession alone. Republic of Hawaii v. Tokuji, 9 Haw. 548; Opper v. United States, 348 U.S. 84; Annot., 99 L.Ed. 110, 127 A.L.R. 1131, 45 A.L.R. 2d 1320. But rather a more flexible rule as to the required quantum of the corroborative proof of the corpus delicti has been adopted.

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Bluebook (online)
367 P.2d 81, 45 Haw. 269, 1961 Haw. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hale-haw-1961.