State v. Hancock

426 P.2d 872, 247 Or. 21, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 444
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 426 P.2d 872 (State v. Hancock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Hancock, 426 P.2d 872, 247 Or. 21, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 444 (Or. 1967).

Opinion

FORT, J.

(Pro Tempore).

Defendant, Wayne Kelley Hancock, appeals from a judgment of conviction of the crime of assault and robbery being armed with a dangerous weapon, as did his brother and co-defendant, Ronnie Wagner Hancock. See State v. Hancock, 245 Or 240, 421 P2d 687 (1966). The brothers were tried separately though charged jointly in the indictment. Three assignments of error *23 are presented. Two relate to the admissibility of certain exhibits. For a proper understanding of each a summary of relevant portions of the evidence is necessary.

The crime involved the holdup and robbery of a market. The robbers in the course of the holdup, in addition to taking money and checks from the cash register at gun point, also rifled the purses of the clerk on duty and a lady customer, and, the jury could reasonably infer, took the wallets from two male customers who also came into the store during the holdup. One of these customers, named Mike Fahey, was known and identified by the clerk on duty.

The robbers stuffed the stolen cash, checks and other property, including the billfolds and coin purses, into a cash register cover and left the store. In the parldng lot outside the store they commandeered at gun point a car occupied by two seventeen-year-old girls and compelled the girls to drive them about Portland and its environs for nearly three hours. While so engaged they ordered one of the girls to separate the cash from the checks contained in the cash register cover. She did so. The robbers kept the currency. The precise amount of money was not shown. While driving in the vicinity of the St. John’s Bridge area one of the robbers threw a wallet out of the car window.

Promptly after being released by the robbers, the girls notified the police and related to them the foregoing activities. They accompanied the police to the St. John’s Bridge area the following day and there a wallet was found in the vicinity where the wallet was thrown from the car. Some of its contents were scattered alongside the road. It contained the driver’s license and other identification of Michael Fahey. Mr. Fahey was not called as a witness at the trial.

*24 The robbery occurred about 8:15 p.m. The defendants were with the girls continuously until about 11:00 p.m. The police after being called to Tiny’s Cafe near Portland at 3:00 a.m. to investigate a disturbance, arrested both defendants outside the cafe for being drunk on the street. At that time this defendant was searched and a large roll of currency containing $163 was found on his person. The roll included 38 one-dollar bills.

At the trial both the Fahey wallet and the currency taken from Wayne Kelley Hancock were introduced into evidence as exhibits over timely objection. The ruling as to each is assigned as error. We will consider each separately.

The rule is well-established that the admissibility of demonstrative evidence is generally a matter within the discretion of the trial court.

In criminal cases:

“Objects may be admitted in evidence which the defendant had thrown away, or which had been thrown from the room or building, or the vehicle in which the defendant was present.”

The defendant contends here that the failure of the state to call Mike Fahey to testify to the taldng of his wallet by the robbers and to the identification of the wallet found near the bridge renders the exhibit inadmissible. The defendant is not here charged with robbing Fahey. The wallet here introduced tended to corroborate the evidence of the girls, both of whom identified the defendant as one of the two robbers, *25 regarding both the flight of the defendants with them following the crime charged, and the fact that one of them threw ont a wallet in the vicinity of St. John’s bridge. In addition it tended to corroborate the testimony of the store clerk, who also identified the defendant as one of the two robbers. She testified that Mike Fahey, who was personally known to her, came into the store during the holdup and was himself compelled by the robbers at gun point to lie down, first in the store and later beside her in the store cooler. No error was committed in admitting the wallet into evidence.

With respect to the currency found upon him at the time of arrest, defendant contends since there was no showing of how much money was taken in the robbery, it was error to receive the $163 as an exhibit. He contends an insufficient foundation was laid. No objection was made by the defendant to the testimony of the police officers who searched him and found the money, or to their testifying to the specific amount of $163 they found upon him. The objection went only to the receipt of the money itself as an exhibit.

In this ease the defense of the defendant was alibi. He denied any involvement at all in the robbery. He denied knowing or being with the girls in their car at any time. In addition he had offered evidence in his case in chief that he was not at the time of the crime impecunious and that earlier on the evening in question he had “well over $100.00” in his pocket. Both of the challenged exhibits, though identified during the state’s case in chief, were offered and received during rebuttal after defendant had introduced his alibi evidence.

We agree with the defendant that the currency here *26 is not admissible under the theory of prior impecuniosity, for no such showing was here made, nor because the specific bills found on the defendant could be individually identified as a part of the stolen money through serial number, special marking, unique condition, or the like. It was, however, admissible because the currency is itself a chattel and there was direct evidence connecting the defendant with it, both while he was in the presence of the girls in the car as well as when with the victims in the market. His possession of the $163 in currency when arrested some four hours after leaving the girls was a significant circumstance in the case. 1 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (12th ed) 411, § 204, states:

“When money is found in the possession of the defendant, it is generally held that it is unnecessary to identify the bills of money as having been the bills which had formerly been in the possession of the victim of the crime, or to trace the source of such money.”

In State v. Sack, 210 Or 552 at 581, 300 P2d 427 (1957), we stated:

“* * * Circumstantial evidence is not limited to proof in the first instance of certainty. Evidence is relevant and admissible if it shows possibility, capacity, probability, or certainty. The fact that proof beyond reasonable doubt is the ultimate requirement does not militate against the value of individual items of evidence which rise no higher than proof of the possibility or probability. ***"

*27 In State v. Hunter,

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Bluebook (online)
426 P.2d 872, 247 Or. 21, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hancock-or-1967.