State v. Heintz

140 So. 28, 174 La. 219, 1932 La. LEXIS 1642
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 1, 1932
DocketNo. 31573.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 140 So. 28 (State v. Heintz) 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. Heintz, 140 So. 28, 174 La. 219, 1932 La. LEXIS 1642 (La. 1932).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

The defendant was convicted of robbery, and sentenced to serve not less than nine nor more than fourteen years at hard labor in the state penitentiary, and appealed.

The only bill of exception argued before this court is the one reserved to the ruling of the trial court refusing to grant defendant a new trial.

The basis of the motion is that since the trial and conviction defendant has discovered new evidence which it is alleged was not discovered before the trial, and which, if admitted on a second trial, would change the results.

The only new evidence discovered by defendant is that which, it is alleged, tends to impeach the testimony of Miss Lena Miller, the state’s chief witness at the trial. Miss Miller was the person robbed, and the only witness called by the state to prove it. That •she was in fact robbed of the sum of $9-10, which she was carrying in her purse, is not questioned. But defendant denied that he was the person who robbed her, and attempted to prove an alibi, which defense was rejected by the jury.

Bliss Bliller testified on the trial that she was driving her automobile along a street in New Orleans when another automobile driven by one man with another standing on the running board, overtook hers and crowded it so close to the curb on the right-hand side of the street that she was forced to stop; that, when she stopped, the man on the running board of the other car demanded that she deliver to him her purse with its contents, otherwise he would kill her; that upon her refusal he struck her with a revolver and then attempted' to take the purse from her and that a struggle ensued; that her *221 assailant, not being a strong man physically, was about to fail in his attempt, when the other man who had driven the car got out, came to the assistance of his companion or associate; and that the two overpowered her and took the purse, with its contents, and escaped.

Several days later, defendant was arrested as a suspect and carried to police headquarters and Miss Miller was sent for. She testified on the trial that she was shown a great number of persons at police headquarters (one hundred or thereabouts), and that, while she was not personally acquainted with defendant and had never seen him before the day of the robbery, she pointed him out and identified him as the man who had driven the automobile and who had assisted in the robbery.

While on the stand, she said repeatedly that defendant was the man. She identified him positively in court, and said she could not be mistaken. While her testimony was not corroborated, the jurors seem to have been satisfied with her identification of the accused, and we can well see why they should have been, as the- robbery took place in broad daylight and she had ample opportunity to observe her assailants. The other participant in the holdup was not arrested, but Miss Miller gave an accurate description of him also, stating that he was a tall slender man with high cheek bones.

The court was asked to grant a new trial in order that defendant might call certain witnesses whose testimony it is alleged would impeach that of Miss Miller given on the trial concerning her identification of the accused.

The general rule is that the verdict u. a jury will not be set aside and a new trial granted for the sole purpose of enabling the accused to impeach testimony admitted on the trial. This rule is repeated in numerous decisions of this court, and is announced by the text-writers generally. State v. Patterson, 150 La. 114, 90 So. 532; State v. Preuett, 142 La. 720, 77 So. 514; State v. Folden, 135 La. 791, 66 So. 223; State v. Serio, 137 La. 517, 68 So. S47; State v. Feducia, 138 La. 974, 70 So. 1010; State v. Bordelon, 141 La. 611, 75 So. 429; State v. Young, 107 La. 618, 31 So. 993; State v. Maxey, 107 La. 799, 32 So. 206; State v. Gauthreaux, 38 La. Ann. 608; State v. Johnson, 30 La. Ann. 305; Archbold’s Criminal Practice & Pleading, pp. 649-653; Wharton’s U. S. Criminal Digest, pp. 458, 459; Cyc. vol. 12, p. 741; 16 C. J. 1202, § 2729; 20 R. C. L. 294, § 76.

If this general rule has ever been departed from in this state, our attention has not been called to the case, and we have not been able to find one.

However, in the case of State v. Washington, 108 La. 226, 32 So. 396, 397, the court, after repeating the above general rule, said:

“But Eiis case presents an exceptional feature. The name of the attorney for George Washington, the affiant, in the case in which he was convicted, appears as a witness. It may be mere inadvertence or downright thoughtlessness, growing- out of the idea that he was signing as a witness to the mark. Be it as it may, we think in the interest of justice it is advisable to set aside the verdict and sentence of the court. The issues, as relates to the affidavit, are in su6h *223 shape that we feel constrained to send the case bach to the district court for further proceedings.”

The case at bar presents no “exceptional feature.” Defendant was convicted on April 30, and on May 7 a man named Martin says he went with his sister, Mrs. McGuire, to a drug store for the purpose of seeing “to what extent Miss Miller was certain of her identification of Eloyd Heintz (the defendant),” and that while they were there Miss Miller came in and sat at a table for a few minutes, when he and his.sister walked out to their car, and that as they were about to start the car Miss Miller came out and said “Wait a minute. Aren’t you the man that held me up on February 21?”

Upon his denial that he was the man, he says that Miss Miller asserted that he was and said she had witnesses to'prove it, and wanted him to go to Oapt. Lannes’ house and “he could tell you whether you were the man or not.” He says she further told him that, if he would tell her who robbed her and thus assist her in getting her money back, she would do all she could for Eloyd Heintz.

Mrs.' McGuire, Mrs. Gauther, and Mrs. Heintz say they went to the residence of Miss Miller on the night of May 6, and asked her in the presence of a detective if she was positive that Eloyd Heintz was the man who had robbed her, and that said to Mrs. Heintz:

“If you will help me find the man who drove the Oldsmobile the Saturday night before your son was arrested, I will go down and do all I can to have your son released.”

They say that Miss Miller further told them that on Saturday night before Heintz was arrested she had received a telephone call from a party whose name she declined to divulge, telling her that the man who drove an Oldsmobile car at a certain time was the one who robbed her. Mrs. Heintz says Miss Miller told her that “she watched for the car, but finally about 1:30 Friday morning, March 20, she had the man arrested, and him and another man was in an Oldsmobile and my son, Floyd Heintz, was driving the car at the time."

The purpose of this testimony was to show that Miss Miller was not certain of her identification of this accused and that she had him arrested on hearsay.

The witness Mrs. McGuire was defendant’s concubine. Martin is her brother, and Mrs. Coulter is her sister. The district judge says in his per curiam to this bill that “the witnesses, each in his turn, did not impress me favorably.

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 28, 174 La. 219, 1932 La. LEXIS 1642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-heintz-la-1932.