State v. Henry

875 N.W.2d 374, 292 Neb. 834
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 2016
DocketS-14-519
StatusPublished
Cited by330 cases

This text of 875 N.W.2d 374 (State v. Henry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. Henry, 875 N.W.2d 374, 292 Neb. 834 (Neb. 2016).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/courts/epub/ 02/26/2016 08:20 AM CST

- 834 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 292 Nebraska R eports STATE v. HENRY Cite as 292 Neb. 834

State of Nebraska, appellee, v. Eric M. Henry, appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed February 26, 2016. No. S-14-519.

1. Jury Instructions: Appeal and Error. Whether a jury instruction is correct is a question of law, regarding which an appellate court is obli- gated to reach a conclusion independent of the determination reached by the trial court. 2. Motions to Suppress: Appeal and Error. In determining the correct- ness of a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, the appellate court will uphold the trial court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly wrong, but will reach a conclusion independent of that reached by the trial court with regard to questions of law. 3. Pretrial Procedure: Appeal and Error. Unless granted as a matter of right under the Constitution or other law, discovery is within the discre- tion of a trial court, whose ruling will be upheld on appeal unless the trial court has abused its discretion. 4. ____: ____. The decision of the trial court granting or denying a motion for a bill of particulars requested by the accused will not be reversed by the appellate court in the absence of an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court in making its adjudication. 5. Pleadings: Parties: Judgments: Appeal and Error. A denial of a motion to sever will not be reversed unless clear prejudice and an abuse of discretion are shown, and an appellate court will find such an abuse only where the denial caused the defendant substantial prejudice amounting to a miscarriage of justice. 6. Rules of Evidence. In proceedings where the Nebraska Evidence Rules apply, the admissibility of evidence is controlled by the Nebraska Evidence Rules; judicial discretion is involved only when the rules make discretion a factor in determining admissibility. 7. Rules of Evidence: Appeal and Error. Where the Nebraska Evidence Rules commit the evidentiary question at issue to the discretion of the - 835 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 292 Nebraska R eports STATE v. HENRY Cite as 292 Neb. 834

trial court, an appellate court reviews the admissibility of evidence for an abuse of discretion. 8. Trial: Juries: Evidence. A trial court does not have discretion to submit testimony materials to the jury for unsupervised review, but the trial court has broad discretion to submit to the jury nontestimonial exhibits, in particular, those constituting substantive evidence of the defend­ ant’s guilt. 9. Witnesses. The manner in which a witness may be examined is within the sound discretion of the court. 10. Jury Instructions: Proof: Appeal and Error. The appellant has the burden to show that a questioned jury instruction prejudiced him or otherwise adversely affected his substantial rights. 11. Jury Instructions: Appeal and Error. All the jury instructions must be read together, and if, taken as a whole, they correctly state the law, are not misleading, and adequately cover the issues supported by the pleadings and the evidence, there is no prejudicial error necessitat- ing reversal. 12. Statutes: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will not read into a statute a meaning that is not there. 13. Pretrial Procedure: Evidence. In the absence of any discovery motion under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-1913 (Reissue 2008), there is no discovery order, and without a discovery order, there can be no violation requiring suppression of the evidence. 14. ____: ____. Where the State in good faith destroys evidence before a defense discovery motion under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-1913(1) (Reissue 2008) can be made, a district court is not obliged to suppress the State’s tests or analyses under § 29-1913(2) without any motion for discovery under § 29-1913(1). 15. Motions to Suppress. A suppression motion cannot serve as a substitute for a discovery motion. 16. Indictments and Informations. Where an information alleges the com- mission of a crime using language of the statute defining that crime or terms equivalent to such statutory definition, the charge is sufficient. 17. Criminal Law: Robbery. It is not necessary to a charge of robbery to name the alleged victim. 18. Rules of Evidence. Generally, the foundation for the admissibility of text messages has two components: (1) whether the text messages were accurately transcribed and (2) who actually sent the text messages. 19. Rules of Evidence: Proof. The proponent of text messages is not required to conclusively prove who authored the messages; the pos- sibility of an alteration or misuse by another generally goes to weight, not admissibility. - 836 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 292 Nebraska R eports STATE v. HENRY Cite as 292 Neb. 834

20. Trial: Hearsay: Testimony: Evidence. It is generally sufficient to make a general hearsay objection to a specific statement, but a general hearsay objection to the entirety of a witness’ testimony or to multiple state- ments in an exhibit, each admissible or objectionable under differing theories, is not usually sufficient to preserve the hearsay objection. 21. Trial: Evidence: Appeal and Error. Unless an objection to offered evi- dence is sufficiently specific to enlighten the trial court and enable it to pass upon the sufficiency of such objections and to observe the alleged harmful bearing of the evidence from the standpoint of the objector, no question can be presented therefrom on appeal. 22. Trial: Evidence: Presumptions. Once the proponent of evidence shows that the proposed evidence is relevant and competent, it is presump- tively admissible. 23. Trial: Hearsay: Evidence: Proof. It is the party objecting to the evi- dence as hearsay who bears the burden of production and persuasion that the objected-to evidence is in fact hearsay. 24. ____: ____: ____: ____. Once the opponent demonstrates the evidence is hearsay, the burden shifts to the proponent to lay the foundation for one of the exceptions to the hearsay rule. 25. Trial: Evidence. Regardless of whether the proponent or the trial court articulated no theory or the wrong theory of admissibility, an appellate court may affirm the ultimate correctness of the trial court’s admission of the evidence under any theory supported by the record, so long as both parties had a fair opportunity to develop the record and the circum- stances otherwise would make it fair to do so. 26. Conspiracy: Hearsay: Rules of Evidence. The rule that a statement by a coconspirator is not hearsay if made during the course and in further- ance of a conspiracy is construed broadly in favor of admissibility. 27. Conspiracy. A conspiracy is ongoing until the central purposes of the conspiracy have either failed or been achieved. 28. ____. There is no talismanic formula for ascertaining when a coconspir- ator’s statements are in furtherance of the conspiracy; a statement need not be necessary or even important to the conspiracy, as long as it can be said to advance the goals of the conspiracy as opposed to thwarting its purpose. 29. ____. The definitional exclusion to the hearsay rule applies to the cov- erup or concealment of the conspiracy that occurs while the conspiracy is ongoing, just as it would to any other part of the conspiracy. 30. ____. When a conspiracy involves a sequence of objectives, conceal- ment is usually an integral part thereof. 31. Conspiracy: Proof: Presumptions. Upon proof of participation in a conspiracy, a conspirator’s continuing participation is presumed - 837 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 292 Nebraska R eports STATE v. HENRY Cite as 292 Neb. 834

unless the conspirator demonstrates affirmative withdrawal from the conspiracy. 32.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
875 N.W.2d 374, 292 Neb. 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-henry-neb-2016.