State v. Kennedy

121 A.2d 647
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 1, 1956
DocketEx. No. 9558
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 A.2d 647 (State v. Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kennedy, 121 A.2d 647 (R.I. 1956).

Opinion

121 A.2d 647 (1956)

STATE
v.
Harold R. KENNEDY.

Ex. No. 9558.

Supreme Court of Rhode Island.

April 5 as of January 17, 1956.

*648 William E. Powers, Atty. Gen., Alfred E. Motta, Special Counsel, Providence, for the State.

Aram A. Arabian, Public Defender, John DiLibero, Asst. Public Defender, Providence, for defendant.

FLYNN, Chief Justice.

This is an indictment charging that the defendant on March 14, 1953 "with force and arms, at Providence in the aforesaid County of Providence did rob one Anna Mainelli." After a trial in the superior court a jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged and thereafter the trial justice denied the defendant's motion for a new trial. The case is here on his bill of exceptions to that decision and to five rulings excluding certain testimony, all other exceptions being expressly waived.

The evidence for the state showed among other facts that on the evening of March 14, 1953 the owners of a house at No. 665 Pleasant Valley Parkway in the city of Providence had left their children and home in the care and custody of Mrs. Anna Mainelli for the evening; and that about nine o'clock on that night a man came to the door and rang the bell. Mrs. Mainelli responded and saw this man outside holding his hat in his hand. He asked her if the man of the house was at home. She opened the door only enough to be heard and replied in the negative. The man, who later was identified as defendant, then pushed her aside, opened the door, and entered the house announcing: "This is a holdup." He then displayed a black gun which had been concealed by his hat. He ordered Mrs. Mainelli into the den where her daughter and the daughter of the owners, both about thirteen years of age, were reading. That room was brightly lighted and defendant ordered them to lie down on the floor.

He then turned the light off and on a couple of times, evidently as a signal to others. Immediately two accomplices, who wore masks made out of paper bags, entered the house and asked where the safe was. When the occupants disclaimed knowledge of any safe, the accomplices began to ransack the house and so continued for about fifteen minutes. During that time the defendant sat in the lighted den thus giving Mrs. *649 Mainelli and the two girls an opportunity to look at him. When the accomplices returned without finding the safe, some remarks were made and all three left the house, but only after they took some money from a pocketbook and other personal property of the value of $150.

The police were notified immediately and began their investigation. As a result thereof Mrs. Mainelli and the two girls were summoned to police headquarters on seven or eight different occasions to see if they could identify certain individuals who were suspected of possibly being involved in this crime. They were unable to identify any of those suspects. However, on April 18, 1953, after defendant was taken into custody for questioning in connection with another reported crime, he was viewed separately and at different times by the two girls and by Mrs. Mainelli. Each of them identified him positively as being the unmasked man who had the gun and guarded them in the den on March 14, 1953 while the two accomplices searched the house and took the valuables.

On the other hand the defendant, insisting throughout that these witnesses were mistaken, took the witness stand and denied that he was present in Providence on March 14, 1953. He presented an alibi in defense and testified that, with the exception of a couple of days when he went to Washington, D.C. on business with the veterans' administration and returned directly to Richmond, Virginia, he was in the latter city at all times between March 12 and about April 14, 1953; that during the entire evening of March 14, 1953 he was actually working at papering and painting rooms in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Claude W. Ledford in the city of Richmond, where he also spent the night; that following some two or three weeks' residence with them in their house after March 14 he left Richmond, since it was difficult to hold any job because of his criminal record; and that he intended and started to go to Chicago where he hoped to find work more easily.

However, he testified that he left with only $2; that in hitch-hiking he received the offer of a sailor to ride from Baltimore to Quonset Point near Providence; that he came to Providence on April 17 for the first time in his life; and that he was arrested on April 18 while he was inquiring as to the location of route 1, intending to return to Washington, D.C.

In his effects he carried notations of two addresses, one of which concerned a well-known criminal. In explaining these he testified that the address of one was the wife of a convict with whom he had served in a southern jail, and that she gave him the address of the other as a friend of her husband who might finance defendant's trip back to Richmond, Virginia. Apparently he sought no work in Washington on his journey north and sought none in this state when he arrived. Nor did he explain why he was returning so quickly to Washington or Richmond, both of which he had left a few days previously in order to seek work in Chicago. His only disclosed contacts here concerned persons who had criminal records.

In relation to his defense of an alibi, the court at defendant's request permitted the testimony of four witnesses to be taken by deposition in Richmond, Virginia. These included a social worker in the Richmond Chapter of the American Red Cross where defendant had received some help, the landlady at whose home he had boarded and roomed just prior to going to live at the Ledfords' house, the defendant's married sister, and Mrs. Ledford at whose house he claimed to have spent the entire evening and night of March 14, 1953.

The defendant now argues in general that the cross-examination of himself and his witnesses by the state's attorney tended to create an artificial atmosphere, the effect of which was to prevent the jury from fairly weighing the testimony in his behalf; that in denying defendant's motion for a new trial the trial justice misconceived the evidence, because a review thereof will show that the state failed to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; and that certain testimony was erroneously excluded as set forth under his exceptions numbered 2, 3, 4, 6 and 7.

*650 In our opinion the transcript does not support any of these contentions. In connection with the first, it was defendant himself who first introduced evidence relating to some of his early history and misfortunes, and also his later criminal record of several convictions in various states for crimes involving bad checks and forgery. He also elected to testify and offered an alibi as his defense. The cross-examination of defendant and his witnesses in this connection was not different from what would ordinarily be expected and permitted in testing the truth of the statements with particular reference to the asserted alibi. The defendant cannot complain of a prejudicial atmosphere merely because of the criminal record he introduced or because the state's attorney did not accept as true every fact which defendant and his witnesses had asserted in their direct testimony.

The defendant also argues that the trial justice in denying the motion for a new trial had misconceived the evidence. However, he does not point out in his brief or argument any specific instance which supports that claim and we have found none.

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Related

State v. Breen
767 A.2d 50 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2001)
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740 A.2d 330 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
121 A.2d 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kennedy-ri-1956.