State v. Klashtorni

232 N.W. 111, 181 Minn. 203, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 941
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 29, 1930
DocketNo. 27,901.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 232 N.W. 111 (State v. Klashtorni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Klashtorni, 232 N.W. 111, 181 Minn. 203, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 941 (Mich. 1930).

Opinions

Upon Reargument.

Holt, J.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of robbery in the first degree. He appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The general statement of the facts may be found on a former appeal where a new trial was granted, 177 Minn. 303, 225 N. W. 278. There was a robbery of the First National Bank of Spring Valley on May 7, 1928. The important question was that of the identity of the defendant as one of the four men who participated. The evidence was held sufficient. A new trial was granted upon the ground that the state ivas in substance trying the defendant for a bank robbery committed in Iowa and the use of bonds which were the proceeds of the robbery, and overemphasizing the disreputable liquor business in which he was engaged so much as to becloud the issue upon the charge of robbery.

The evidence as to identification, which we may consider as including the question of alibi, is much the same as at the first trial, and we need not repeat it. On this trial there is the additional testimony of one Dixon. He was a stove and range supply and repair man, living at Marshalltown, Iowa, and worked northern Iowa and southern Minnesota. He testifies that on May 8, about seven o’clock, he parked his auto in the tourist camp at Albert Lea, which is in the general vicinity of Spring Valley. He slept in his auto. About 11 o’clock two men drove in and camped near his auto. *205 He assumes to identify one of them as defendant. They talked about Spring Valley qnd said something about its being a good place. They had some paper money in their possession. A physician of Minneapolis testifies that the defendant came to his office for an examination on May 8, 1928, pursuant to an appointment made that day; that he took his temperature at six p. m; and that the examination took him one-half to three-quarters of an hour. The defendant was a former service man, and the physician made examinations in connection with the verterans hospital. The state- seems to concede that the doctor took the examination on that day about as he' said and claims that still the defendant might have been at Albert Lea at 11 o’clock as claimed by Dixon. The doctor’s testimony would affect Dixon’s testimony but not the testimony of others tending to show the defendant’s guilt. The effect of the testimony was for the jury.

The testimony of the bank officers is substantially as at the first trial, and the defendant’s alibi for the night of the seventh is not much different though perhaps strengthened by some additions as well as by some omissions. The trial court suggests that both the state’s case and the defendant’s case were strengthened somewhat on the second trial. We hold, as we did on the first appeal, that the evidence sustains a finding that the defendant was a participant in the robbery.

The motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence is based on the affidavit of Lyle Hamlin, the president of the bank. He and the vice president, Gilbert, together with Dixon and Brown, were the principal witnesses of the state testifying as to identification. Probably we may say that Gilbert and Hamlin .gave the principal testimony supporting identification at both trials.

This appears from Hamlin’s testimony when queried at the second trial about the identity of the defendant:

Q. “State whether you are positive that this defendant here in court, L. M. Klass, is the same man you saw in the bank the day it was robbed?
*206 A. “Just as positive as anybody can be under such circumstances.”

‘On cross-examination he said:

“I think the statement that I am as positive as any person can be under such circumstances covers what I mean.”

After the trial Hamlin came to have some misgivings. On November 8, 1929, he made an affidavit, which is the basis of the defendant’s motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. It follows:

“State of Minnesota,
“County of Hennepin.
“Lyle Hamlin, being first duly sworn on oath, deposes and says that he is now and was on the 7th day of May, 1928, the president of the First National Bank of Spring Valley, Minnesota.
“That said bank was robbed on the 7th day of May, 1928.
“That shortly after said robbery, one LaChapelle of the Burns Detective Agency, representing the American Bankers Association in the investigation of said robbery, showed affiant and Mr. C. A. Gilbert, the vice president of said bank, a number of photographs for the purpose of attempting to identify the men who participated in said robbery. That after affiant and Mr. Gilbert had selected the defendant Klass’ photograph from among the photographs shown them as aforesaid, both affiant and Mr. Gilbert asked Mr. LaChapelle if, in his opinion, this man (the defendant Klass) might be suspected of being connected with this kind of a deal (a bank robbery). That Mr. LaChapelle replied in the affirmative, and related to affiant and Mr. Gilbert in detail the defendant Klass’ alleged connection with the robbery of a bank at Vinton, Iowa, in August of the previous year.
“Affiant further deposes and says that during the last trial of the defendant, in June, 1929, and after affiant had given his testimony in said trial identifying the defendant, a Mr. Gordon, the chief of the Burns Detective Agency, told affiant that he, Gordon, very *207 much doubted the connection of the defendant Klass with the Spring Valley robbery. ■
“That this statement, together with previous developments, as’ hereinbefore outlined, disturbed affiant considerably, and shortly-after the trial affiant was' on the point of communicating with the attorney general’s office, but upon further reflection affiant concluded he would await further developments.
“That since that time affiant has on his own account given com siderable study to the probability or rather possibility of an error in identification made under such circumstances; that affiant has spent some time in places like the Radisson Hotel, in Minneapolis, which are frequented by the Jewish people, making a study of identification; that this study has not resulted in lessening the disturbed feeling which Mr. Gordon’s statement created in affiant’s mind.
“That affiant has prior hereto communicated directly with both. Mr. Gurnee, the assistant attorney general, who tried the case on the part of the State, and with Mr. Nelson, one of the defendant’s attorneys, voluntarily and of his own motion, concerning the doubt affiant now entertains regarding the guilt of this defendant. That subsequent thereto, affiant also voluntarily, by letter, communicated these facts to the trial court.
“Affiant further states that by reason of the facts aforesaid and. the feeling which he now entertains in the matter, if he were called as a witness in another trial of the defendant in connection with this case, he would be very reluctant to identify the defendant as. one of the robbers of the Spring Valley bank.

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Related

State v. Olsen
258 N.W.2d 898 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1977)
State v. Thieme
160 N.W.2d 396 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1968)
State v. Quinn
255 N.W. 488 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
232 N.W. 111, 181 Minn. 203, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-klashtorni-minn-1930.