State v. Lombard

471 So. 2d 782, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8858
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 1985
DocketNo. 84-KA-354
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 471 So. 2d 782 (State v. Lombard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lombard, 471 So. 2d 782, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8858 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

GAUDIN, Judge.

Guy A. Lombard, accused of fatally stabbing John St. Pierre at a high school football game on September 3, 1983, was indicted by a Grand Jury and subsequently convicted of second degree murder by a 12-per-son jury in the 24th Judicial District Court. Lombard was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence.

On appeal, he assigned four errors; however, most of Lombard’s brief and all of his counsel’s oral argument before this Court dealt with only one of these assignments: It was reversible error for the trial judge not to grant use immunity to a defense witness who would otherwise assert the privilege against self-incrimination and refuse to testify.

Lombard’s other assignments of error are:

(1) The trial judge gave an inadequate jury instruction,

(2) The prosecutor’s closing argument was inflammatory, and

(3) The evidence did not support the second degree murder conviction, instead supporting, at best, only a manslaughter conviction.

For the following reasons, we are of the opinion that Lombard was not denied due process and that he received a just and fair trial. We affirm his conviction and sentence.

Testimony at the five-day trial indicated that St. Pierre had gone to West Jefferson Stadium with a girlfriend, Heidi Jeandron. With the football game in progress, Heidi left her seat to go to the restroom, only to find, she said, her path blocked by Lombard. As Heidi nudged her way past Lombard, she asked: “Do you have a problem?” Lombard said, according to Heidi, that he wouldn't call it a problem but a passion. When she returned to her seat, Heidi again had to push past Lombard.

St. Pierre asked Heidi what had happened. Upon hearing her recount, St. Pierre went to the top of the exit ramp where Lombard was. Words were exchanged, and St. Pierre returned to his seat to watch the rest of the game.

Later, when St. Pierre and his date were attempting to leave the stadium, they had to go past Lombard, who was still standing at the top of the exit ramp. More words were exchanged, but St. Pierre and Heidi continued on their way down the exit ramp.

Lombard then grabbed his genital area and made an obscene gesture toward St. Pierre, whereupon St. Pierre took off his eyeglasses and handed them to Heidi and returned up the ramp to where Lombard was. St. Pierre hit Lombard and a fight ensued, during which Lombard removed a knife from his pocket and stabbed St. Pierre twice.

Lombard said:

“... I was gasping for air, he was breaking my arm, and so, I took my right hand and I got my knife, and I swung. I needed to get some air, I didn’t want to kill him, I just wanted to get some air. I wanted to get my arm from him.
“... I swung once, and he didn’t stop. He kept shaking me. So, I swung again.”

The first wound was inflicted on the left side of St. Pierre’s chest, the second in his upper right leg. An ambulance took St. Pierre to a nearby hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Appellant was arrested at the stadium but his knife was never found. He said that moments after the fight, he had given the weapon to his friend, Randall (Randy) Bruner, who had accompanied him to the game.

ASSIGNMENT NO. 1

In this assignment of error, Lombard contends that a person accused of a crime [785]*785has a constitutional right to present a defense; and that right, in appropriate circumstances, may require the trial judge to grant use immunity to a defense witness who refuses to testify because of the Fifth Amendment’s self-incrimination privilege, íhe witness in question is Randy Bruner.

After the presentation of the State’s case, Lombard’s trial attorney, Thomas Divens, outside the jury’s presence, asked the trial judge “... about the possibility of calling him (Bruner) as a court witness under some sort of structured court immunity.”

Divens explained that Bruner “... has been threatened in the sense that he feels that remarks made by the District Attorney indicate that if he does testify, he will be charged. That is the way he feels, and based on that, there is some reluctance to testify.”

The Assistant District Attorney, Patrick Leitz, replied:

“Your Honor, I told the defendant’s father that I thought he was an accessory to the crime, and if he so testified, he would be charged ...”

Before ruling, the trial judge, with the jury still retired, listened to the sworn testimony of both Randy Bruner and his father, Keith Bruner.

Keith Bruner, a lawyer and a former Assistant United States Attorney, said that earlier, after Randy had been subpoenaed to testify before the Grand Jury, he (Keith Bruner) had made up his mind not to allow Randy to testify “... on the grounds it might tend to incriminate him.” Presumably, Keith Bruner knew of his son’s involvement in the stadium incident. Randy did not testify before the Grand Jury, nor at trial, except during this interlude.

After both Bruners had taken the stand, Leitz said:

“... he (Randy) is a potential defendant. The information which we have, and the testimony which we presume that the defendant would give, he would be charged as an accessory to murder, of accessory after the fact, murder.”

The prosecutor presumed, correctly, that Lombard was going to later say that just after the fight was over, he had given his knife to Randy.

The trial judge denied Lombard’s motion, and correctly so. In considering the merits of this assignment of error, we shall first consider the use of defense witness immunity in any Louisiana case, then the applicability of use immunity to Lombard’s trial.

There is no statutory authority for defense use immunity in this State. The immunity statute, LSA-C.Cr.P. art. 439.1, gives the Attorney General and the District Attorney the right to jointly request immunity for a witness whose testimony- “... may be necessary to the public interest.” A defendant’s justification for seeking immunity for a witness is vested in the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and in Art. I, Sec. 16 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974, both of which give a person accused of a crime the right to present a defense.

In 1980, the United States Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit, in United States v. Turkish, 623 F.2d 769, writs denied at 449 U.S. 1077, 101 S.Ct. 856, 66 L.Ed.2d 800, dwelled at length on the history and validity of defense use immunity.

The majority opinion, authored by Judge Newman, states in part:

“Granting immunity to a defense witness at the defendant’s request seems to have been considered for the first time, in a reported decision, by Chief Justice Burger, then a Circuit Judge, as dictum in Earl v. United States, 361 F.2d 531 (D.C. Cir.1966) ... cert. denied, 388 U.S. 921 [87 S.Ct. 2121, 18 L.Ed.2d 1370].... Since then it has been much discussed by courts and commentators. Interest in defense witness immunity was considerably heightened after Congress enacted the ‘use’ immunity statute, 18 U.S.C. Secs.

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Related

State v. Lombard
501 So. 2d 889 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1987)
State v. Lombard
477 So. 2d 1115 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
471 So. 2d 782, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lombard-lactapp-1985.