State v. Simms

471 P.2d 821, 3 Or. App. 153, 1970 Ore. App. LEXIS 489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 9, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 471 P.2d 821 (State v. Simms) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Simms, 471 P.2d 821, 3 Or. App. 153, 1970 Ore. App. LEXIS 489 (Or. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

BRANCHFIELD, J.

Defendant was indicted and tried on a charge of first degree felony murder. The jury found him guilty of manslaughter and he appeals. He charges that the trial court erred when it denied his motion for a new trial. That motion was based upon a claim of newly-discovered evidence, and the alleged suppression by the state of evidence favorable to the defendant.

*155 On April 2, 1968, defendant was driving his automobile around Portland. Also in the ear were a 12-year-old boy and two juvenile girls. About 5:30 p.m. the 12-year-old boy left the ear and snatched a purse from an elderly woman, Mrs. Marie Brandon, who was walking home from the Fred Meyer store on Union Avenue. The boy re-entered the car which defendant then drove to the Big C store. The boy and one of the girls left the car and entered the store. Shortly afterwards they came out. When a woman, later identified as Mrs. Alice Vannet, came from the store, the boy and girl re-entered the car, and the boy told defendant to folloAV the woman. When Mrs. Vannet reached her home, the 12-year-old boy and the girl again left the car, which waited for them Avith its motor running, and went up to the porch of the Vannet home. The boy and girl took Mrs. Vannet!s purse with such force that Mrs. Vannet fell from the porch. In falling, she struck her head on concrete, which caused her death. The boy and girl then re-entered the car Avhich promptly left the scene. There Avas currency amounting to $23 in the purse, which the boy divided among the four people in the car. In convicting defendant, the jury necessarily found that he knew of the theft from Mrs. Brandon and of the intention of the boy and girl to take Mrs. Vannet’s purse. Defendant denied knowledge of any intent to steal purses and contested other of the above facts. However, there Avas evidence in support of all the facts recited.

At the hearing on Ms motion for a new trial, the defendant made three contentions: First, that the 12-year-old boy had testified falsely concerning the theft of Mrs. Brandon’s purse. Secondly, the defendant contended that the state concealed a police report on the Brandon incident. Finally, he contended that the *156 state wilfully suppressed an oral statement made by Mrs. Brandon to the deputy district attorney that the 12-year-old boy was not her assailant.

Applications for a new trial based on newly-discovered evidence are viewed with disfavor and are strictly construed. The requirements which must be met before the trial court will allow a new trial are set out in State v. Truxall, 2 Or App 214, 467 P2d 646 (1970), and in State v. Williams, 2 Or App 367, 468 P2d 909 (1970), and need not be repeated here. The newly-discovered evidence which defendant claimed entitled him to a new trial consists of a statement taken from the 12-year-old boy after the trial in which he said he had testified falsely concerning the Brandon purse-snatch. The state countered by introducing a still-later written statement in which the boy swore that his trial testimony was true and correct in all details. The boy’s testimony throughout is shrouded in self-contradiction. It is apparent, as the trial court found, that the boy was quite capable of changing his story every time he told it. The statement obtained by the defendant is not the kind of evidence that would “probably change the result” if a new trial were granted. It was merely impeaching and contradictory of other evidence and was patently untrustworthy. See State v. Williams, supra, and State v. Johnson, 250 Or 599, 444 P2d 10 (1968).

Defendant’s post-trial claims with regard to the testimony of Mrs. Brandon and her alleged statement to the district attorney are based upon his lack of knowledge concerning what Mrs. Brandon had said prior to trial. Examination of her report to the police, her testimony and her post-trial statement conclusively demonstrate that she could not identify her assailant other than that he was a young Negro. Defendant had *157 an opportunity to and did cross-examine her. She was not asked at the trial to describe the boy who stole her purse, nor was she asked whether she had ever discussed the case with the deputy district attorney or any other representatives of the state of Oregon. Both of defendant’s attorneys are experienced trial lawyers. We can only speculate as to their tactical reason for failing to cross-examine Mrs. Brandon more extensively. Whatever the reason, it is apparent that the tactic was deliberately adopted. It was not error on the part of the attorneys to use their best judgment in determining the manner of cross-examination, nor was it error for the trial judge to deny them another trial in order to afford them an opportunity to follow a different course.

Entwined with his claim of newly-discovered evidence, defendant says that the state suppressed evidence favorable to him. This claim is based upon the failure of the state to produce the police report of the Brandon purse-snatch and upon the statement taken from Mrs. Brandon after the trial, in which her description of the person who took her purse varied from the appearance of the 12-year-old boy who admitted taking it.

Defendant’s motion for a new trial was supported by the affidavit of one of his attorneys. That affidavit recited the defendant’s version of the theft of the purse from Mrs. Brandon; it denied knowledge by the defendant of either of the purse thefts until after the 12-year-old boy returned to the car with Mrs. Vannet’s purse; it claimed that the Portland Police Department denied having a record of the theft of the Brandon purse; and it alleged that the deputy district attorney who tried the case had been told by Mrs. Brandon that the 12-year-old boy who testified *158 in this case could not be the person who stole her purse. Defendant claims that the state of Oregon thus had in its possession evidence vital to the defendant and material to his case, and that the prosecution, with knowledge of the material and crucial nature of this evidence, did not disclose it to the defense.

Defendant claims the suppression of the police report and the failure by the deputy district attorney to inform him of Mrs. Brandon’s statement that the boy who testified in this case could not have stolen her purse amount to a violation of defendant’s constitutional right to due process.

Our review of the constitutional question presented by the defendant is made difficult by two factors. One of these is the intermingling by defendant of two different theories upon which he based his claim for a new trial, with a shift in emphasis from “newly-discovered evidence” to “unconstitutional suppression of evidence” between the time the matter was argued in the trial court and briefed in this court. The other complication arises from a memorandum filed in the trial court by the state wherein the truthfulness and accuracy of the supporting affidavit of defendant’s counsel was admitted for the purpose of the motion for a new trial.

There was no dispute that Mrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cole v. Cupp
475 P.2d 428 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
471 P.2d 821, 3 Or. App. 153, 1970 Ore. App. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-simms-orctapp-1970.