State v. Stevens

CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 2015
DocketS-14-036
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Stevens (State v. Stevens) 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. Stevens, (Neb. 2015).

Opinion

Nebraska Advance Sheets 460 290 NEBRASKA REPORTS

State of Nebraska, appellee, v. Malique A. Stevens, appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed March 27, 2015. No. S-14-036.

1. Courts: Juvenile Courts: Jurisdiction. In determining whether a case should be transferred to juvenile court, a court should consider those factors set forth in Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-276 (Cum. Supp. 2012). In order to retain the proceed- ings, the court need not resolve every factor against the juvenile, and there are no weighted factors and no prescribed method by which more or less weight is assigned to a specific factor. It is a balancing test by which public protection and societal security are weighed against the practical and nonproblematical rehabili- tation of the juvenile. 2. Courts: Juvenile Courts: Jurisdiction: Evidence. When a district court’s basis for retaining jurisdiction over a juvenile is supported by appropriate evidence, it cannot be said that the court abused its discretion in refusing to transfer the case to juvenile court. 3. Trial: Joinder. There is no constitutional right to a separate trial. Instead, the right is statutory and depends upon a showing that prejudice will result from a joint trial. 4. Trial: Joinder: Proof: Appeal and Error. The burden is on the party chal- lenging a joint trial to demonstrate how and in what manner he or she was prejudiced. 5. Trial: Joinder: Appeal and Error. A trial court’s ruling on a motion for consoli- dation of prosecutions properly joinable will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion. 6. Trial: Joinder: Indictments and Informations. The propriety of a joint trial involves two questions: whether the consolidation is proper because the defendants could have been joined in the same indictment or information, and whether there was a right to severance because the defendants or the State would be prejudiced by an otherwise proper consolidation of the prosecutions for trial. 7. Trial: Joinder: Jurisdiction. A court should grant a severance only if there is a serious risk that a joint trial could compromise a specific trial right of one of the defendants, or prevent the jury from making a reliable judgment about guilt or innocence. Prejudice serious enough to meet this standard may occur when evi- dence that the jury should not consider against a defendant and that would not be admissible against a defendant if a defendant were tried alone is admitted against a codefendant, when many defendants are tried together in a complex case and they have markedly different degrees of culpability, when essential exculpatory evidence that would be available to a defendant tried alone would be unavailable in a joint trial, or in other situations. 8. Trial: Joinder: Proof. To prevail on a severance argument, a defendant must show compelling, specific, and actual prejudice from the court’s refusal to grant the motion to sever. Nebraska Advance Sheets STATE v. STEVENS 461 Cite as 290 Neb. 460

9. Pleadings: Parties: Judgments: Appeal and Error. On appeal, a denial of a motion to sever will not be reversed unless clear prejudice and an abuse of discre- tion are shown. 10. Rules of Evidence: Appeal and Error. When the Nebraska Evidence Rules commit the evidentiary question at issue to the discretion of the trial court, an appellate court reviews the admissibility of evidence for an abuse of discretion. 11. Witnesses: Impeachment. Generally, the credibility of a witness may be attacked by any party, including the party who called the witness. 12. ____: ____. One means of attacking the credibility of a witness is by showing inconsistency between his or her testimony at trial and what he or she said on previous occasions. The trial court has considerable discretion in determining whether testimony is inconsistent with prior statements. 13. ____: ____. As a general rule, a witness makes an inconsistent or contradictory statement if he or she refuses to either deny or affirm that he or she did, or if he or she answers that he or she does not remember whether or not he or she made it. 14. Evidence: Hearsay. It is elementary that out-of-court statements offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted are hearsay. Thus, prior extrajudicial statements of a witness may be received into evidence for the purpose of assisting the jury in ascertaining the credibility of the witness, but unless they are otherwise admis- sible, they may not be considered as substantive evidence of the facts declared in the statements. 15. Witnesses: Impeachment. A party cannot impeach his or her own witness with- out limitation. 16. Witnesses: Impeachment: Prior Statements: Juries. The rule permitting a party to impeach his or her own witness may not be used as an artifice by which inadmissible matter may be gotten to the jury through the device of offering a witness whose testimony is or should be known to be adverse in order, under the name of impeachment, to get before the jury for its consideration a favorable ex parte statement the witness had made. 17. Witnesses: Impeachment: Prior Statements: Case Disapproved. A party’s impeachment of its own witness under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-607 (Reissue 2008) with a prior inconsistent statement is not necessarily dependent upon a showing that the trial testimony sought to be impeached caused affirmative damage to the party’s case. To the extent that State v. Brehmer, 211 Neb. 29, 317 N.W.2d 885 (1982), and State v. Marco, 220 Neb. 96, 368 N.W.2d 470 (1985), can be read to hold otherwise, they are disapproved. 18. Sentences: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will not disturb sentences that are within statutory limits, unless the district court abused its discretion in estab- lishing the sentences. 19. Sentences. When imposing a sentence, the sentencing judge should consider the defendant’s (1) age, (2) mentality, (3) education and experience, (4) social and cultural background, (5) past criminal record or record of law-abiding conduct, and (6) motivation for the offense, as well as (7) the nature of the offense and (8) the violence involved in the commission of the offense. The sentencing court is not limited to any mathematically applied set of factors. Nebraska Advance Sheets 462 290 NEBRASKA REPORTS

20. ____. The appropriateness of a sentence is necessarily a subjective judgment and includes the sentencing judge’s observation of the defendant’s demeanor and attitude and all the facts and circumstances surrounding the defendant’s life.

Appeal from the District Court for Lancaster County: Jodi Nelson, Judge. Affirmed. Matthew K. Kosmicki for appellant. Jon Bruning, Attorney General, and Melissa R. Vincent for appellee. Heavican, C.J., Wright, Connolly, Stephan, McCormack, Miller-Lerman, and Cassel, JJ. Stephan, J. After a jury trial, Malique A. Stevens was convicted of robbery and sentenced to 6 to 10 years’ imprisonment. A c­odefendant, Alfredo V. Dominguez, was tried with Stevens and convicted of the same crime. In this appeal, Stevens chal- lenges various procedural and evidentiary rulings. We find no merit in any of his assignments of error and therefore affirm his conviction and sentence. BACKGROUND On the evening of December 3, 2012, Janelle Yaunk parked her car in the lot of an apartment complex in north Lincoln, Nebraska, where a friend resided. As she walked toward the entrance of the building, she was approached by a young man who displayed a gun. Two other young men soon joined him. All three wore hoods over their heads and foreheads, and the rest of their faces, except their eyes, were covered with bandannas.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Stevens, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stevens-neb-2015.