State v. Teves

679 P.2d 136, 5 Haw. App. 90, 1984 Haw. App. LEXIS 57
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 1984
DocketAPPEAL NO. 9060; CRIMINAL NO. 2501
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 679 P.2d 136 (State v. Teves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Teves, 679 P.2d 136, 5 Haw. App. 90, 1984 Haw. App. LEXIS 57 (hawapp 1984).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

BURNS, C. J.

Defendant-appellant John L. Teves, Jr. (Teves), was convicted of seven counts: two counts of attempted robbery in the first degree in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) §§ 705-500 and 708-840(b)(ii); two counts of kidnapping in violation of HRS § 707-720(l)(d); two counts of sexual abuse in the first degree in violation of HRS § 707-736(l)(a); and one count of rape in the first degree in violation of HRS § 707-730(1 )(a)(i).

Teves argues four points on appeal: (1) that he had an unqualified right to be told by the State about the progress and results of tests conducted with respect to pubic hair samples, tire castings, and fingerprint evidence; (2) that the lower court erred in admitting into evidence the complaining witnesses’ identification of him as their assailant at the photographic line-up and in court; (3) that the State should have given him advance notice of its intent to call Arthur Myer as one of its rebuttal witnesses; and (4) that the lower court erred in denying his motion for new trial.

*91 We find no merit in points 1, 2, and 3. We find some merit in point 4.

Teves’s motion for new trial, made pursuant to Rule 33, Hawaii Rules of Penal Procedure (HRPP), 1 was based on the uncontro-verted allegation that one of the prosecution’s rebuttal witnesses gave false testimony. We set aside the denial of the motion and remand for its reconsideration under the test announced in this case.

At approximately 1:15 p.m., on March 16, 1982, on Kauai, two women were sexually assaulted by a lone male. They stated that the assailant carried a machete, wore sunglasses, and had a. yellow T-shirt tied around his head. The police were promptly notified, and upon their arrival, they were informed by the women that immediately prior to the incident they saw two men in a pickup truck. The truck was described by one of the women as a green pickup with a gun rack on the back window. However, upon being returned to the scene of the incident and seeing a similar brown truck owned by the police, both women stated that the pickup they saw immediately prior to the incident was brown, not green.

Later that evening, Teves told the police that he had been in the area from 7:30 a.m. to a little past 10:30 a.m. with Jonathan Reis (Reis). They had ridden in Reis’s brown pickup truck which was pulling a horse trailer. Teves denied seeing the women’s black car but admitted seeing “one van — somebody had chop the back — the guy was picking fern, one haole guy.” The driver of a 1964 Dodge A100 Van Pickup, Robert Figg, testified at trial that on the *92 day of the incident he was in the area picking ferns, but did hot arrive in the area until after 1:00 p.m.

Initially, Reis corroborated Teves’s story. However, on March 19, 1982, Reis recanted and told the police the story he eventually testified to at trial.

Reis testified that at approximately 9:00 a.m. on March 16, 1982, he drove his father’s brown 1981 Ford pickup truck, pulling a horse trailer containing two horses, into the area of the incident to look for Reis’s lost hunting dog. Teves accompanied him. They returned to Reis’s house at about noon. After a meal, they left the horse trailer at home, went to a store to pick up meat scraps, and then returned to the area of the incident. They drove to a hunter’s check-in station and then turned around and headed back toward Kapaa. At a river crossing, they passed two women standing by a car. After driving on a short distance, they stopped. Reis took the meat scraps and walked up the Kuilau trail while Teves remained in the pickup. When Reis returned, Teves was not in sight. Reis drove slowly toward Kapaa for a mile or so then turned around and headed back. A short time later, he saw Teves running toward him. Teves was carrying two shirts, a machete, and dark glasses. When Reis asked him where he had been, Teves in essence stated that he held up the two women, disrobed them, threw their clothes and car keys in the river, and had sexual intercourse with one of them. When Reis got home that afternoon, he told his friend and house guest Carl Kaui what had happened.

Kaui testified that later that day he went to Teves’s house and asked Teves, “What you did to that [sic] girls?” and Teves responded in a kind of bragging tone, “You don’t know what I did to the girls.” When Kaui mentioned that the police had been asking questions, Teves responded, in Kaui’s words, that “if he got to serve his time, he going to serve.”

On March 18, 1982, the police conducted a six-person photo line-up and both women identified Teves as their assailant. At trial, both identified Teves as their assailant.

Teves’s defense was that (1) he had an alibi and (2) a man named Fred Farias was a more appropriate suspect. Teves introduced evidence that he and Reis’s father’s pickup were both at home at the time of the incident; that Reis’s father’s pickup does not have a gun rack on the back window and that it has pipe *93 framing over its bed; that Farias’s father has a green 1976 Chevrolet pickup truck, with a gun rack attached to the back window; that Farias matched the description given by the women; that Farias had previously been in trouble with the law; that an anonymous caller to Teves’s home implicated Farias; that Reis and Kaui have reputations for untruthfulness; and that Reis wanted to curry favor with the prosecution because on March 22, 1982 Reis’s father was going to trial on Kauai for attempted murder.

On rebuttal, one of the women testified that Farias was not her assailant, and then Farias’s father, Arthur Myer, testified on direct examination as follows:

Q. Where do you work, Mr. Myer?
A. Locally, Hawaiian Dredge.
Q. Do you use this truck for your work?
A. Right.
Q. Every day?
A. Every day.
Q. On March 16, a Tuesday, 1982, where was this truck between 8:00 and 4:30? Do you know?
A. Well, I work every day, so I use the truck every day to go to work because I have no transportation to go back and forth.
Q. Were there any days that you were sick from work so that the truck would have been home available to someone other than yourself?
A. No.

On cross examination, he testified as follows:

Q. On March 16, on what area of Nawiliwili were you laying pipes?
A. Right in the parking lot.
Q. What time did you have lunch that day?
A. 11:00.
Q.

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Bluebook (online)
679 P.2d 136, 5 Haw. App. 90, 1984 Haw. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-teves-hawapp-1984.