State v. Ware
This text of 345 So. 2d 33 (State v. Ware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana
v.
Sylvester WARE.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*34 Mack Marsh, Davenport, Files, Kelly & Marsh, Monroe, for defendant-appellant.
William J. Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., Barbara Rutledge, Asst. Atty. Gen., J. Carl Parkerson, Dist. Atty., James A. Norris, Jr., Asst. Dist. Atty., for plaintiff-appellee.
CALOGERO, Justice.
Defendant Sylvester Ware was charged by bill of information with committing armed robbery in violation of R.S. 14:64. After trial, a jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged and defendant was sentenced to twenty-two years in the custody of the Department of Corrections, without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence. On this appeal, he relies upon six assignments of error for reversal of his conviction and sentence.
An armed robbery occurred at Barbara's Grocery located on Winnsboro Road in Monroe, Louisiana, on Saturday evening, March 6, 1976. At the time of the robbery, four persons were in the store preparing for a fish fry. Mr. James Mann, one of the owners of the store, and Mr. George Hunt were in the front of the store near the cash register, and Mrs. Barbara Mann and Mrs. Ethel Bass were in the rear of the store making preparations to fry fish.
Three black males then entered the store in a crouched position through the front door. Two of the males remained near the front of the store and one proceeded to the back of the store where he forced Mrs. Mann and Mrs. Bass to lie down on the floor, then proceeded back up to the front of the store where he struck Mr. Hunt on the head and took his wallet. One of the two robbers who stayed at the front of the store took all of the cash from the cash register and left, followed shortly thereafter by the remaining two robbers.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 1.
By this assignment defendant complains that the trial court erred in failing to sustain his motion to quash urged on the ground that the bill of information improperly charged him with committing two offenses in the same count, in violation of the joinder rules set forth in Title 13, Chapter 5 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The bill of information in pertinent part read as follows:
". . . Sylvester Ware . . . while armed with dangerous weapons, to wit: pistols, robbed Barbara Mann and George Hunt, contrary to the provisions of R.S. 14:64 . . ."
Defendant's motion to quash the bill of information contended that it was duplicitous in that it included two offenses in the same count. After a hearing, the trial judge denied defendant's motion to quash.
The state in brief concedes that recent amendments to Articles 493 and 495, the repeal of Articles 491 and 492, and the addition of Article 495.1, Code of Criminal Procedure (as per Act No. 528 of 1975) simply allow joining two or more offenses in the same indictment or bill of information in separate counts for each offense, not in a single count. However, they take the position that defendant here was charged not with two offenses, but with a single offense, an armed robbery of two victims, *35 the occurrence having been a single incident.
While defendant's arguments are not frivolous,[1] we find it unnecessary to discuss them at length in view of the fact that we have just recently decided this very legal issue adversely to defendant's position. In State v. Foe, 337 So.2d 491 (La. 1976), we reviewed an identical type of bill of information in which defendant was charged in one count with armed robbery "of Julia Kisiel and Bruno Kisiel," and we concluded that the state, while not required to do so, had opted to charge defendant with a single armed robbery of dual victims, in a circumstance where there was a single transaction involving identical time, place and partiesa single set of factsand that no prejudice could result under the circumstance. Our decision in State v. Foe, supra dictates that we find assignment of error number one non-meritorious.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 2.
In this assignment defendant contends that the trial court erred in refusing to order the state to furnish answers to a number of interrogatories in his bill of particulars.
The interrogatories which defendant asserts the state should have been compelled to answer are as follows:
# 3. What thing of value is the defendant alleged to have committed the theft of?
# 4. From what person was anything of value allegedly taken;
# 5. From the immediate control of what person was anything of value taken?
# 6. Do you contend that this defendant used force in the commission of this offense or is it alleged that this defendant used intimidation in the commission of this offense?
# 7. Describe specifically the dangerous weapon alleged to have been used in the commission of this offense?
The state in response to these interrogatories stated that defendant was not entitled to the information requested.
The state employed the short form bill of information in charging this armed robbery. It is, of course, true that the short form bill of information has withstood constitutional attack chiefly because of the requirement that, upon defendant's request for a bill of particulars, the state must inform him of the essential facts constituting the offense with which charged, including more specific facts if the offense may be committed in a number of different ways. State v. Mason, 305 So.2d 523 (La. 1974). The state therefore is compelled to provide defendant with sufficient information so that he may be informed of the nature and cause of the charge against him in order that he might better be able to prepare his defense and to meet the charges against him.
While we believe that he was entitled to be told what was the nature of the thing(s) he was accused of taking, what person or persons, is alleged to have been the victim, or victims, and whether he is charged with having taken something from the person(s) or from his (their) immediate control, we do not find error in this case in the state's refusal to respond to these questions in view of the fact that defendant was fully aware of each of these matters by virtue of the state's evidence and testimony presented at the preliminary examination attended by defendant and his attorney.
This assignment does not have merit.
*36 ASSIGNMENT OF ERRORS NOS. 3 AND 6.
Defendant moved to suppress as evidence at trial any in-court identification by Messrs. Mann and Hunt, two of the victims, for the alleged reasons that any such identification would necessarily be tainted by impermissibly suggestive photographic and inperson line-ups conducted on the same day the crime was committed and defendant was arrested. He also moved to suppress a pistol seized without a search warrant from the residence of one Edgar Simon.
Defendant's contentions with respect to the line-up are not borne out by the record. Each of them were conducted in a fair and proper manner free of suggestiveness of any character.
His contention that the pistol should not have been suppressed is likewise without merit. There was no search at Mr. Simon's residence. Rather Simon and his friend, sometimes apartment guest, Aaron Tolliver, simply assented to turning the pistol over to the deputy, led the deputy to the pistol (Tolliver did, with Simon's tendered apartment key), and turned it over to the deputy.
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