State v. Warren

89 N.W.2d 702, 252 Minn. 261, 1958 Minn. LEXIS 609
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 25, 1958
Docket37,253
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 89 N.W.2d 702 (State v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Warren, 89 N.W.2d 702, 252 Minn. 261, 1958 Minn. LEXIS 609 (Mich. 1958).

Opinions

[262]*262Murphy, Justice.

The defendant, Francis E. Warren, was convicted and sentenced on a charge of second-degree robbery as defined in M. S. A. 619.43. He was committed to the Minnesota state prison at Stillwater, Minnesota, at hard labor until duly released by operation of law or by act of the proper authorities. The maximum sentence provided by statute is a term of 15 years. The defendant appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The appeal raises two issues: (1) Whether the evidence at the trial sustained a verdict of guilty against the defendant; and (2) whether material evidence, newly discovered, which with reasonable diligence could not have been discovered and produced at trial, warranted a new trial in this case. Because of our determination of the second issue, it is not necessary for us to discuss the first.

The record shows that at 1:30 a. m. on July 4, 1956, David Wilson, the complaining witness, a 15-year-old boy, was found lying on the boulevard of a residential street in Moorhead, Minnesota. He was unconscious at the time and had a bruise in back of his ear. He was taken to a hospital and, soon after recovering consciousness, told police that some Indians had attacked him in a park and robbed him. Later he changed his story.

He testified that on the morning of July 3, 1956, he came to Moor-head with his folks, who resided on a nearby farm. He left his folks, intending to go to a show. He was supposed to contact his sister, who resided in Fargo, and ride back to the farm with her at about 5 p. m. In the interval between 9 a. m., when he left his folks, and noontime, he said that he walked over to Fargo and stopped at the swimming pool. He says that about 12:30 p. m. he met two Indian men in an automobile on the streets in Fargo, who invited him to go for a ride. He accepted and got in the front seat between them. The car was a 1940 Chevrolet, green with a brown top. He said he knew the driver of the car, having met him a month before with his father at a tavern at the trading town of Kragnes, Minnesota. This Indian, who was tall with a mustache, was well acquainted with his Uncle Ed, who operated a summer resort at Ponsford, Minnesota. He said the three of them drove about the city of Moorhead and the vicinity all afternoon, during [263]*263which time they stopped at the airport. At about 6 p. m. they pulled into a side road, and the two men began drinking beer. Although David was supposed to call his sister so as to go home with her about 5 p. m., he said nothing to the men about this, and at no time did he ask to be taken home or to get out of the car. It appears that the men had four or five 6-packs of beer, most of which they drank during the course of the afternoon and evening. At about 10:30 p. m. they parked the car on Highway No. 75 a short distance outside of the city of Moorhead and, while the Indians were drinking beer, one of them asked David if he had any money. He said he had $2, which the driver asked to borrow. The driver said he wanted the money for gasoline to get back to Ponsford. David refused and attempted to get out of the car. At that point Warren, the defendant, struck him with a club. He said he blacked out momentarily and, as he came to, he felt the driver of the car taking the $2 from his pocket. Later they drove back to Moorhead, stopping on a residential street. The driver told David that he would kill his Uncle Edward if he told anyone what had happened and ordered him to get out and lie on the boulevard. The men remained in the car parked in the street. After lying on the boulevard for 10 or 15 minutes, David raised his head and looked up. At this point he said Warren got out of the car and struck him again with the club. During the entire time he was with these men in the car, a period of 12 hours, neither he nor the men got out of the car.

David gave descriptions of the two men to the police officers. He described the driver in detail as a tall Indian with a mustache whom he had met a short time before at Kragnes, Minnesota. He had also met this Indian’s wife and mother. That during the visit he had with this particular Indian at Kragnes, his father was present and they discussed with him the subject of David’s Uncle Edward, who lived in the same area as the tall Indian who was acquainted with David’s uncle and had been at his resort. They discussed the subjects of hunting and fishing. He said that about the only conversation he had during the 12 hours he was with these two men during their journeyings in and about the environs of Moorhead had to do with his Uncle Ed and the subject of hunting and fishing. He had no conversation whatever with the defendant, whom he identified as the other passenger in the car. He [264]*264identified the defendant as being an Indian who wore a brown duckbill cap and high laced shoes.

The driver of the car was not apprehended, but on the basis of the description given by David, the defendant, Warren, was apprehended and brought to the hospital for identification by David. The defendant did not know he was being identified at the time. He was taken to the hospital where he stood in the hallway outside of the door to the room in which David was convalescing. He was placed in a position outside the door where David had an opportunity to view him through a crack between the hinges of the door, after which he informed the sheriff that the man who stood in the hallway was his assailant. This identification, with the statement which the defendant is supposed to have made before the policeman had told him the purpose of his arrest to the effect that he “didn’t slug anybody,” was considered sufficient to present an information charging the defendant with the offense of robbery in the second degree.

The defendant, an ex-serviceman with no previous record, denied knowing a tall, thin, mustached Indian. He said that he did not know of a green and brown 1940 Chevrolet and denied knowing David Wilson. He said that he had spent July 3rd drinking beer with friends in taverns in Moorhead. Two of his friends testified that they were drinking with him that day. No one saw David with the defendant, nor was there any testimony to implicate him outside of David’s story. On this evidence the defendant was found guilty by the jury.

After the trial the defendant’s attorney discovered a tall, thin, mustached Indian named Palmer Brunette. It is not disputed that Brunette could not have been located by the defense before the trial. Brunette admitted that he was acquainted with David’s uncle, Eddie Wilson, who operated the resort at Ponsford, that he lived in that vicinity, and that he was acquainted with David and his father, whom he had met at Kragnes a short time before. After Brunette was located, he was taken before David, who said that he was indeed the man he had seen before at the tavern at Kragnes but was not the particular Indian who drove the car on the day of the offense. On the basis of this newly discovered evidence, the defendant moved for a new trial.

The state’s case against the defendant was by no means impressive. [265]*265In spite of the attenuated character of the state’s proof, it was sufficient to present an issue to the jury, and, were it not for the impeaching character of the evidence presented in the motion for a new trial, we would say that it is not for this court to rationalize how the jury came to find one way when they could just as well have found to the contrary.

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State v. Warren
89 N.W.2d 702 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 N.W.2d 702, 252 Minn. 261, 1958 Minn. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-warren-minn-1958.