State v. White

729 A.2d 31, 158 N.J. 230, 1999 N.J. LEXIS 665
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 26, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 729 A.2d 31 (State v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. White, 729 A.2d 31, 158 N.J. 230, 1999 N.J. LEXIS 665 (N.J. 1999).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

HANDLER, J.

The defendant in this ease was convicted on charges arising from an armed robbery and assault committed by several persons. Prior to trial, one of the perpetrators confessed to participating in the crimes and contemporaneously stated that the defendant was not involved. At trial, portions of the perpetrator’s confession *233 exculpating the defendant from the crime were excluded from evidence, while the balance of the confession, which directly incriminated the declarant, was admitted. The Appellate Division affirmed the defendant’s conviction. We granted certification. 153 N.J. 217, 708 A.2d 68 (1998).

We consider the main issue on appeal to be whether portions of an incriminating statement by a declarant that exculpate the defendant constitute admissible statements against interest. Closely related to that issue, and the basis for the Appellate Division’s holding, is whether omission of the exculpatory evidence in this case, if error, was capable of producing an unjust result.

I

As. Terrence Morris was returning from work early in the morning of September 24, 1994, he walked by a group of men whom he recognized from the neighborhood, having passed them nightly on his way home. Several of the men approached Morris, then assaulted and robbed him. One placed Morris in a choke-hold from the rear. Another put a silver gun in Morris’s face and struck him across the nose with it. A third went through Morris’s pockets. Morris faced his assailants as they prepared to leave and asked, “why?” The man wielding the handgun struck Morris again in the eye.

Morris called the police. Officers Timothy Legowski and James Hatter of the Jersey City Police Department responded shortly after six o’clock in the morning, and Morris told them of the assault and robbery. With Morris in the back of the squad car, the officers searched the immediate neighborhood. When Morris recognized his attackers within a group of six or seven men in front of a house on Bramhall Avenue, Legowski and Hatter stopped the car and pursued members of the dispersing crowd.

The officers found defendant Randolph White hiding in a nearby lot. Morris identified White as the man who had choked him. Frank Williams and another, Sharone Smith, were discovered under the porch of a neighboring house; a silver gun was nearby. *234 Morris identified the gun as the one used in the robbery, and recognized Williams as the gun carrier, but was unable to identify Smith. Consequently, White and Williams were arrested. Smith was released.

On November 29,1995, prior to trial but more than a year after the crime, Sharone Smith confessed his involvement in the Morris robbery. Smith initially gave an oral statement, which was memorialized in writing and signed by Smith the same evening. At the time Smith made the statement, he was incarcerated at Kearny Correctional Institution, having pled guilty in May of 1995 to an aggravated assault that had occurred roughly two weeks before the robbery of Morris. Smith not only admitted his own participation in the robbery and assault of Morris, he also stated that White had nothing to do with the crime and that Morris’s identification of White as one of the assailants was a mistake. Smith acknowledged that he was making the statement “because Randolph [White] shouldn’t get in trouble for something he did not do.”

Randolph White and Frank Williams were tried together. The State’s case relied on testimony by the victim and the police officers involved that was inconsistent in many respects. In court, Morris said he passed “three, maybe four” men standing on a porch; Officer Legowski testified, however, that Morris told him that he had seen six or seven men on the porch. Testimony also differed as to the number of men who actually assaulted Morris: “About three” was Morris’s testimony at trial. Officer Legowski, who responded to Morris’s call for help, testified that Morris told him that he was attacked by “approximately six” men. A defense investigator who spoke with Morris within two weeks of trial testified that Morris told him “he was robbed by two people.” Morris also seemed uncertain about what had been stolen. At trial, he claimed twenty dollars were taken, along with a shoulder bag containing work clothes and an additional sixty dollars. Officer Legowski testified both at trial and in a pre-trial hearing that Morris told him the assailants took sixty-seven dollars. Morris’s *235 identification testimony of White and Williams fluctuated as well. Morris initially identified White as the choker and Williams as the gunman, and confirmed this identification at the holding cell. At trial, however, Morris recalled that Williams had placed him in a choke-hold while White threatened and beat him with the gun.

White presented an alibi in defense. Defendant claimed that he and three friends drove to Brooklyn from Jersey City to buy marijuana on the morning of the crime and returned between six and six-thirty in the morning. On their return, they parked the car and began walking toward White’s aunt’s house when they were approached by Williams, who was coming from his girlfriend’s home. They then encountered acquaintances Sharone Smith and Tavonne McMillan. Smith and McMillan, White testified, were bragging about the robbery they had just committed. Shortly thereafter, the police drove by with Morris. Defendant claimed he ran upon seeing the police because he was carrying marijuana. He alleged that he was detained by the police, not because Morris identified him, but because he was carrying drugs. White’s account was corroborated by David Stackhouse and Gar-dell Price, two of the men who allegedly accompanied defendant to New York. (The other man, whom defendant, Stackhouse, and Price all identified as Abdul Webster, did not testify.)

Defendant sought to further substantiate his account by introducing the confession made by Sharone Smith. Because Sharone Smith did not testify at trial, having invoked the privilege against self-incrimination, White presented Smith’s written statement through Gerald Robbins, the investigator retained by the defense who obtained the statement from Smith on November 29, 1995. Smith’s statement and the investigator’s testimony regarding that statement were hearsay, and were offered as a declaration against penal interest. The court admitted only those portions of Smith’s written and oral statements that explained Smith’s own involvement in the robbery and assault. 1 The court barred those por *236 tions of the statement that explicitly disclaimed White’s involvement in the crime, including Smith’s explanation that defendant “had just come back from New York and he had nothing at all to do with the robbery. He was just picked up by the police because he ran.” 2 The court viewed the admitted portions as “the nucleus *237 of [the] inculpating statement,” and reasoned that “all other things” in the statement were “superfluous.”

At the conclusion of trial, the jury found White and Williams each guilty of one count of armed robbery,

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

Related

Dcpp v. K.A. and J.M., in the Matter of the Guardianship of R.a-m.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
State of New Jersey v. Hosea R. Jackson
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
State of New Jersey v. Andrew Pena
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Dcpp v. L.H. and D.G., in the Matter of F.H.-g.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
D.E.H. v. B.W.M.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
Dcpp v. D.B. and D.H., in the Matter of S.B.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2023

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
729 A.2d 31, 158 N.J. 230, 1999 N.J. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-white-nj-1999.