Swift v. People

465 P.2d 391, 171 Colo. 178, 1970 Colo. LEXIS 652
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 24, 1970
Docket23207
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 465 P.2d 391 (Swift v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swift v. People, 465 P.2d 391, 171 Colo. 178, 1970 Colo. LEXIS 652 (Colo. 1970).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice McWilliams.

One Willie Howard ¡Swift, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was convicted by a jury of the crime of assault with the intent to murder (C.R.S. 1963, 40-2-34) and immediately thereafter the same jury in a separate proceeding determined that he had also suffered three prior felony convictions. Based' on these verdicts the defendant was then sentenced under the Habitual Criminal Act (C.R.S. 1963, 39-13-1) to a life term in the state penitentiary. By this writ of error the defendant on a wide variety of grounds seeks reversal of the judgment and sentence thus entered.

Brief reference to the evidence adduced by the People upon trial is deemed helpful to an understanding of the controversy. It should be noted the defendant at trial elected to exercise one of his many constitutional rights and did not testify nor was any evidence offered in his behalf. This he is of course entitled to do under the constitutions of both the United States and Colorado. However, in so doing the defendant is in no position to *181 thereafter complain if the jury draws inferences from the People’s evidence which are unfavorable to him. Schamber v. People, 159 Colo. 102, 410 P.2d 514.

At aboiit 3 o’clock on a September morn several Colorado Springs police officers were sent to investigate the report of a suspicious party in an inimproved area of open land at and near 25th Street and its intersection with Fountain Creek in El Paso County. Officers Caldwell and Stratton were the principal witnesses against the defendant. They testified that after surveying the scene at and near the intersection of 25th Street and Fountain Creek for several minutes they espied the silhouette of a person who then “jumped up and started to run.” The officers said that they shouted “hold it” to the fleeing figure and that the only response to their admonition was a series of shots directed at the aforesaid police officers. Both police officers testified that they saw “flames” from the weapon fired at them; that the flames had a horizontal trajectory; and that the person firing at them was some thirty to thirty-five feet away from them. One officer stated that the “white flash looked like it was aimed right for me — like a big arm reaching out and trying to get hold of me....” The officers returned fire and Officer Stratton felled the fleeing person with one shot.

Moments later these same officers came upon the person of the defendant lying on the ground in an unconscious condition with a gun containing five empty cartridges located within two to three feet from him. A subsequent search of the area revealed a very recently stolen safe, a sledgehammer and crowbar lying adjacent thereto with a chisel stuck in the door of the safe and the handle lying on the ground. This was substantially all of the evidence produced by the district attorney in connection with the substantive charge of assault to murder. Evidence relating to the habitual criminal charge will be reserved for later comment.

The defendant contends that the evidence is *182 legally insufficient to support a conviction for the crime of assault with intent to murder in that there was no evidence thát this defendant had a specific intent to murder either Caldwell or Stafford. Relating to this matter of specific intent, it is also contended that the trial court erred in refusing to give the jury the particular form of instruction on specific intent tendered by the defendant. This entire line of argument we regard to be without merit. In our view the evidence does show, prima facie, and intent on the part of the defendant to murder both Caldwell and Stratton. Moreover, instruction No. 12 concerning specific intent which was given the jury does meet the requirements of Armijo v. People, 157 Colo. 217, 402 P.2d 79. The reasoning of counsel that the failure of the district attorney to produce a spent bullet suggests that the defendant was perhaps firing blanks or at the best only firing warning shots in the air is rejected as too finely spun and not supported by the record.

Error is also predicated on the ruling by the trial court that the testimony regarding the finding of the safe constituted admissible evidence. We perceive no error in this regard. Evidence which tends to establish motive or intent is not rendered inadmissible merely because it may tend to show commission by the accused of a crime different from the one with which he is charged. Bell v. People, 158 Colo. 146, 406 P.2d 681. Certainly it could be reasonably inferred from this evidence that the defendant was not simply firing shots into the air but was firing at the officers in an effort to avoid detection and arrest for the theft of the safe.

Counsel also argues that the trial court abused its discretion in overruling defendant’s request that the jury be sequestered during the trial and in refusing to permit the jury to make a personal inspection of the scene of the crime. Suffice it to say that we find no abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court in denying these two requests. In connection therewith see Feldstein v. *183 People, 159 Colo. 107, 410 P.2d 188 and Day v. People, 152 Colo. 152, 381 P.2d 10. And the contention that the closing argument of the district attorney was improper and requires reversal is also without substance. Indeed the particular argument of the district attorney to which the defendant takes umbrage seems to us to be surprisingly mild.

Complaint is also made by the defendant concerning the habitual criminal proceedings. In this connection the district attorney offered authenticated copies (as opposed to certified copies) of the record of two former convictions in New Mexico and one in Colorado. Coppinger v. People, 152 Colo. 9, 380 P.2d 19. Additionally, the custodian of records at both the New Mexico state penitentiary and the Colorado state penitentiary testified and each identified the defendant as having been received in connection with the aforementioned convictions at the aforesaid institutions on the dates in question. Further, pursuant to C.R.S. 1963, 52-1-1 the district attorney “read” into the record certain statutes from the printed statute books of New Mexico. The district attorney also “introduced” into evidence certain Colorado statutes. Reference to the statutes of both New Mexico and Colorado was for the purpose of showing that defendant’s prior convictions were felony convictions, as opposed to misdemeanors.

It was on such evidence that the jury returned verdicts that the defendant had suffered three prior felony convictions. Certainly the evidence is amply sufficient to sustain these several determinations.

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Related

People ex rel. Faulk v. District Court ex rel. County of Fremont
673 P.2d 998 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1983)
People v. Gladney
570 P.2d 231 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1977)
People v. Favors
556 P.2d 72 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1976)
Swift v. People
488 P.2d 80 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
465 P.2d 391, 171 Colo. 178, 1970 Colo. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swift-v-people-colo-1970.