United States v. Frances Slade

980 F.2d 27, 23 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20494, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 30888, 1992 WL 340665
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 24, 1992
Docket92-1176
StatusPublished
Cited by270 cases

This text of 980 F.2d 27 (United States v. Frances Slade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Frances Slade, 980 F.2d 27, 23 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20494, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 30888, 1992 WL 340665 (1st Cir. 1992).

Opinion

SELYA, Circuit Judge.

This appeal challenges the district court’s refusal to grant a new trial to a criminal defendant on the basis of evidence that the defendant claims was newly discovered. We affirm.

I

On October 4,1989, a jury found Frances Slade, a managerial employee of MacDonald & Watson Waste Oil Company (M & W), guilty of two counts of knowingly *29 causing a hazardous waste to be transported to an unpermitted facility in violation of section 3008(d)(1) of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), 42 U.S.C. § 6928(d)(1) (1988). On appeal, we affirmed the convictions of several defendants (including Slade) whilst vacating the convictions of Eugene D’Allesandro (M & W’s president) and Narragansett Improvement Company (holder of the RCRA permit under which M & W operated in Rhode Island). See United States v. MacDonald & Watson Waste Oil Co., 933 F.2d 35 (1st Cir.1991).

Phillip Lavigne, the former manager of M & W’s Boston office, did not testify at the original trial. During D’Allesandro’s retrial, however, the government called La-vigne as a witness. In the course of his testimony, Lavigne recounted the substance of certain conversations in which he and Slade had participated. These conversations related to the events underlying Slade’s conviction. 1 On December 11, 1991, Slade moved for a new trial, citing this testimony as newly discovered evidence.

The district court concluded that the evidence in question “consisted] of facts that were clearly known to [Slade] at the time of [her] trial.” Hence, it denied relief. This appeal followed.

II

Freshly discovered evidence is sufficiently sturdy to warrant a new trial in a criminal case only if (1) the evidence was unknown or unavailable to the defendant at the time of trial; (2) the failure to learn of it was not a result of the defendant’s poor diligence; (3) the new evidence is material; and (4) the impact of the new evidence is so strong that an acquittal would probably result upon retrial. See United States v. Natanel, 938 F.2d 302, 313 (1st Cir.1991), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 112 S.Ct. 986, 117 L.Ed.2d 148.(1992); United States v. Martin, 815 F.2d 818, 824 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 825, 108 S.Ct. 89, 98 L.Ed.2d 51 (1987); United States v. Wright, 625 F.2d 1017, 1019 (1st Cir.1980). The defendant must shoulder the burden of establishing each facet of the four-part test. See Natanel, 938 F.2d at 313; Wright, 625 F.2d at 1019.

Because the district court is usually in a much better position to judge the credibility of the witnesses and to assess the highly nuanced relationship between the purported new evidence, and what previously transpired at trial, we treat the district court’s handling of such motions with considerable deference. Consequently, we will reverse a denial of á motion for new trial premised on newly discovered evidence only for manifest abuse of the district court’s informed discretion. See Natanel, 938 F.2d at 313.

Ill

It would serve no useful purpose to rehearse the factual predicate on which Slade’s conviction rests. For one thing, we have already discussed those facts at some length. See MacDonald & Watson, 933 F.2d at. 39-40. For another thing, our resolution of this appeal hinges not so much on the factual framework as it does on the procedural posture of the appeal.

A

The hazardous waste that was allegedly brought to an improper facility at Slade’s direction consisted of contaminated soil from the so-called Master Chemical property. At D’Allesandro’s second trial, La-vigne testified that Slade “explicitly informed the heads of MacDonald & Watson’s Boston and Rhode Island offices that MacDonald & Watson could not accept the soil from the Master Chemical site.... ” In her motion for a new trial, Slade posited this bit of testimony as new evidence. She hypothesized that, by using Lavigne’s testimony to show that she had, on earlier occasions, rejected samples from the Master Chemical site, she would have undermined the prosecution’s theory that she knowingly permitted the illegal dumping. Although acknowledging that a person’s *30 own conversations can rarely constitute “new” evidence, Slade argued that these particular conversations were the exception that proved the rule because she “did not remember speaking to ... Lavigne at any time regarding the chemical analysis for the Master Chemical cleanup....”

The district court declined to buy what Slade was selling. It denied her motion on the ground that Slade could not satisfy the first prong of the four-part test. The court based this ruling on its finding that the facts to which Lavigne testified were clearly known to Slade at the time of her trial.

B

On appeal, Slade recasts Lavigne’s testimony, this time highlighting different aspects. She argues that the nascent fact is Lavigne’s statement that soil samples marked “CDM Dorchester” were in fact samples from the Master Chemical site. Slade now concedes that she did not forget about the conversations in which she rejected the Master Chemical soil samples, but says that she never knew the soil was from the Master Chemical site. 2 Although Slade’s presentation below and her presentation before us involve the testimony of the same witness, the similarity ends there. The two contentions — one about ‘certain conversations and the other about the marking of soil samples — pull from that testimony distinctly different factual threads and weave them into different legal patterns. We cannot countenance this sort of asseverational embroidery.

As a general rule, appellate litigators should winnow their stable of legal arguments, retaining their most effective claims and putting unpromising claims to pasture before seeking appellate review. This rule does not mean, however, that litigants remain free to shift horses in midstream. Here, Slade attempted just such an interstitial feat. Following the district court’s denial of her motion for a new trial, she apparently reassessed the field, decided her old argument was lame, 3 and now seeks to ride a fresh mount in a new direction. Her attempt fails.

It is a bedrock rule that when a party has not presented an argument to the district court, she may not unveil it in the court of appeals. See, e.g., Hernandez-Hernandez v. United States,

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980 F.2d 27, 23 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20494, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 30888, 1992 WL 340665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-frances-slade-ca1-1992.