Green v. State, 6828

Decision Date07 September 1966
Docket NumberNo. 6828,6828
Citation190 So.2d 42
PartiesHenry GREEN, Jr., Appellant, v. STATE of Florida, Appellee.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals

Robert E. Jagger, Public Defender, and Robert E. Pyle, Asst. Public Defender, Clearwater, for appellant.

Earl Faircloth, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and William D. Roth, Asst. Atty. Gen., Lakeland, for appellee.

PIERCE, Judge.

This is an appeal by Henry Green, Jr., from a judgment of conviction entered against him upon a jury verdict finding him guilty under an information filed in the Pinellas County Circuit Court charging him with robbery at gun point of one Hiram Sharp.

From the judgment and sentence imposed defendant Green assigns numerous errors, only one of which deserves serious consideration, namely, the propriety of allowing the testimony of a State witness, Allie Mae Smith, to go to the jury over objection of defendant.

The robbery occurred on November 13th, 1964, at about 7 o'clock P.M. at the Seven-Eleven Food Store, located on 78th Avenue in St. Petersburg. The Assistant Manager of the store, Hiram C. Sharp, Jr., was sweeping up in the aisle of the store with his back to the front entrance, when two colored men came in, walked up behind him, and asked him if he had any beer. Sharp straightened up and indicated where the beverage could be found in the store, at which time one of the colored men stuck a gun in his back and said 'this is a stickup, I don't want any trouble, I will blow your head off'. Sharp then proceeded to turn over the contents of the cash register and a small safe on the floor to the men, amounting to a little over $214.00. The men thereupon turned around and walked out of the store side by side and disappeared. At the time they entered no one else was inside the store except Sharp, but while they were inside and before they left a customer, James S. Wegner, entered and after walking around the store noticed Henry Green standing at the end of the counter looking out in front of the store. He then noticed the other negro standing at the cash register with Mr. Sharp. Immediately afterward, when he went to pay his bill, Wegner saw the cash registers were open and then ascertained, in conversation with Sharp, that the robbery had just occurred. The two negroes had just left the store. Wegner positively identified the defendant Henry Green as being the negro who had been watching out the front door. 1

Allie Mae Smith, a 16 year old girl, who had known Henry Green for about five years, went to see Green at the County Jail while he was awaiting trial, and had a short conversation with him. Her occupancy of the witness stand was punctuated by repeated objections and arguments between counsel and continual haranguing and coloquys between counsel and the Court, all of which tended to incredibly slow up the pace of the trial, and has rendered difficult a coherent reading of what actually took place. She was brought on as a witness to narrate the substance of her conversation with Green at the jail, and ostensibly to quote statements from Green that would implicate him in the Seven-Eleven robbery upon which he was on trial.

But after all the clashes and acrimony of counsel and indulgences of the Court that marked her tenure as a witness, and the fragmentary shambles of her testimony could be analyzed, all that had been accomplished was to infect an otherwise orderly criminal prosecution with fatal error. The substance of her testimony, as gleaned from the morass of extra-testimonial bickerings attendant upon the proceedings, was that she had read a newspaper article in the Clearwater Sun 'about Henry Green * * * about money being stolen * * * from the Seven-Eleven'.

The following excerpts from the record refer to the conversation:

'Q Who was present when you were talking to Henry?

A No one.

Q Just the two of you?

A Yes.

Q All right, what did you say to him and what did he say to you?

A Well, I asked him where did he go. He said he went to Miami or Georgia, one of them. And I asked him how did he get there. He said with Leroy in the white Oldsmobile. And I told him people out where I live was accusing me of being with them when that happened.

Q When what happened?

A When he was being accused of money being stolen.

Q All right, what did he say?

A He said that he was going to punish them, or something like that. Made some kind of remark.

Q All right, go ahead. What else did you talk about? Did you him anything about the money?

A That's all I know.'

The newspaper article in question was never introduced or offered in evidence, it was not otherwise identified, and the contents of the article were not otherwise disclosed except as aforesaid. Allie Mae did not have the article with her when she was at the jail or at the trial, although she had been interrogated by the prosecutors just prior to trial. It is obvious from her testimony that both the news article itself and her conversation with Green at the jail related to a robbery of A Seven-Eleven Store with money being taken. It is equally obvious, however, that the robbery was never identified as This particular robbery for which Green was on trial. The trial Judge, after such testimony was already in, apparently decided to strike Allie Mae's testimony, observing that-- '* * * after having thought about this particular case that is before me I would have to strike all the testimony of Allie Mae Smith, because it is my opinion that I should strike it and so inform the jury. * * * It is my opinion, though, that it would be actually harmful error with the mistake that I had made, 2 and it is my further opinion that Allie Mae Smith's testimony when I think about it, most of it is immaterial. In fact, in my opinion all of it is immaterial, and it is almost impossible to pick out what is not and what is material. In fact it is my opinion that most of it is immaterial. Therefore I would grant the motion for a directed verdict at this time based on the case as it now appears.'

However, during the ensuing wrandling of counsel, with the Court participating therein, the Judge apparently changed his mind and, after letting the prosecutor put Allie Mae back on the witness stand but adducing nothing additional from her of any consequence, denied successive motions to strike the various portions of her testimony. The case then went to the jury, resulting in the verdict of guilty as aforesaid.

For decades in Florida--in fact since 1886 3--convictions have been reversed because of admission of evidence of other offenses wholly independent of the case being tried. Such evidence must be excluded if it has no direct bearing in proof of the instant case and where the only probative value is to prove or tend to prove a wholly extraneous offense. Hooper v. State, Fla.App.1959, 115 So.2d 769; Hartman v. State, 1936, 121 Fla. 627, 164 So. 354; Rhodes v. State, 1932, 104 Fla. 520, 140 So. 309; West v. State, 1939, 140 Fla. 421, 191 So. 771; Adams v. State, 1943, 153 Fla. 68, 13 So.2d 610. And this is true even though the offenses are similar or of like nature. Denton v. State, 1913, 66 Fla. 87, 62 So. 914; Suarez v. State, 95 Fla. 42, 115 So. 519; Boyett v. State, 1928, 95 Fla. 597, 116 So. 476; Varnum v. State, 1939, 137 Fla. 438, 188 So. 346; Padgett v. State, Fla.1951, 53 So.2d 106; Fastow v. State, Fla.1951, 54 So.2d 110; Smith v. State, Fla.1951, 54 So.2d 37. Likewise, any evidence that has no more attributes of admissibility than to merely suggest, or tend to suggest, commission of an independent crime, goes out. Wilson v. State, Fla.App.1965, 171 So.2d 903; Andrews v. State, Fla.App.1965, 172 So.2d 505.

In 1959 the Supreme Court, in Williams v. State, Fla.1959, 110 So.2d 654, in a well-publicized opinion by Chief Justice Thornal, presumed to put a 'new look' on such extraneous-offenses evidence, or at least to chart a new 'legal approach' to such evidence. Up until Williams the Inadmissibility of such evidence had been intermittently referred to in the cases as 'the general rule', while the instances of Admissibility had been variously described as 'the exceptions'. The Williams case took the old package out of tinfoil and wrapped it up in neat, modern cellophane by announcing that the Admission of such evidence would be thenceforth 'the general rule' and the Non-admission would be 'the exception'. Thus, by a sort of reverse English the rule of relevancy has now supplanted the rule of exclusion. And it is to the credit of our Supreme Court that this new approach was announced. Because it is as it should be. Admissibility should always be favored if legally permissible. Exclusion should never be resorted to unless legally necessary. The contrast between hearsay and res gestae is a classic example. Hearsay, now the exclusionary rule, should be the exception. Res gestae, now the admissibility exception, should be the rule--if and when, of course, it is applicable. See Williams v. State, Fla.App., 188 So.2d 320, opinion filed June 24, 1966.

Fundamentally, however, as we read Williams, the essential characteristics of evidentiary admissibility have not been materially altered. Evidence of other offenses which was admissible before Williams has been generally held admissible since Williams, and will undoubtedly continue so to be held in the future; and vice versa as to inadmissibility.

We analyze Williams to mean that evidence of other offenses is admissible if--

--it is relevant and has probative value in proof of the instant case or some material fact or facts in issue in the instant case; and

--its sole...

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    ...exception or rule of exclusion', text 663. The rationale of Williams was discussed by this 2nd District Court at length in Green v. State, Fla.App.1966, 190 So.2d 42, and in the later case of Winkfield v. State, Fla.App.1968, 209 So.2d 468. In Green we said '* * * as we read Williams, the e......
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