State v. Brown, 10067

Decision Date15 October 1964
Docket NumberNo. 10067,10067
Citation16 Utah 2d 57,395 P.2d 727
Partiesd 57 STATE of Utah, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. Mervil Edward BROWN, Defendant and Appellant.
CourtUtah Supreme Court

Phil L. Hansen, Salt Lake City, for appellant.

A Pratt Kesler, Atty. Gen., Ronald N. Boyce, Chief Asst. Atty. Gen., Salt Lake City, for respondent.

CROCKETT, Justice.

Mervil E. Brown appeals from a second jury verdict convicting him of forcible rape. A prior conviction of this same offense was reversed and remanded for a new trial. The facts are set forth quite fully in the previous opinion, 14 Utah 2d 324, 383 P.2d 930. A new trial was granted primarily because the district attorney had commented on the failure of defendant's wife, who was present at the trial, to take the stand and testify in support of his alibi that he was at home at the time the offense was committed. 1

Upon the second trial, from which this appeal is taken, the defendant's wife, Barbara Brown, did testify. The principal error complained of in this case also harks back to the fact that she did not testify in the first trial. It arises out of her cross-examination by the district attorney. After she had testified on direct to various facts tending to support her husband's alibi that he was not at the scene of the crime but was at home, the district attorney questioned her thus:

'Q. Mrs. Brown----

'A. Yes.

'Q. Have you ever testified before in this matter?

'A. No.'

Defendant urges that this amounted to a comment on the claim of privilege in the first trial and was in direct violation of our decision in the prior case that no comment should be made concerning the exercise of the privilege not to testify.

We first note that had above quoted cross-examination been left alone without defense counsel bringing out other facts on redirect, the jury may well have been unaware that Mrs. Brown had claimed the privilege in the prior trial. There could have been several reasons, including absence or sickness, why she had not testified before. However, we deem it in keeping with judicial propriety not to quibble about the matter and to meet the issue squarely. For that purpose we accept defense counsel's contention: That the district attorney asked the question in order to discredit Mrs. Brown; and that from the entire record the jury would have been aware that she had claimed privilege and did not testify in the first trial, so counsel felt obliged to bring out the fact that he had advised her to do so. Even so, from our study of the matter, it is our opinion that no prejudicial error was committed.

We observe in passing that, generally speaking, the interdiction against commenting on the claim of privilege not to testify relates to the case in which the privilege is exercised and not to other proceedings, such as this subsequent trial. 2 More directly approaching the critical question here: The defense could either claim the privilege or waive it, whichever it thought would be to its best advantage. But it could not engage in halfway measures by waiving the privilege and obtaining the benefit of having her testify and still claim some of the protection refusal to testify affords. As we pointed out in the former case, if the privilege is claimed it should be scrupulously protected. But when it is waived, it is done away with just as though it did not exist, and the witness is then in the same status and subject to the same treatment as any other witness, no more and no less. This includes being subjected to cross-examination.

The questions then arise: Would the fact that Mrs. Brown claimed her privilege in the first trial be a legitimate inquiry to test the truthfulness of her testimony?; and more fundamentally, would it have any probative value in determining the defendant's guilt or innocence? On these questions the defense again must take one position or another: Either that it has some probative value, or that it does not. If it has no probative value whatsoever, then it was harmless error to admit it. But if it has any probative value, then in the interest of investigating the truth, there is no impropriety in letting the jury know all the facts.

Inasmuch as the evidence under discussion obviously has no direct bearing on the crime itself, any value it may have would be only upon the credibility of the witness. It is such a well-known characteristic of human behavior that when one is accused of a crime of which he is innocent, he will make a denial, that if one fails to deny such an accusation, when he is at liberty to speak, his silence may be considered as some evidence bearing on his guilt. 3 Somewhat akin to this, but admittedly of lesser force, is the principle we deal with here. It is also in accord with human experience that if a person knows facts which would tend to protect others whose interests are in hazard, particularly members of his own family, he will...

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8 cases
  • State v. Carter, 920110
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • January 18, 1995
    ...marital privilege not violated by prosecutor's in-court reference to possible trial testimony of defendant's spouse); State v. Brown, 395 P.2d 727, 728 (Utah 1964) (holding defendant not prejudiced by prosecutor's comment indicating that spouse had asserted marital privilege to avoid testif......
  • Davis v. State, 38
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • September 1, 1995
    ...silence. The significance of the witness's pretrial silence is another matter which must be determined by the jury. State v. Brown, 16 Utah 2d 57, 395 P.2d 727, 729 (1964)("[W]hen a person claims to have ... exculpatory information and remains silent when it would be natural to expect that ......
  • State v. King
    • United States
    • Utah Court of Appeals
    • July 19, 2012
    ...of the witness and upon the existence or nonexistence of the facts the witness later comes forward to assert.State v. Brown, 16 Utah 2d 57, 395 P.2d 727, 729 (1964); see also Fletcher v. Weir, 455 U.S. 603, 604–06, 102 S.Ct. 1309, 71 L.Ed.2d 490 (1982) (per curiam) (explaining that the “ ‘[......
  • State v. Haga
    • United States
    • Utah Court of Appeals
    • February 26, 1998
    ...forward to exonerate the defendant." Id. at 726. In support of its holding, the Miller court cited a 1964 Utah case, State v. Brown, 16 Utah 2d 57, 395 P.2d 727 (1964). In Brown, the defendant's original conviction for rape was reversed and his case remanded because, in violation of the mar......
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