State v. DeGroot

Decision Date07 October 1988
Docket NumberNo. 87-935,87-935
Citation430 N.W.2d 290,230 Neb. 101
PartiesSTATE of Nebraska, Appellee, v. Kenneth DeGROOT, Appellant.
CourtNebraska Supreme Court

Syllabus by the Court

1. Trial: Evidence: Motions for Mistrial. In order to prevent defeat of justice or to further justice during a jury trial, a mistrial is generally granted at the occurrence of a fundamental failure preventing a fair trial in the adversarial process.

2. Trial: Motions for Mistrial: Juries. Even in the case of error, declaring a mistrial is not necessarily required if the resulting prejudice can be cured by an admonition to the jury.

3. Trial: Motions to Strike. An objection followed by admonition or instruction is typically presumed to be sufficient to dispel prejudice.

4. Trial: Motions for Mistrial: Due Process. The test for determining whether an inadvertent remark by a witness necessitates the granting of a mistrial is whether the remark which the jury was instructed to disregard, when viewed against the backdrop of all the evidence, so tainted the entire proceedings that the accused did not have a fair trial.

5. Trial: Witnesses: Appeal and Error. In order to establish reversible error due to a violation of a sequestration order, the defendant must make a showing of prejudice.

6. Juries: Verdicts: Time. There is no rule which requires the jury to deliberate any particular length of time, and the fact that the jury returned a guilty verdict in a relatively short period of time does not establish that the jury acted with passion and prejudice.

7. Trial: Evidence: Appeal and Error. It is within the trial court's discretion to admit or exclude evidence on the ground of relevancy, and such rulings will be upheld on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.

8. Trial: Evidence: Perjury. Evidence of a defendant's attempts to suborn perjury or otherwise to prevent a fair trial is relevant and admissible as evidencing a consciousness of his guilt.

Charles F. Fitzke, Scotts Bluff County Public Defender, for appellant.

Robert M. Spire, Atty. Gen., and Mark D. Starr, Lincoln, for appellee.

HASTINGS, C.J., BOSLAUGH, WHITE, CAPORALE, SHANAHAN, and GRANT, JJ., and COLWELL, District Judges, Retired.

HASTINGS, Chief Justice.

Following a trial by jury, the defendant was convicted of forcibly breaking and entering a residence with the intent to steal. He has appealed and assigns as error that (1) the court failed to declare a mistrial when the State's witness volunteered inadmissible evidence; (2) the court allowed witnesses to testify who had violated the sequestration order; and (3) the court allowed evidence of the defendant's attempt to persuade a witness to testify falsely for him. We affirm.

On April 8, 1987, Terry Metcalf and her family had retired for the evening at their Scottsbluff residence. The doorbell rang, but she saw no one at the door. Shortly thereafter, she observed a man smoking a cigarette on her front porch. She notified her husband, but by the time they returned to the front of the house, the man was gone. Mrs. Metcalf then walked toward her kitchen and saw a man walking out of her bedroom. Both she and the man screamed, the man apparently left, and she called the police.

After a chase, the police found the defendant under some evergreen bushes in a fenced yard some blocks away from the Metcalf residence. The defendant was taken to the Metcalfs' residence, where Mrs. Metcalf identified him as the man who had broken into their home.

The defendant's appearance matched the description given by Mrs. Metcalf before the defendant was arrested. A cigarette butt was found outside the Metcalfs' home the night of the crime. A serologist testified that the cigarette butt contained evidence of body fluids secreted by 31 percent of the caucasian population, and that defendant was a member of that percentage grouping. The bedroom window screen had been cut, and the defendant had a large butterfly knife with him when he was caught. Also, a footprint at the scene appeared to match the tread on the defendant's shoe.

At trial, the court granted defendant's motion to sequester the witnesses. The court instructed the witnesses that such an order

means the witnesses remain out in the hall until they are called to testify, after they are called in to testify one by one. Since witnesses are sequestered that means one witness after he has testified should not go out and tell everybody what they said. The idea of sequestration of the witnesses is so that one witness does not know what another said and each are [sic] testifying fresh.

After Mrs. Metcalf testified, she apparently remained in the courtroom. Her husband then testified, followed by a police officer. The State then recalled Mrs. Metcalf, over objection by the defense, to identify the piece of screen about which the previous witness had testified as having come from her bedroom window.

The defendant sought to establish an alibi to the effect that he was in the neighborhood to collect a debt from a friend and was only resting in the yard when he was found by the police. The State called a witness who offered a letter, written to him by the defendant, asking the witness to testify falsely about the alibi. The defense objected to admission of this letter.

The State also called an investigator from the county attorney's office to testify as to how she had first found out about the above-mentioned letter. When asked how she had happened to first see that letter, she began to testify, "About 20 minutes before that I had been talking to Larry [the person having the letter] about his knowledge of who could have--" and at that point a defense objection was sustained. She was then asked, "You were investigating or acting in your capacity as an investigator for the county attorney's office while you were talking to Larry Coleman; is that right?" The witness answered:

I was showing Larry Coleman a copy of a threatening letter that had been sent to a witness in this case and he was looking at it to see if he could recognize the handwriting from someone in the jail. So he pulled out a piece of paper from his pocket--

at which point defense counsel objected and asked that "the testimony be stricken as unresponsive and as a surprise testimony." The objection was sustained and the answer ordered stricken, and the jury was admonished to disregard the testimony. At the next recess, the defendant's motion for a mistrial based on the foregoing testimony was overruled.

The jury was out but 30 minutes before returning with a verdict of guilty. A motion for a new trial was heard by the court, at which time the defense offered testimony by the defendant's girlfriend that she had seen some police officers together in the hallway, visiting with one another, at various times following the testimony of one or more of the officers and before one or more of the officers was yet to testify. The conversations which she heard were in no way connected with any testimony that any of the officers had previously given. The three officers themselves were called to testify, but denied conversing about their testimony.

As to the first assignment of error, the trial court found that the testimony of the investigator was not "a purposeful effort on the part of the State to inject this evidence before the jury but resulted from inadvertence and from the witness preparation, and resulted from the witness not the prosecuting attorney." The court also noted that the evidence had been stricken and the jury admonished to disregard it.

The standard for determining whether declaring a mistrial is appropriate was spelled out in State v. Archbold, 217 Neb. 345, 351, 350 N.W.2d 500, 504 (1984), wherein this court stated:

In order to prevent defeat of justice or to further justice during a jury trial, a mistrial is generally granted at the occurrence of a fundamental failure preventing a fair trial in the adversarial process. Some examples are an egregiously prejudicial statement by counsel ... or the introduction of incompetent matters to the jury, to the extent that any damaging effect cannot be removed by proper admonition or instruction to the jury.

(Emphasis supplied.)

Thus, even in the case of error, declaring a mistrial is not necessarily required if the resulting prejudice can be cured by an admonition to the jury. As Justice Brennan said in his concurrence and dissent to United States v. Young, 470 U.S. 1, 24, n. 2, 105 S.Ct. 1038, 1050, n. 2, 84 L.Ed.2d 1 (1985), cited in State v. Ross, 220 Neb. 843, 374 N.W.2d 228 (1985), "an objection followed by admonition or instruction is typically presumed to be sufficient to dispel prejudice."

According to State v. Borchardt, 224 Neb. 47, 56, 395 N.W.2d 551, 557-58 (1986):

A mistrial is properly granted when an event occurs during the course of a trial which is of such a nature that its damaging effects cannot be removed by proper admonition or instruction to the jury and would thus result in preventing a fair trial.... Error cannot ordinarily be predicated on the failure to grant a mistrial if an objection or motion to strike the improper material is sustained and the jury is admonished to disregard such material.

As stated in State v. O'Kelly, 193 Neb. 390, 391, 227 N.W.2d 415, 417 (1975), "When the jury is admonished to disregard objectionable questions and answers a mistrial ordinarily will not be granted."

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9 cases
  • State v. Sardeson
    • United States
    • Nebraska Supreme Court
    • 24 mars 1989
    ...following this exchange, Sardeson moved for a mistrial, which motion the district court overruled. Recently, in State v. DeGroot, 230 Neb. 101, 430 N.W.2d 290 (1988), this court stated the standard for determining whether declaration of a mistrial is appropriate: " 'In order to prevent defe......
  • State v. Freeman
    • United States
    • Nebraska Supreme Court
    • 9 avril 2004
    ...he stated that he had not kissed her, and Freeman reportedly said, "`Well, it would help me if you did.'" In State v. DeGroot, 230 Neb. 101, 430 N.W.2d 290 (1988), evidence was presented that the defendant asked a witness to testify for him, telling the witness to give information that woul......
  • State v. Fisher
    • United States
    • South Dakota Supreme Court
    • 13 mars 2013
    ...Several courts have found that fabrication of evidence is admissible as demonstrating consciousness of guilt. See State v. DeGroot, 230 Neb. 101, 430 N.W.2d 290, 294–95 (1988) (holding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting evidence of the defendant's attempt to proc......
  • State v. Jackson
    • United States
    • Nebraska Supreme Court
    • 29 octobre 1999
    ...it. A mistrial is not necessarily required if the resulting prejudice can be cured by an admonition to the jury. State v. DeGroot, 230 Neb. 101, 430 N.W.2d 290 (1988). An objection followed by an admonition or instruction is typically presumed to be sufficient to dispel prejudice. Id. When ......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

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