CURTIS AUSTIN, APPELLANT, v. STATE OF NEVADA, RESPONDENT.
No. 6300
Supreme Court of Nevada
December 7, 1971
Rehearing denied January 10, 1972
491 P.2d 724
Robert List, Attorney General, Carson City; William P. Beko, District Attorney, Nye County, for Respondent.
OPINION
By the Court, GUNDERSON, J.:
Convicted of possessing heroin in violation of
As counsel for appellant contends, the trial transcript contains nothing inculpatory of Austin except the testimony of Jesse Martin, a heroin dealer with a lengthy and varied criminal history who, when apprehended with “a whole bunch of narcotics” several months before the incident concerned herein, had undertaken to incriminate others in exchange for cash and to avoid prosecution for his own criminal activities. Without Martin‘s testimony the record shows only that on October 3, 1969, Austin drove from Las Vegas to Beatty, Nevada. There, at the Exchange Club, a casino-restaurant serving also as a bus station, Austin met Tanya Edwards, who had arrived by bus from Portland, Oregon, some eight hours earlier. Austin bought a glass of milk. Then, both left the casino and entered Austin‘s car; Miss Edwards placed her luggage on the rear seat; police officers appeared, showed a search warrant, and found heroin concealed in a slipper in Edwards’ luggage.1
Austin thus stands convicted of possessing narcotics which arrived in Nevada with Edwards, which never thereafter came into Austin‘s actual possession, and over which he exercised no dominion whatever on the date of the alleged offense. Therefore, it is vital to appreciate that the conviction must be justified, if at all, on the theory that, through Martin, the State proved Austin, as owner of the narcotics, constructively possessed them through Edwards, and before her through Martin himself.2 It is vital, we say, because without recognition of this, Martin‘s status as an accomplice to the crime charged cannot properly be evaluated. The rationale that one participant in a criminal scheme is culpable for the others’ acts is a sword that cuts both ways. And from Martin‘s testimony a chronology of events emerged, principally on cross-examination, that would constitute him an active criminal participant with Austin in possession of the heroin concerned.
According to Martin, about September 23, Austin proposed that Martin leave Las Vegas “to sell narcotics for him“; Martin agreed, without learning how, where or when he was supposed to go. On September 26, Martin testified, he asked Austin about the trip; then he learned Austin wanted him to leave Las Vegas to market heroin in Portland, Oregon, a city with which Martin had no familiarity. Pursuant to instructions from Austin, he “checked the bus station and got the amount of the fares from Las Vegas to Portland and the time that the
As Martin‘s story proceeded, Austin and Edwards picked him up in Austin‘s car; Austin stopped, went into the desert, came back and gave Martin ten balloons containing 20 heroin capsules each, a total of 200 “caps,” retail value $5 each, a total of $1,000. Then Austin drove them to Beatty, where Martin last saw him “approximately 11 o‘clock that night on the 26th” when Austin gave Edwards money to purchase their tickets to Portland. Upon arrival there about 10:00 p.m. September 27, they rode around in a taxi an hour or so, then took separate motel rooms. Thereupon, Martin went out to find where the “fast action” was. (As Martin said Edwards did nothing after their arrival, except to hold some of the heroin Martin transported there, Martin‘s story does not account for why Austin sent her along, as supposedly he did.)
Martin first said he had no money when they arrived, then said he had less than $30; he stayed eight days; still, he claimed he sold no narcotics. Instead, he said, he proceeded to search out addicts and give the narcotics away, leaving with Edwards all that he did not take with him “down on the street.” (Considering expenses necessarily inherent in the venture, it is hard to see how Austin could profit from it, even had Martin sold everything supposedly entrusted to him.)
Martin explained he gave away the narcotics because Austin told him to generate business by distributing samples. He kept giving them away, he said, because no “contact” appeared to show him the ropes, as Austin supposedly had promised. Yet it was apparent Martin needed no one to show him the ropes; he is justifiably proud of his own expertise in the narcotics trade.3 Probably because he could not explain his survival in any other way, he admitted that he accepted meals and favors from addicts he “raised,” but denied accepting money. He was communicating with the Las Vegas police, he claimed,
According to Martin, only four days after Edwards and Martin arrived in Portland, Austin became disgruntled because Martin was not making any money there, and directed that Edwards should return with such narcotics as were undistributed. (Martin testified that the night before Edwards left—which would have been October 1, as she had to leave Portland October 2, to arrive in Beatty October 3—he was with her when she called Austin. This testimony was at odds with that given at the preliminary hearing, when Martin testified he was present only at the time Edwards called Austin from the bus depot on arrival.) When Austin asked that Edwards return, Martin allowed her to leave with seven balloons of
The police apparently did not know that, in fact, Martin had been purveying heroin in Portland; for they obtained a search warrant upon an affidavit that assumed Martin was merely keeping Miss Edwards and the narcotics under surveillance. Martin‘s testimony does establish, however, that he was a heroin dealer, and had been well over a year before his alleged transaction with Austin. Some three months before events involved in Austin‘s conviction, Martin admitted, he was apprehended with 56 “caps” of heroin; then, to avoid prosecution, he undertook to incriminate others, and supplied or fabricated evidence on at least one other associate besides Austin and Edwards. From testimony of police officers as well as Martin it is clear that in exchange for Martin‘s co-operation and testimony, the police gave Martin money when he requested it, and refrained from prosecuting him.6
The courts have long recognized not only that the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice has doubtful worth, but that his incrimination of another is not corroborated simply because he accurately describes the crime or the circumstances thereof.7 Our legislature, as legislatures in a multitude of other states, has codified this historic view.
“1. A conviction shall not be had on the testimony of an accomplice unless he is corroborated by other evidence which in itself, and without the aid of the testimony of the accomplice, tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense; and the corroboration shall not be sufficient if it merely shows the commission of the offense or the circumstances thereof.
“2. An accomplice is hereby defined as one who is liable to prosecution, for the identical offense charged against the defendant on trial in the cause in which the testimony of the accomplice is given.”
It is therefore apparent: first,
Under statutes such as
“The difficulty comes in determining what corroboration is sufficient. First, we must eliminate from the case the evidence of the accomplice, and then examine the evidence of the remaining witness or witnesses with the view to ascertain if there be inculpatory evidence, —evidence tending to connect the defendant with the offense. If there is, the accomplice is corroborated; if there is no inculpatory evidence, there is no corroboration, though the accomplice may be corroborated in regard to any number of facts sworn to by him.” Id., at 255; emphasis in original.
This seems the approach the courts have uniformly taken to application of statutes like
Implicitly recognizing the propriety of the aforedescribed approach to application of
The State‘s only response to this is summarized in, and almost limited to, one sentence in its answering brief: “The law does not require corroboration of an informant.” Thus, it seems fair to say that lack of “corroboration” is conceded, so that Austin‘s conviction may not stand if Martin was an “accomplice” within the meaning of our legislature‘s mandate. We pass to consideration of this second issue.
2. As Martin described the criminal endeavor in which he incriminated Austin, was Martin within the statutory definition of an “accomplice“; and, if so, may application of
“‘Where the voluntary cooperation in the commission of a crime is admitted,’ says Mr. Wharton in his work on Criminal Evidence, vol. 1 (10th ed.) sec. 440, ‘the court may charge the jury that the witness is an accomplice; but where the evidence is conflicting as to the manner of cooperation, the question as to whether or not the witness is an accomplice should be submitted to the jury, under instructions as to voluntary or real cooperation in the commission of the offense charged.‘” 50 Nev., at 7-8. Thus, neither the Verganadis case, nor others in which this court has considered the subject of feigned accomplices, are in point on the matter before us. Unlike the informant in Verganadis, whom this court said was not an accomplice “for the reason that there was no criminal intent on his part,” Martin was not merely feigning participation. He was a criminal with criminal intent, playing both sides, for his own purposes, and not to further the ends of justice. The police obviously could not, and apparently did not, sanction Martin‘s criminal acts. Martin purveyed narcotics, not to aid the police, and not because compelled by the exigencies of the situation in which he found himself. About this, we believe, reasonable men cannot differ.
It is Martin‘s criminal intent, not his intent to betray Austin, that is decisive of his status. “An accomplice is ‘one culpably implicated in, or who unlawfully co-operates, aids, abets, or insists in, the commission of the crime charged.’ ” 2 Wharton‘s Crim. Ev. § 448 (12th ed. 1955). “The test as to whether one is an accomplice is whether his participation in the offense has been criminally corrupt.” Blake v. State, 24 P.2d 362 (Okla. Crim.App. 1933). In Savage v. State, 170 S.W. 730 (Tex. Crim.App. 1914), where a witness testified the defendant had offered to bribe him to leave the country, and that the witness actually left as agreed, but with intent of betraying the defendant to the police, the court said:
“It is useless for the court to assume, under the circumstances and statements as made by this witness, that there was any question or issue as to his being an accomplice. . . .
Under this witness’ evidence, he went into a scheme to work up a case against these parties at the beginning in order to get them into trouble, and that, having done so, he accepted the money and railroad ticket and agreed to leave the country, and did start to El Paso, and later on did in another instance leave the country, and he testifies that appellant Savage sent him money to different points in Texas, California, and Arizona to keep him out of the country in the latter instance. There could be no question that Barkley was an accomplice, made so by his own testimony. The court should have instructed the jury positively that he was an accomplice.” 170 S.W., at 733. Accord: Carr v. State, 82 S.W.2d 667 (Tex. Crim.App. 1935).
We view the instant matter in much the same light. As Martin‘s testimony left no doubt his participation was criminally corrupt, the court erred in permitting the jury to determine he was a feigned accomplice only, and to ignore our legislature‘s requirement of corroboration. Whether the jury reached their verdict on this basis, or some other, Martin‘s testimony alone was insufficient to support it.
We perceive no other way to view the matter. If the distinction between an actual accomplice and a “feigned accomplice” does not depend on whether the informer participates with criminal intent, or merely feigns it, then on what does the distinction depend? What are we talking about “feigning,” if not the criminal intent? The distinction surely cannot depend upon whether the informer harbored, at the time of his own criminal acts, intent to betray supposed confederates to the police if it should seem expedient to do so. Nor can it turn on whether, before performing his own criminal acts, the informer took the precaution to tell the authorities of his intent to betray his confederates. We believe we are concerned with whether Martin‘s criminality was feigned, not with whether his loyalty was.
By
Accordingly, appellant‘s conviction must be and hereby is
While other assignments of error have been raised, it is unnecessary to decide them.
ZENOFF, C. J., and BATJER, J., concur.
THOMPSON, J., with whom MOWBRAY, J., agrees, dissenting:
1. Our Constitution limits the appellate jurisdiction of this court in criminal cases to questions of law alone.
2. Of course it is true that the testimony of a real accomplice must be corroborated in order to justify a conviction.
3. Martin testified that he had alerted the police that Austin and Tanya Edwards were to meet in Beatty, Nevada, on a certain day and that Tanya would have the narcotics in her possession. Moreover, his testimony, if believed, established that the narcotics originally belonged to Austin and were being redelivered to him by Tanya. Austin did meet Tanya in Beatty on that day and she did have the narcotics in her possession. In short, the events which transpired gave credit to that aspect of Martin‘s testimony and, as to that aspect, it was permissible for the jury to believe that Martin was a feigned accomplice who voluntarily cooperated with law enforcement to aid justice by detecting a crime.
4. Austin contends that the State failed to prove his possession of the narcotics. He had driven to Beatty to meet Tanya who had the narcotics in her handbag. As they started to drive away in Austin‘s automobile the police intervened, exhibited a search warrant, searched the car and the handbag, found the narcotics, and placed Austin and Tanya under arrest.
5. The jury‘s verdict in this case should be sustained. We have no business setting aside factual determinations. The majority opinion paints the witness Martin as a rascal and then accepts his testimony as entirely true in order to rule as a matter of law, that he was a real accomplice as to all phases of the transaction whether in Oregon or Nevada. The jury was not obliged to so treat his testimony. It could sift, evaluate, accept some of it and reject the balance. The jury apparently accepted Martin‘s advice to the police that a crime would occur in Beatty because it did happen precisely as he said it would. I find no legal error in that decision.
