Appellants jointly appeal from judgments and sentences after a jury trial on an indictment jointly charging them with armed robbery of a federally insured bank in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(d).
The evidence of guilt is overwhelming. One of the confessed participants and co-defendants testified to the plans and execution of the robbery and implicated each of the appellants as an active participant. There was other direct and circumstantial proof of guilt. The only point on appeal is whether the trial court erroneously refused to strike as “unresponsive, prejudicial and inflammatory” a reference by one of the police officer-witnesses to the “records” of appellants.
The question is presented in this context: On direct examination one of the arresting officers testified that he and his partner stopped the three defendants and a woman in a car at approximately 3:30 in the morning in a residential section of Dallas, Texas; that the car was stopped because it was exceeding the speed limit and the lights on the rear were defective. When the car was stopped, the driver alighted and in response to questions identified himself as Bob Nabors; he admitted having no driver’s license or any other identification. On search of Nabors’ person the officers found “a large sum of bills” and a driver’s license and identification card “belonging to another man named Briggs”. After some further searching and questioning, the defendants were taken to the Dallas Police Headquarters and to the Auto Theft Bureau where they were further searched and placed in custody. The police officer was cross-examined concerning the cause of apprehension and particularly with respect to the speed of the automobile and the defective lights over the license plate. The cross-examination developed the fact that neither appellant Crocker nor appellant Sumrall had committed any breach of the peace in the presence of the officers. On direct examination the witness was asked, “What was your purpose in removing this examination from the scene of the arrest to the police station?” The question was objected to as “pure conjecture”. The objection was overruled and the witness answered, “The purpose was after questioning them that we advised them that we were going to check their records, and being that they admitted that they had one.” The response was objected to “on the grounds that it is prejudicial and inflammatory. It’s unresponsive to the question propounded by the U. S. Attorney.” The court ruled, “No. He’s telling him why they took them to the police station. Overruled.” Counsel for the defendants then moved to strike the answer “as being unresponsive, prejudicial and inflammatory.” The motion was overruled and nothing further was said concerning the matter during the trial of the case. None of the defendants testified and neither their reputations nor their veracity was put in issue.
On appeal the government freely concedes that the reference to the defendants’ “records” was inadmissible and erroneous. See Michelson v. United States,
It has been recently said in the Second Circuit that “Improper introduction of evidence of a defendant’s past criminal record is ground for a new trial.” And, “Cautionary instructions will not cure the error.” See United States v. Rinaldi,
Before Michelson and Marshall, the Supreme Court, dealing with the erroneous admission of probative evidence of guilt and particularly whether such error so infected the case as to require reversal, said, “If, when all is said and done, the conviction is sure that the error did not influence the jury, or had but very slight effect, the verdict and the judgment should stand.” See Mr. Justice Rutledge in Kotteakos v. United States,
We have recently had occasion to note the harmless error rule of 52(a) F.R. Crim.P. in considering whether the error “affected in a substantial degree the
*314
rights of the accused or contributed to a miscarriage of justice.” See Wright v. United States, 10 Cir.,
From all this it seems safe to say that not all inadmissible references to records of prior convictions or bad character are incurable by appropriate rulings of the court. But, the harmless error rule is more easily stated than applied, for it involves the human equation of attempting to read the jurors’ minds to determine whether the erroneous matter, be it inadmissible evidence or an erroneous statement of the law, unduly influenced their consideration of guilt or innocence.
Reference to the case law is helpful only to determine what concrete facts have prompted the courts to excuse error as “harmless” or to reverse for prejudice. The closest case in point of fact is Evenson v. United States, 8 Cir.,
Other courts have excused the incidental and isolated erroneous references to defendants’ prior trouble with the law on the grounds that the prompt instruction to the jury to disregard the answer cured the error, i. e. see United States v. Strom-berg,
In Tallo v. United States,
no curative instruction was given immediately after the incident nor at any later stage in the trial.”
We are, of course, loathe to reverse a ease like this in the face of overwhelming evidence of guilt. Technical niceties such as these make the law appear ridiculous to the man on the street. But, “All law is technical if viewed only from concern for punishing crime without heeding the mode by which it is accomplished.” I. e. see Mr. Justice Frankfurter in Bollenbach v. United States,
The judgments are reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
. Mr. Justice Jackson stated the rule as follows: “Courts that follow the common-law tradition almost unanimously have come to disallow resort by the prosecution to any kind of evidence of a defendant’s evil character to establish a probability of his guilt. Not that the law invests the defendant with a presumption of good character, Greer v. United States,
