287 N.W. 567 | Mich. | 1939
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *416 Separate complaints were made against each of the defendants. The cases were tried together, but with the understanding that they were *417 distinct. The record is sent here on two appeals which are again heard together. The charge against both defendant Samuel (Sammy) Sawaya and defendant John Lawrence Sullivan is robbery while armed.
On December 6, 1937, between 8 and 9 o'clock in the morning, the Family theater in Monroe was held up by two masked bandits. From the foyer of the theater there are two stairways on opposite sides leading to the second or mezzanine floor and the balcony of the theater. At the head of one of the stairways is located the office of the management. As various persons entered the theater to transact business on the second floor, they were met by the bandits who displayed revolvers and forced each person in turn to go to the mezzanine and lie face downward on the floor. The bandits then proceeded to tie their hands and tape their legs. Five people were systematically disposed of in this way. Mr. Denniston, the manager of the theater, was given a similar reception but only after the bandits had led him into his office at the point of a gun and forced him to open the safe. After it had been opened, the bandits demanded a black bag which was used for carrying the receipts of the theater to the bank, and which was hanging near the safe just inside the coat closet. The money from the safe, $1,607, was transferred to the bag, and Denniston was tied up and forced to lie beside the others. Then the bandits disappeared into the street. As they left the theater one was still masked. They were carrying the black bag between them.
Defendants were subsequently apprehended and identified in the police departments of Detroit and Toledo, Ohio. At the trial they denied all connection with the crime. Necessarily, the principal question involved their identification as the bandits who *418
committed the robbery. Appellants claim that there is a total want of evidence to establish such a connection and argue that a verdict should have been directed in their favor. The record does not disclose such a lack of proof as to evoke application of the rule of People v. Minney,
Identity, which may be established by circumstantial evidence alone, People v. Stewart,
Witness Denniston testified that he was struck with the similarity between the voice of the smaller bandit in the theater and with that of defendant Sawaya when he saw him at the police station where preliminary identification was made. He said Sawaya spoke in a very low undertone just as at the theater. On cross-examination another witness, Carley, was asked whether he had at any time since he was tied up in the theater been able to recognize any voice similar to Sawaya's. "Undoubtedly voice is a competent means of identification,"State v. Karas,
There was testimony that neither of the bandits in the theater wore glasses. Defendant Sullivan sought to introduce testimony of his mother to the effect that he always wore glasses and could not see without them. Defendants' counsel also sought to have the jury examine the glasses which Sullivan was wearing in the courtroom and to have Mrs. Sullivan testify that they were the same glasses which had been purchased from a Detroit doctor in April, 1937, and regularly worn by her son thereafter. These offers were refused by the trial court and the rulings are assigned as error.
While no decision involving the introduction of glasses in evidence has come to our attention, the applicable principles are clearly established. Evidence, of whatever nature, must be excluded until a proper foundation has been laid for its admission. A document, unless self-authenticating, must first be properly identified by a witness. Reed v. David Stott FlourMills,
To refute the statement of Mrs. Sullivan that her son always wore glasses, the people produced a Detroit police officer who undertook to testify that Sullivan was not wearing glasses when he saw him at police headquarters on December 28 and 29, 1937. Defendants claim that this testimony contains a clear suggestion that they had been incarcerated on another charge and is in itself ground for a new trial. In the first place, we think the suggested inference is entirely too remote and without reasonable basis. In the second place, the objection was not raised in the court below. Finally, the testimony of the police officer was stricken because it had not been shown that Sullivan was voluntarily without his glasses while in police custody. The trial judge instructed the jury to disregard the statement. No reversible error is disclosed.
Appellants claim that the prosecutor in the course of his remarks referred to them as "two felons." *422
The judge stated that he did not remember that such a statement was made and there is nothing in the record to support defendants' allegation that it was made. The court further observed that if made he did not think it would justify declaring a mistrial. Thereupon defendants' counsel stated that the specific objection he was raising was that the prosecutor had argued that the defense had failed to refute the evidence offered by the prosecution, which implied that defendants had failed to take the witness stand in their own behalf. This claim is apparently founded upon the comment of the prosecutor that one of the State's witnesses was a man of "unquestioned good character." The character of a witness is presumed to be good, and there is nothing objectionable in so stating where that character has not been questioned in fact. To find such a statement tantamount to a declaration that defendants admit their guilt by a failure to testify is tenuous in the extreme. The right of a prosecutor to call attention to the "undisputed" or "uncontradicted" character of certain evidence has long been recognized. People v. Hammond,
Appellants argue that the prosecution did not adduce evidence of finger prints on the safe and thus identify the bandits in this manner. There is no proof whatever that there were finger prints left on the safe. It was shown that the safe was opened by Mr. Denniston and not by the bandits, and the record *423 does not contain any proof that the bandits touched the safe except when they took the money from the compartment in the interior. There was no evidence that the bandits wore gloves or did not wear them. Remarks by counsel on this point were indicated by the trial judge to be improper and the jury was told to disregard comments which went beyond the limits of the evidence. Being impertinent to the issues as presented, defendants' request for a charge on the question of finger prints and the wearing of gloves to prevent them was correctly refused.
We have examined the other claims made by appellants' counsel but we find no prejudicial error.
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
WIEST, BUSHNELL, SHARPE, POTTER, CHANDLER, NORTH, and McALLISTER, JJ., concurred.