STATE of Maine v. Joshua M. ROBINSON Sr.
Docket No. Sag-14-393.
Supreme Judicial Court of Maine.
June 18, 2015
2015 ME 77
Argued: May 13, 2015.
Katie R. Hollstrom, Asst. Dist. Atty., Sagadahoc County District Attorney‘s Office, Bath, for appellee State of Maine.
Patricia Mador, Asst. Dist. Atty. (orally), Sagadahoc County District Attorney‘s Office, for appellee State of Maine.
Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, and HJELM, JJ.
ALEXANDER, J.
[¶ 1] Joshua M. Robinson Sr. appeals from a judgment of conviction of burglary (Class C),
I. CASE HISTORY
[¶ 2] The following facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the jury‘s verdict, as required by our standard of review, are derived from the trial record. See State v. Ormsby, 2013 ME 88, ¶ 2, 81 A.3d 336.
[¶ 3] On August 26, 2013, at 1:20 a.m., an officer of the Bath Police Department was patrolling Water Street and Centre Street in Bath, “checking the backs of buildings” for security purposes. He observed Robinson at the back of one building, walking behind a large, parked box truck. Finding it unusual to see someone in that area at that time of night, the officer left his vehicle and met Robinson as he came around the back of the truck toward the officer. The officer noticed that Robinson had a “heavy odor of alcohol on his breath, his eyes were a little bit bloodshot, and once in a while he slurred words.” Robinson later maintained that he had been urinating by the back of the truck. The officer did not see anyone other than Robinson in the area.
[¶ 4] The officer noticed a “strange pile of items” sitting on the ground next to the
[¶ 5] Two other officers arrived to check nearby businesses for signs of forced entry. The officers located an open window, with the screen removed, at Beale Street Barbeque. The restaurant‘s owner (“the owner“) arrived in response to a call about the incident. The officers showed the owner the pile of items, and he identified the items as taken, without permission, from Beale Street Barbeque. On the night of the burglary, the officers did not ask the owner whether the restaurant had a surveillance system, and the owner never informed the officers about any surveillance system.
[¶ 6] While some officers were talking with the owner, another officer had placed Robinson in the back of a police cruiser. The owner stood approximately fifteen to twenty feet away from Robinson, and he recognized Robinson, who had worked as a cook at the restaurant from April 2005 to February 2007. During those years, the owner had seen Robinson “a minimum of” twenty to thirty times and had some “memorable occasions” with him.
[¶ 7] At the police station, Robinson stated that he had “no idea” how his cell phone ended up on the pile, and that “[h]e must have just sat there, while he was waiting for his cousin.” He did not know where his cousin was but said that they had been together at another bar when Robinson left that bar to urinate. When asked if his fingerprints would be found on the stolen property, Robinson stated, “I don‘t know, maybe.”
[¶ 8] Robinson was charged by indictment with one count of burglary (Class C),
[¶ 9] On July 14, 2014, after the jury had been selected, the restaurant owner advised the State that there had been a surveillance video recording of the burglary. The owner also stated that four or five days after the burglary, he had reviewed the video and identified Robinson, though he had not seen Robinson‘s face. The video had been automatically recorded over approximately a month after it was initially recorded, as a normal function of the surveillance system. The State immediately notified Robinson and advised him that, because the original video was unavailable, the State would propose to have the owner testify as to his observations of the video as evidence that Robinson had been inside the restaurant.
[¶ 10] The jury trial was held between July 23 and 25, 2014. Before the start of the trial, Robinson made a motion in limine to exclude any identification testimony by the restaurant owner and any other evidence concerning the video. Robinson argued that (1) there was insufficient foundation for the owner to provide lay opinion testimony pursuant to
[¶ 12] The owner testified that, on the video of the night of the burglary, he saw a person come through the door, and he recognized the person as Robinson based on the intruder‘s height, size, hair color, and “the way he was moving and interacting.” The owner explained, “I recognized him by his body type. You know, I can‘t clearly say that I didn‘t see his face.” He described the man in the video as “big” and “bulky,” like Robinson, who was called “Tank” at the restaurant. The owner said that upon watching the video, he “fully believed” and was “personally certain” that the person he saw was Robinson.
[¶ 13] The owner also acknowledged that the images in the video were not “well-illuminated” at the time of the incident, and that it was difficult to make out facial features in the video because it was “low resolution and dark.” There was some ambient light coming in from outside, a computer lighting the bar area, and a light in the hallway, which remained on such that it was clear when the door in the front of the restaurant opened and closed at night. The owner said that his mind would not be changed if he knew that someone of approximately the same size and hair color had confessed to the burglary, because he “fully believe[d] . . . Robinson was in there,” and he “believe[d] in [his] ability to have recognized that.” When asked why he did not inform the police of the existence of the surveillance video, the owner responded, “I really didn‘t consider it that important. It didn‘t occur to me. I thought it was kind of a slam dunk case.”
[¶ 14] The court ruled that the owner would be permitted to testify as to his observations from the video pursuant to
[the owner] was able to perceive this video, and . . . his observations of what was on the video are rationally based and they are relevant to a determination of the facts in issue. So if [the owner] were speculating or guessing and that he may be asked all of these questions again, I will instruct him not to guess or speculate, but to answer based on the best of his recollection.
[¶ 15] The owner then testified to the jury, reporting observations similar to, though in less detail than, those provided
[¶ 16] Three witnesses called by Robinson testified that Robinson‘s cousin, who was with him the night of the incident, had stated to each of them that he was the one who entered the restaurant on August 26, 2013.3 Those witnesses reported that Robinson‘s cousin stated that he and Robinson had been out drinking, they were “very drunk,” and the cousin wished to continue drinking. He had no money, so he broke into Beale Street Barbeque alone, while Robinson was “passed out” nearby, and he took the bottles of alcohol and other items. The witnesses reported that the cousin had stated that he left Robinson, still passed out, to retrieve a bag so that he could take the items and Robinson home. The witnesses testified that Robinson and his cousin were, at the time of trial, approximately the same size, but that Robinson used to be “very heavy” and weighed more in the past.
[¶ 17] After the defense rested, the State presented a Bath Police detective as a rebuttal witness. He testified that the cousin gave him a similar, though more vague, account of the events on the night of the incident. Robinson did not testify.
[¶ 18] After closing arguments, the court instructed the jury regarding the elements of burglary and theft, and, additionally, on accomplice liability4 and the inference of exclusive possession—that is, if the State proves beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant is in exclusive possession of property recently stolen in a burglary or theft, the law allows the permissive inference that the defendant participated in the burglary and theft. See
[¶ 19] The jury returned guilty verdicts on the burglary and theft charges. Following a sentencing hearing, Robinson was sentenced to two years and six months’ confinement on the burglary charge and a concurrent six-month sentence on the theft charge, with all but eighteen months suspended, followed by two years of probation. The court also required Robinson to pay $597 in restitution. Robinson brought this timely appeal pursuant to
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
[¶ 20] Robinson argues that the court abused its discretion by allowing the res-
[¶ 21] We review a trial court‘s admission of lay witness testimony pursuant to
A. The Best Evidence Rule: Other Evidence of Contents
[¶ 22] Pursuant to the best evidence rule, when evidence is presented in the form of a writing, recording, or photograph, the original must be used to prove its content unless an exception applies. See
[¶ 23] “Once the requirements of
B. Opinion Testimony by a Lay Witness
[¶ 24] In his objection to the owner‘s testimony, Robinson relies on
If the witness is not testifying as an expert, the witness‘s testimony in the form of opinions or inferences is limited to those opinions or inferences which are (a) rationally based on the perception of the witness and (b) helpful to a clear understanding of the witness‘s testimony or the determination of a fact in issue.6
[¶ 25] When both the jury and a witness can view the same photograph or video, the witness‘s identification of the people in the photograph involves “a kind of lay opinion.” Field & Murray, Maine Evidence § 701.1 at 369. That is because the “eyes [of the jurors] are as good as those of a lay witness.” Id. When the witness‘s testimony is a statement as to what that witness saw, heard, tasted, smelled, or otherwise perceived with his or her senses, it is not necessarily lay opinion testimony, admissible only after Rule 701 analysis. Testimony about what a witness has directly observed using his or her senses is properly considered by the fact-finder to determine the accuracy of the witness‘s observations, rather than the veracity of the witness‘s opinions. A witness‘s testimony reporting the witness‘s observations may become lay opinion testimony only when the witness is asked to draw conclusions from the reported observations about matters that are not readily apparent from the reported observations.
[¶ 26] Here, the owner‘s report that he saw in the video a heavy set man moving around the restaurant was an observation properly admitted and reviewable for accuracy by the fact-finder. Although the jurors were unable to see the video with their own eyes, the owner‘s conclusion, based upon his own prior observations of Robinson, that it was Robinson in the video may only be admitted as lay opinion testimony.
[¶ 27] A lay opinion “does not meet the standard of Rule 701 if it is not rationally based wholly and solely on the perceptions the witness acquired through his personal observations.” Mitchell v. Kieliszek, 2006 ME 70, ¶ 13, 900 A.2d 719. “[S]uch perception must be adequately grounded on personal knowledge or observation just as would be the case with simple statements of fact.” Id.
[¶ 28] In State v. Miller, 1999 ME 182, ¶¶ 5, 11, 741 A.2d 448, we affirmed the admission of the testimony of two detectives regarding their opinions that the defendant was the person depicted in surveillance photographs. We stated that the requirements of Rule 701 were met in that context when “‘the witness possesses sufficiently relevant familiarity with the defendant that the jury cannot also possess, and when the photographs are not either so unmistakably clear or so hopelessly obscure that the witness is no better-suited than the jury to make the identification.‘” Id. ¶ 9 (quoting United States v. Jackman, 48 F.3d 1, 4-5 (1st Cir. 1995)). Additionally, we stated:
Of paramount importance in determining whether the witness‘s opinion will be helpful to the factfinder is the witness‘s opportunity to observe the defendant in different settings, in different lighting, and under different circumstances than the jury, in such a way that the witness‘s scrutiny of the photograph at issue and comparison to the witness‘s knowledge of the defendant‘s appearance will bring more to the jury‘s assessment of the facts than they could glean from observation of the defendant in the courtroom. Such testimony will be more helpful to the jury when the witness has had substantial and sustained contact with the person in the photograph . . . .
Miller, 1999 ME 182, ¶ 10, 741 A.2d 448.
[¶ 29] In Miller, we analyzed the admissibility of identification testimony when the original photograph was available, and thus, the relevant question was whether the jury itself was in as good a position as
[¶ 30] Here, the owner provided opinion or inference testimony identifying Robinson as the person in the surveillance video in a manner that was both (a) based upon his own personal observation of the video and (b) helpful to the jury‘s understanding of a crucial fact in issue—the identity of the person inside the restaurant—that the jurors could not have replicated by examining the video themselves.
[¶ 31] Rule 701(a) requires only that the witness‘s testimony be adequately grounded in his own firsthand knowledge, which in this case was established by the facts that the owner knew Robinson,7 viewed the video, and formed an opinion regarding the burglar‘s identity based upon his familiarity with Robinson and his observations from the video. See Mitchell, 2006 ME 70, ¶ 13, 900 A.2d 719; State v. Johnson, 434 A.2d 532, 534-35 (Me. 1981) (upholding the admission of a medical examiner‘s testimony about the appearance of ceramic or pottery fragments as “rationally based on his own observations” and not purporting to be expert testimony); Field & Murray, Maine Evidence § 701.1 at 365-66 (describing the “rationally based” language as meaning only that the opinion be one that a normal person, without specialized knowledge, would form from the observed facts).
[¶ 32] With regard to Rule 701(b), the owner‘s voir dire testimony established that he was familiar not only with Robinson‘s physical attributes, but also with his body movements, as the result of working with him for two years. Even if the video were available at trial, this information placed the owner in a better position than the jurors to make the identification. See Miller, 1999 ME 182, ¶¶ 9-10, 741 A.2d 448. In addition, although there was evidence that the surveillance system was not intended for use at night and that the owner could not make out facial features while viewing the video, the owner explained that there was some light from various sources, and that he was able to view the intruder and conclude that it was Robinson.8 Thus, the observed evidence was not so “hopelessly obscure” that the owner could no better identify Robinson in the video than could a jury.Id. ¶ 9.
[¶ 34] The majority of Robinson‘s contentions—that the video was obscured by night; that years had passed between when the owner knew Robinson and when he viewed the video, and another year between his viewing the video and testifying at trial; and that the owner may have been influenced by a misconception that Robinson had already confessed—go to the weight, not the admissibility, of the owner‘s testimony. Robinson was given ample opportunity to impeach both the owner‘s credibility and the accuracy of his observations. The court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the owner‘s testimony about his observations of the video over Robinson‘s Rule 701 objection. The weight to be given to the owner‘s testimony was in the province of the jury as fact-finder. See State v. Watson, 2000 ME 77, ¶ 8, 751 A.2d 1004.
C. Prejudice versus Probative Value
[¶ 35] Evidence that is otherwise admissible may be excluded if its probative value is “substantially outweighed” by dangers including “unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury.”
[¶ 36] The fact that the original surveillance recording was missing, by no fault of the State or the defense, and that there was no other evidence placing Robinson inside the restaurant on the evening in question, was relevant to the trial court‘s analysis and ultimate determination that the probative value of the owner‘s observations outweighed any risk of unfair prejudice or of misleading the jury. See
Judgment affirmed.
