OPINION
The defendant was convicted of burglary in the second degreе and sentenced to serve not less than three (3) years nor mоre than six (6) years in the penitentiary.
The defendant says the trial court should have suppressed the lineup identification beсause of lack of counsel thereat and lack of waiver thereof, and says a new trial should have been granted оn the basis of newly discovered evidence.
The judgment is affirmed.
The circumstances surrounding the lineup in which the defendant was identified did not require thе appointment of counsel or waiver thereof to avoid infringement of the defendant’s constitutional rights.
On June 7, 1980, police officers went to the defendant’s home in search of the defendant’s brother for investigation of burglary. The defendant, on his own initiative, went to the police station with his brother, who had driven there at the request of the police. After some elapse of time, during which no investigation involving the de
The right to cоunsel does not attach until the police activity moves from an investigation stage into “adversary judicial proceedings.” State v. Mitchell,
Clearly, the matter in this case was purely investigatory at the timе of the lineup. Therefore, the right to counsel had not attаched.
The newly discovered evidence, upon which the defendant seeks a new trial, is the post-trial discovery of a сonviction for sale of marihuana had, prior to the trial, against one of the State’s witnesses.
The defendant claims this should be granted because a pretrial discovery motion demаnded the revelation of any convictions of the witnesses who were to be offered by the State. We know of no authority under the Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure or in the decisiоnal law of this state which requires such revelation by the State. Thеre is no showing the defendant, prior to trial, made any indepеndent effort to secure this information.
As the trial judge pointed оut, the name of the witness was known to the defendant, the index to the minutes of the court reflected the name, and the matter could have been located as easily by the defendant as by the State. Neither the discovery demand for this information nor T.C.A. § 40-2109(c)(3) establishes a predicate upon which to grant the relief sought.
Furthermore, this witness was not the sole witness to this crime. The evidеnce of the defendant’s guilt is established without the testimony of the witnеss. Moreover, when the alleged newly discovered evidenсe would only go to the credibility of a witness, a new trial based thereon is not warranted. Hicks v. State,
Notes
. The defendant did not leave the custody of the police after the lineup and prior to the issuing of the arrest warrant.
