381 N.E.2d 960 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1978
The issues in this case arise as a result of the following facts. Defendant-appellant, having waived his right to a trial by jury, was tried to the court on charges of aggravated robbery and theft. As part of its case in chief, the state called one Watson as a witness. Watson had been indicted jointly with defendant as a result of the same alleged offenses and had pled guilty several days prior to defendant's trial. After the questioning of Watson about events concerning the alleged offenses produced only answers of "I don't remember," the prosecutor inquired of Watson if he had made a statement to the police. Watson replied that he had. The prosecutor then proceeded to examine Watson by reading him large parts of the questions and answers from the previously recorded statement in an attempt to refresh his recollection. The witness did not deny making the statements which were read to *113 him but "could not recall" any of the statements.1 Counsel for the defendant objected throughout to this method of questioning. His assignment of error states that the trial court erred to the prejudice of defendant-appellant by permitting the prosecution to incorporate portions of Watson's recorded statement to the police into his questions.
The rule in Ohio has long been that set out in the syllabus of State v. Duffy (1938),
"1. When a witness has voluntarily made a written statement, under oath, as to the existence of a state of facts, the party calling him may, in the absence of an express forewarning from the witness of an intention to repudiate it and notwithstanding knowledge of his hostility, rely upon such statement and expect his testimony to be in accord therewith; and if his testimony is in direct contradiction thereto as to a material fact, such party will be deemed taken by surprise as a matter of law.
"2. When taken by surprise by the adverse testimony of its own witness, an accomplice of the accused, the state may interrogate such witness concerning his prior inconsistent sworn statement, made in or out of the presence of the accused, for the purpose of refreshing the recollection of the witness, but not for the purpose of offering substantive evidence against the accused."
Those principals are applicable to this case. Although the concept of the prosecutor being "surprised" that an accomplice would testify differently than he had done in his statements to the police stretches the imagination, the rule is well established. Its necessity doubtless results from the oft-criticized2 concept that a party may not impeach his own witness. *114
The law set out above in the syllabus of Duffy was first enunciated in Hurley v. State (1888),
Appellant here argues that before the prosecutor can use a witness' prior inconsistent statement to refresh his recollection, the witness must in fact testify inconsistently. He argues that in his case Watson did not make any statement inconsistent with his statements to the police but tesified only that he could not recall or remember these facts and events.
We would not say that every statement by a witness that he cannot recall an event is inconsistent with a statement in regard to the event made at a previous time. However, where as here, the events occurred only ninety days before and were of a type and under circumstances which an individual would remember quite vividly, we are of the opinion that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in determining that Watson's assertion of lack of memory was untrue and, in effect, was a repudiation of his prior statements. See United States v. Insana (C. A. 2, 1970),
Appellant next contends that the prosecution's use of the witness' prior statement under the guise of refreshing his recollection amounts to a denial of appellant's right to confront the witnesses against him as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. He cites as authority Bruton v. United States (1968),
Bruton held that the confession of a codefendant inculpating the defendant was inadmissible at a joint trial because, despite the court's instructions, it was impossible for a jury to erase the inculpatory statements from its mind in determining the defendant's guilt. It therefore followed, held the court, that since the codefendant who had made the statement inculpating Bruton did not take *115 the witness stand, Bruton was deprived of his right to cross-examination secured by the confrontation clause of the Sixth Amendment.
In Douglas the prosecutor called the defendant's accomplice and codefendant as a witness and then proceeded to read the latter's purported confession which implicated the defendant. The witness repeatedly refused to answer questions on the ground that he would incriminate himself. The court there held that since the codefendant witness had a constitutional right to remain silent, the defendant was deprived of his right to cross-examine in violation of the confrontation clause of the Sixth Amendment.
Both Bruton and Douglas are still the law. However, they have application only where the defendant is denied his right to fully and effectively cross-examine the witness who made the alleged inculpatory statement.
In California v. Green (1970),
This same result was reached in Nelson v. O'Neil (1971),
"The Constitution as construed in Bruton, in other words, is violated only where the out-of-court hearsay statement is that of a declarant who is unavailable at the trial for full and effective cross-examination." Nelson v. O'Neil, supra, at 627.
Here, Watson was on the witness stand. The defendant was given the opportunity to cross-examine him but did not take advantage of such opportunity. He, therefore, was not denied his right of confrontation under the Sixth Amendment.
For these reasons we find the assignment of error not well taken.
Judgment affirmed.
PALMER, P. J., KEEFE and BETTMAN, JJ., concur.