Dеfendant was initially charged with having committed the felony (§ 556.020) 1 of robbery in the first degree. §§ 560.120 and 560.135. He was represented by appointed counsel and admitted to bail. When defendant was arraigned on the robbery charge April 22, 1976, in the Circuit Court of Greene County, his trial was set for June 7, 1976, but defendant did not appear for trial. Thereafter the 24-year-old defendant was charged with failure to appear at the robbery trial as denounced by § 544.665-1(1). 2 With different appointed counsel and jury waived, defendant was court-tried and found guilty of failure to appear. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied and he was sentenced to imprisonment for a term of four years with credit of 267 days spent in prison or jail awaiting trial.
On appeal, defendant’s first point relied on is: “The [trial] court erred in allowing defendant’s attorney [appointed to represent him on the robbery charge] to testify about conversations between himself and defendant on May 25, 1976 since such conversations were privileged communications between attorney and client.” Albeit this point is written heedless of the requirements of Rule 84.04(d), we will consider it in light of the following background and that portion of § 491.060 which reads: “The following persons shall be incompetent to testify: ... (3) An attorney, concerning any communication made to him by his client in that relation, or his advice thereon, without the consent of such client; . . .” (Our emphasis).
From the time of arraignment on April 22 (when defendant was advised of his trial setting for June 7) until May 25, defendant’s counsel did not see or hear from defendant. During this period counsel wrote to defendant on May 14 and May 19 and several times contacted defendant’s wife and defendant’s bondsman in an effort to converse with defendant or ascertain his whereabouts. Defendant had not paid the bondsman who, as could be expected, was also intеrested in finding defendant.
On May 25, after first making telephone contact, defendant and his father appeared at the lawyer’s office where the three of them conferred. Defendant’s objections that any testimony by counsel relative to this meeting would violate the attorney-client privilege were overruled because, so the trial court opined, the presence and hearing of a third person (defendant’s father) destroyed the attorney-client privilege.
Defendant’s attorney on the rоbbery charge testified under subpoena, in sub
It is too general and inaccurate to say that all communications between counsel and client are privileged. To be privileged the communication must relate to attorney-client business and not to extraneous matters.
In re Busse’s Estate,
That the cause was set for trial on June 7 and that defendant’s attendance on that date was expected, were routine matters not in the nature of confidential communications arising from the attorney-client relationship.
United States v. Hail,
Defendant’s second point: “The [trial] court erred in admitting State’s Exhibits 5 & 8, which were letters sent from [defendant’s attorney on the robbery charge] to appellant for the reason that such letters were privileged communications between attorney and client and for the further reason that there was insufficient foundation to show that defendant had received them or they had ever been mailed; and lacking such foundation, they were irrelevant to the issue of appellant’s alleged intention to not appear.”
Exhibit 8, a letter dated May 19 written by the attorney for defendant and addressed to defendant at his Springfield address (with a copy to the bondsman), contained a reminder that the triаl on the
We hold that the admission of Exhibits 5 and 8 into evidence did not рermit disclosure of privileged communications between attorney and client. To be privileged, writings which constitute a communication between attorney and client must equate to the general requirements of other privileged communications. Therefore, when the letters contained mere recitations of facts accessible to others or ascertainable from the public court records and constituted a simple transmission of these matters and where the attorney’s knowledge dеrived from sources other than the defendant, the communications were not privileged.
Cranston v. Stewart,
As to the last portion of defendant’s second point we find no reversible error. Even assuming, arguendo, that the trial court erred in admitting the two letters into evidence because “there was insufficient foundation to show that defendant had received them or they had even been mailed,” it is firmly established that admission of improper evidence is generally harmless if the facts attempted to be shown are fully and propеrly provided by other acceptable evidence.
State v. Starkey,
Defendant’s third point: “The court erred in admitting State’s Exhibit 5 and also in admitting the testimony of [defendant’s bondsman on the robbery charge] as to his conduct and defendant’s conduct aftеr June 7,1976, these things being irrelevant in view of the fact that defendant was charged with failure to appear on June 7th only.” We disagree with this assertion. As previously noted a copy of Exhibit 5, supra, was sent to defendant in care of his mother’s St. Louis address on the day аfter defendant failed to appear on the robbery charge. The mother telephoned the attorney the day after the letter had been posted and acknowledged its receipt. Defendant’s father testified defendant had been residing with his mother “until just the day before [the bondsman first] came” to St. Louis seeking defendant after his failure to appear. The bondsman recounted that he ultimately located defendant in a St. Louis cafe a short distance from the mother’s home. This evidence and the testimony of the bondsman relative to his efforts to locate defendant subsequent to his failure to appear at the robbery trial “tended to establish that defendant’s failure to appear was deliberate and willful, the result of a plan or design to еvade incarceration. We consider it relevant .... [c]f.
State v. Musick,
Defendant’s fourth point: “The court erred in returning a verdict against defendant since there was insufficient evidence to prove defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, in that: A. He did not leave the state. B. He communicated with his attor
This final point presents nothing for appellate review because it is proffered shorn of all citation of authority. In such a case the point is deemed to have been waived or abandoned.
State v. Halliburton,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. References to statutes and rules are to RSMo, V.A.M.S., and to Missouri Supreme Court Rules of Civil Procedure, V.A.M.R.
. Sec. 544.665-1(1): “In addition to the forfeiture any security which was given or pledged for his release, any person who, having been released pursuant to sections 544.040 to 544.-665, or upon a recognizance or bond pursuant to any other provisions оf law, willfully fails to appear before any court or judicial officer as required shall be guilty of an offense and punished as follows: (1) If arrested for or charged with a felony, by a fine of not more than five thousand dollars or imprisoned for not more than five years;”.
