STATE of Idaho, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Justin Lee WILSON, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 40759.
Court of Appeals of Idaho.
May 15, 2015.
Review Denied June 10, 2015.
349 P.3d 439
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; Russell J. Spencer, Deputy Attorney General, Boise, for respondent.
LANSING, Judge.
Justin Lee Wilson conditionally pleaded guilty to felony driving under the influence, reserving the right to appeal the denial of his motions to exclude a State‘s witness from testifying because of a discovery violation and his motion to continue the trial. We affirm.
I.
BACKGROUND
According to testimony adduced at Wilson‘s preliminary hearing, at approximately 12:30 a.m. on June 28, 2012, witness Laurie Mayfield was riding a bus when she observed two men enter the bus and stagger to their seats in the back. The “obnoxious” men loudly talked about celebrating one man‘s birthday and about how intoxicated they were. Mayfield identified Wilson as one of the men.
Mayfield became concerned when the men began to discuss who would drive when they reached their stop. The men and Mayfield exited the bus at the same stop, and Mayfield got into a car driven by her daughter. Mayfield and her daughter watched as the men entered a Chevrolet Blazer and drove out of the parking lot at a high rate of speed, spewing gravel, with Wilson at the wheel. The women wrote down the vehicle‘s license plate number and called 911. They then followed the Blazer and saw Wilson speeding, running red lights, and swerving. When the Blazer stopped at a bar, the women parked in an adjacent lot. The police were “right behind” the women and arrived “within seconds” after they stopped.
After speaking with the women, Coeur d‘Alene police officer Mortensen went into the bar and asked the bartender who was the most recent arrival. The bartender pointed out defendant Wilson. The officer directed Wilson outside, where the women identified him as the driver of the Blazer. Mortensen also observed that Wilson appeared intoxicated. After Wilson refused field sobriety tests, he was arrested for felony driving under the influence,
At the preliminary hearing, during cross-examination of Officer Mortensen, defense counsel established that the officer did not obtain any information from witnesses regarding how many drinks Wilson may have had at the bar. At the close of the hearing, defense counsel and the prosecutor argued how the absence of such evidence would affect the probable cause determination. The magistrate found that it was not determinative, as the women‘s testimony provided probable cause to believe that Wilson was under the influence while he was driving and before he entered the bar. The magistrate therefore bound Wilson over to the district court.
Early in the case, Wilson filed a request for discovery, including a request under
Wilson moved to exclude the bartender‘s testimony, asserting a discovery violation. At a hearing on the motion the State disclosed, for the first time, the content of the bartender‘s statement to the prosecution‘s investigator, indicating that the bartender had not served a drink to Wilson and that Wilson had not consumed anything provided by other customers before the police officer arrived. The district court refused Wilson‘s requested sanction of exclusion of the witness, but ordered that the defense be allowed to interview the bartender before she testi-fied.
Thereafter, Wilson entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving the right to appeal the denial of his motions to exclude the witness and for a continuance.
II.
ANALYSIS
When a party has failed to comply with discovery the trial court may impose sanctions including, in appropriate circumstances, the exclusion of a witness.
The disposition of a motion for a continuance is likewise committed to the discretion of the trial court and will not be overturned on appeal unless a clear abuse of
At the hearing on Wilson‘s initial motion to exclude the bartender as a witness, the prosecutor explained that in September the police and prosecution investigators began attempting to locate the bartender, but had been hampered because the woman no longer worked at the bar and had changed her name upon getting married. The prosecutor also said she had disclosed the witness‘s name to the defense as soon as the investigators discovered it.
On these facts, the district court at the initial hearing found a discovery violation. The district court apparently concluded that, in good faith, the prosecutor should have disclosed the bartender earlier as a witness that the State “may” call at trial under
hol
On appeal, Wilson argues that this sanction was insufficient and that the witness should have been entirely excluded or, in the alternative, his motion for a continuance should have been granted so that he could locate and subpoena the claimed witnesses who could contradict the bartender‘s testimony. We are not persuaded, for Wilson has not demonstrated any possible prejudice from the late disclosure of the bartender that was not eliminated by the district court‘s sanction. By allowing the State to call the bartender only as a rebuttal witness in the event that Wilson presented evidence that he consumed alcohol in the bar, the court placed the defense in exactly the same strategic position that it occupied before the bartender was disclosed. That is, defense counsel asserted that before disclosure of the bartender, he had not intended to present the defendant‘s testimony nor any other witnesses who would testify to Wilson‘s consumption of alcohol in the bar. He claimed to need to call such witnesses only in order to contradict the bartender‘s anticipated testimony. However, that need was eliminated by the court‘s prohibition against the State calling the bartender in its case-in-chief. The court‘s ruling provided an effective discovery sanction that obviated any prejudice to the defense and eliminated the basis for Wilson‘s claimed need to locate witnesses to counter the State‘s evidence in its case-in-chief, because there would be no such evidence to controvert.
Wilson has shown no prejudice, and therefore no reversible error, in the district court‘s resolution of his motion for sanctions and motion for a continuance. Therefore, the district court‘s orders and the judgment of conviction are affirmed.
Chief Judge MELANSON and Judge GRATTON concur.
Notes
Upon written request of the prosecuting attorney, the defendant shall permit the state to inspect ... any results or reports of ... mental examinations ... made in connection with the particular case ... which the defendant intends to introduce in evidence at the trial, or which were prepared by a witness whom the defendant intends to call at the trial when the results or reports relate to testimony of the witness.
