The defendant appeals his three misdemeanor convictions for operating a motor vehicle after his license to operate had been suspended and his misdemeanor conviction for disobeying
The four offenses charged arose out of three separate incidents. The first occurred on November 24, 1985, when Nashua police officer Neal Casale saw a car go by with an expired inspection sticker. The officer stopped the vehicle, which had a male and female seated inside, and asked the driver his name and address. The driver responded that his name was Michael H. Manna and that he lived at 4 Jo Ellen Drive in Merrimack and did not have a New Hampshire license in his possession. The officer radioed for a license check from his police cruiser, which revealed that Michael H. Manna did not have a New Hampshire driver’s license. The officer then gave the driver a summons for operating without a license and the passenger, who owned the vehicle, a summons for the use of an uninspected vehicle.
Just before Christmas, in 1985, a man who identified himself as Michael Manna left a telephone message for Officer Casale, who returned the call. Michael Manna stated that he had been sent a notice from the Nashua District Court for failure to appear to respond to a summons; but he claimed he had never received a summons from Officer Casale and that he had not committed the alleged offense on November 24, 1985.
A meeting between the two men was arranged on December 27, 1985. When they met, Officer Casale immediately recognized that Michael Manna, the person with whom he was meeting, was not the same person he had arrested on November 24, 1985. Michael Manna told Officer Casale that he believed his brother Richard was the driver, since Richard had in the past held himself out to the police to be Michael Manna when he had been stopped for operating a vehicle while his license was suspended.
Officer Casale then requested a license check for Richard Manna and found that Richard’s license to operate had also been suspended. Hence, if Richard had, in fact, been the driver on November 24, 1985, he would have been operating a motor vehicle after suspension. Officer Casale then located a 1984 photograph of the defendant from the Nashua police files and recognized the person in the photograph to be the defendant, Richard Manna. The
The next incident involving the defendant occurred on January 30, 1986. Nashua police officer Jamie Provencher stopped a vehicle because of erratic operation at 2:48 a.m. The vehicle was being operated by a male, with a female passenger. On this occasion the defendant gave his real name and date of birth. The officer checked the status of the defendant’s license and learned that his license to operate had been suspended. The defendant was subsequently arrested and charged with driving after suspension.
The third incident involving the defendant occurred on March 4, 1986, when Nashua police officer Thomas Ravanelle, who was operating a radar post, noted a man whose head “almost hit the ceiling of the car” because of his height, with a passenger, driving a speeding vehicle. The officer followed the car until it stopped at a parking lot, whereupon the heads of both parties disappeared. The officer could, however, see what he thought were “parts of bodies coming up over the seat a few inches.” When the officer approached the car, the defendant, who the officer estimated to be “six foot five,” was in the passenger’s seat. His wife, Maureen, who the officer estimated to be “four feet ten inches tall,” was in the driver’s seat. The officer concluded that the parties had changed seats. He asked the defendant his name and date of birth because he believed the tall male was the operator “when [he] had clocked [the car] on radar.” Once again, a license check revealed that the defendant’s license had been suspended, and he was charged with driving after suspension.
The defendant moved to sever the three driving-after-suspension cases. The motion was denied, and the four misdemeanor cases were tried together. The defendant’s motion to suppress the identification by Officer Casale was also denied.
The defendant first claims that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to sever the cases. This court’s applicable standard of review is that “the resolution of consolidation questions lies within the sound discretion of the trial court and ... in the absence of a showing of an abuse of this discretion, its ruling will not be disturbed on appeal.” State v. Cote,
The jury could easily examine and weigh the evidence in each case without risk of confusion since the charges arose out of three distinct incidents, each involving a particular date and a particular officer. The State’s evidence consisted of the direct testimony of the three officers involved and of the defendant’s brother. The State also- introduced the defendant’s photograph and two documents.
The defendant argues that charges should be consolidated for trial only when they are “related or apparently part of a common scheme or plan.” State v. Freije,
In this case, it should be noted, the trial court was careful to caution the jury to consider each offense separately. State v. Cote,
The defendant next argues that consolidation made it impossible for him to testify as to the incident involving his wife without being required to testify as to the other charges. This contention fails because the defendant did not make “a convincing showing that he ha[d] both important testimony to give concerning one count and strong need to refrain from testifying on the other[s].” Baker v. United States,
Turning to the suppression issue, the defendant argues that the trial court erred in failing to suppress Officer Casale’s out-of-court and in-court identifications of the defendant because of the fact that Casale sought out the single photograph of the defendant when the defendant’s brother accurately insisted that he had been improperly charged with the initial offense.
We have held in State v. Howe,
The use of a single photograph would be highly suggestive in a case where the police were working with a victim or potential untrained lay witness to obtain an identification. State v. LeClair,
Michael was not a witness to the November 24, 1985 driving incident and he could not have testified that his brother was the driver on the date in question. The person who could best testify as to the actual driver was Officer Casale, who had made the stop and issued the summons. Given the circumstances, it is unreasonable to hold that Officer Casale should have requested that another police officer prepare a photo array to see if Casale could pick out Richard Manna so as to increase the reliability of his photo identification. Officer Casale, having been given information about Richard’s past actions and being the arresting officer, acted as a reasonable officer would under the circumstances and simply obtained a photo of Richard which was at hand in order to verify Michael’s story and complete his investigation.
The defendant also suggests that the State should be made to prove by clear and convincing evidence that it has satisfied the five reliability factors set forth in State v. LeClair,
The defendant cites Manson v. Brathwaite,
In view of the fact that the procedures for identification under these facts were not unduly suggestive and that the reliability of Officer Casale’s out-of-court identification meets the clear and convincing test, the trial court did not need to determine the existence of an independent source for the in-court identification. Howe,
Affirmed.
