The State appeals the order of the Superior Court (Coffey, J.) sеtting aside the jury’s guilty verdict against the defendant, Michael Spinale, on one charge of robbery. See RSA 606:10, III (2001). The trial court concluded that no rational juror could have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. We reverse and remand.
I
The following facts were adduced at trial. On July 21,2004, Kevin James was working as an attendant at the Simco Parking Lot outside the Happy Hampton Arcade in Hampton. The parking lot was busy due to a fireworks show scheduled to begin at 9:30 p.m. in a beach area approximately 100 *459 yards from the rear of the lot. A booth located at the front of the parking lot provided lighting to James while he stood or sat outside it to collect parking fees and provide tickets to drivers entering the lot. James held the money and ticket stubs in the pockets of an apron. James’ supervisor, Jake Hume, remained inside the arcade for most of the night, but occasionally went outside to direct traffic and collect money from James.
Shortly beforе 9:00 p.m., three men pulled into the parking lot and gave James “a hard time” about the high parking fees and the location of their parking spot. James radioed Hume and asked him to come outside. When Hume arrived, James informed him of what had occurred and pointed to the men as they were walking towards the beach. Officer James Tuttle of the Hampton Police Department, who was on motorcycle patrol, arrived shortly thereafter, but did not see the men. After Officer Tuttle left, Humе informed James that he would call the police if the men returned to cause additional problems.
At approximately 10:44 p.m., after the fireworks had finished, James observed the same three men walking towards him. One of the men passed James and walked towards their car. A second man, later identified as Corey Daniels, stood five or six feet to the side of James, while the third man, later identified by James as the defendant, continued to approach him. The defendant waited while James finishеd with another customer, and then pulled out a knife, pressed it against James’ neck, and demanded all of his money. Initially, James thought that the defendant was joking, but after a couple seconds, realized he was serious. James then noticed a vehicle driving towards them. He told the defendant that the police were coming. When the defendant and Daniels turned to look behind them, James ran behind the booth and watched the defendant and Daniels run back to their vehicle and drive away. As the vеhicle passed James, he wrote down the type of vehicle, Chevy Blazer, and its license plate number, 90AX02, on a ticket stub.
James radioed Hume immediately. Hume arrived and James informed him that the same three men who had given him a hard time about the parking fees had attempted to rob him. Before they could call the police, however, James and Hume observed Officer Tuttle patrolling the lot.
James and Hume described the three individuals to Officer Tuttle. James described the defendаnt, whom Officer Tuttle listed in his report as “Suspect #1,” as a white male, five feet five to five feet six inches in height, twenty to twenty-five years of age, 180 to 210 pounds, with dark hair, wearing a black shirt and possibly jeans, and the driver of the Blazer. He also informed Officer Tuttle that he did not “see any facial hair at the time.” James described Daniels, the man standing to the side and listed as “Suspect #2” in Officer Tuttle’s report, as a white male, five feet eight to *460 five feet nine inches in height, in his early twenties, with a stocky build and dark hair, and wearing a white shirt and jeans. He described the man who had immediately walked to the vehicle, listed as “Suspect #3” in Officer Tuttle’s report, as a white male, five feet eight to five feet nine inches in height, in his early twenties, and wearing a blue Iverson basketball jersey with the number three on it. Hume, who did not see the alleged robbery but had observed the individuals walking away from the earlier confrontation, described “Suspect #2” to Officer Tuttle as wearing a white shirt and having a goatee, and “Suspect #3” аs being tall and wearing a blue Iverson tank top with the number three on it.
The police later identified the defendant as the owner of a Chevy Blazer with Massachusetts license plate number 90AX02. Detective Lynne Charleston of the Hampton Police Department subsequently obtained a general description of the defendant from his driver’s license, compared it to the description of “Suspect #1” in Officer Tuttle’s report, and concluded that the descriptions “somewhat fit.” She then located a photograph of the defendant, which was taken on June 6,2004, and depicted the defendant as having a goatee. Using this photograph, Detective Charleston assembled a two-page photographic array containing photographs of fifteen other men similar in appearance to the defendant. The defendant’s photograph was placed on page two of the array, while a photograph of Daniels, “Suspect #2,” was placed on page one. Daniels’ photograph was included even though, at the time, he was not a suspect in the robbery.
On August 26,2004, Detective Charleston showed the two-page array to James. James recognized none of the photographs on page one, but, “almost immediately” and with “no contemplation,” identified the defendant as the person who tried to rob him. James testified that, “as soon as [he] saw” the array, he was “100 percent sure” that the defendant was the man who robbed him. Detective Charleston asked James to sign, date, and indicate how he knew the defendant on the array. Accordingly, James circled the defendant’s photograph and wrote: “This looks like the kid who held the knife to me the night in the parking lot.” Thereafter, the defendant was charged with robbery.
During trial, James identified the defendant as the robber with “100 percent” certainty. When asked by defense counsel to estimate the defendant’s current height and weight, James testified that the defendant was approximately five feet seven inches or five feet eight inches in height, and 180 pounds. After the State rested, the defendant moved to dismiss, arguing, among other things, that the identification evidence had been insufficient to support a finding beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had committed the robbery. The trial court denied the motion, *461 ruling that the State had made a prima facie case on identification, and that the issue of identification was for the jury to decide.
Thereafter, the defendant testified and presented two witnesses, Danielle Gagne and Jen Elwell, who had been his friends for approximately six years. Gagne and Elwell testified that they met the defendant and the other two men in the beach area before the fireworks began. After the fireworks, Gagne and Elwell walked towards their vehicle with the three men. Gagne testified that the last time she saw the defendant, he was “walking to his car.” Elwell testified that she waved at the men as they were getting into the defendant’s car, and did not see a parking lot attendant.
The defеndant testified that he was at Canobie Lake with the other two men when Elwell called and asked them to come to Hampton beach. He parked in the Simco lot, but encountered no problems with the parking attendant. He denied meeting a parking attendant in the parking lot when he left after the fireworks, and denied that either he or any of his companions had a knife or confronted an attendant. The defendant testified that he was currently twenty-one years of age, six feet two-and-one-quarter inches in height, approximately 250 pounds, and had never shaved his goatee since he grew it approximately eight years before. He also stated that, at the time of the incident, he weighed approximately 230 to 240 pounds. The defendant admitted that he owns a black Chevy Blazer with Massachusetts license plate number 90AX02.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty. The defendant later filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV). He argued that the jury was “manifestly” mistaken as to James’ idеntification of the defendant, and, therefore, the verdict should be set aside and a judgment of acquittal entered. At a subsequent hearing, the defendant contended that there was “an overwhelming contradiction in” James’ testimony such that there was “insufficient evidence to find beyond a reasonable doubt that [he] was the perpetrator.” He asked the trial court to either rule the evidence insufficient and enter a judgment of acquittal, or find that the jury made a plain mistake and order a new trial.
The trial court set aside the verdict and granted a new trial. In so doing, the court cited the legal standard concerning sufficiency of evidence; indicated that it “agreefd] with the defendant’s sufficiency of the evidence argument”; and concluded that “no rational juror could have found [the defendant] guilty beyond a reasonable doubt on the evidence presented at trial.” Specifically, the trial court stated:
The description Mr. James gave to Officer Tuttle on thе night of his attack — presumably the most reliable description available— *462 simply varies too greatly from [the defendant]^ actual physical attributes to conclude that he was the attacker. On cross-examination, Mr. James attempted to credit the difference between the defendant’s actual height and his description to Officer Tuttle to bad estimation skills. This may be so, but his explanation does little to eliminate the reasonable doubt surrounding his later identifications. Further, Mr. James conceded that there was no difference in [the defendant’s appearance at trial and the photo from Defective] Charleston’s array, taken before the attack, which showed him wearing a goatee. The obvious conclusion is that [the defendant] was in fact “Suspect #2,” the stocky, taller man standing behind “Suspect #1,” the shorter attacker with no facial hair.
Based upon these findings, the trial court “decline[d] to enter a judgment of acquittal[,]” and instead, set aside the defendant’s cоnviction and granted a new trial.
The State urges us to reverse the trial court’s decision and remand for resentencing. It contends that the trial court improperly second-guessed the jury’s verdict and made credibility determinations in concluding that the identification evidence was insufficient. The State maintains that there was sufficient direct and circumstantial evidence of identification for a rational juror to find that the defendant was the perpetrator, and thus, the evidence was sufficient to support the conviction. The State notes that while the trial court did not explicitly grant the motion for JNOV and enter a judgment of acquittal, as is the normal practice where a court finds insufficient evidence to support a conviction,
see, e.g., State v. O’Neill,
II
In his initial motion for JNOV, the defendant requested that the trial court find that the identification evidence was insufficient, set aside the verdict, and enter a judgmеnt of acquittal notwithstanding the verdict. At the hearing, however, by asking the trial court to set aside the verdict and *463 grant a new trial, the defendant appears to have argued that the verdict was conclusively against the weight of the evidence. It is unclear whether the trial court found the evidence to be insufficient or conclusively against the weight of the evidence. Accordingly, we evaluate the trial court’s order on both grounds.
The often-confused concepts of weight and sufficiеncy of the evidence are distinct and are governed by different standards.
Broderick v. Watts,
Thus, on a motion for JNOV, where the trial court applies the sufficiency standard,
O’Neill,
In applying the facts to the sufficiency standard, “[o]ur review does not involve an inquiry solely into whether the jury was given an instruction that guilt must be found ‘beyond a reasonable doubt,’ and then a search for
any
evidence of guilt.”
O’Neill,
Here, James’ eyewitness testimony established a
prima facie
case of robbery against the defendаnt. James encountered the defendant not once, but twice on the night of the incident. On two separate occasions, he identified the defendant as the person who robbed him. When presented with a sixteen-person photographic array, James immediately recognized the defendant as the robber, and was “100 percent sure” of his identification. During trial, James again identified the defendant as the robber with “100 percent” certainty. In these circumstances, the jury
*465
reasonably could have credited James’ identifications and found that the defendant committed the crime. Any discrepancies between James’ description of the defendant to Officer Tuttle and his later identifications presented questions of credibility and the weight to be given to James’ testimony and were issues for the jury to resolve.
See Slattery,
Although a verdict may be supported by sufficient evidence, a trial “court may nevertheless conclude that the judgment is against the weight of the evidence.”
Thompkins,
A trial court’s grant of a new trial on the ground that the guilty verdict is against the weight of the evidence, “unlike a reversal based on insufficient evidence, does not mean that acquittal was the only proper verdict. Instead, the [trial] court sits as a ‘thirteenth juror’ and disagrees with the jury’s rеsolution of the conflicting testimony.”
Tibbs,
*466
However, “the jury verdict must be an unreasonable one before the [trial court] may set it aside.”
Panas v. Harakis & K-Mart Corp.,
Because the trial court has greater discretion when ruling upon a motion to set aside the verdict as against the weight of the evidence, our scope of review of such a decision is narrower.
Kierstead,
The degree of deference to the trial court, however, depends upon whether the trial court granted or denied a motion to set aside the verdict as against the weight of the evidence. When а trial court grants such a motion, “there is [a] usurpation by the court of the prime function of the jury as the trier of facts.”
Lind v. Schenley Industries Inc.,
After reviewing the evidence in the record in conjunction with the trial court’s decision, we conclude that the trial court unsustainably exercised its discretion to the extent it found that the jury’s verdict was against the weight of the evidence. The record does not establish an objective basis sufficient to sustain the trial court’s conclusion that James’ description of the perpetrator to Officer Tuttle “simply varie[d] too greatly from [the defendant’s actual physical attributes” such that the actual perpetrator was Daniels and not the defendant.
See Lambert,
While James estimated the perpetrator’s height as being considerably less than the defendant’s actual height when reporting to Officer Tuttle, James also significantly underestimated the defendant’s height during trial. Thus, the trial court gave undue weight to the differences between James’ description of the perpetrator’s height to Officer Tuttle and the defendant’s actual height. The trial court also gave undue weight to James’ inability to recall that the perpetrator had facial hair when he spoke with Officer Tuttle. While the defendant testified that he had worn the goatee for eight straight years, no evidence corroborated his claim that he had in fact been wearing the goatee since he was thirteen years of age. Indeed, the trial court’s explicit finding that another witness corroborated the defendant’s testimony “that he had worn a goatee for many years” was clearly erroneous. Our review of the reсord reveals no such testimony. Moreover, in weighing these purported discrepancies, the trial court did not accord sufficient weight to the fact that James twice identified the defendant as the perpetrator with “100 percent” certainty. Finally, the trial court failed to consider that, although his apparent theory of the case was that no robbery had occurred, the defendant presented no evidence suggesting that James had a motive to fabricate the robbеry.
*468
Given James’ two positive identifications of the defendant, we conclude that the trial court gave undue weight to the discrepancies upon which it relied, and that it unsustainably exercised its discretion in granting a new trial. This is not one of those exceptional cases where the jury failed to give the evidence its proper weight. Rather, this was a classic jury case, in which the jury examined and properly weighed the conflicting evidence to conclude that the defendant committed the robbery.
See Taggart v. State,
Reversed and remanded.
