FRANK DELANO VIPPERMAN, APPELLANT, v. THE STATE OF NEVADA, RESPONDENT.
No. 11634
STATE OF NEVADA
July 21, 1980
[Rehearing denied October 7, 1980]
614 P.2d 532 | 96 Nev. 592
GUNDERSON, J., dissented.
Richard H. Bryan, Attorney General, Carson City; Robert Miller, District Attorney, and James Tufteland, Deputy District Attorney, Clark County, for Respondent.
OPINION
By the Court, MANOUKIAN, J.:
Appellant, Frank Delano Vipperman, appeals from a conviction by jury of murder in the second degree. He was sentenced to life imprisonment. There are several assignments of error. We have determined, however, that only one issue warrants our consideration—that is, whether the trial court erred in excluding proffered evidence claimed to have been material to appellant‘s defense.
The state presented a witness, Dave McPeak, an employee of the partnership, who testified that he saw appellant shoot Parquette. The witness first testified that he heard appellant threaten the victim during several telephone conversations. He then stated that, on April 20, 1973, he and the victim were working at the used car lot and body shop until about 7:00 p.m. Parquette went to lock up and the witness remained in the body shop. The witness then heard a shot and a scream and went to investigate. The victim was yelling “Frank shot me” as he held his wrist and was spinning around. The witness was about to help when he saw appellant standing nearby with a gun. The witness turned, the gun went off, and he crawled underneath a car before running to the building next door.
There was additional testimony as to threats by appellant against the victim. The state also pointed out that appellant was able to account for every minute he spent on that day, except for the period between 7:00 and 10:00 p.m. Appellant attempted to show that McPeak, the alleged eye witness, was in fact lying and that appellant did not kill the victim. Vipperman testified that the friction between the two men was due in large part to the fact that the victim was not conducting the business responsibly. Because of that, appellant decided that he wanted to dissolve the partnership. In furtherance of this decision, appellant called the FBI and the Department of Motor Vehicles in order to report Parquette‘s involvement in stolen automobiles which Parquette and a girl living with him had obtained. Appellant testified that he had asked Parquette if there was any way he could get his share of partnership money back. It was
When appellant was told this, he decided to leave for California. He was scared and nervous. On the day of the homicide, appellant purchased a shotgun from a pawnshop believing that he could discourage Parquette if Parquette saw that appellant had a gun. Appellant also testified that he was certain that Parquette would have somebody after him and appellant stated that on that day he saw men following him. Appellant testified that he missed his scheduled plane to California and then went to the bus station. He left his suitcase in a locker at the bus station and took a cab from downtown. Appellant said that he took his car downtown and parked at a hotel, leaving the shotgun in the car. He testified that he met a girl at a downtown casino and spent time with her from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m., after having been drinking all day. When he returned to his car, he discovered that the shotgun was missing. When he arrived back at his house, he was arrested.
Vipperman first testified without objection to the fact that he had contacted the FBI and the Department of Motor Vehicles with regard to Parquette‘s involvement with stolen vehicles. Appellant then introduced the testimony of an FBI agent who stated that the FBI had received information of the possible involvement of Parquette in the possession of stolen cars. Appellant attempted to elicit testimony from the agent as to what happened as a result of that information. According to the offer of proof, the agent would testify that the FBI had the Las Vegas Police impound stolen vehicles found at Parquette‘s home one week after the homicide and, shortly thereafter, the FBI terminated its investigation. Vipperman argued that this testimony would directly corroborate appellant‘s testimony that Parquette was in fact dealing in stolen cars and that Parquette made the threat to appellant that he would get “a face full of desert.” The state argued that not only was this hearsay, but that what transpired subsequent to the death of Parquette was irrelevant and immaterial to the case. The objection was sustained. Appellant also attempted to introduce the testimony of a records supervisor from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department which indicated that the vehicles found on the property next to the body shop were actually stolen. The court also sustained the objection to this offer and stated that the fact that the victim was dealing illegally in stolen cars was irrelevant, immaterial and remote. In the context of this case, we agree.
Appellant argues, citing Johnstone v. State, 92 Nev. 241, 548 P.2d 1362 (1976), that the evidence was admissible and highly relevant and that this was evidence which could have been used by the jury as a basis for acquittal. In Johnstone, hearsay testimony tended to prove that appellant was not with companions when they killed the victims. There was a logical connection between the evidence and appellant‘s claim that he did not commit the crime. In the instant case, appellant contended that he did not commit the crime and was with an unidentified female at the time the homicide occurred. The evidence that stolen vehicles were found on the victim‘s property and the fact that the stolen car investigation ceased after Parquette‘s death were proffered to prove involvement with stolen cars and to substantiate the fact that a threat was made by Parquette. These matters would tend to prove a claim of self-defense or provocation by appellant rather than an alibi. Appellant, though, failed to claim self-defense or provocation. Had he done so, the evidence likely would have been relevant. The only reason proffered for introduction of the evidence was to corroborate appellant‘s position as to threats made by the victim2 and was thus properly excluded.
Other contentions of error are wholly without merit. We affirm the judgment of conviction.
MOWBRAY, C. J., and THOMPSON and BATJER, JJ., concur.
GUNDERSON, J., dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
To prove appellant killed Parquette, the State established that appellant had purchased the death weapon on the day of the homicide. Interpreted as an act of preparation, this purchase inferentially helped evidence appellant‘s presence and participation in Parquette‘s murder.
Attempting to prove his theory of the case, i.e. that another had killed Parquette, while he himself was elsewhere, it obviously became important for appellant to establish the innocent nature of the purchase, from which his preparation and guilt might otherwise be inferred. For this purpose, evidence corroborating appellant‘s explanation that the weapon had not been purchased as preparation for Parquette‘s murder, but for self-defense, was clearly relevant.
Thus, it is unclear to me how it may logically be said that the evidence in question “was simply not ‘of consequence to the determination of the action.‘”
