Hull v. State
Hull v. State
Opinion
Carol Lacey Hull was convicted of first degree robbery and was sentenced as a habitual offender to life imprisonment without possibility of parole. On appeal, she contends that the in-court identification by an eyewitness should have been excluded *Page 1203 because that identification was the product of an unduly suggestive photographic array displayed to the witness prior to trial and had no independent basis of reliability.
Ryan testified that on the afternoon of the robbery she was driving around the courthouse square in Bay Minette when she met a white automobile proceeding the wrong way on the one-way street. Ryan, who had her two small children with her, stopped her car and waited while the driver of the white vehicle made a U-turn in front of her. In making this U-turn, the white car came within approximately two feet of the front of Ryan's vehicle. When asked if she "g[o]t a good look or a look at [the driver's] face," Ryan answered affirmatively. After the driver of the white car made a U-turn, she parked in the drive-through lane of a bank across the street from the drugstore.
Ryan was proceeding slowly down the courthouse square when she observed a man with a brown paper bag under his arm exit the drugstore and cross the street. When the man reached the bank, he began to run. He ran to the white car and jumped in, and the car pulled off before he had closed the door. Ryan testified that she "knew something was up," so she followed the white car in an attempt to obtain its complete tag number. The driver of the white car eventually eluded her by driving through a stop light, and Ryan then went to the police station, where she reported what she had seen.
The officer in charge of the robbery investigation, Kenneth Hall, confirmed at the suppression hearing that Ryan had given a "multi-page, detailed statement" shortly after the robbery. However, Officer Hall related Ryan's description of the driver of the white car only as "a white female, blond headed." Also at the suppression hearing, Officer Hall testified that Ryan was unable to provide the entire tag number of the white vehicle and that she was hypnotized shortly after the robbery in an effort to obtain a complete tag number. While under hypnosis, Ryan described the driver of the white car as a "plain white female, blond hair, no make-up . . . around thirty-five to forty years old or maybe older and approximately a hundred and thirty to a hundred and forty pounds." She also stated that the driver was wearing a "button-down blouse" and gave the color of this blouse. Earlier in his testimony, Officer Hall had indicated that Ryan's description of the driver while under hypnosis was the same as the description that she had given immediately after the robbery. Officer Hall also testified that Ryan viewed a line-up approximately two weeks after the robbery and did not identify anyone. The defendant was not a participant in this line-up.
Almost a year after the robbery, Officer Hall received from the Montgomery Police Department information which implicated the defendant in the Stacey's Drugstore robbery. He prepared a photographic spread composed of four color photographs and one black and white photograph, all of which were frontal views of the subjects.1 The black and white photograph was a *Page 1204 photograph of the defendant. Hall testified that he showed these photographs to Ryan, who identified the defendant as the driver of the white car. This spread contained the only photographs that Hall showed to Ryan and, as far as he was aware, these photographs were the only photographs that Ryan had been shown.
Some 51 weeks after the robbery, Officer Hall assisted Mobile police officers in arresting William Holland, the alleged gunman. The arrest occurred at Holland's residence and was covered by a local television station. Shortly before the officers effectuated the arrest, the defendant was observed leaving Holland's residence in the company of a third person. She and this third person were apprehended approximately two blocks from Holland's residence. A white car fitting the description of the get-away car used in the instant robbery was found at Holland's residence, and it was registered in Holland's name.
Officer Hall testified at the suppression hearing that, several days after the arrest, he was in a flower shop operated by Ryan's mother-in-law, who related to him that Ryan had watched the television coverage of the arrest of Holland and the defendant and "had I.D.'d the woman from the T.V. as being the subject from the car." He further testified at trial that "the photo spread and the arrest was near about imminent, one after the other. It was approximately fifty-one weeks later." It appears that the photographic identification by Ryan occurred before the televised arrest.
Ryan's testimony as to the pre-trial identification process differed profoundly from Officer Hall's. She stated that she was shown between eight and ten photographic spreads by three different officers. According to Ryan, she was first shown a single photograph approximately a week after the robbery, and definitely ruled out the subject of this photograph as the driver of the white car. She stated that a week and a half to two weeks after the robbery, Officer Hall showed her a spread of black and white photographs from which she identified the defendant's photograph. These photographs were frontal views of the subjects. Shortly thereafter, she was shown a spread of profile views and she again identified a picture of the defendant. Ryan was then permitted to make an in-court identification of the defendant as the driver of the white car. On cross-examination, Ryan stated that she was not at any time shown a spread consisting of "one colored [photograph] and four black and whites or anything like that."
Having found that the pre-trial identification procedure was impermissibly suggestive, we must now determine whether Ryan's in-court identification of the defendant was independently reliable. In Neil v. Biggers,
The opportunity to view. Ryan viewed the driver of the white car in full daylight as that driver made a U-turn directly in front of her. While Ryan did not testify as to the length of time she observed the driver of the white car, it does not appear to have been more than a matter of seconds.
The degree of attention. The driver of the white car was driving the wrong way on a one-way street and was driving toward Ryan, who had stopped her own vehicle. Ryan did not testify as to her degree of attention.
The accuracy of the prior description. Ryan had previously given a fairly detailed description of the driver of the white car. This description included the driver's race, sex, hair color, approximate age and weight, and one item of clothing worn by the driver.
This description, as testified to by Officer Hall, was obtained while Ryan was under hypnosis. However, the defendant has not contested the identification by Ryan on the grounds that she was hypnotized. Compare Chamblee v. State,
The witness's level of certainty. There is nothing in the record to indicate the certainty with which Ryan identified the *Page 1206 defendant's photograph. Both Ryan and Officer Hall testified simply that Ryan identified the photograph. However, Ryan never identified anyone else as the driver of the white car. Officer Hall testified that when Ryan viewed a line-up in which the defendant was not present she did not identify anyone. Ryan testified that she viewed a line-up and eight to ten photographic spreads, but only identified photographs of the defendant.
The time between the crime and the identification. The evidence was in conflict as to the time lapse between the crime and the initial identification. Officer Hall testified that this period was 51 weeks, while Ryan testified that it was a week and a half to two weeks. The trial occurred over 34 months after the crime.
All in all, the evidence which we must consider in determining whether Ryan's in-court identification was independently reliable is clearly conflicting. Ryan observed the driver in the white car in daylight, but only for a matter of seconds. While the short time Ryan had to view the driver of the white car does not necessarily weigh against the reliability of her identification, see O'Brien v. Wainwright,
Ryan did give a fairly detailed, although somewhat general, description of the driver of the white car shortly after the robbery. The defendant has not contested the accuracy of this description, but maintains that it is too general to be an indication of reliability. However, Ryan's prior description is no more general than descriptions given in other cases where the identification was held reliable. See Neil v. Biggers,
There was no testimony as to the certainty of Ryan's identification of the defendant. She had not made a previous identification of someone other than the defendant and that fact lends support to a finding of reliability. See Neil v.Biggers,
In this particular case, our review of the totality of the circumstances must also include the fact that Officer Hall testified that Ryan viewed the arrest of the defendant on television and that this televised arrest was in very close proximity to the highly suggestive photographic line-up. Defense counsel did not question Ryan about the televised arrest and we therefore cannot determine with any degree of certainty what effect this might have had on Ryan's identification of the defendant. Cf. United States v. Ayendes,
This Court is well aware that the credibility of a witness is for the jury to determine.2 See, e.g., Reeves v. State,
Since the photographic line-up from which Ryan initially identified the defendant was impermissibly suggestive, the burden was on the prosecution to show that the in-court identification had an independent basis of reliability. SeeO'Brien v. Wainwright,
For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
All Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Carol Lacey Hull v. State.
- Cited By
- 12 cases
- Status
- Published