This opinion
will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as
provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (1998).
STATE
OF MINNESOTA
IN
COURT OF APPEALS
State of Minnesota,
Respondent,
vs.
Rogelio Tovar,
Appellant.
Filed March 7, 2000
Lyon County District Court
File No. K7-97-792
John M. Stuart, State Public Defender, Sharon E. Jacks, Assistant Public Defender, 2829 University Avenue SE, Suite 600, Minneapolis, MN 55414 (for appellant)
Mike Hatch, Attorney General, Robert A. Stanich, Assistant Attorney General, 525 Park Street, Suite 500, St. Paul, MN 55103-2106; and
Richard R. Maes, Lyon County Attorney, Lyon County Courthouse, 607 West Main Street, Marshall, MN 56258 (for respondent)
Considered and decided by Davies, Presiding Judge, Lansing, Judge, and Harten, Judge.
HARTEN, Judge
Appellant
challenges his conviction for fifth-degree controlled substance offense,
arguing that the district court abused its discretion in admitting hearsay
evidence and that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s
verdict. Because we see no abuse of
discretion and ample evidence to support the verdict, we affirm.
FACTS
Appellant
Rogelio Tovar and his wife, Lorena Tovar, rented space in their home to Alfredo
Sanchez. A police informant came to the
home, planning to buy from Sanchez one pound of marijuana for $1,000. A conversation between the informant and
appellant’s wife was monitored by two deputies and recorded.
Ms. Tovar: Well, Alfredo say
that if you want to leave the money and then you want to come back later, until
he came back home. He is in Worthington
and he say about three he will be back and then my husband say that he have
one, that then he can sell you just half, half a pound.
Informant: He got one though, right here?
Ms. Tovar: Yeah, but I don’t know where is it.
Informant: You don’t know where?
Ms. Tovar: Yeah.
But my husband says he can sell you just half.
Informant: But he is going to sell me one when he
comes back?
Ms. Tovar: Well, that is what
Alfredo say but it is not Alfredo’s. So
it is my husband’s.
Informant: All right. Well, I can leave the money for you and then
I will be back at three.
* * * *
Ms. Tovar: Okay. Because my husband will be here by
two-thirty, three.
Informant: Yeah.
Ms. Tovar: And it doesn’t matter
if Alfredo is not here but my husband will be here.
Informant: At three?
Ms. Tovar: Yeah.
Informant: All right.
Ms. Tovar: Um-hum.
How much is it?
Informant: A “G.”
All right, I will be back at three.
The
informant returned to the house at 3:20 p.m. and met appellant, who went
upstairs, returned with a bag containing 369 grams (13 ounces) of marijuana,
and gave the bag to the informant. This
transaction was not recorded because the monitor attached to the informant was
not working.
Appellant was later arrested and charged with
fifth-degree controlled substance crime.
At trial, his wife was called as a witness for the defense. She testified that she told the informant
only during a phone conversation, not in person, that he could leave the money.
She also testified to telling the
informant: (1) that Alfredo was in Worthington, (2) that her husband said that
“he have one but he can sell you half but I don’t know where it is at”; (3)
that “[Alfredo] would be back at three but it [the marijuana] is not his, it is
my husband’s”; (4) that when the informant returned, she went into Alfredo’s
room, got the bag of marijuana, and gave it to her husband; (5) that she told
her husband, “Alfredo just say that ‘Give that package to the man.’;” and
(6) that her husband was going to ask her what the package was but she
didn’t have time because her children were crying.
After her testimony, the prosecution sought to introduce the tape for
impeachment purposes. Over the
objection of the defense on hearsay grounds, the tape was admitted.
The informant testified that he returned to
appellant’s house a little after three because Ms. Tovar had said appellant
would be back then, that he met appellant in the kitchen, and that “[appellant]
went upstairs, got the marijuana, came back down and gave it to me. I looked at it, saw that it looked like a
pound of marijuana and left.” When
asked where appellant was while the informant looked at the marijuana, the
informant testified, “Right beside me in the kitchen.”
The jury found
appellant guilty of fifth-degree controlled substance crime. He challenges his conviction, arguing that
the district court abused its discretion in admitting the tape and that the
state did not meet its burden of proving appellant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
D E C I S I O N
1. Admission
of the Tape
Appellate
courts largely defer to the district court’s evidentiary rulings, which will
not be overturned absent a clear abuse of discretion. State v. Kelly, 435 N.W.2d 807, 813 (Minn. 1989). The prosecution sought to introduce the tape
to impeach appellant’s wife’s testimony that she had made certain statements
only over the phone when in fact she had made them in person; the truth of the
statements was not at issue. During the
testimony offered by the deputy who had monitored the taped conversation, the
judge explained to the jury:
[T]here is an exclusion of evidence as to something being hearsay as
what somebody was told by another person and the statement that is going to
be—what I anticipate the answer to be from talking with counsel is I will
permit the answer to the question but it does not prove the matter asserted in
that out-of-court statement but merely to show that the statement was made.
Thus, by the
time the jury heard the tape, it had already heard testimony of its contents
from both participants and testimony from a non-participant, and been told that
the non-participant’s testimony was admitted only to show the conversation took
place. We find no abuse of discretion
in admitting the tape.
Moreover,
even if the tape had been wrongly admitted, its admission would not have
affected the verdict. If the trial
court has erred in admitting evidence, the reviewing court determines whether
there is a reasonable possibility that the wrongfully admitted evidence
significantly affected the verdict. State v. Post,
512 N.W.2d 99, 102, n.2 (Minn. 1994).[1]
The
evidence was merely a tape of a conversation about which the two participants
had already testified in detail; it corroborated their accounts of what they
said to each other and showed only that appellant’s wife erred when she
testified that she said certain things only over the phone when she actually
said them in person. But the jury
learned nothing new from the tape.
There was no reasonable possibility that the tape significantly affected
the verdict.
2. Sufficiency of the Evidence
In considering a claim of insufficient
evidence, this court’s review is limited to a painstaking analysis of the
record to determine whether the evidence, when viewed in the light most
favorable to the conviction, is sufficient to allow the jurors to reach the
verdict that they did. State v.
Webb, 440 N.W.2d 426, 430 (Minn. 1989). The reviewing court must assume that the jury believed the
state’s witnesses and disbelieved any evidence to the contrary. State v. Moore, 438 N.W.2d 101, 108 (Minn.
1989). A conviction based entirely on
circumstantial evidence merits stricter scrutiny than convictions based in part
on direct evidence. State v.
Jones, 516 N.W.2d 545, 549 (Minn. 1994). A jury, however, is in the best position to evaluate
circumstantial evidence and its verdict is entitled to due deference. Webb, 440 N.W.2d at 430.
Appellant contends that the evidence is
insufficient to prove that he knew what was in the bag he handed to the
informant. But the testimony of
appellant’s wife, the informant, and the deputies, and the circumstance of
appellant’s handing over a bag to an individual who had previously paid $1,000 for
a pound of marijuana, support the jury’s verdict.
Appellant relies on Jones to argue that his conviction must
be overturned because the evidence supports a rational theory other than that
of his guilt. Jones is readily
distinguishable. In Jones,
the defendant allegedly assisted in the crime by supplying the perpetrator with
the gun and the bicycle ridden to the crime scene and by identifying the
victim. 516 N.W.2d at 549. But evidence supported alternatives to
these allegations: the perpetrator had used the gun and had access to the
apartment where it was kept, defendant’s bike was a different color, and the
victim’s identity was obvious, as he was a white man, six feet four inches and
290 pounds, in a group of Southeast Asians.
Here, appellant’s alternative theory, i.e. that he simply took a bag
his wife handed him, heard her tell him that their tenant had said to give the
bag to the informant, and handed the bag to the informant, all without knowing
the contents of the bag, was unsupported evidence. Instead, there was substantial evidence supporting the state’s
case, and the jury believed that evidence.
There is no basis for overturning the verdict.
Affirmed.
[1] Appellant argues that the standard is whether the verdict was “surely unattributable” to the erroneously admitted evidence, citing State v. Keeton, 589 N.W.2d 85, 91 (Minn. 1998). Appellant misconstrues the Keeton holding that “If the verdict actually rendered was surely unattributable to the errors, the errors are harmless,” to mean that errors are harmless only if the verdict is “surely unattributable” to them.