No. 79CA0665Colorado Court of Appeals.
Decided December 11, 1980. Rehearing denied February 5, 1981. Certiorari denied May 11, 1981.
Appeal from the District Court of Boulder County, Honorable Rex H. Scott, Judge.
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J. D. MacFarlane, Attorney General, Richard F. Hennessey, Deputy Attorney General, Mary J. Mullarkey, Special Assistant Attorney General, Mary E. Ricketson, Assistant Attorney General, for plaintiff-appellee.
Miller and Gray, P.C., Robert Bruce Miller, for defendant-appellant.
Division III.
Opinion by JUDGE KIRSHBAUM.
[1] Defendant appeals his jury conviction of second degree burglary. We affirm. [2] The record reveals that police officers responding to a burglar alarm at approximately 4:30 a.m. on February 2, 1978, discovered defendant inside the Boulder Medical Center Pharmacy holding a bag containing various drugs. Some of the drugs were property of the pharmacy. At trial defendant admitted that he was guilty of the crime of second degree criminal trespass. However, he claimed that he was so intoxicated on the night in question that he was not aware of his actions and that, therefore, he lacked the specific intent required for conviction of second degree burglary. During the trial, both parties offered evidence concerning defendant’s alleged state of intoxication.Page 122
[3] On direct examination, defense counsel, having established that defendant had come to Colorado from New York in 1973, asked defendant the following questions and received the following answers: [4] “Q Have you been into any trouble in Colorado since you came out here? [5] A No, I haven’t. Just what is going on now. [6] Q Now, there have been allegations that you were found on February 1st, 1978, in the early morning hours with a bag of pharmaceutical drugs. Were you a drug dealer? [7] A No. [8] Q Were you a drug addict? [9] A No, I wasn’t. [10] Q Do you know what you were doing with that bag of drugs, if indeed you had one? [11] A No.” [12] At an in camera hearing subsequent to the completion of the direct examination of defendant, the prosecution informed the trial court that it intended to cross-examine defendant concerning a New York misdemeanor conviction for malicious mischief. Defendant objected on the ground that both the conviction and other evidence that he had been a drug addict while a high school senior involved events which occurred prior to 1973. When his objection was overruled, defendant requested and received permission from the trial court to resume the stand, expressly preserving his objection. He then testified on further direct examination about the misdemeanor conviction and about his drug addiction as a youth in New York. [13] Defendant first contends that the trial court erred in overruling his objection to the admission into evidence of the New York misdemeanor conviction. We agree, but find no reversible error. [14] Evidence of prior felony convictions is admissible to attack the credibility of a defendant who testifies on his own behalf. People v. Montez, 197 Colo. 126, 589 P.2d 1368 (1979); § 13-90-101, C.R.S. 1973. However, a defendant’s credibility may not be impeached by evidence of prior misdemeanor convictions. See People v. Robles, 183 Colo. 4, 514 P.2d 630 (1973). While evidence of prior misconduct, including misdemeanor convictions, may be admitted to attack the veracity of specific testimony by a defendant, People v. Mejia, 188 Colo. 120, 534 P.2d 779(1975); People v. Terranova, 38 Colo. App. 476, 563 P.2d 363 (1977), impeachment of a defendant “may not be accomplished by attacking the general character of the witness.” People v. Taylor, 190 Colo. 210, 545 P.2d 703 (1976). [15] Here, defense counsel specifically limited his questioning of defendant to defendant’s activities since arriving in Colorado in 1973. Defendant’s character witnesses also directed their testimony concerning defendant’s reputation and character to the time subsequent to his departure from New York. Contrary to the People’s argument, defendant’s response to his attorney’s question and his introduction of character testimony limited to his conduct in Colorado did not raise any inference of untrue testimony concerning his activities in New York. See Lutz v. People, 133 Colo. 229, 293 P.2d 646 (1956).[1] Hence, the trial court’s ruling to allow cross-examination on the misdemeanor conviction constituted error. [16] Faced with that ruling, defendant treated it as the law of the case by expressly noting his continued objection while obtaining permission from the trial court to elicit the damaging evidence himself. In these circumstances, defendant’s decision to re-open his direct testimony was analogous to the decision by a defendant who, faced with evidence erroneously and over objection elicited by a prosecutor on cross-examination, elects to explore the critical events on re-direct examination. In neither case should such decision be deemed a waiver of the objection.
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See McCormick on Evidence § 55 (E. Cleary 2d ed. 1972) Fred J. Brotherton, Inc. v. Kreielsheimer, 22 N.J. Super. 385, 92 A.2d 57
(1952).
[1] Nor would such evidence have been admissible under Colorado Rules of Evidence 608(b), had that rule applied here, since the misdemeanor conviction is not probative of defendant’s character for truthfulness or untruthfulness.
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