Case Title: State v. Sims

Citation: 104 Ariz. 118, 449 P.2d 289

Docket Number: 1779

State: arizona

Court: Arizona Supreme Court

Date: 1969-01-15T00:00:00Z

Document:
104 Ariz. 118 (1969) 449 P.2d 289 The STATE of Arizona, Appellee, v. Robert Lee SIMS, Appellant. No. 1779. Supreme Court of Arizona. In Banc. January 15, 1969. Gary K. Nelson, Atty. Gen., Darrell F. Smith, Former Atty. Gen., by Carl Waag, Asst. Atty. Gen., Phoenix, for appellee. W. Edward Morgan and William E. Hildebrandt by William E. Hildebrandt, Tucson, for appellant. STRUCKMEYER, Justice. This is an appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Pima County denying a motion for a new trial after a conviction for murder in the first degree and sentence of death thereon. Robert Lee Sims was convicted of murder of one Glendell M. Soape. From that conviction and an order denying a new trial Sims first appealed to this court in 1965. While the appeal was pending, Sims filed in this court a supplemental motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. We referred this motion to the superior court for a determination as to the facts and law. There the decision was against Sims and we affirmed. State v. Sims, 99 Ariz. 303, 409 P.2d 17. On that appeal Sims asserted a right to new trial by virtue of certain purportedly newly discovered evidence; including recanted testimony of a co-defendant, and evidence of an alibi known to defendant at the time of original trial. We quoted with approval the following language from People v. Shilitano, 218 N.Y. 161, 112 N.E. 733, L.R.A. 1916F, 1044: We found no abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court for refusing a new trial based on the recanted evidence of one serving a life sentence who had been a participant in the crime. As to the purported alibi we said "* * * recollection after a trial is concluded does not constitute newly discovered evidence because by its general nature it deals with the known while discovery *119 deals with the unknown." State v. Sims, supra, 99 Ariz. 310, 409 P.2d 22. Sims now seeks a new trial on the basis of all the matters heretofore considered and adjudicated in the earlier appeal, coupled with further alleged "newly discovered" evidence. This consists of the testimony of one Armentha Doretha Richardson to the effect that she was with Sims on the night and during the hours in question, drinking at a Tucson bar and gambling in a Tucson home. The express question presented by Sims on this appeal is: We feel that our earlier opinion in this case is completely dispositive of the question here presented; both for the reasons that the "new evidence" is not new evidence since it is of a nature that was known to the defendant at the time of the original trial; and for the further reasons hereinafter stated. In State v. Schantz, 102 Ariz. 212, 427 P.2d 530, we said that a motion for a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence must meet the following requirements: Motions for new trial are granted with great caution and invariably only after an exercise of the sound discretion of the trial court, State v. Schantz, supra; State v. Schroeder, 100 Ariz. 21, 409 P.2d 725; State v. Goff, 99 Ariz. 79, 407 P.2d 55. This is especially true where the basis of the motion is alibi, State v. Sims, supra, and see cases there cited. The trial judge at the original trial and at the hearing on all of Sims' motions for a new trial was the same person. He has heard all the evidence and observed the witnesses. At his trial Sims unequivocally testified that he was home asleep in bed when the crime took place. This was his testimony until the second motion for new trial. Sims then swore that he had been buying pigs at about the time the offense was committed. Now, three years later, he points to the testimony of Armentha Doretha Richardson to the effect that he was drinking and gambling with her on the night in question. Thus, the defendant has advanced three different stories concerning his presence on the evening of the murder. The trial judge at the conclusion of the last hearing stated: Armentha Doretha Richardson testified at the hearing that she was released from the Arizona State Prison in January of 1967, after having completed a sentence for an undisclosed offense; that she served a sentence for narcotics in the State Prison of West Virginia at Wallison; that upon being released from Wallison she was transferred to a workhouse in Cincinnati, Ohio; that thereafter in Waukegan, Illinois, she was arrested in a house of ill *120 fame. But most significantly she testified on cross-examination: In the light of this evidence the trial court was amply justified in denying Sims' third motion for new trial. Judgment affirmed. UDALL, C.J., LOCKWOOD, V.C.J., and McFARLAND and HAYS, JJ., concur.