ALESICH v. State

26 So. 3d 1080, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 379, 2009 WL 1856660
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 30, 2009
Docket2008-KA-00875-COA
StatusPublished

This text of 26 So. 3d 1080 (ALESICH v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ALESICH v. State, 26 So. 3d 1080, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 379, 2009 WL 1856660 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

ISHEE, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. Melvin Alesich was convicted in the Harrison County Circuit Court of burglary of a dwelling. He was sentenced to twenty-five years as a habitual offender in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections without eligibility for parole or probation. Aggrieved, Alesich appeals asserting that jury instruction S-l improperly amended the indictment and that the jury’s verdict was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Eva Stephens and Alesich first met at a local water slide in Gulfport, Missis *1082 sippi. They spoke briefly, and Alesich asked Stephens for her telephone number, which she gave him. Their second meeting occurred when she invited him to accompany her to a friend’s house. Alesich and Stephens spoke on the phone thereafter, and she invited him to join her at a neighbor’s barbeque. Their fourth and final meeting occurred when Alesich appeared at Stephens’s home unannounced one evening as she was preparing to go to a friend’s house, and she invited him to go with her. At the end of the evening, they returned to Stephens’s home, and she told him that she did not wish to see him anymore. Alesich said he was okay with her decision, and that was the last time they spoke. However, Alesich subsequently wrote two notes and left them for Stephens to find. She found the first note stuck on her mailbox that read, “Eva, I love you forever.” The second note had been left on her car and said, “I love you, Melvin.”

¶ 3. According to Stephens, on August 19, 1996, at approximately 4:00 a.m., she was asleep in the bed with her two-year-old daughter when she awoke to find Ale-sich climbing through her bedroom window. Stephens and her daughter began to scream, and he jumped on top of Stephens and tried to quiet her by covering her mouth. Alesich then hit Stephens across her face and climbed back out the window through which he had allegedly entered. Nothing in the house was stolen. Stephens immediately called 911, and she told the dispatcher what had happened, the identity of the intruder, and that he drove a yellow truck.

¶ 4. Officer Christopher Parrish with the Gulfport Police Department was the first officer to respond. At trial, Officer Parrish testified that when he arrived at Stephens’s home that night, he noticed the area above her left eye was red and was beginning to swell. Officer Parrish searched Stephens’s house and discovered that the window in her bedroom was open and that the screen had been either torn off or pried open. He also found a chair outside that had been placed in front of Stephens’s bedroom window. He attempted to get fingerprints from the inside and outside of the house, but he was unable to do so.

¶ 5. In the meantime, Officer Lynette Woodard received a dispatch with Alesich’s name and vehicle description. She patrolled the area near Stephens’s house and saw a yellow Ford truck parked on a nearby street. When Officer Woodard called its tag number in to dispatch, she was told that the truck was registered to Alesich. She began inspecting the vehicle, and Ale-sich walked around from behind a house and approached the truck. He identified himself to Officer Woodard as “Melvin Ale-sich,” and she placed him in handcuffs. As she was doing so, Alesich told her that “he was just trying to get Miss Eve’s [sic] attention.” Officer Woodard drove Alesich to Stephens’s house, and Stephens identified him as the intruder.

¶ 6. Detective Claud Guinn with the Gulfport Police Department testified that he also responded to Stephens’s call. When he arrived at the scene, he spoke with Stephens and observed that her left eye was bruised and swelling. Detective Guinn then went to the police station to speak with Alesich, but Alesich did not wish to give a statement. Alesich was processed and placed in the adult detention facility. On May 5, 1997, a jury found Alesich guilty of burglary of a dwelling. He was sentenced as a habitual offender to twenty-five years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections without eligibility for parole or probation.

¶ 7. Alesich filed a pro se motion for an out-of-time appeal, and it was reviewed by *1083 a panel of justices from the Mississippi Supreme Court. The circuit court had previously found that Alesich’s counsel had filed a post-trial motion on May 29, 1997. However, his attorney never set the motion for a hearing; no order had been entered disposing of the motion; and no order had been entered allowing his attorney to withdraw as counsel. In an order ruling on Alesich’s motion for an out-of-time appeal, the supreme court noted that the time for filing a notice of appeal does not begin running until the circuit court ruled on his post-trial motion. Therefore, the supreme court found that Alesich’s motion for an out-of-time appeal was filed prematurely, and the court dismissed the motion without prejudice. Following entry of the supreme court’s order, the circuit court entered an order on April 21, 2008, denying Alesich’s motion for a new trial. He then timely filed the present appeal.

DISCUSSION

I. Whether jury instruction S-l improperly amended the indictment for burglary.

¶ 8. Alesich first complains that jury instruction S-l was an indirect amendment to the indictment. He contends that the alleged amendment “was substantive in nature, materially changed an element of the original offense [with which he was] charged, materially altered his defense to the indictment, and was reversible error as it circumvented the authority of the grand jury.”

¶ 9. The purpose of an indictment is to put a defendant on notice of the charges against him so that he is able to prepare an adequate defense. Evans v. State, 916 So.2d 550, 551(¶ 5) (Miss.Ct.App.2005). “All that is required is that the indictment provide ‘a concise and clear statement of the elements of the crimes charged.’ ” Id. at 551-52(¶ 5) (quoting Williams v. State, 445 So.2d 798, 804 (Miss.1984)). It is well established that courts may amend indictments to correct defects of form, but only the grand jury may correct defects of substance. Jones v. State, 912 So.2d 973, 976(¶ 9) (Miss.2005). In Wilson v. State, 935 So.2d 945, 949(¶ 12) (Miss.2006) (citing Swington v. State, 742 So.2d 1106, 1118(¶ 44) (Miss.1999)), the supreme court stated:

The test of whether an accused is prejudiced by the amendment of an indictment or information has been said to be whether or not a defense under the indictment or information as it originally stood would be equally available after the amendment is made and whether or not any evidence the accused might have would be equally applicable to the indictment or information in the one form as in the other; if the answer is in the affirmative, the amendment is one of form and not of substance.

¶ 10. In the present case, the indictment provided that Alesich, “on or about August 10, 1996, did unlawfully, wilfully, feloniously and burglariously break and enter the dwelling house of Eva Stephens ... with the intent to steal personal property therein....

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Bluebook (online)
26 So. 3d 1080, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 379, 2009 WL 1856660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alesich-v-state-missctapp-2009.