Davis v. State

881 P.2d 657, 110 Nev. 1107, 1994 Nev. LEXIS 133
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1994
Docket24405
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 881 P.2d 657 (Davis v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. State, 881 P.2d 657, 110 Nev. 1107, 1994 Nev. LEXIS 133 (Neb. 1994).

Opinion

*1109 OPINION

Per Curiam:

On August 12, 1992, eighteen-year-old Damon Lamonte Davis was certified as an adult for crimes committed prior to his eighteenth birthday. After pleading not guilty, Davis was tried by a jury and convicted of three counts of robbery with use of a deadly weapon, one count of first-degree kidnapping with use of a deadly weapon, one count of burglary, one count of battery with intent to commit a crime, two counts of assault with a deadly weapon, and one count of discharging a firearm from a motor vehicle. Davis was sentenced to two consecutive life terms for the kidnapping with a deadly weapon charge, and to various, mainly concurrent, fifteen, six and four year terms on the remaining charges.

The convictions which Davis contests herein arose out of criminal conduct involving two victims, Wendy Dombrowski and Michael R. Sanchez. We conclude that Davis was fairly tried and convicted with respect to the Dombrowski crimes, but that his convictions stemming from the Sanchez events must be vacated and dismissed with prejudice.

FACTS

The evidence presented at trial concerned three different incidents, only two of which form the basis for Davis’s assignments of error on appeal.

The Dombrowski Incident formed the basis for one of the *1110 counts of robbery with use of a deadly weapon and the count of first-degree kidnapping with use of a deadly weapon.

The victim, Wendy Dombrowski, testified that at 8:15 p.m. on the evening of March 24, 1992, she had just pulled into the driveway of her Las Vegas home when she was accosted by an unknown assailant whom she identified at trial as Davis. The assailant pointed a gun at Dombrowski’s face and demanded that she give him her purse; Dombrowski complied. The victim’s wallet contained $40.00 and an ATM card, which prompted Davis to order Dombrowski to drive him to her bank, threatening to kill her if she disobeyed. With Davis’s gun poking her in the side, Dombrowski drove to a nearby bank, removed $500.00 from the ATM and handed the cash to Davis. After the machine denied further withdrawals, Davis instructed Dombrowski to drive back to her home, stating that there better be some money there. When the two arrived at the victim’s house, Dombrowski noticed a nearby car flash its lights. Davis told Dombrowski not to call police since he knew where she lived and would return and kill her. Davis then ran towards the car that had flashed its lights as Dombrowski ran into her home, locked the door, and called 911.

Dombrowski described Davis’s gun as a dark-coal colored automatic, and testified that because of the manner in which he carried it, and because she could feel its coldness and weight through her t-shirt, she did not believe it to be made out of plastic. Although Dombrowski testified that she saw that the gun was of metal construction, she admitted on cross-examination that she could not testify that she knew it was a real gun. On redirect, however, she stated she had never described the gun as plastic and that at one point, the gun made a noise like a bullet being placed in the chamber.

Defense counsel stipulated that a positive match was made between Davis’s fingerprints and those found on the vehicle used in the kidnapping. Metro Detective Michael T. Karstedt testified that he had interviewed Davis regarding this incident after the fingerprint analysis and a photo line-up indicated that he was a suspect. After being informed of his Miranda rights, Davis admitted being the perpetrator, but stated that he had committed the crime with a BB gun, rather than a real gun. No gun was ever recovered.

Davis took the witness stand on his own behalf and corroborated Dombrowski’s version of the events, including his threats to kill her, but testified that the gun he used was a plastic toy. gun which only shot soft rubber BB-size balls. Davis’s mother testified that there were several toy guns in her home, as she had nine grandchildren. Davis’s girlfriend testified that she had seen Davis *1111 with “one of them little K-Mart toy guns [that] shot .... [ljittle red circle caps.”

The Sanchez Incident resulted in a charge of two counts of robbery with use of a deadly weapon, one count of burglary, and one count of battery with intent to commit a crime.

The victim, Michael R. Sanchez, testified that at approximately 8:45 p.m. on the evening of April 15, 1992, as he pulled into his garage and was exiting his car, he was hit in the face by an unknown intruder. At trial, Sanchez identified Davis as his assailant. Davis was with another individual, who had a small gun that “looked like a .380.” Both individuals demanded money and Sanchez complied by giving Davis the $6.00 he had in his pocket. The pair then asked for a bank card, and Sanchez replied that he did not have one, but that his wife did. The intruders then required that he go into the house with them to retrieve it. Sanchez led the pair into his home, where his wife and two children were present. The perpetrator with Davis waived his gun at Sanchez and threatened to shoot him. Sanchez secured his wife’s purse, giving it to the individual with the gun, who in turn handed it to Davis. The pair then informed Sanchez that they were all going to the bank and accompanied Sanchez back to the garage. Sanchez’s wife went to the door of the garage and told her husband to let them take the purse and the truck, but not to accompany them. For some reason, the two men gave up their plan of taking Sanchez to the bank and left with the $36.00 they had taken from Sanchez and his wife.

Sanchez positively identified Davis at trial and indicated that he had earlier picked him out of a photographic line-up. Mrs. Sanchez likewise testified that she had picked Davis out of a photographic line-up and that she had no doubt whatsoever concerning her identification of Davis.

Davis testified that he was not involved in this incident, and that on the evening in question, he was with his girlfriend Anyana and her son watching movies on the occasion of the birthday of Anyana’s friend, Jessica. Davis also claimed that he had recently hurt his knee at a basketball tournament and really could not function. The fact that Davis’s knee was injured while he was at the tournament was corroborated by his coach, his mother, his girlfriend Anyana, and her friend Jessica. Seventeen-year-old Anyana Swan, who testified that she was Davis’s girlfriend and the mother of their nine-month-old child, stated that Davis was with her at Jessica’s house for Jessica’s birthday on the evening of April 15, 1992, watching movies. Jessica corroborated Anyana’s testimony.

The jury also heard evidence of a third criminal incident involving Davis which resulted in his conviction for two counts *1112 of assault with a deadly weapon and one count of discharging a firearm from a motor vehicle. However, none of Davis’s assignments of error on appeal relate to these convictions.

DISCUSSION

Whether the district court erred in refusing to give Davis’s proposed jury instructions on coercion as a lesser related or lesser included offense of kidnapping

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Bluebook (online)
881 P.2d 657, 110 Nev. 1107, 1994 Nev. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-state-nev-1994.