Dolan v. State

925 A.2d 495, 2007 Del. LEXIS 214, 2007 WL 1366511
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 10, 2007
Docket345/368, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 925 A.2d 495 (Dolan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dolan v. State, 925 A.2d 495, 2007 Del. LEXIS 214, 2007 WL 1366511 (Del. 2007).

Opinion

STEELE, Chief Justice:

Defendant-appellant Michael Dolan appeals his conviction for burglary in the second degree. 1 Dolan argues on appeal that the Superior Court judge who convicted him after a bench trial erred in two respects. Specifically, the trial judge: (1) incorrectly interpreted 11 Del.C. § 825(a) in ruling that Dolan formulated the necessary intent to commit a crime in a dwelling after illegally entering the Delaneys’ home and remaining in the home unlawfully; and, (2) erroneously concluded that he did not have to consider the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the inference that Do-lan formulated the intent to commit a crime in the Delaney’s home at the time he entered it unlawfully. Dolan claims that one accused of violating 11 Del.C. § 825(a) must form the intent to commit a crime inside a dwelling either when or before he enters the dwelling unlawfully.

Whether a defendant must formulate the intent to commit a crime inside a home at the time he enters the home unlawfully, for purposes of the second degree burglary statute, is an issue of first impression.

After examining the record and relevant case law, we, joining the majority of jurisdictions, and hold that, to be convicted of second degree burglary, 2 a person must form the intent to commit a crime inside before or at the time he enters the dwelling. The record of the bench trial does not establish that the trial judge considered this factor in his findings supporting the judgment of conviction. Accordingly, we REVERSE and REMAND for further findings and conclusions consistent with this Opinion.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On August 20, 2005, Robert and Robin Delaney went on vacation with their children. The Delaneys asked their neighbor, Eulekoa Kanamee, to watch their house and feed their cat while they were away. They gave Kanamee the key to their house and Robert’s cell phone number.

On August 24, 2005, Dolan 3 called the Delaneys while they were in Ocean City, Maryland, and asked them if he could stay at their house. Because of concerns about Dolan’s drug and alcohol abuse problems, the Delaneys told Dolan that he could not *497 stay at their house while they were away. During this phone conversation, Dolan asked three different times if he could stay at their house, and each time Robert told him no. Dolan seemed angry, and hung up the phone.

Later that day, Robert checked his voice mail and heard a message from Kanamee asking Robert to call him back. Robert called him back at around 4:30 p.m., Kana-mee told Robert that at around 3:30 p.m., Dolan had come over to his house and said “my name is Mike Dolan, and you don’t need to come over and feed the cats tonight or watch the house ... I’m going to go ahead and do it.” Dolan told Kanamee that he had talked to Robert and had permission to stay at the Delaneys’ house. In response, Robert told Kanamee that Dolan “absolutely didn’t have permission to be in the house.”

After talking to Robert, Kanamee, at around 4:45 p.m., went to the Delaneys’ house to check on the cat and get the mail. When Kanamee got there, he noticed that Robert’s truck, which had been parked in front of the house at 3:30 p.m., was gone. Later, at approximately 9 p.m., Kanamee heard Robert’s truck pull into the driveway. Kanamee looked through his window and saw Dolan get out of the truck and walk towards the Delaneys’ house. Kana-mee immediately called the Delaneys, and Robert told Kanamee to call 911.

After he called 911, Kanamee continued to observe Dolan as Dolan initially, but unsuccessfully, tried to enter the Delaneys’ house through a side door. Kanamee then saw Dolan walk to the back of the house. Approximately five minutes later, a light went on inside the Delaneys’ house and Kanamee saw Dolan walk by a second floor window. The police arrived a few minutes later and took Dolan into custody. Officer Dale Legace testified that he found a screen on the ground at the rear left corner of the Delaneys’ house with a large cut in the center of it. Legace further testified that the window from which the screen had been removed had a lawn chair placed directly below it.

The Delaneys returned to their house the following morning. After taking inventory of their personal property, they noticed that several items were missing, including $200 in change that was in their daughter’s room, a drill, Robert’s work credit card, and two six-packs of beer.

At trial, Dolan testified that on August 23, 2005, the day before he was arrested, Robert gave him permission to stay at his house. According to Dolan, Robert told him to go to Kanamee’s house to get a key. Dolan testified that when he went to Kana-mee’s house on August 23 to get a key, no one answered the door. Dolan then went to the Delaneys’ backyard and saw “an extension cord running through the back window ... so the window wasn’t ... locked.” Dolan “pushed the window up and ... went inside the [Delaneys’] house.”

Dolan further testified that once he was inside he took the keys to Robert’s truck and went to the store. After returning to the house thirty minutes later, Dolan remained there for the rest of the evening of August 23. The next morning, Dolan went into the kitchen, pulled out a beer, and continued to drink the entire morning of August 24. That afternoon, Dolan went to Kanamee’s house and introduced himself as the man who would be staying at the Delaneys’ house. 4 Afterward, he returned to the house, took some money, and *498 bought beer. Dolan also testified that he took Robert’s drill. Finally, Dolan testified that he did not intend to steal when he entered their home, but that he lost control after he started drinking.

Dolan waived his right to a jury trial, and on February 15, 2006, a Superior Court judge found him guilty of burglary in the second degree, misdemeanor theft, and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. On June 2, 2006, the judge sentenced Do-lan to 8 years at level V, suspended after 4 years for 18 months at Level III probation, for the burglary charge; and 1 year at level V, suspended for 1 year Level III probation, for both the theft and motor vehicle charges.

DISCUSSION

Dolan argues that the State presented no evidence that he intended to commit theft when he entered and remained unlawfully in the Delaney’s home. The trial judge, he would have us conclude, had no evidence on which to base a conviction of second degree burglary. Dolan contends that the trial judge erred when he interpreted 11 Del.C. § 825(a) to allow the element of an intent to commit a crime inside the Delaneys’ home to be formed while Dolan remained in the home unlawfully. Citing New York case law, 5 Dolan argues that the trial judge applied the second degree burglary statute too broadly, and that a person must form the intent to commit a crime in a dwelling either when or before he enters the premises unlawfully.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
925 A.2d 495, 2007 Del. LEXIS 214, 2007 WL 1366511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolan-v-state-del-2007.