Goodwine v. State

764 P.2d 680, 1988 Wyo. LEXIS 163, 1988 WL 122604
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1988
Docket87-251
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 764 P.2d 680 (Goodwine v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodwine v. State, 764 P.2d 680, 1988 Wyo. LEXIS 163, 1988 WL 122604 (Wyo. 1988).

Opinions

GOLDEN, Justice.

Appellant Greg Goodwine (Goodwine) appeals his conviction of robbery for which he was sentenced to not less than two nor [681]*681more than three years to be served concurrently with an identical term on a charge of probation revocation.

Goodwine raises two issues:

1. The introduction of appellant’s statements to law enforcement personnel was reversible error.
2. The evidence presented to the court was insufficient to sustain the conviction.

We reverse Goodwine’s conviction of robbery, sustain his conviction of the lesser-included offense of larceny, and remand for resentencing on the crime of larceny.

Since the sufficiency of evidence issue is dispositive, we need not address the issue of the admissibility of incriminating statements.

Around noon on Sunday, December 14, 1986, Goodwine entered the front doors of the lobby of the Showboat Motel in Casper, Wyoming, and, with a slight limp, walked directly to the registration counter where Leilah Montoya, the desk clerk, was working alone. Goodwine’s height was between 5'7" to 6' and his weight was between 160-165 pounds. His hair was long and he wore blue jeans, a jacket, and a black baseball cap. Ms. Montoya’s height was 4'11" and her weight was 98 pounds.

Unknown to Ms. Montoya, Goodwine had suffered a severe “closed head injury” in an automobile accident on August 25,1985. This injury resulted in severe neurological deficiencies which adversely affected his speech and gait. When Goodwine approached the counter, Ms. Montoya asked if she could help him. Goodwine spoke lowly and softly and mumbled, so that Ms. Montoya could not understand what he was saying. She testified that Goodwine stood there for a moment, and then he reached into his pants pocket and produced two lighters. He slammed them down on the counter in front of Ms. Montoya and pushed them toward her. He mumbled something, but she could not understand him. She took it that he wanted her to buy the lighters, and told him she was not interested. He stepped back from and then toward the counter, picked up the lighters and put them into his pocket, stepped back from the counter, looked around the lobby area, and stepped back and forth in a continuous circle.

Goodwine then asked Ms. Montoya if there was a restroom or restaurant, and she replied there was not. She believed his voice was getting louder as he was getting agitated because she could not understand his words. He put his hands back into his pocket and pulled his right hand back out of his pocket. Ms. Montoya thought he probably had a gun in his pocket. Good-wine then walked toward the counter and looked over a glass partition on the counter above the cash register. Ms. Montoya by then was feeling very nervous and was beginning to be frightened that he was going to rob the motel.

Goodwine then backed away from the counter and walked around the comer of the counter leading to the office. Ms. Montoya was feeling very frightened that he was coming back there to rob the cash register. She grabbed the cash register key, which was in the register, locked the cash register, took the key out, and tried to, but could not get, another cash register key hidden under the counter. She turned around and was going to grab a club, but she could not reach it; she tried to swing shut a fourfoot high steel gate at the entry way to the registration area, but she could not reach it either. Goodwine was standing about two feet away from the gate. Ms. Montoya left the counter and registration area by going into a back office and slamming the door which locked automatically.

From the back office she called 911 and asked for police assistance. She was feeling frightened that he was going to take the cash register money and frightened for herself. After calling for police assistance, she opened the office door slightly and peeked out; she saw Goodwine behind the counter and the closed cash register. She was going to try again to reach for the club, but he was too close. He was riffling registration cards and other papers and touching the cash register keys. Ms. Montoya closed the office door and called 911 again. She returned to the office door, opened it slightly, peeked out, and saw [682]*682Goodwine by the open cash register stuffing cash into his pocket. She closed the door, did not see Goodwine leave, and came out of the back office when a policeman arrived.

Ms. Montoya estimated Goodwine took between $300 to $320 in various denominations, including twenty-dollar bills. She testified that Goodwine had not asked her for any money.

The police located Goodwine a short time later at a fast food outlet near the motel. When the officer talked about money that was taken from the motel, Goodwine volunteered to the officer that the money was under a table next to their table. So Good-wine would not be left unattended, the officer asked a waitress to come over and retrieve the money. The waitress picked up $169 in currency, and Goodwine was arrested. At the Natrona County jail during the police search of Goodwine, six twenty-dollar bills fell from inside the left pant leg pocket area. After a bench trial he was convicted of the crime of robbery.

Apart from Goodwine’s statements to police officers, substantial evidence exists to support Goodwine’s conviction of the crime of larceny; therefore, we need not consider Goodwine’s claim that his incriminating statements were erroneously admitted into evidence. We do, however, consider whether there is sufficient evidence to support his conviction of robbery.

W.S. 6—2—40l(a)(ii) (June 1983 Repl.) states in pertinent part that a person is guilty of robbery if in the course of committing a crime defined by W.S. 6-3-402 (June 1983 Repl.) (such as larceny) he “threatens another with or intentionally puts him in fear of immediate bodily injury.” 1 Although we are satisfied with the evidentiary basis for the trial court’s finding that Goodwine committed larceny, we must review the evidence to determine whether it is sufficient to allow the trial court, sitting as the finder of fact, to form a basis for a reasonable inference of guilt proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Righter v. State, 752 P.2d 416, 420 (Wyo.1988). Specifically, we review the state's evidence that Goodwine threatened Ms. Montoya with immediate bodily injury or intentionally put her in fear of immediate bodily injury, so as to elevate the larceny to robbery.

At common law, the taking of property under circumstances calculated to terrorize the victim was identified as the more serious offense of robbery. Model Penal Code and Commentaries, 2 A.L.I. 96, § 222.1 comment 1, p. 96 (1980). “These circumstances were described as a taking from a person or in his presence by force or by putting the victim in fear of immediate bodily injury.” See generally 2 W. LaFave and A. Scott, Substantive Criminal Law § 8.11 (1986). In Wyoming, the heart of the robbery offense is the combination of larceny and either the threat to the victim of immediate bodily injury or the intentional placing of the victim in fear of immediate bodily injury. The legislative intent of the robbery statute is to reach all forms of express and implied threat immediately to inflict bodily injury as a result of which the accused takes property from the victim.

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Goodwine v. State
764 P.2d 680 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
764 P.2d 680, 1988 Wyo. LEXIS 163, 1988 WL 122604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwine-v-state-wyo-1988.