State v. Adam

896 P.2d 1022, 257 Kan. 693, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 2, 1995
Docket70,715
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 896 P.2d 1022 (State v. Adam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Adam, 896 P.2d 1022, 257 Kan. 693, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 84 (kan 1995).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

[694]*694Allegrucci, J.:

Scotty Adam appeals from his jury convictions of second-degree murder and aggravated robbery. He was sentenced to concurrent terms of 15 years to life and 5 to 20 years’ imprisonment.

Adam raises several issues on appeal. He claims error concerning the non-pattern instruction on aggravated robbery, the instruction on the accused’s initially provoking the use of force by the deceased, and the instructions on voluntary and involuntary manslaughter. He also claims error in admitting gruesome photographs into evidence and in the State’s suppression of exculpatory evidence.

The events leading to this tragedy started shortly after midnight on January 23,1993. Scott Miller, Dustin Rothfuss, and Scott Sanders stopped in Council Grove to buy gasoline at a convenience store. They were driving back from Emporia to Junction City, where they lived. They had been drinking on the road and for several hours in a bar in Emporia.

They were in Sanders’ car, and he was driving. Larry Shane and Andy Helton were sitting in a booth inside the convenience store; they laughed at Miller when he went in. Miller, who admitted being drunk, pulled a toothpick from the mouth of one of them. Then Sanders came in and, without exchanging words or getting involved with either of tihe young men in the booth, left with Miller. The convenience store clerk called the police.

As Sanders pulled out of the convenience store lot, a white Cámaro followed. The Camaro was being driven by Scotty Adam. Adam and J.B. Pritchard, both from Council Grove, had been “cruising.” They had pulled in near the gasoline pumps to watch because they had seen Miller and Sanders and thought they looked like they might start a fight. When Miller and Sanders ran out of the convenience store “yelling and stuff,” Adam and Pritchard decided to chase them out of town.

After getting out on the highway, Adam and Sanders tried to run each other off the road. Adam passed Sanders. Then Sanders passed Adam. Adam started to pass Sanders again, and Sanders moved his car to the left so that Adam went off the road on the left. Adam accelerated to get around Sanders. In a short time, one [695]*695of the young men who had been inside the convenience store drove his truck alongside Adam’s Camaro and began slowing down. Adam slowed, too. When they stopped side by side, Sanders stopped behind them. They were approximately three miles north of Council Grove.

Adam testified that he anticipated a fight and stopped to watch it, but he did not want to be involved in it because he had observed at the convenience store that Miller and Sanders were big. Adam is 5'6" tall and at that time weighed 128 pounds. Sanders was 6'3" tall and weighed 200 pounds.

Sanders was angry, according to Miller, because Adam had swerved close to his car and Sanders was very protective of his car. Miller testified that others opened their doors first, but Sanders was the first person to emerge from a vehicle. On direct examination, Miller testified that, as Sanders got out of his car, he said to no one in particular, “Do you want some?” On cross-examination, he testified that Sanders jumped out of his car, ran up to the driver’s side of the Camaro, and yelled, “[Y]ou want some?” Miller saw Sanders hit Adam.

Pritchard testified that Sanders opened the driver’s door of the Camaro, said, “You want a piece of me?” and pulled Adam partway out of the car. Sanders had Adam up against the car door. Pritchard testified that Adam was “thrashing around out there.”

Adam testified that he likes knives and kept one in an unsnapped scabbard on the console in his car. As Sanders pulled Adam from the car, Adam grabbed his knife. Adam testified that Sanders repeatedly hit him. Adam hit Sanders in the back with the butt of the knife; Sanders hit Adam once more and caused him to slump down. It was then, according to Adam, that he “just started swinging” his knife and stabbed Sanders. Adam testified that he had no intention of using the blade. Sanders collapsed, bleeding from the chest.

Miller lay Sanders on the ground, and then Shane started hitting Miller. Adam testified that he was in shock. When he looked down and saw the knife in his hand, he just threw it away.

Adam testified that he walked over to where Sanders was lying and moved Sanders’ head to see if he was moving or awake. Before [696]*696trial, Pritchard made the statement to a law enforcement officer that Adam had kicked Sanders in the head as he walked by. At trial, Pritchard testified that Adam “just kind of scooted” Sanders’ head or shoulder as he walked by.

As Adam walked back to his car, he picked a cap up off the ground and threw it into the car. Adam testified that he did not know that the cap belonged to Sanders; in fact, he was not even aware of what it was.

Realizing that Sanders was down, the young men from Council Grove got back in their vehicles and drove away. At the double shelters on the lake, they stopped and got out of their vehicles. Adam testified that by then he realized that what he had tossed in his car was a cap and that it did not belong to him or his friends. Helton suggested that he bum the cap. Shane gave him a lighter, and Adam set it on fire.

By shortly after 1:00 a.m., a law enforcement officer and an ambulance had been dispatched to the scene of the stabbing. Sanders was not breathing and had no pulse upon arrival at the emergency room of the hospital, and efforts to resuscitate him were not successful. He had four stab wounds — in the left side of his chest, the upper right side of the abdomen, in the lower part of the left abdomen, and on the left shoulder. An autopsy was performed, and the pathologist testified that the cause of death was internal bleeding caused by the stab wound to the chest. She stated that Sanders would have lost consciousness within a few seconds of being stabbed in the chest.

At 1:39 a.m., Adam walked into the sheriff’s office and said, “I’m the one that stabbed that guy.” In response to the sheriff’s question about what happened, Adam said, “I wasn’t getting my ass kicked.”

About mid-morning of January 25, Adam was examined by Dr. Lora Siegle at the request of law enforcement officers with regard to his complaint of pain in his left side. She found a small bruise on his left side. She found no other bmises, no bumps on his head, no abrasions, and no loose teeth. In a post-trial motion, it came out that a deputy sheriff had examined Adam on January 24 and reported finding a bump on Adam’s forehead which extended up into his hairline.

[697]*697We first consider Adam’s claim that the non-pattern instruction on aggravated robbery was improper. Adam was charged with willfully taking a red baseball cap from the presence of Scott Sanders by force. The district court gave two jury instructions on aggravated robbery. The first was the pattern instruction, PIK Crim. 3d 56.31:

“The defendant is charged with the crime of aggravated robbery. The defendant pleads not guilty.
“To establish this charge, each of the following claims must be proved:
1. That the defendant intentionally took property from the person or presence of Scott O. Sanders;
2. That the taking was by force;
3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
896 P.2d 1022, 257 Kan. 693, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-adam-kan-1995.