State v. Alvis

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedOctober 8, 2021
Docket122269
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Alvis (State v. Alvis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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. Alvis, (kanctapp 2021).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 122,269

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

MATTHEW JON ALVIS, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Ellis District Court; GLENN R. BRAUN, judge. Opinion filed October 8, 2021. Affirmed.

Carol Longenecker Schmidt, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Natalie Chalmers, assistant solicitor general, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before GARDNER, P.J., HILL and HURST, JJ.

PER CURIAM: After a bench trial, the judge found Matthew Jon Alvis guilty of several crimes. When he asked for a new trial, Alvis claimed that his counsel had failed to adequately investigate his alibi and then present that alibi defense to the court. The court heard the alibi defense evidence during the hearing on the motion for a new trial and found the witnesses were not believable and denied his motion for a new trial. Those facts raise one issue in this appeal. Does the judge's lack of credibility findings mean that Alvis cannot show reversible error—that is to say, the results of his trial would have been different if counsel had properly investigated and presented his alibi at trial?

1 A former girlfriend reports Alvis to the police. A chase follows.

In the summer of 2018, Alvis dated Savannah Weilert for a few weeks. While they were dating, she sold Alvis a white Pontiac car with damaged passenger side doors. When Alvis broke up with Weilert on August 16, 2018, it was a bumpy split.

Two days after breaking up, Weilert called 911 and reported that Alvis had some marijuana and was driving his white Pontiac G6 with damaged passenger side doors and a license plate registered to another vehicle. She gave the 911 dispatcher the license plate number of that vehicle. She reported that Alvis had just left her house and was on the way back to his house.

After her 911 call, police spotted the vehicle turning into a Wendy's parking lot. Corporal Vilaysing followed the car into the parking lot. The dispatcher confirmed the tag on the vehicle was registered to a Chevy pickup truck and not the Pontiac. Vilaysing pulled up alongside the vehicle, about 40 feet to the east of it as the vehicle went through the Wendy's drive-through. The driver of the Pontiac looked right at him, and they made eye contact. At that moment, Vilaysing identified Alvis as the driver.

As the Pontiac left the drive-through, Corporal Vilaysing turned on his emergency lights to stop the Pontiac, but the car did not stop. It turned into a Dillons parking lot and quickly began to accelerate. Vilaysing activated his sirens and gave chase. The driver committed several moving violations including excessive speeding, driving in the center lane, and failing to stop at stop signs. En route, the driver tossed a baggie of marijuana out of the window, which was later recovered by the police.

Vilaysing pursued the Pontiac through Hays until he lost sight of the vehicle on a dirt road. A few minutes later, another officer located the Pontiac parked at a residence in

2 rural Ellis County. Alvis was not in the vehicle. Officers canvassed the area but did not locate Alvis.

Alvis is charged, tried to the court, and convicted.

The State charged Alvis with possession of marijuana, fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer, interference with law enforcement, and possession of drug paraphernalia. Alvis chose a bench trial.

At trial, Weilert testified that on August 18, 2018, she went to Alvis' house, and they smoked marijuana together. Alvis drove her home. Afterward, she made the 911 call. On cross-examination, defense counsel asked Weilert if she was angry and wanted to get Alvis into trouble. Weilert testified she was angry with Alvis.

Corporal Vilaysing testified he was "[a] hundred percent" confident Alvis was the driver of the Pontiac. Vilaysing knew Alvis as soon as he saw him. Vilaysing had two encounters with Alvis eight years earlier. After the traffic chase, he pulled Alvis' mugshots to confirm that Alvis was the one driving the Pontiac.

Alvis testified he last saw Weilert on August 16, 2018—the day they broke up. He testified he did not drive the Pontiac on August 18, 2018. He testified, "I believe I was in Dighton, Kansas, working with my cousin . . . doing a tree service."

In closing, trial counsel argued that Weilert was not credible because she was evasive and obviously wanted to get Alvis into trouble. Trial counsel questioned Corporal Vilaysing' s identification of Alvis because Vilaysing had not seen Alvis for eight years. Trial counsel argued that Vilaysing saw who he wanted to see in the driver's seat based on the information from dispatch. Trial counsel pointed out that the State presented no fingerprint, DNA evidence, or any video footage that showed Alvis as the driver.

3 The court found Alvis guilty as charged. The court believed Weilert' s report because it was verified by the officers within moments of her 911 call. Alvis was observed driving the Pontiac and did have marijuana as she described. The court also found Corporal Vilaysing's testimony credible and reliable.

At a posttrial hearing, the court appoints Alvis a new lawyer and takes testimony on his alibi defense.

Before sentencing, Alvis moved for a new trial, alleging his trial attorney was ineffective in failing to present his alibi defense. The court appointed Alvis new counsel and held an evidentiary hearing on the motion.

Alvis testified he told trial counsel that his mother knew he was working with his cousin, Jason Johnson, on August 18, 2018, in Dighton, Kansas. Alvis told his counsel that Johnson would have more information about the job they worked that day. Alvis gave trial counsel his mother's contact information and his cousin's name. He asked trial counsel to get his cousin's phone number from his mother. He recalled his trial counsel later telling him that his mother did not know where he was on that day. Trial counsel told him that she had called Johnson and left him a voicemail, but Johnson never called her back. Trial counsel told him she was not confident in his alibi and wanted to try a different defense. Alvis testified he insisted on the alibi defense. Alvis tried calling Johnson before trial but could not get ahold of him.

Alvis' mother, Angela Alvis, testified that she spoke with trial counsel on the phone for a while. Angela testified she told trial counsel that Alvis had been working with his cousin, Johnson. But she did not know for sure he was working that day because she was not with him. She gave trial counsel Johnson's phone number. Angela told trial counsel she was not sure if Johnson would come to court.

4 Johnson testified he did not talk to Alvis' trial counsel. He testified he worked with Alvis and another man, Theodore Evans, in Dighton on August 18, 2018. He brought a work order dated August 18, 2018, which listed "Matt" and "Ted" as sales representatives. They worked from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. that day. Johnson testified he was 100 percent positive that Alvis worked with him in Dighton the entire day on August 18, 2018.

Trial counsel testified that she always knew Alvis was alleging a possible alibi defense. Alvis gave her his cousin's name. Alvis' mother told her she did not know where Alvis was on August 18, 2018. Trial counsel thus eliminated the mother as an alibi witness. Trial counsel testified Alvis told her that Johnson would only give her a signed affidavit or document, and would refuse to come to court. Alvis' mother also confirmed that Johnson would not testify. Trial counsel was not sure if she had tried to contact Johnson.

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State v. Alvis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-alvis-kanctapp-2021.