State v. Blue

558 P.2d 136, 221 Kan. 185, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 580
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 11, 1976
Docket48,356
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 558 P.2d 136 (State v. Blue) 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. Blue, 558 P.2d 136, 221 Kan. 185, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 580 (kan 1976).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Foth, C.:

Michael Blue (charged for some reason as “Michael Jackson a/k/a Michael Blue”) appeals from a conviction for forgery. He was found guilty of knowingly delivering a forged prescription for Quaalude — a tranquilizer and sleeping tablet — to Consumers Pharmacy in Wichita on the afternoon of July 7, 1975. The primary issue before the jury was whether he knew the prescription was forged when he presented it. On appeal he contends the evidence was insufficient on this issue. His chief complaints here, however, center on the state’s rebuttal evidence.

The prescription, purportedly written by Dr. Daniel Thompson, was presented by the defendant to a clerk at Consumer’s Pharmacy. The clerk could not read the patient’s name, and Blue told him it was Minnie Diaz. The pharmacy had no record of a customer by that name, so the clerk gave him an information card to fill out. The defendant identified himself at that time as Michael Jackson. He scribbled an address, which he later testified he knew to be that of a cemetery, and returned the card. The card and prescription were handed by the clerk to Mary Wittstock, the pharmacist, who was *186 unable to fill the prescription because it lacked dosage directions. She called the office of Dr. Thompson and was told he had no patient named Minnie Diaz. At that point she refused to fill the prescription. The defendant insisted that it be filled, repeatedly saying, “She really needs it. Why can’t she have it.” He then asked to speak with the doctor’s office, and the pharmacist redialed the number. The defendant, while speaking with the doctor’s office, asked to see the prescription. When the pharmacist held it up for him to look at he took it from her hand and subsequently left the store with it.

Waiting for him outside in his car was Paula J. Goodbear, a young woman of American Indian ancestry who lived with him in his house. According to their testimony Paula was totally dependent on defendant for transportation; when she needed to run errands for herself or her friends, Blue drove her. The prescription, according to them, was for a friend of Paula’s. The defendant testified he didn’t know any Minnie Diaz (and hence, of course, couldn’t know whether or not “she really needs it”).

Blue and Goodbear next appeared later that afternoon at Poison’s Pharmacy in the Twin Lakes shopping center. While the defendant looked at magazines and smelled cologne Ms. Good-bear presented the prescription, which was promptly recognized as a probable forgery. The police were called and she was taken into a back room for questioning; the defendant was allowed to go into the back room as well. Both were subsequently charged with forgery. Ms. Goodbear pleaded guilty in a separate proceeding; she testified in this case, “I kind of had an idea that it was forged when I went to Poison’s. I got the idea that it was forged after it wasn’t able to be refilled [sic] at Consumer’s.”

Appellant’s first five points go to rulings surrounding the introduction of rebuttal evidence. Both the defendant and Ms. Good-bear testified that they had not visited any other pharmacies on July 7, but had stayed home that morning picking up the house. On rebuttal the state proposed to present evidence to the contrary. In an abundance of caution the court held a Bly hearing (State v. Bly, 215 Kan. 168, 523 P. 2d 397) outside the hearing of the jury. The preferred evidence was ruled inadmissible under K. S. A. 60-455 (it did not show any other crime or civil wrong) but was admitted as rebuttal evidence going to credibility.

The substance of the rebuttal evidence was that Home Drug East had filled a Quaalude prescription from Dr. Thompson for *187 Paula Goodbear that morning, and that the defendant had been with her.

The pharmacist from Home Drug East could not identify either Ms. Goodbear or the defendant, but did describe the woman who had the prescription filled as short, dark haired with an Indian complexion, wearing a halter top and a wide brimmed straw hat. Ms. Goodbear was wearing a halter top and wide brimmed straw hat when she was arrested that afternoon at Poison’s. The prescription was in the name of Sandra Martinez; Sandra Martinez was the name used by Paula Goodbear when she visited Dr. Thompson. The Home Drug East pharmacist described his customer’s companion as a young black man, about five foot ten and thin — a general description of the defendant.- He was observed looking at magazines in the store while Ms. Goodbear had her prescription filled, and only because they departed together did the pharmacist conclude they had come in together.

Wichita police officer Zora M. Graves testified that she had responded to the call at Poison’s. She questioned Ms. Goodbear, who first said that the fraudulent prescription belonged to her sister-in-law, then changed her story saying it belonged to her sister, Sandra Martinez. A search of Ms. Goodbear’s purse after her arrest revealed two bottles of Quaalude, one dated July 3, the other the bottle dispensed by Home Drug East the morning of July 7. Both bottles plus the prescription form used at Home Drug East the morning of July 7 were admitted into evidence.

In two of his points appellant complains of the admission of all the above — the testimony of the Home Drug East pharmacist and Officer Graves, and the exhibits — on the grounds that it was immaterial and that it violated the intent and purpose of K. S. A. 60-455, the “other crimes” statute. The contention is based primarily on the fact that the Home Drug East pharmacist could not positively identify the defendant.

While the eyewitness identification was not positive the circumstantial evidence was convincing. The descriptions of Ms. Good-bear’s physical appearance and of the clothing she was wearing at the time of her arrest matched those given by the Home Drug East pharmacist and, more importantly, she was in possession of the filled prescription, made out in the name she customarily used in her medical dealings. The conclusion is inescapable that Ms. Goodbear was the person who had the prescription filled at Home Drug East that morning. Further, both Blue and Goodbear testi *188 fied that it was customary for them to run errands together because she had no other means of transportation. This, plus a general description of her companion fitting the defendant, gave rise to a ready inference that he was the man with her that morning.

The rebuttal evidence was competent to show that the testimony of Goodbear and Jackson that they did not visit any other pharmacy that day was false; it was thus admissible to attack their credibility under K. S. A. 60-420.

The trial court has broad discretion in determining the use and extent of relevant evidence in rebuttal (State v. Barnes, 220 Kan. 25, 551 P. 2d 815), and its ruling will not be ground for reversal absent abuse of discretion to the prejudice of the defendant. (State v. Emery, 218 Kan. 423, 543 P. 2d 897.) Admission of the rebuttal evidence, put forward to contradict facts brought forth in the defendant’s evidence, was not error.

Nor did the admission of the evidence violate the spirit of the rule against “other crimes” evidence. K. S. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
558 P.2d 136, 221 Kan. 185, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-blue-kan-1976.