State v. Carter

551 P.2d 821, 220 Kan. 16, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 440
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 12, 1976
Docket47,921
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 551 P.2d 821 (State v. Carter) 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. Carter, 551 P.2d 821, 220 Kan. 16, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 440 (kan 1976).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kaul, J.:

Defendant-appellant (Gilbert M. Carter) appeals from jury convictions on two counts of felony theft. (K. S. A. 21-3701 [a].) His principal contentions on appeal concern the admission into evidence of a prior theft conviction and a subsequent similar offense for which no conviction had been obtained. De *17 fendant also claims error in the hmiting instruction submitted by the court in¡ connection with K. S. A. 60-455.

In the first count of the information defendant was charged with taking $600 in cash and $381 in credit card receipts from Jim’s Auto Service in Wichita. In the second count defendant was charged with the theft of $300 in cash from Western Auto Store No. 7 in Wichita.

The state’s evidence on count No. 1 consisted primarily of the testimony of Jim Hying, manager of the Apeo Service Station, and Brian Hooks, an employee.

On the morning of June 27, 1973, Mr. Hying finished adding up the station’s previous day’s receipts around 9:40 a. m. He put the day’s receipts in a bank pouch and placed the pouch in his desk drawer which he believed was locked. He then left the station to drive a customer home. Shortly thereafter two of the three remaining employees left the station on errands, leaving Hooks working ¡alone.

Shortly before 10:00 a. m. Hooks went out to the station driveway to wait on a customer. While doing so, he testified he saw the defendant walking toward the station building. After he finished with the customer, and was returning to the building, Hooks passed the defendant who was leaving the station wearing an overcoat that came below 'the knees. Hying testified he returned to the station around 10:05 a. m. and discovered the bank pouch containing approximately $981 in currency was missing from his desk.

Mr. Hying further testified that sometime during the previous month a customer had informed him that a man had been in his office. After being informed Hying immediately returned and checked his desk drawer, but the money pouch had not been taken. Hying testified the man who was pointed out to him by the customer as having been in hisi office was the defendant. He further testified he later observed this same man on June 29, 1973, near a nearby Western Auto store and subsequently identified his picture as that of the man near the store on that date.

The Western Auto store theft charged against defendant in count No. 2 occurred on June 29, 1973, two days: after the service station theft. It appears the Western Auto store was within one block of the service station. Defendant admitted he lived near the vicinity of both alleged crimes. About 9:00 a. m. on June 29, Wayne Hastings, the manager of the Western Auto store, placed $370 in currency in an office drawer. Shortly thereafter the store *18 opened and a man, subsequently identified as the defendant, approached Hastings concerning a merchandise exchange. Hastings referred defendant to Ben Mader, an employee. Mader went into the store office to get a refund slip since a one-dollar credit was due the defendant. Defendant followed Mader into- the office. At this point, defendant told Mader he did not have a sales receipt for his merchandise, so Mader left defendant in the office while he went to confer with the manager. Mader located Hastings, waited ten or fifteen seconds for the latter to finish with -a customer, and began to explain the situation to him. At this point, defendant walked up to Hastings and Mader. Mr. Hastings explained to defendant that a sales receipt was needed unless the exchange was a straight swap of merchandise. Defendant then left the store. A few minutes later, when another customer sought change for a twenty-dollar bill, Hastings went to- the office drawer and discovered the money was missing.

At trial, in the course of the state’s presentation of its case in chief, it offered evidence of a prior similar offense for which defendant was convicted. The information in this prior offense was filed July 24, 1967, charging defendant with grand larceny in the amount of $78 in currency and bank checks which were stolen from Alice H. Christopher at the Phyllis Wheatley Children’s home in Wichita on June 2,1967. The journal entry of judgment was filed on December 7, 1967, and showed defendant’s plea of guilty to the charge and subsequent probation.

Before the information and journal entry of judgment, evidencing defendant’s 1967 conviction, were offered the trial court held a hearing outside the jury’s presence. At the hearing Alice Christopher and her secretary, Loretta Harris, testified in detail concerning the facts underlying the charge and conviction. Mrs. Christopher testified -that she knew the defendant and that while working at the Wheatley home on June 2, 1967, she left her purse in her office during the noon hour and returned to find the money missing from it. Mrs. Harris testified that she saw defendant leaving Mrs. Christopher’s office, while Mrs. Christopher was at lunch, and that she (Mrs. Harris) questioned defendant and defendant told her his name was Johnson.

Defendant objected to the introduction of the information and journal entry on the ground of remoteness. His counsel, Mr. Lewis, argued:

*19 . . This has been some seven years ago and we argue that it is too remote in time to have any probative emphasis or value in this particular proceeding. Now if it were seven months ago, or even as late as a year ago, but not seven years ago. It is too remote in time to make it evidentiary.”

Defendant also strenuously objected to the admission of the testimony of Mrs. Christopher and Mrs. Harris concerning the circumstances of the offense. The trial court sustained defendant’s objection to the testimony of Mrs. Christopher and Mrs. Harris, but did permit the introduction of the information and journal entry.

Later in the state’s case in chief, the court permitted the state to introduce the testimony of Bill Sturn and Richard Fife concerning an incident that occurred on August 8, 1973, in Winfield. On that date Stum was the manager and Fife an employee of a service station in Winfield. Fife testified that he saw defendant drive by the station while Sturn was preparing a bank deposit at his desk in the station. Defendant made a U-turn and drove into the station driveway. Defendant entered the station office and sat at Stum’s desk examining a road map while Fife put some gasoline in his automobile and checked the oil. At this time everyone had left the station, including Sturn and the defendant. Fife further testified that about five minutes later two ladies came to the station and were then followed by the defendant who returned and asked for $2.00 worth of gasoline.

Stum testified that while he was working on his bank receipts in the morning he saw defendant drive up in a red Cadillac convertible; that Sturn put the money in his desk drawer, which he locked, and went out to wait on customers, including the defendant. Defendant went into the station as Stum was leaving and asked if he could use the telephone. Sturn further testified that while he was working on an automobile defendant was sitting on the desk looking at a road map; and that when he (Sturn) came back into the station the defendant asked him how to get to Neo desha.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
551 P.2d 821, 220 Kan. 16, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carter-kan-1976.