State v. Cartmell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMarch 15, 2019
Docket118787
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Cartmell (State v. Cartmell) 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. Cartmell, (kanctapp 2019).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 118,787

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

COY RAY CARTMELL, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Butler District Court; JANETTE L. SATTERFIELD, judge. Opinion filed March 15, 2019. Affirmed.

Clayton J. Perkins, of Capital Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Joseph M. Penney, assistant county attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before POWELL, P.J., LEBEN, J., and KEVIN BERENS, District Judge, assigned.

LEBEN, J.: Coy Ray Cartmell appeals his conviction of distribution of a controlled substance—about a half-ounce of marijuana sold for $40. That's a felony offense under Kansas law, and the court sentenced Cartmell to serve 28 months in prison.

Cartmell first challenges the jury instructions, which mistakenly failed to tell the jury that Cartmell had to commit the crime intentionally. But Cartmell's attorney didn't object to the jury instructions at trial, so we review only for clear error—meaning that he must convince us that the jury's verdict would have been different with a better instruction. We don't find that to be the case: Cartmell's defense was that he didn't transfer any marijuana to the undercover officer he saw that night, not that he accidentally or mistakenly did so.

Cartmell's second objection is to some testimony of that undercover officer. She had gone to buy marijuana from a specific person that night, and she told the jury she "was told that [she] would be buying from Coy Cartmell." That suggested Cartmell was a guy that somebody knew to be selling marijuana—and likely was the person the officer bought marijuana from that night. Cartmell objects that the testimony was inadmissible hearsay, the statement of a person who didn't testify at trial offered to prove his guilt.

But even if we assume the trial court shouldn't have admitted this testimony, we don't reverse the jury's verdict when the erroneous admission of evidence didn't affect the trial's outcome. We don't find that this testimony affected the outcome here. Another officer testified—without objection—that he too had been told before the exchange that Cartmell would be the seller. And the trial simply came down to which of two primary witnesses the jury believed—the undercover officer, who said she bought the marijuana from Cartmell, or Cartmell, who denied it.

We find no reversible error in this trial and affirm the district court's judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The events unfolded one evening in January 2016. Depending on whose testimony you believe, Cartmell encountered undercover El Dorado police officer Maggie Schreiber either around 9:30 p.m. (her testimony) or around 5:30 p.m. (his testimony).

Schreiber said that she had arranged an undercover drug buy through an informant, a woman named Lisa Williams, who accompanied Schreiber that evening. Schreiber, in disguise, drove with Williams to a residential complex (a collection of small

2 homes) known as the Country Cottages. She said that she drove in at about 9:30 p.m. and saw Cartmell standing nearby unit No. 7.

Soon after Schreiber parked her car, she said Cartmell came to the driver's side window. She said he gave her two small plastic bags of marijuana (each containing a single bud) and she gave him $40. The total weight of the marijuana in the bags, as confirmed by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, was just under half an ounce.

Schreiber said that because she had done undercover drug buys before, she made note of Cartmell's facial features and appearance so that she could accurately identify him. She said that he had been only about two feet away and that she had adequate lighting. Either later that night or the next day, she looked at his driver's license photo and said that was the man she'd bought the marijuana from.

Another El Dorado police officer, Detective Scott Roberts, waited nearby that night, tracking Schreiber's movements through a GPS tracking unit. He testified that the plan had been that Schreiber would be buying marijuana from Cartmell. He said that Schreiber went to the Country Cottages at about 9:30 p.m., was there for about two minutes, and then met Roberts back at the police station—with the two bags containing marijuana.

Cartmell testified that Schreiber had approached him on foot that night at about 5:30 p.m. He said he remembered the date and time because he had been getting ready to go to a birthday party for an 11-year-old boy. He said Schreiber came up as he was loading things into his car; he said she told him a friend had said he could get her some marijuana. Cartmell said he told her he didn't have any, Schreiber left, and Cartmell went to the birthday party about an hour later.

3 The jury found Cartmell guilty. Based on the level of the offense (a severity-level 4 drug offense), the presumptive sentence was imprisonment. But because the offense level, even when matched with someone like Cartmell who hasn't committed any person felony offenses, is in a border box on the sentencing guidelines chart, the court could grant probation. That was an option if the court found that there were treatment programs available in the community that would be more effective than imprisonment in reducing the chance of further offenses by Cartmell. See K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 21-6805(d); K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 21-6804(q).

When defense counsel argued that Cartmell's real problem was that he was selling small quantities of drugs to pay for the drugs he was using, the district court set over the sentencing to give Cartmell a chance to get a drug evaluation so that he might make the case for probation. But Cartmell never got one—he said he couldn't afford it, but he also had at least one positive drug test for marijuana use while awaiting sentencing. The court ultimately gave Cartmell the presumptive sentence, 28 months in prison.

Cartmell then appealed to our court. He has appealed the underlying conviction, not the sentence.

ANALYSIS

I. Cartmell Has Not Shown Clear Error in the Jury Instructions.

Cartmell claims that the jury instructions should have told the jury that he had to commit the offense intentionally. With limited exceptions, to be guilty of a crime, you must have had some guilty mental state. So you must not only do some specific act (or fail to do one), but you also must have a particular state of mind. Under Kansas law, some acts must be done intentionally—meaning it's the person's conscious objective to engage in the conduct or cause the result—to be a crime. Others might be criminal when

4 done knowingly (when the person is aware of that person's conduct and it's reasonably certain to cause the result) or even recklessly (by consciously disregarding a risk). See K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 21-5202.

At Cartmell's trial, the district court gave somewhat odd instructions to the jury. The court never told the jury that Cartmell had to have committed this offense in some particular mental state—whether intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly. But the court defined for the jury what it meant for someone to act intentionally—even though nothing in the rest of the instructions told the jury why that might be important.

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Related

State v. McCullough
270 P.3d 1142 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2012)
State v. Jarmon
419 P.3d 591 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2018)
State v. Lowery
427 P.3d 865 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2018)

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Cartmell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cartmell-kanctapp-2019.