State v. Cathey

741 P.2d 738, 241 Kan. 715, 1987 Kan. LEXIS 404
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 17, 1987
Docket59,742
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 741 P.2d 738 (State v. Cathey) 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. Cathey, 741 P.2d 738, 241 Kan. 715, 1987 Kan. LEXIS 404 (kan 1987).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Lockett, J.:

Ron Cathey appeals his convictions of one count of aggravated battery (K.S.A. 21-3414) and one count of attempted first-degree murder (K.S.A. 21-3401). Cathey makes numerous claims, among them that the trial judge improperly admitted hearsay evidence violating his constitutional right of confrontation and that the trial judge improperly instructed the jury. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

On Saturday evening, September 7, 1985, in Pratt, Kansas, Kaycee Wheeler, accompanied by a girlfriend, Nora Parsons, asked Michael Bowers (the victim) to spend the night with her at her mother’s home. Enroute to the mother’s home, the three observed that Mark Cathey’s car had hit a parked car.

Earlier that evening, Mark Cathey, the defendant’s brother, *717 had been drinking with Kaycee Wheeler, Nora Parsons, and Travis Parr, another boyfriend of Wheeler’s, at a local restaurant. Mark behaved boisterously.

Later that night, after he had parted company with his drinking companions, Mark Cathey used his car in an attempt to run another car, occupied by David Bishop and Jim Wenrich, off the road. A fight ensued. Mark was hit several times in the face. Soon after the fight, an off-duty police officer observed Mark Cathey’s blue Camaro hit a parked car. Mark abandoned his car and ran from the scene of the accident.

Around midnight, Mark’s brothers, Floyd Cathey and the defendant, Ron Cathey, were at Mark’s house with their girlfriends. Mark, battered and bloodied, suddenly entered his house by the back door. After reporting to the group that he had been in a fight and a car accident, Mark exited through the front door. Immediately thereafter, the police arrived looking for Mark because he had left the scene of the accident.

After the police departed, Ron and Floyd went to look for Mark. They found Mark and took him to Floyd’s girlfriend’s house. Ron and Floyd then departed to find the person who had “done this to their brother.” Unable to locate an assailant, they returned and asked a confused Mark what had occurred. Ron and Floyd believed Mark’s reply to be that Wheeler’s boyfriend, Michael Bowers, had beaten him. They left to locate Bowers and avenge their brother’s beating.

At approximately 9:00 a.m. on Sunday, the police were sent to investigate the report of a naked man lying in a back yard. They found the man, later identified as Michael Bowers, lying in the back yard of Wheeler’s mother’s home, unconscious and breathing irregularly. Bowers had been both shot below the left eye and beaten. Bowers was unable to remember anything after having been pulled out of the back door of Wheeler’s mother’s home by his assailant and was unable to identify his assailant. Both Ron and Floyd left for Colorado early that morning. Ron returned to Pratt two days later.

Law enforcement officers initially suspected that Floyd Cathey was the assailant. During the investigation of the crime, Janet Moore, Floyd Cathey’s girlfriend, gave statements to KBI agents on September 9 and September 16, 1985. She later tes *718 tified at two inquisitions held on November 1,1985. Janet Moore maintained that she knew nothing about the shooting of Michael Bowers, Ron Cathey was also subpoenaed and testified at the inquisition on November 1, 1985.

On November 22, 1985, Moore’s sister, Nancy Jackson, gave inquisition testimony. After testifying, Nancy located Moore and informed Moore that perjury charges were pending against her. Later, Moore was given immunity by the prosecution for any perjury she had committed during the prior inquisitions. On November 25, Moore gave additional inquisition testimony which refuted her first statements. Moore testified that when Ron and Floyd returned to her house, they said “they just blew somebody away.” She stated that when she asked Floyd if he had done it, Floyd responded, “No, Ron shot him.” Moore was later charged with aiding and abetting and was placed on diversion.

On November 25, 1985, Ron Cathey was arrested for the shooting of Michael Bowers. On June 11,1986, he was convicted in a jury trial on one count of aggravated battery and one count of attempted murder. Janet Moore testified for the prosecution. Cathey appeals his convictions, raising numerous issues.

Cathey’s initial claim is that the charges of aggravated battery and attempted first-degree murder are multiplicitous, and, therefore, his convictions violate K.S.A. 1986 Supp. 21-3107(2) which states:

“Upon prosecution for a crime, the defendant may be convicted of either the crime charged or an included crime, but not both. An included crime may be any of the following: . . . (d) a crime necessarily proved if the crime charged were proved.”

Multiplicity is the charging of two or more counts in a complaint where only a single criminal act is involved. State v. Garnes, 229 Kan. 368, 372, 624 P.2d 448 (1981); State v. Dorsey, 224 Kan. 152, 578 P.2d 261 (1978). K.S.A. 1986 Supp. 21-3107(1) allows charging an individual with multiple violations arising from a single transaction when the same conduct may establish the commission of more than one crime.

The principles for determining whether charges are multiplicitous are: (1) A single offense may not be divided into separate parts; generally, a single wrongful act may not furnish the basis for more than one criminal prosecution. (2) If each *719 offense charged requires proof of a fact not required in proving the other, the offenses do not merge. (3) Where offenses are committed separately and severally, at different times and at different places, they cannot be said to arise out of a single wrongful act. State v. Garnes, 229 Kan. at 373.

In Games, we considered the multiplicity of charges of aggravated battery and attempted murder. Games was charged with Count I, aggravated battery by shooting; Count II, aggravated battery by stabbing; and Count IV, attempted murder. The victim had been shot, then placed in a car and driven to a field. There she was robbed, taken out of the car, stabbed, run over by the car, abandoned, and left to die. Games argued, as does Cathey, that the charges in Count I, the shooting, and Count II, the stabbing, were multiplicitous with Count IV, attempted murder, because the facts formed one continuous series of events. It was determined that, since the shooting relied upon in Count I occurred at an earlier time and place than the other criminal acts, it was a separate and distinct offense and was not multiplicitous with Count IV.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
741 P.2d 738, 241 Kan. 715, 1987 Kan. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cathey-kan-1987.