State v. Collins

460 P.2d 573, 204 Kan. 55, 1969 Kan. LEXIS 313
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 8, 1969
Docket45,321
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 460 P.2d 573 (State v. Collins) 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. Collins, 460 P.2d 573, 204 Kan. 55, 1969 Kan. LEXIS 313 (kan 1969).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, J.:

This is an appeal in -a criminal action from a conviction and sentence on two charges of second degree burglary and grand larceny in connection therewith contrary to K. S. A. 21-520 and 21-524.

The appellant specifies the trial court erred in (a) consolidating the two cases against him for purposes of trial; (b) permitting the prosecuting attorney to examine his own witnesses by leading and suggestive questions; and (c) overruling his motion for a new trial based on the ground of newly discovered evidence.

Briefly stated, the evidence discloses that Larry Joe Collins (defendant-appellant) during the early evening hours of May 31, 1967, was in the company of John Patterson, his wife, Sharon Patterson, Gary Leach and Joe Campos in a tavern called Jenk’s Jive in the city of Wichita, which is located near the Kansas Lighting Distributors, Inc.

There was “bad blood” between John Patterson and the appellant, which came about because the appellant started keeping company with Patterson’s wife while Patterson was confined in the Sedgwick County jail. The purpose of the meeting at the tavern on the evening in question was ostensibly to call “a peace treaty.” After Leach and Campos left the tavern, conversation soon turned to burglarizing the place next door, Kansas Lighting Distributors, Inc. Patterson testified he went into the alley, climbed up to the roof and entered the building through an attic window. Once inside he located the safe and rolled it to the door. Patterson then opened the door and went back to the tavern where he told the appellant the safe was ready to be punched. After an attempt to punch the safe was unsuccessful, it was loaded into the back of the appellant’s automobile and taken to a residence at 2301 Mascot in the city of Wichita, which was occupied by Benny Ray Wolfenbarger and Raymond Czernialc. The safe was unloaded from the trunk of the *57 automobile, taken into the house where it was opened, and the contents removed. The safe was then hauled away and dumped into the river.

Patterson testified that after this incident he, his wife and the appellant went to Joe’s Lounge where they again met Gary Leach and they “decided to get this Rose Bowl West.” Patterson then told of the group breaking and entering into the bowling alley, removing the safe, taking it to the appellant’s house, opening it, removing the contents, and finally throwing the safe into the river.

The appellant was charged with second degree burglary and grand larceny in one information for the burglary committed at the Kansas Lighting Distributors, Inc. He was charged in another information with burglary in the second degree and grand larceny for burglarizing the Rose Bowl West bowling alley.

Patterson toned state’s evidence upon being granted immunity from prosecution for the Rose Bowl West incident.

Upon motion the trial court consolidated the two cases against the appellant for trial. The appellant entered pleas of not guilty, was tried to a jury and found guilty. He was sentenced as an habitual criminal pursuant to K. S. A. 21-107a and given twenty-five years in the state penitentiary on each burglary and larceny count, the four sentences to run consecutively.

The appellant, an indigent, was represented throughout the trial and on appeal by Wilmer E. Goering, a duly authorized practicing attorney appointed by the trial court to represent the appellant.

Appeal has been duly perfected specifying the errors heretofore indicated.

Over objection of the appellant the trial court consolidated the two cases against him for trial. On appeal the appellant relies primarily upon language in State v. Thompson, 139 Kan. 59, 29 P. 2d 1101.

It has been repeatedly held where separate and distinct felonies are charged in separate counts of one and the same information and all of the offenses charged are of the same general character, requiring the same mode of trial, the same kind of evidence, and the same kind of punishment, the defendant may be tried upon all of the several counts of the information at one and the same time, and in one trial. (State v. Brown, 181 Kan. 375, 312 P. 2d 832; and State v. Anderson, 202 Kan. 52, 446 P. 2d 844.)

*58 Whether a defendant who is charged with several separate and distinct felonies, as above stated, may be tried upon all of the several counts of the information at one and the same time, and in one trial, rests in the sound judicial discretion of the trial court. (State v. Brown, supra.)

Upon motion of the state, the offenses with which the appellant was charged in the two cases were consolidated for trial because the offenses were of the same tj'pe, requiring the same mode of trial, the evidence as to both offenses would be interrelated, and the punishment in both cases would be the same.

No distinction is made in the law, as above stated, where separate informations are filed against the same defendant charging him with similar offenses, and die trial court sustains a motion to consolidate the two cases for trial. (State v. Browning, 182 Kan. 244, 320 P. 2d 844.)

The appellant in State v. Brown, supra, relied upon the same language in State v. Thompson, supra, asserted by the appellant herein. In Brown the decisions of this court were carefully analyzed and the arguments of the appellant herein were shown to have no merit on facts similar to those here presented.

In the instant case the chisel and hammer used to open each of the safes in question were shown to be the same. This was disclosed by an analysis of the paint from each of the safes recovered from the river and the hammer and chisel recovered from a trash barrel near the appellant’s residence. Under these circumstances the state was confronted with the possibility that a prosecution for a second offense may have been barred under K. S. A. 62-1449 had the cases not been consolidated for trial. (State v. Momb, 154 Kan. 435, 119 P. 2d 544; and State v. Browning, supra.)

In the instant case the two burglaries and larcenies occurred on or about the same day, both crimes were committed in a single series of transactions, and some of the same evidence was needed to prove each offense. Under all of the circumstances heretofore related, the trial court did not err in consolidating the two cases for trial.

The appellant contends the trial court erred in permitting the state to refresh the memory of Wolfenbarger and Czernialc with previous statements made to and recorded by the Wichita police department, or in permitting the state to use leading questions to examine these state witnesses.

*59

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
460 P.2d 573, 204 Kan. 55, 1969 Kan. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-collins-kan-1969.