State v. Cookson

293 A.2d 780, 1972 Me. LEXIS 317
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 31, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 293 A.2d 780 (State v. Cookson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cookson, 293 A.2d 780, 1972 Me. LEXIS 317 (Me. 1972).

Opinion

WEATHERBEE, Justice.

A Piscataquis County jury found the defendant guilty of the crime of burglary, as defined by our statutes in 17 M.R.S.A. § 751. The Defendant appealed.

The jury could properly have found from the evidence as follows:

In the early evening of January 6, 1971, Mr. and Mrs. Livermore, an elderly couple who live in Milo, received a visit from the Defendant with whom they had had a slight previous acquaintance. The Defendant left and at about 10:35 he returned, ostensibly to see if he had dropped his billfold in the Livermore kitchen. In fact, the Defendant and three other men had arranged that the Defendant was to pretend he had lost the billfold in order to get the door unlocked so that the other three could get in and steal the Livermores’ property. Mrs. Livermore opened the door for him to enter and she and the Defendant looked around the kitchen for the billfold for about five minutes when the front door suddenly burst open and three men, their faces masked with nylon hose, entered and seized the Defendant, pretending to knock him to the floor. While the Defendant feigned unconsciousness, the three men seized and held Mr. and Mrs. Livermore and demanded their money. After taking money from the victims, one of the intruders detained the elderly people in the living room at which time the Defendant got up from the floor and went upstairs where the intruders opened bureau drawers and boxes in a search for more money. At this point the Defendant looked out the window and saw a police car in front of the house. He then went down and resumed his supine position on the kitchen floor while his associates broke open the back door and ran away.

The Defendant was represented at trial by court appointed counsel who now assigns several claimed errors on appeal.

Motion for Change of Venue.

Before trial the Defendant moved for a change of venue principally on the basis of articles concerning the crime published in the area newspapers and the Defendant’s bad reputation in that county as a result of prior criminal charges.

The testimony on voir dire disclosed no indication of local prejudice against Defendant and there were no published statements by public officials expressing belief in Defendant’s guilt. The *782 evidence fell short of demonstrating a climate of hostility and prejudice against Defendant which would prevent a fair trial in Piscataquis County. If the rather explicit account of the crime, photographically illustrated with scenes in the ransacked home, which appeared once in the Milo newspaper presented any danger of outraged feelings against a person charged with such a crime, the danger was successfully avoided. A careful voir dire was conducted of the jury panel by the Presiding Justice and only five prospective jurors recalled reading any newspaper reports or hearing any radio or television reports of the crime. Four of these five did not serve on the panel. The fifth remembered reading of the alleged burglary and hearing it discussed by family, friends and neighbors but said she had an open mind as to the Defendant’s guilt or innocence. She was not challenged by the defense and Defendant’s counsel told the Court that the jury was satisfactory to the Defendant. We do not find that the Presiding Justice’s denial of the Motion for Change of Venue was an abuse of his discretion. For an extensive discussion of problems of pre-trial publicity see State v. Coty, Me., 229 A.2d 205 (1967).

Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss

While the indictment contains an allegation seldom encountered here, as we will later discuss, it sufficiently alleges a violation of 17 M.R.S.A. § 751.

The Court’s charge concerning Intoxication

During his charge to the jury the Presiding Justice instructed it in substance that while voluntary intoxication is not an excuse for crime and does not make innocent an otherwise criminal act, this Defendant was charged with a crime an essential element of which was the specific intent to steal. He told the jury that it should return a verdict of Not Guilty if it found that the Defendant was so intoxicated that he had so far lost his reason and faculties that the jurors had a reasonable doubt that he was able to form and have a purpose to steal.

The Defendant does not quarrel with the legal principles which the Justice explained to the jury but he complains that while he testified that he was “drinking” enough so that he “could feel it” when he first visited the victim and that-he had then drunk “a few beers” between,'.his first and his last visit (he and a friend consumed “9 or 10 beers” on this latter occasion), the evidence fell short of 'demonstrating that he was, in fact, intoxicated. Therefore, the Defendant says, the1 Justice’s reference to intoxication could only prejudice the jury as to his credibility and as to the likelihood of his being disposed to commit such a crime.

The Defendant fakes nothing by this objection. The statutes demand that the Presiding Justice :

“. . . [Sjhall . . . charge the jury . . ." upon all matters of law arising in the '’case but shall not, during the trial, including the charge, express any opinion upon issues of fact arising in the case . . .”14 M.R. S.A. § 1105.

The Presiding Justice correctly stated to the jury the rule of law relating to intoxication and crimes requiring a specific intent. State v. Smith, Me., 277 A.2d 481 (1971). However, mere abstract principles of law, although correct, should not be given unless they are applicable to the facts in evidence. State v. Benson and Greenlaw, 155 Me. 115, 151 A.2d 266 (1959).

In Smith, which also involved a charge of burglary, there was evidence that the Defendant had consumed some intoxicating liquor before committing the offense. The Defendant objected Jo the Justice’s instruction to the jury that the mere drinking of intoxicating liquor does not excuse or minimize the responsibility of the individual who commits a crjme. On appeal, this *783 Court found no error ih the giving of this familiar instruction.

The Defendant in Smith requested an instruction that the jury should find the Defendant not guilty if it found that the intoxicating liquor had impaired his ability to form the specific intent necessary in burglary. On appeal we found that this instruction was correctly refused, saying, 277 A.2d at page 492:

“Before a court is required or justified in giving an instruction submitting to the jury the issue, whether the defendant’s condition of inebriety was such as to destroy his mental capacity of having, entertaining or formulating a particular specific intent, there must be evidence upon which to base such an instruction. Unless there was evidence which tended to prove that the mental condition of the defendant from drunkenness was such, at the time of his breaking and entering of the L.D. home, that he was not capable of having the intent to rape, then an instruction upon that subject as requested by the defendant was unauthorized, . . .”

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Bluebook (online)
293 A.2d 780, 1972 Me. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cookson-me-1972.