State v. Duncan

805 P.2d 1387, 247 Mont. 232, 48 State Rptr. 176, 1991 Mont. LEXIS 40
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1991
Docket90-213
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 805 P.2d 1387 (State v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Duncan, 805 P.2d 1387, 247 Mont. 232, 48 State Rptr. 176, 1991 Mont. LEXIS 40 (Mo. 1991).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Roy Lee Duncan appeals his convictions of robbery and deliberate homicide through accountability following a jury trial in the First Judicial District, Broadwater County. We affirm.

Duncan presents the following issues on appeal:

1. Were Ursla Smith, Sherry Hendricks and Ginny Penn accomplices, and if so, did independent evidence sufficiently corroborate the accomplice testimony?

2. Is the evidence in this case sufficient to support a conviction of deliberate homicide through accountability?

3. Is the felony murder rule under § 45-5-102(l)(b), MCA, constitutional?

In July, 1989, Roy Lee Duncan, along with five other adults and three small children, traveled to Montana in a single car. The adults were members of a self-formed group. The children are incidental to this appeal, and as such, will not be further discussed.

One of the adults, Ernest “Ernie” Mazurkiewicz was considered by other group members as the leader of the group. On June 24, 1989, Ernie instructed the other adults, Roy, Joe Milinovich, Ursla Smith, *234 Sherry Hendricks, and Virginia “Ginny” Perm, to place their fingerprints, made from their own blood, on individual pieces of paper. Each person signed and dated the piece of paper containing their fingerprint. These pieces of paper signified comradery and loyalty to Ernie. Ernie also told the adults that these pieces of paper meant that they were members with him forever, and the only way they could leave the group was “in a pine box.”

While in Big Timber, Montana, Ernie asked Ursla, the treasurer of the group, to give Roy some money to purchase a handgun. Ursla complied, but Roy was unable to purchase the handgun because he was an out-of- state resident. The group eventually drove to Billings, Montana, where Roy and Ursla went to the local driver’s licensing bureau and attempted to obtain Montana driver’s licenses for in-state identification. Both Roy and Ursla paid $12.00 to a clerk at the driver’s licensing bureau in order to apply for a driver’s license, and both received'a receipt from the clerk. Ursla passed the required written driver’s license examination, and the clerk properly validated her receipt making it a learner’s permit. Roy, however, failed the written examination, and accordingly, the clerk did not validate his receipt as a learner’s permit. Ursla, however, upon Ernie’s request, falsified Roy’s receipt to make it appear that Roy passed the test, and was a recipient of a learner’s permit.

The group then left Billings and Roy purchased two handguns by using his falsified learner’s permit as identification; one of the handguns, a .22 caliber FIE revolver, was purchased in Columbus, Montana, and the other, a .25 caliber Loricin semiautomatic, was purchased in Big Timber, Montana. Ursla testified that following the purchases of the handguns, she overheard Ernie telling Roy how to commit robberies. Sherry and Ginny testified that following the purchases of the handguns, they were aware that the handguns were going to be used to rob.

The group proceeded west on Interstate 90 through Montana, and on the evening of July 24,1989, stopped at a convenience store outside of Bozeman. Roy, Ernie, Ursla, and Joe went inside the convenience store; Sherry and Ginny remained in the car. While in the convenience store, Roy engaged in conversation with Larry Beckwith, who was en route to Alaska where he had an employment opportunity. Following his conversation with Larry, Roy informed Ernie that Larry could obtain employment for them in Alaska.

Together with Ernie, Roy again talked with Larry to further pursue the notion of possible employment opportunities in Alaska. *235 Apparently, after this conversation and a phone call placed by Larry to Alaska, Larry agreed to take Roy, Ernie, and Joe to Alaska and help them find jobs.

Larry and the group left the convenience store simultaneously and headed-north toward Townsend, Montana. Joe rode with Larry in his red pick-up truck and the rest of the group followed Larry’s pick-up in their car. Shortly after leaving the convenience store, Larry’s pick-up truck pulled off the highway; the group’s car also stopped. Roy then joined Larry and Joe in the pick-up and the vehicles once again continued to drive down the highway with the pick-up leading the way. Later, the pick-up pulled off the highway again and the car likewise pulled over. A brief exchange occurred, but the riders in the vehicles remained the same: Larry, Roy, and Joe rode in the pick-up and the rest of the group rode in the following car.

Sometime later, Larry’s pick-up began to swerve on the highway; Ernie, the driver of the group’s car, passed the pickup, drove through Townsend, and then pulled the car over to the side of the highway and waited for the pick-up. The pick-up eventually pulled up behind the group’s car, whereby the pick-up then led the car down a secondary road off of the main highway.

At this point Ernie asked Ursla to hand him Duncan’s handgun, the loaded .22 caliber FIE revolver, which was located in the passenger side panel of the car; Ursla complied. Both vehicles once again pulled off the road. Ernie got out of the car and joined Roy who was standing in the roadway. Joe was standing in a nearby ditch straightening his clothes. Ernie handed Roy the handgun and told Roy that the group was going to spend the night at a rest area. Ernie then got back into the car, and the car drove off, leaving Roy, Joe, Larry and the pick-up behind.

About forty-five minutes later, the car and the pick-up met at an exit ramp outside a nearby town. After both vehicles pulled over, Roy got out of the pick-up and handed Larry’s wallet to Ernie; Ernie gave the wallet to Ursla for safe-keeping. The vehicles then proceeded to a gas station and later to a rest area. At the rest area, Ursla testified that after she inquired about what happened on the secondary road, Roy stated that he “overtook” Larry and “sent Mr. Beckwith to hell where he belonged.” Ginny testified that Roy said “that he had got the guy, didn’t know how many times he had shot him and that Joe had hit him with a rock but he wouldn’t go down.” Additionally at the rest area, Ernie, who had regained possession of the .22 caliber FIE revolver, emptied the handgun and took out the shells.

*236 The car and pick-up proceeded on to a second rest area, and stayed a brief time. Upon leaving this second rest area, the car and pick-up truck headed south on Interstate 15. Ursla, Sherry, and Ginny testified that, at this point, they fell asleep in the car. The three testified that they were awakened when Roy and Joe, who had been riding in Larry’s pick-up, entered the car with Larry’s possessions. At this point, the three women became aware that the pick-up was ablaze.

Larry’s truck was later reported to be burning on Interstate 15 approximately six miles north of Dillon, Montana, and authorities later identified that the pick-up belonged to Larry from the pick-up’s license plate.

At around noon on July 25, 1989, a detachment from the Montana National Guard discovered Larry’s body on an abandoned portion of Highway 12 approximately 2.2 miles north of Townsend, Montana.

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Related

State v. Johnson
918 P.2d 293 (Montana Supreme Court, 1996)
State v. Gollehon
864 P.2d 249 (Montana Supreme Court, 1993)
State v. Turner
864 P.2d 235 (Montana Supreme Court, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
805 P.2d 1387, 247 Mont. 232, 48 State Rptr. 176, 1991 Mont. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-duncan-mont-1991.