State v. Eaton

568 S.W.2d 541, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2587
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 1978
DocketNo. KCD 29189
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 568 S.W.2d 541 (State v. Eaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Eaton, 568 S.W.2d 541, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2587 (Mo. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

SOMERVILLE, Presiding Judge.

Defendant was charged by information with burglary, second degree, tried to a jury, found guilty as charged, and sentenced to eight years imprisonment.

No evidence was presented by or on behalf of defendant; hence, the following [543]*543facts stand uncontroverted. On the night of April 29,1976, two members of the Kansas City, Missouri Police Department responded to an activated burglar alarm which was located in the Goodman Hardware Company building at 511 East 18th Street, Kansas City, Missouri. A realty company occupied the building immediately west of the Goodman Hardware Company building and the two shared a party wall. Upon arriving at the scene, the officers checked the Goodman Hardware Company building and found that all windows and doors affording entrance thereto were intact. A representative of the burglar alarm system arrived at the scene and admitted the officers to the Goodman Hardware Company building. Various items of hardware were found to have been scattered about. One of the officers observed a figure on an elevated catwalk disappear through a hole in the west wall of the building. Thereafter the interior lights were turned on, and a person, positively identified at the trial as the defendant, was discovered “crouching” in the rear of the building. Further investigation disclosed that the rear door of the building occupied by the realty company had been jimmied and access to the building occupied by Goodman Hardware Company had been made via the building occupied by the realty company and a freshly carved hole in the party wall. Fresh pry' marks discovered on a safe belonging to Goodman Hardware Company indicated that an attempt had been made to spring the safe door. The building occupied by Goodman Hardware Company had been thoroughly checked at the close of business and all doors and windows were secure and there was no hole in the party wall at that time.

Chronologically, the guilty verdict was returned by the jury on September 28, 1976, but defendant’s motion for new trial was not filed until November 5, 1976. The record is silent as to any application by defendant for an extension of time within which to file his motion for new trial, as well as to any grant of additional time by the trial court to defendant within which to file his motion for a new trial. Rule 27.-20(a) provides, inter alia, that “[s]uch motion [motion for new trial] shall be filed before judgment and within ten days after the return of the verdict: Provided, on application of defendant, the court may extend the time for filing such motion for an additional period of thirty (30) days: Provided further, the court shall have no power to make another or further extension of the time for filing said motion.” There is no escape from the conclusion that under the record in this case defendant’s motion for new trial, in order to have been timely, had to have been filed “within ten days after the return of the verdict.” Rule 27.20(a), supra. Compliance with Rule 27.20(a) is mandatory, and noncompliance is a matter to be noticed sua sponte by this court as neither it nor the parties can waive strict compliance. State v. Tucker, 451 S.W.2d 91 (Mo.1970); State v. Rapp, 412 S.W.2d 120 (Mo.1967); State v. Emory, 563 S.W.2d 120 (Mo.App.1978); and State v. Maddox, 549 S.W.2d 931 (Mo.App.1977). A motion for new trial filed out of time, as here (on the 47th day after the jury returned its verdict), is deemed a nullity and preserves nothing for appellate review. State v. Richardson, 519 S.W.2d 15 (Mo.1975); State v. Emory, supra; and State v. Brown, 543 S.W.2d 796 (Mo.App.1976).

Whether defendant’s failure to comply with Rule 27.20(a), supra, turns out to be the nemesis of his four points raised on appeal, depends on whether part or all of the points can be saved for appellate review by either the “plain error” rule, Rule 27.-20(c) 1 or the mandatory review provisions of Rule 28.02 2.

[544]*544Defendant’s points on appeal are as follows: (1) defendant was deprived of an “impartial trial, due process and equal protection of law in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States” by reason of the exclusion of all blacks from the petit jury finally selected to try defendant by the state’s use of its peremptory challenges; (2) the information failed to charge defendant with a proscribed offense because it contained no allegation that defendant entered the building occupied by Goodman Hardware Company “with the intent to steal goods or merchandise stored therein”; (3) the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for acquittal at the close of all the evidence because the state failed to “prove beyond a reasonable doubt” that defendant burglariously entered the Goodman Hardware Company building “with the in-' tent to commit a felony therein”; and (4) defendant was denied “a fair trial and due process of law as guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution” because the state “deliberately suppressed the existence of fingerprints and photographs takened [sic] at the scene of the alleged offense.”

Under the prevailing ease law of this state issues with constitutional dimensions may be addressed and disposed of on appeal as “plain error” under Rule 27.20(c). State v. Hammonds, 459 S.W.2d 365, 369 (Mo.1970); State v. Coyne, 452 S.W.2d 227, 228 (Mo.1970); and State v. Meiers, 412 S.W.2d 478, 480-81 (Mo.1967). Points one and four relied on by defendant, although not preserved for appellate review, will be dealt with under the auspices of the “plain error” rule, Rule 27.20(c), in view of their constitutional tone.

Point three, which freely lends itself to being construed as an attack upon the sufficiency of the evidence, is likewise amenable to being reviewed on appeal as “plain error” under Rule 27.20(c). State v. White, 439 S.W.2d 752, 753 (Mo.1969); and State v. McClunie, 438 S.W.2d 267, 268 (Mo.1969).

Point two will be reviewed under the mandatory review provisions of Rule 28.02, supra, since it challenges the sufficiency of the information to charge defendant with a proscribed offense.

Defendant’s insistence that he was deprived of an impartial trial, due process and equal protection of law in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States by reason of the exclusion of all blacks from the petit jury by the state’s use of its peremptory challenges parrots a frequently asserted claim of error.

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Bluebook (online)
568 S.W.2d 541, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-eaton-moctapp-1978.