State v. Gladney

577 So. 2d 1179, 1991 La. App. LEXIS 655, 1991 WL 45783
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 3, 1991
DocketNo. 22318-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 577 So. 2d 1179 (State v. Gladney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gladney, 577 So. 2d 1179, 1991 La. App. LEXIS 655, 1991 WL 45783 (La. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

NORRIS, Judge.

The defendant, James C. Gladney (also known as James Harper), was indicted for the aggravated rape and armed robbery of “Susan” in violation of La.R.S. 14:42, 64. He proceeded to a jury trial and was found guilty on both counts. The district court sentenced him to life and 40 years at hard labor, both without benefit of probation, parole or suspension of sentence. The court subsequently granted an out of time appeal in which Gladney urges three assignments:

“(1) The Court erred in sustaining the State’s objection to testimony proffered for the purpose of corroborating the source of acquisition of a pistol found on defendant which was the same pistol taken by the party who raped the victim.
“(2) The Trial Court erred in refusing to sustain the defendant’s objection to the prosecutor’s comments during closing argument wherein the prosecutor stated that the defendant had been previously tried in connection with certain cases and that he had told his story to the jury then and that the jury didn’t believe him then when there was no evidence that there had ever been any prior trial and in fact there never had been any trial.
“(3) The Appellate Court should take note of any error patent on the record.”

We find no reversible error and therefore affirm the convictions and sentences.

Facts

Around 6:30 a.m. on July 24, 1981 “Susan” and her then-fiancé (now husband) “Bobby” left their ground-floor apartment in Fountainbleau Apartments in Bossier City. Susan drove Bobby to work in Shreveport and then returned to their apartment between 7:20 and 7:30. She entered and shut the door behind her but did not lock it because she intended to step back outside and buy a newspaper from a nearby paper rack.

As Susan was searching in her pocketbook for change, she suddenly heard a man standing right behind her say, “Don’t move.” She turned around and saw an intruder standing in the doorway and pointing a loaded gun at her. Although Susan told him no one else was at home, the intruder led her around the apartment to assure that they were alone. He then walked her back to the livingroom couch and ordered her to lie down; he raped her.

After this he ordered her, still at gunpoint, to give him money. Frustrated that Susan’s billfold was empty, he led her around the apartment again, this time in search of things to take. He took about $40 in coins from Susan’s children’s piggy-bank; Bobby’s high school class ring from Kubasaki High School in Okinawa (the intruder commented he had been in Okinawa before); Bobby’s .38 Llama revolver; a bottle of Crown Royal whiskey; and the Crown Royal cloth bag to carry it all.

After first threatening to tie her up in the bathroom, the intruder ordered Susan into the bedroom closet and pushed a chest of drawers in front of the door. The intruder then left as silently as he had entered. Susan waited in the closet, terrified, for several minutes before pushing the chest away, climbing out a window and fleeing to her mother-in-law’s house. She was taken to Bossier General Hospital and examined by Dr. McCormick. That afternoon she went to the police station, reported the incident and gave a description of the assailant to Detective Sproles. Meanwhile Detective West investigated Susan’s apartment and found it “ransacked.”

Because five similar early-morning incidents had occurred in the vicinity in a space of 10 days, Bossier City Police conducted a stake-out of apartments in the area. Officers gathered from other victims a description of the suspect’s dark blue and silver mid-size car, perhaps a Mercury Cougar; and from Susan and others a description of the suspect as a black male of medium height and muscular build, wearing a mod[1181]*1181erate afro and long sideburns. As part of the stake-out Detective West took an unmarked patrol car to Fountainbleau Apartments at 3:45 a.m. on July 31.

About 4:30 Det. West saw an Olds Cutlass with a dark blue Landau roof and a silver body drive into the parking lot and back into a space not far away. The driver, a black male, turned off his headlights but sat in the car for some time with the dome light on; he appeared to be looking at something on the steering wheel or his lap. Det. West drove by the suspect’s car twice and parked in the suspect’s plain view with parking lights on and engine running. Within 30 seconds the suspect turned off his dome light, cranked the engine and started out the parking lot onto East Texas Street; Det. West followed him. Reinforced by Officer Cowan, Det. West stopped the suspect’s car on Airline Drive.

The suspect produced a driver’s license that read “James C. Gladney” of Princeton, La. but he told the officers his name was “James Harper.” Gladney explained the difference by saying he had two birth certificates. When asked why he was at Fountainbleau Apartments at such an hour, he said he was reading a book and Founta-inbleau was a good place for reading. He consented to a search of his car; officers found two pornographic magazines (the nature of the magazines was withheld from the jury) and a .38 Llama revolver, like the one reported stolen from Susan’s apartment. Gladney also told the officers his sister lived in the apartments. The officers Mirandized him and asked him to the station for questioning.

At the station Gladney was Mirandized again and placed under arrest. He told officers he had bought the gun from a man named Johnson on Sprague Street two or three months earlier. An inventory search of Gladney’s person turned up a high school ring from Kubasaki with Bobby’s initials in it. Gladney explained he bought the ring from the same Johnson, but about a week before his arrest. Police found the serial number of the gun seized from Glad-ney’s car matched the one owned by Bobby. A check of the Cutlass’s license number traced it to an address in Princeton, La.; police also determined that no relative of Gladney’s was living at Fountainbleau Apartments.

Later that day Gladney participated in a lineup which his attorney supervised. Susan positively identified Gladney as her assailant. Bobby also identified the ring as his own.

A Bossier Parish grand jury returned the instant true bill on August 17, 1981, charging Gladney with aggravated rape and armed robbery; he pleaded not guilty. Various motions to suppress were heard and rejected on September 23; trial on the merits was held on October 28 and 29, 1981. As noted, the jury found him guilty as charged. Sentences were imposed on January 19, 1982. The district court granted an out of time appeal on March 13, 1990.

Hearsay Testimony

By his first assignment Gladney urges, in essence, that the trial court erred in excluding as hearsay his testimony about how he acquired the .38 Llama revolver which was found in his car on July 31 and was proven to have been stolen from Susan’s apartment a week before. Gladney argues this testimony was not hearsay and was relevant to prove his motive and state of mind before buying the gun.

At trial Gladney testified that a week or two before July 24, he had talked to a man named “Red” (whose last name he did not know) about buying a gun for his wife. On the evening of the 24th Gladney and his friend Reggie Hicks went to a place called the “Gambling Shack” (its exact location was not given) and met up with “Red,” who told them how to get a gun.

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Related

State v. Taylor
688 So. 2d 1262 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1997)
State v. Brown
628 So. 2d 207 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
577 So. 2d 1179, 1991 La. App. LEXIS 655, 1991 WL 45783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gladney-lactapp-1991.