State v. Green

469 P.3d 1228
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedAugust 21, 2020
Docket118366
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 469 P.3d 1228 (State v. Green) 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. Green, 469 P.3d 1228 (kan 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 118,366

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

THAD CHRISTOPHER GREEN, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. An instruction on voluntary intoxication is unnecessary when there is no evidence to support impairment of the defendant that would make it impossible to form the necessary criminal intent.

2. An instruction on a lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter is unnecessary when the defense relies on a theory of sudden quarrel or heat of passion, and no evidence supports that theory.

3. A district judge's refusal to instruct on voluntary intoxication and a lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter when there is no evidence to support either instruction is a decision of law, not fact-finding involving weighing of evidence or evaluation of witness credibility. It does not violate a criminal defendant's constitutional right to jury trial.

1 4. The rule of Beck v. Alabama, 447 U.S. 625, 100 S. Ct. 2382, 65 L. Ed. 2d 392 (1980), does not apply in noncapital criminal cases. If it did, it would give no relief to a defendant whose jury was not faced with an all-or-nothing choice between conviction and acquittal.

5. Even if it is error to admit a videotape of a criminal defendant's interview by law enforcement that is not redacted to remove the interviewers' critical comments on the defendant's credibility, the substance of the issue is unpreserved for appellate review in this case.

6. A cautionary instruction on informant testimony is not necessary when the informants were not acting as agents of the State when they obtained the incriminating information and their testimony was corroborated by other testimony and evidence.

7. The cumulative error doctrine does not apply when no errors or only one error is identified by an appellate court.

Appeal from Montgomery District Court; F. WILLIAM CULLINS, judge. Opinion filed August 21, 2020. Affirmed.

Peter Maharry, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, argued the cause, and was on the briefs for appellant.

Jodi Litfin, assistant solicitor general, argued the cause, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, was with her on the brief for appellee.

2 The opinion of the court was delivered by

BEIER, J.: This is defendant Thad Christopher Green's direct appeal of his convictions arising out of the death of Cameron Wawrzynaik. Wawrzynaik was the boyfriend of the defendant's ex-wife.

A jury convicted the defendant of first-degree premeditated murder, aggravated burglary, and arson. He raises seven issues in this appeal: (1) The jury should have been instructed on the defense of voluntary intoxication; (2) the jury should have been instructed on voluntary manslaughter as a lesser included offense of first-degree premeditated murder; (3) the district court judge's failure to instruct on voluntary intoxication and voluntary manslaughter deprived him of his constitutional right to a jury trial, because the judge made factual determinations that should have been made by the jury; (4) the failure to instruct on voluntary manslaughter pushed the jury to convict him of first-degree premeditated murder even if jurors had a reasonable doubt about whether the State had proved its case; (5) the district judge erred in admitting a videotaped interrogation of the defendant into evidence because law enforcement agents repeatedly challenged his honesty and truthfulness during that interrogation; (6) the district judge erred in refusing to give a cautionary instruction about testimony from jailhouse informants upon whom the State's case relied; and (7) cumulative error requires reversal of the defendant's convictions and a new trial.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In the early morning hours of December 23, 2015, Mary Lou Vannoster, who lived in rural Montgomery County, Kansas, near Jefferson, looked out her living room window

3 and saw her "whole yard was lit up." She ran outside, saw that the house next door was on fire, and ran back inside to call 911.

Montgomery County dispatch sent firefighters and law enforcement, including Detective Matthew Hastings of the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office, to the scene of the fire. When Hastings arrived, the entire house was in flames and had "lost a lot of its height and its shape." An outbuilding north of the house and a pickup in the driveway also were on fire.

After speaking with Vannoster, Hastings found out that Wawrzynaik had been renting the burning house from another neighbor's son. Hastings tried to contact Wawrzynaik by phone but did not get a response.

Eventually Ron Cunningham, Wawrzynaik's stepfather, pulled up in a pickup. Cunningham believed Wawrzynaik was inside the burning house because Wawrzynaik's pickup was in the driveway.

As this situation evolved just north of the Kansas-Oklahoma border, Martha Donelson Green and Fred Green were at home near Burbank, Oklahoma, south of the border. About 12:15 a.m., Martha heard Fred answer a phone call.

Martha could hear "screaming and yelling" coming from the person who had called. She could not hear much of what was being said—"just a really serious situation was going on." She could hear Fred responding to the caller "really calm." The only word from the caller that Martha could make out—a word she "heard real clear"—was "blood." She believed Fred was talking to one of his sons—the defendant or his brother, Dustin. After the call was over, Fred "started crying." According to Martha, "[H]e was yelling, 'I

4 lost my son. I lost my son.'" Martha "thought that whatever happened on the phone . . . was, you know, life or death," but Fred would not tell her what had happened.

Martha was caring for her grandbaby that night and needed help dealing with both Fred and the baby; so she sent a text message to her daughter, Tasha Fox. Tasha and her husband, Brad, shared an address but not a residence with Martha and Fred. The Foxes came over, and Tasha took the baby upstairs, where she called 911.

Sheriff's Deputy Mike Stasyszen from Osage County, Oklahoma, was dispatched to Fred and Martha's house. When he got there, Fred did not want to talk to him and told him to go away. Eventually Martha let him into the house. Stasyszen would later testify that "[Fred] was very frantic inside the house. He was running around picking up stuff, throwing it down. He—like he was looking for something. He just kept saying, 'I've got to go. I've got to go.'"

Fred eventually calmed down: "His face was still red. He still wasn't, like, real coherent. He really wasn't his self, and he was trying to calm down. He wanted law enforcement to leave." Martha told him, "Well, we've got to figure out what's going on, Fred," but "he just wouldn't talk about it."

Fred left the house, and Martha asked the sheriff's deputies who remained if they had heard about any wrecks or about the defendant or his brother "getting into trouble." Martha would later testify: "[T]hen I told them about [the defendant] and [Ramanda Green] having the divorce case and that Cameron [Wawrzynaik] was in Kansas. And I said, 'You need to call Kansas and find out if something's happened up there.'" Martha was worried that the defendant had hurt Wawrzynaik. Stasyszen would later testify that Fred had told [Martha], "My son just killed somebody," and then became irate and, according to her, "went crazy." 5 Stasyszen called dispatch to let them know Fred had left his home. The dispatcher was Lacy Ferguson, who happened to be Ramanda's sister-in-law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
469 P.3d 1228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-green-kan-2020.