State v. Holiday

598 So. 2d 524, 1992 La. App. LEXIS 1227, 1992 WL 81947
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 1992
DocketNo. KA 91 0285
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 598 So. 2d 524 (State v. Holiday) 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. Holiday, 598 So. 2d 524, 1992 La. App. LEXIS 1227, 1992 WL 81947 (La. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

LANIER, Judge.

Huey Price Holiday, a/k/a Robin Hood, was charged by bill of information with illegal possession of stolen things having a value of five hundred dollars or more in violation of La.R.S. 14:69. He pled not guilty and, after trial by jury, was found guilty as charged. Subsequently, defendant was sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor for a term of ten years. This appeal followed.

FACTS

On December 27,1988, Deputy Claude A. Rogers, III, of the Terrebonne Parish Sheriffs Office (TPSO) investigated the burglary of a commercial fishing boat, the Mr. Travis, (owned by Gary Poole) in Chauvin, Louisiana. Rogers went inside the vessel with Poole, who identified four items that were missing from the boat: (1) a Si-Tex1 EX 7 Loran receiver, (2) A Tri-Star forty channel CB radio, (3) a fifty-five channel President VHF radio, and (4) an Inmor digital depth finder. Poole advised Rogers the burglary had occurred approximately between 5:30 p.m. on December 26, 1988, and 1:30 p.m. the following day. When Rogers asked Poole if he had any serial numbers of the stolen items, Poole indicated that he did not.2

Shortly thereafter, TPSO Major Godfrey Buquet received information from an informant that Ronald Ellender had just purchased goods stolen during a burglary. Buquet directed TPSO Deputy Morris Du-plantis to investigate the matter. At about noon on December 28, Duplantis went to Ellender’s home in Montegut, Louisiana. After Duplantis talked to Ellender, Ellen-der brought out a Si-Tex Loran receiver with the serial number 019850. Ellender told Duplantis that he had purchased the Loran receiver from defendant, whom El-lender knew, for twenty dollars.

The state introduced into evidence a canceled check dated December 27, 1988, drawn on Ronald Ellender’s bank account, made payable to the order of cash in the amount of twenty dollars, bearing the signature of Ronald Ellender as drawer and the endorsement of Huey P. Holiday, Jr. on the reverse side of the check. Ellender identified this exhibit as the check he gave defendant in payment for the Loran receiver.

According to Ellender, he purchased the Loran receiver on either December 27 or the following day when defendant came to Ellender’s home and offered to sell him the receiver, a radio which “looked like” a CB radio, and a depth finder. Defendant stated that the items were not “hot” or stolen, and he offered to sell all of them to Ellen-der for about fifty dollars. However, El-lender did not want the other items and chose to purchase only the receiver at the price of twenty dollars.3

[527]*527After obtaining the serial number of the Loran receiver, Duplantis left Ellender’s home and returned to his office. Duplantis contacted several electronics dealerships, including EMT Electronics, Inc., in Houma, Louisiana. Duplantis gave a Mr. Thibo-daux at EMT Electronics the serial number of the Loran receiver, and Thibodaux told Duplantis that Poole had purchased the receiver from EMT. The state introduced into evidence an invoice and a copy of Gary Poole’s check payable to EMT, showing Poole’s purchase of the receiver on April 23,1987, for six hundred thirty-four dollars and forty-four cents.

After determining that the receiver belonged to Poole, Duplantis obtained a warrant for defendant’s arrest. Duplantis also returned to Ellender’s home and retrieved the receiver.4 On December 29, 1988, defendant was arrested for the instant offense and informed of his constitutional rights.

A few days later on January 3, 1989, TPSO Detective Mike Solet was contacted by Philip Billiot of the City Marshal’s Office, who informed him Elie Hendron wanted to speak to Solet. Hendron then came to the sheriff’s office.

Hendron testified that defendant came into his house on December 28,1988, with a VHF radio and a hand light and offered to sell these items to him for about one hundred dollars. Hendron did not have one hundred dollars. He and defendant started talking about hunting. Ultimately, Hen-dron gave defendant a shotgun in return for the radio and light. Hendron testified that, at the time of this transaction, he believed that defendant owned the items.

Thereafter, on the following morning, Hendron received a telephone call from jail. The caller identified himself as defendant, and Hendron recognized defendant’s voice. During the telephone conversation, defendant told Hendron that the items Hendron had received in exchange for the shotgun were “hot” and not to turn them in to the police. Instead, defendant told Hendron that he wanted them back, that he wanted Hendron to bring them “back of K-mart”, and that he would send someone to get the items. Hendron became frightened after receiving the call from defendant and spoke to his neighbor, Phillip Billiot, who advised Hendron to bring the items to the (Sheriff’s) office.5

The defense consisted of the testimony of one witness, Michael Johnson, who stated that he and defendant were lifelong friends. According to Johnson, he took a ride with defendant in defendant’s father's truck on approximately December 27, 1988. Defendant pulled up to a gas pump at a store in Chauvin. There was a man, a woman and two young children in a truck on the opposite side of the pump. These people were “real filthy”. The man had a “whole bunch of stuff” in the truck, “a lot of pillow cases, sacks, a couple of tables and stuff like that”, giving the appearance that the man and the people with him were moving. Johnson saw the man talking to defendant and saw defendant purchase some items from the man. Johnson stated that he loaned defendant ten dollars so defendant could pay the man the fifty dollars that the man wanted for the items. Johnson observed the man give defendant a sack which contained boxes and what looked like a CB radio. Johnson testified that the transaction occurred on about December 27, at between approximately 10:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Johnson did not look inside the boxes and did not know what was in them. When the state introduced copies of the payroll records from the Bourg Dry Dock, Johnson’s place of employment, showing that Johnson was at work for seven and one-half hours on December 27, Johnson stated that he was not sure of the exact date the transaction had occurred and admitted that it had not occurred on December 27. However, he stated that he was “absolutely sure” he was [528]*528with defendant when defendant purchased the items.

INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL

(Assignment of error 3)6

In this assignment of error, the defendant states the following:

The defendant assigns as error any errors patent on the face of the record, including but not limited to the following. A motion for mistrial should have been requested and granted when the prosecutor made reference, during defendant’s closing argument, to the defendant’s failure to take the witness stand.

In brief, defendant contends that the essence of this assignment of error “is an assertion that trial counsel was ineffective.”

The transcript shows that during the closing argument of defendant’s trial counsel, the following occurred:

And I believe that you know the economic situation at Terrebonne Parish. You can visualize a family, person unemployed with kids, hungry and a man, Mr. Holiday who is known as Robin Hood, wanting to help out a poor destitute family.

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Related

State v. Williams
186 So. 3d 333 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2016)
State of Louisiana v. Lamantraes Williams
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State of Louisiana v. Gary Wayne Woods
Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2012
State v. Randle
827 So. 2d 657 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2002)
State v. Duncan
738 So. 2d 706 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1999)
State v. Dyson
734 So. 2d 786 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1999)
State v. Holiday
600 So. 2d 659 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
598 So. 2d 524, 1992 La. App. LEXIS 1227, 1992 WL 81947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-holiday-lactapp-1992.