State v. Holliday

598 P.2d 1132, 183 Mont. 251, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 872
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 20, 1979
Docket14421
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 598 P.2d 1132 (State v. Holliday) 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. Holliday, 598 P.2d 1132, 183 Mont. 251, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 872 (Mo. 1979).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The defendant in this matter appeals from a judgment entered on April 3, 1978 by the District Court upon a jury verdict of guilty of the crime of robbery.

Defendant was originally tried with three other defendants in October 1975 for the robbery and homicide of Monte Dyckman, a Safeway store employee in Hardin, Montana. The facts surrounding those crimes have been recited in detail by this Court elsewhere. See, State v. Fitzpatrick (1977), 174 Mont. 174, 569 P.2d 383. Therefore, for purposes of this appeal, they need not be exhaustively recounted here.

Briefly, the evidence adduced at defendant’s trial demonstrated he and four other individuals met in a Billings bar on April 5, 1975, and discussed robbing the Safeway store in Hardin, Mon *253 tana. Defendant then accompanied the others .to a home on the west side of Billings, where further plans for the robbery were developed. Defendant then requested a ride to Hardin with one of the participants for himself and two female companions. The other men drove to Hardin in a second car.

Arriving in Hardin, the men left the girls at a local bar at defendant’s request and then drove around the town to ascertain the location of the Safeway store and the drive-in bank where the store’s receipts for that day would most likely be deposited. This accomplished, they returned to the bar, where one of the men, prompted by defendant’s remark that they did not have tape to bind the hands or cover the mouths of the intended victim or victims, left to get some rope. When he returned, the group separated, the defendant and two others going in one car, and the remaining two men going in the other. By this time, the evidence showed defendant had obtained a gun.

The two groups then proceeded to the Safeway store where they intended to wait until the store closed at 10:00 p.m. During this time defendant and one of the occupants of the car cut the rope into pieces which were given to the two men in the other car. When the store closed, the store manager and Monte Dyckman each drove off in his own car, defendant and his companions following Dyckman and the other men following the store manager.

As soon as it became apparent the store manager did not have the deposit of the day’s receipts, the men went to the drive-in bank to await the arrival of Monte Dyckman. Defendant and his companions, seeing Dyckman turn into the bank, returned to Billings, defendant remarking the men in the other car would get Dyckman.

Defendant and his companions arrived at the west side Billings house at approximately 2:00 a.m., April 6, 1975 and awaited the arrival of the other two members of the group. Eventually only one returned and indicated the robbery had in fact occurred, but very little money was taken. Monte Dyckman was discovered later that day, shot to death.

On May 20, 1975, the State of Montana filed an information *254 charging the defendant and his four companions with deliberate homicide, aggravated kidnapping, and robbery. A joint trial was held in October 1975, and two of the four defendants finally tried were found guilty of all three counts, while defendant and the remaining participant were found guilty only of the robbery count. Upon appeal, this Court indicated the defendants suffered prejudice from being tried jointly and concluded that the jury had been improperly and inadequately instructed. State v. Fitzpatrick, 569 P.2d at 393, 395. We then reversed and remanded for a new trial as to all defendants. 569 P.2d at 396.

On November 21, 1977, an amended information was filed charging the defendant with the crime of robbery. A pretrial motion to dismiss asserting defendant was being subjected to double jeopardy was made and denied. At trial, the following was read to the jury prior to the taking of any evidence:

“Counsel of record stipulate and agree that the following factual situation may be presented to the jury without requiring further proof or foundation:
“On or about the late night hours of April 5, 1975, Monte Dyckman, who was then an employee of the Safeway Store of Hardin, Montana was robbed of that store’s receipts.
“During the course of said robbery, Monte Dyckman was killed by being shot in the back of the head by a .45 automatic handgun twice after being bound with his hands behind his back.
“At the scene of the homicide approximately 12 miles west of Hardin, Montana, in the area generally known as Toluca Interchange, there were two spent .45 caliber shell casings found on the ground approximately 120 feet to the rear of the Dyckman vehicle, and two spent .45 caliber automatic shell casings found in the Monte Dyckman vehicle.
“On June 27, 1975, a person by the name of Gary Eugene Radi was arrested in connection with the robbery of Monte Dyckman in Rawlins, Wyoming; upon a search of his vehicle under the rear seat portion of said motor vehicle was found a spent .45 caliber shell casing. Upon examination by the Federal Bureau of Investigation *255 Laboratory in Washington, D.C., it was found that the shell casing from the Radi vehicle had been fired by the same gun which fired the shell casings found at the murder scene.
“There have been two previous trials, one against Gary Eugene Radi and another against Bernard James Fitzpatrick. Gary Eugene Radi was found not guilty although Bernard James Fitzpatrick was found guilty of Deliberate Homicide, Aggravated Kidnapping and Robbery. At the Radi trial the witnesses, Cindy Morgan, Iva Lee Finch, Edwin Bushman and Christine Fetters did not testify, although the prior testimony of Finch and Bushman was read into the record.”

During the presentation of evidence at defendant’s trial, Christine Fetters did testify and related to a particular conversation which took place in her presence between the individuals involved in the robbery/homicide. The conversation concerned the alleged events of April 5, 1975. She said, when asked if one of the parties to the incidents of that date (Radi) said anything else about the alleged crime, “About the only other thing that I can really recall was that he said, ‘The crazy son-of-a-bitch [Fitzpatrick] blew his [Dyckman’s] head off.’ ” Defense counsel immediately objected, whereupon the trial judge and counsel retired to chambers. In chambers, defense counsel moved for a mistrial and the motion was denied. Defense counsel renewed his objection at the close of the State’s evidence and the motion was again denied.

Defendant was subsequently convicted of robbery and sentenced to a term of forty yeárs in the State Prison.

The defendant makes three basic claims in this appeal. First, he argues that his retrial on the robbery count has placed him in double jeopardy contrary to federal and state constitutional inhibitions. Second, he argues the testimony of Christine Fetters regarding Gary Radi’s statement was so prejudicial that the District Court’s denial of a mistrial was reversible error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
598 P.2d 1132, 183 Mont. 251, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-holliday-mont-1979.