State v. Humphery

978 P.2d 264, 267 Kan. 45, 1999 Kan. LEXIS 248
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 16, 1999
Docket79,199
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 978 P.2d 264 (State v. Humphery) 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. Humphery, 978 P.2d 264, 267 Kan. 45, 1999 Kan. LEXIS 248 (kan 1999).

Opinion

*47 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Abbott, J.:

This is a direct appeal by defendant Larry Humpheiy from his conviction of first-degree felony murder (K.S.A. 21-3401), aggravated burglary (K.S.A. 21-3716), and criminal possession of a firearm (K.S.A. 1996 Supp. 21-4204). Humpheiy claims trial error on the following grounds: (1) improper exclusion of evidence, (2) failure to grant a mistrial, (3) failure to give an informant and accomplice cautionary instruction, and (4) cumulative error.

Ronald Sedore, the victim, was a Canadian over-the-road track driver who was shot and killed as he sat in the cab of his 18-wheeler track in front of a house at 815 Troup, in Kansas City, Kansas.

When we view the evidence in a light most favorable to the prevailing party (as we are required to view it), the evidence is as follows: Sherri Simmons was a witness for the State. She testified that she had lived at 815 Troup with Clarence Smith and a friend. When Sedore was shot and killed, she lived at 617 Troup, although she stayed at 815 Troup “off and on.” She also kept clothing at 815 Troup. Simmons testified that on August 11,1996, she was walking on 7th Street in Kansas City, Kansas, when she noticed an 18-wheeler track parked by the side of the street. Sedore was examining a map and appeared lost, so Simmons approached him and asked him if he needed directions. He said he was looking for the GM plant in Fairfax. Sedore seemed confused when Simmons gave him directions, so she got in his track to ride with him and give him directions.

After Sedore dropped his trailer off at the plant, Simmons told Sedore she wanted to get some drags. He gave her $20 for the drags and dropped her off at 7th and Garfield. She bought crack cocaine and smoked it in an abandoned house next door to a drag dealer s house.

After the 7th and Garfield drag stop, Simmons returned to Sedore’s track. He drove to a convenience store, bought Pepsi and cigarettes for her, and proceeded to a track stop on 18th Street. Simmons testified that she and Sedore had sexual intercourse at the track stop in a bed in the back of the track. Simmons said Sedore did not offer her any money for sex and she had sex with *48 him because “[ajnything I wanted I got. So, I mean, I wasn’t . . . interested in this man, so that’s how it was. It wasn’t— no one was buying no one. He was not buying me.” After they had sex, Simmons told Sedore she wanted to get more drugs and directed him to drive to 815 Troup. Sedore gave Simmons $40 and parked his truck in front of 815 Troup. Simmons went inside and Sedore stayed in his truck with the motor running.

Defendant Lany (a/k/a Jay) Humphery, Simmons, Marcus (a/k/a Malcolm) Coleman, Sanford Clardy, and Charles Kelsey, among others, were at 815 Troup the night Sedore was killed. Clarence Smith, who lived in the first floor apartment at 815 Troup, as well as Irving Jordan, who lived in the basement apartment, were also present that night.

Humphery, Coleman, and Clardy were standing outside of 815 Troup as Simmons approached the house. She asked them if they had any drugs and they all went inside the house. Simmons bought some crack and started getting high. The prosecutor asked Simmons whether she talked to Humphery, Coleman, and Clardy after they went in the house, and Simmons responded that when she was smoking someone came into the house and said that the three men were going to rob Sedore. The defense objected to this statement, the judge sustained the objection, and the defense requested a mistrial because the jury had heard evidence which the trial judge had previously ruled inadmissible. The judge refused to grant a mistrial because Simmons had already properly testified that “she asked those three not to rob the truck driver, so the implication of a robbery is already there.” The judge then admonished the jury to disregard the comment.

Simmons then stated that when Humphery, Coleman, and Clardy left the house and went outside, she remained inside smoking for a few minutes and then went outside where “all of them were in the yard talking.” As she was walking towards Sedore’s truck, Kelsey was pulling on her and asking her to give him back his jacket. Simmons told Kelsey to wait because she “was trying to get to the truck driver before anything happened.” Simmons and Humphery reached the truck at about the same time. Simmons testified she was standing next to Humphery on the running board *49 of the truck beneath the passenger door and started bumping into him, telling him not to do whatever he was planning to do. She said Humpheiy then made a gesture towards his waist indicating he had a gun and told her to leave. Simmons then stepped down from the truck.

Simmons said she then went back inside 815 Troup and closed the door. She heard a gunshot and looked out the window. The gunshot had shattered the passenger s side window of the truck. Simmons did not see a gun in Humpheiy’s hand and did not see a flash or a light from a gun. Shortly after she heard the gunshot, she saw Humpheiy, Clardy, and Coleman “going up in the truck.” She saw the three men taking Sedore’s belongings and noticed that one of them had Sedore’s television, but stated, “I don’t know who had exactly had it ‘cause it was dark and plus I was tripping off the fact that — what they had done.” When asked whether she heard anyone say anything, she responded, “Yeah. Someone, I think it was Marcus, said that, Jay, you fucked up, or something like that. I heard something in that category when I was looking out the window.”

Shortly thereafter, Simmons left 815 Troup and went to her cousin Diane Jennings’ house. Kelsey was also at Jennings’ house and Simmons stayed there for about a half hour. She then went to the Chelsea apartments where she met with Humpheiy, Coleman, and Clardy.

Simmons denied that she was a prostitute. She denied killing Sedore and denied setting him up for a robbery. She was asked on cross-examination, “Isn’t it a fact that you told a friend that you had turned a trick for the victim and you were trying to rob him and he fought you and you killed him?” She responded, “I never told anybody such a thing ‘cause I don’t condone murder.”

Kelsey described 815 Troup as “a good time house” because people would go there to “drink, get high and stuff like that.” He said that the night Sedore was killed, he had seen a white truck with its motor running in front of the house. Kelsey testified that Simmons, Humpheiy, Coleman, and Clardy were in the kitchen and Simmons was smoking crack and talking about a truck driver. Humphery, Coleman, and Clardy went outside. Simmons contin *50 ued smoking for a few more minutes and then also went outside. Kelsey followed Simmons, asking her to return a jacket she had borrowed from him, but she told him to wait and proceeded to the truck.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
978 P.2d 264, 267 Kan. 45, 1999 Kan. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-humphery-kan-1999.