State v. Kaesontae

920 P.2d 959, 260 Kan. 386, 1996 Kan. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 12, 1996
Docket73,322
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 920 P.2d 959 (State v. Kaesontae) 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. Kaesontae, 920 P.2d 959, 260 Kan. 386, 1996 Kan. LEXIS 119 (kan 1996).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Allegrucci, J.:

This is a direct appeal by Leck Kaesontae from his conviction by the district court of one count of attempted aggravated robbery and one count of felony murder. The controlling term of his sentence is life imprisonment.

Kaesontae contends the district court erred in (1) finding that the killing was committed in an attempt to commit aggravated robbery; (2) admitting into evidence the tape recording of a 911 call made by a witness to the shooting; and (3) admitting into evidence the statement Kaesontae made to police.

The early morning hours of February 5, 1994, found five young men in two cars, with Matt Edgington alone in one car and Leck Kaesontae, David Edgington, Matt Journey, and Tim Blaine be *387 hind him in Blaine’s car. Blaine testified that Kaesontae had explained Matt Edgington’s being by himself as follows: “So he can start shit so they think he’s by himself and actually he wouldn’t be because we’d be behind him.” Shortly after 2 a.m. they saw a man walking by himself. Blaine stopped in a parking lot to let Matt Edgington catch up. Blaine testified that Kaesontae said he wanted “to jack” the walking man, which meant that he wanted to rob him. Blaine said he was not going to be a part of robbing him. Kaesontae got out of Blaine’s car and got into the front passenger seat of Matt Edgington’s car.

Within a few minutes of arriving there, Matt Edgington drove off, and Blaine followed him. Soon Blaine saw Matt Edgington’s car stop by the walking man. At first Blaine held back, but at the urging of Journey he pulled to within 30 to 35 feet of the lead car. The front window on the passenger side of Matt Edgington’s car was down, and the man walked over to the car. The man bent down and acted as if he were pointing directions for the young men in the lead car. Then Blaine saw Kaesontae point a gun toward the man.

The man threw his hands up in the air and backed toward the rear of the car. He continued moving away from the window until his back was against the rear end of the passenger side of the car. Then, keeping his back against the side of the car, the man walked toward the front of the car and swung his right arm into the window. From Blaine’s car it looked like the man fell or was pulled into the car. The man’s feet were on the ground, but his body from the chest up was inside the car. Blaine saw the gun in Kaesontae’s hand, pointed towrard the man’s chest, and heard two shots fired.

The man grabbed at his chest and walked back from the car. Matt Edgington immediately drove away. When Blaine drove off, the man was still upright in the street, but stumbling.

Matt Edgington made a 911 call at approximately 2:30 a.m. In response, Officer Cross went to a convenience store near the scene of fixe shooting and met Matt Edgington. During the 911 call, Matt Edgington had reported that a passenger in his car shot at a pedestrian. He also reported that he had dropped the passenger off at his house before making the call. Officer Cross and Matt Ed *388 gington first drove by Kaesontae’s residence, and then Edgington was taken to the city'building to be interviewed.

Before 3 a.m., police found the body of a man with a bullet wound below the rib cage lying in the yard of a residence. The man, Chance Pratt, died of a gunshot wound that resulted in massive internal bleeding. The bullet entered the right side of his chest, lacerated the front of the liver, perforated the heart and lower lobe of the left lung, and exited on the left side. The shot was fired at close range.

Timothy Blaine was the chief witness for the State at trial. The State indicated that Matt Edgington was available as a witness but was not called by the State or the defense.

We first consider Kaesontae’s contention that the findings of the district court judge do not, support the conviction of felony murder. The findings singled out by Kaesontae are contained in these comments made by the judge at the close of the evidence:

“Mr. Blaine saw the gun pointed, saw Mr. Chance Pratt raise his hands and back away and that after backing away he went towards the rear of the car, crouched and put his back to the rear quarter panel while Mr. Edgington and Mr. Kaesontae simply sat there in the car. Mr. Chance Pratt came forward, either reached in or hit into the car in a sudden manner, there was a scuffle, the gun went off.
“[A]t the point at which Mr. Leek Kaesontae raised the gun and asked for the wallet this became an attempt at aggravated robbery. . . .
“The attempted aggravated robbery had stopped. That’s not a legal term or a legal conclusion, it just had stopped. Mr. Kaesontae and Mr. Edgington were apparently simply sitting there in the car. What they were talking about or doing or thinking, we don’t know. I suspect they may not know. We have no idea of what Chance Pratt was thinking. . . .
“It does not feel right to say that Mr. Kaesontae did a premeditated first-degree murder; however, the public policy on felony murder is that a person who commits a felony assumes all the risks of that action, whatever happens. It’s clear to the Court that but for this felony for which Mr. Kaesontae bears responsibility, Chance Pratt would not have been killed on that night, and that the imperfect tool of felony murder is the box, the pigeon-hole which best fits this particular set of facts.”

K.S.A. 21-3401(b) provides: “Murder in the first degree is the killing of a human being committed ... in the commission of, *389 attempt to commit, or flight from an inherently dangerous felony as defined in K.S.A. 21-3436 and amendments thereto.” Aggravated robbery is designated an inherently dangerous felony. K.S.A. 21-3436(a)(4).

Kaesontae argues that the district court found that the killing of Pratt was not committed in the attempt to commit or flight from the aggravated robbery of Pratt. The district court found that the attempt to commit aggravated robbery had “stopped.” It further found that Kaesontae and Edgington “simply sat” in the car while Pratt backed away ánd then “went towards the rear of the car, crouched and put his back to the rear quarter panel.” Then, “Pratt came forward, either reached in or hit into the car in a sudden manner, there was a scuffle,- the gun went off.” In Kaesontae’s summation, before Pratt was shot he had “essentially escaped” and was not being pursued. Nor were Matt Edgington and Kaesontae fleeing or attempting to flee. Pratt opened a new episode by “reinsert[ing] himself into the situation.”

The State’s position is that a victim’s resistance to an underlying felony may extend the duration of the criminal transaction beyond the time when the felony is technically complete. For the proposition, the State quotes State v. Giddings, 226 Kan. 110, 113,

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67 P.3d 121 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2003)
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19 P.3d 70 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2001)
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State v. Scott
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923 P.2d 1024 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
920 P.2d 959, 260 Kan. 386, 1996 Kan. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kaesontae-kan-1996.