State v. King

305 P.3d 641, 297 Kan. 955, 2013 WL 4041563, 2013 Kan. LEXIS 656
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedAugust 9, 2013
DocketNo. 99,479
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 305 P.3d 641 (State v. King) 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. King, 305 P.3d 641, 297 Kan. 955, 2013 WL 4041563, 2013 Kan. LEXIS 656 (kan 2013).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Luckert, J.:

Kameron King was convicted by a jury of one count of arson, three counts of criminal threat, one felony count of criminal damage to property, one misdemeanor count of criminal damage to property, one count of assault, .one count of battery, and one count of domestic battery. We reverse two of King’s convictions [957]*957for criminal threat, rejecting the State’s theory that the unit of prosecution for a criminal threat is the number of victims who perceive and comprehend the threat. Instead, we hold there can only be one conviction for a single communicated threat, regardless of the number of victims who perceive and comprehend the threat. We also reverse King’s conviction for felony criminal damage to property because the evidence established multiple acts, the trial court did not instruct the jury it had to unanimously agree on the act that supported the conviction, and we are firmly convinced that the error affected tire verdict.

In addition, we find two other errors but determine these errors were harmless when considered both individually and cumulatively. One of these errors was committed when the trial court failed to obtain a waiver of King’s right to be present in open court and then violated that right by answering a question posed by die jury during deliberations without King being present. The other error occurred when the trial court gave the jury an erroneous deadlocked jury instruction.

We reject tire other arguments advanced by King. One of these arguments is that K.S.A. 60-455 prohibited the admission of evidence of other crimes that were committed at the same time as the crimes for which King was on trial. The other is that it was unconstitutional for the sentencing court to consider King’s criminal history when that history had not been alleged in the complaint or proven to a jury.

Facts and Procedural Background

King’s convictions result from a series of events that occurred on June 20, 2006. At trial, the State and King presented different versions of these events. A detailed summary of this evidence is necessary because several of King’s arguments require us to determine whether an error was harmless. In our discussion of the facts, we will refer to everyone except King by first name because many of the witnesses share surnames.

One witness, Kelly Riley, testified she had known King for 14 years and he was the father of three of her four children. King and Kelly had separated in early 2006. Kelly testified that on June 20, [958]*9582006, she received approximately 45 telephone calls from King during which he screamed and yelled at her because she was seeing another man. She also said that King threatened to steal and burn her van and kill several people, including her.

King’s anger at Kelly was apparent in his interaction with others on June 20,2006. For example, King approached Kelly’s aunt, Theresa Smith, at a baseball game. Theresa indicated King’s breath smelled of alcohol, and she described him as being “pretty angry” about Kelly having a boyfriend.

King was also upset with his father, James King, and wanted his father to evict Kelly from the house she was renting from King’s grandmother. King allegedly acted on this anger by ramming a stolen white flatbed truck into vehicles owned by his father. James testified that at approximately 10:30 p.m. he heard a loud, crashing noise outside his house. He described the noise as sounding like one vehicle colliding with another. Three vehicles—a van, a truck, and an El Camino—were parked in front of James’ garage. James went outside and saw that his van had been shoved into the garage; he did not see any damage to the other vehicles.

An eyewitness testified she saw a white flatbed truck repeatedly drive into the van in James’ driveway before driving off. The eyewitness testified the truck only hit the van, but the van was pushed into tire El Camino. The witness described the truck to James.

Meanwhile, King drove to Kelly’s house, arriving about an hour after his last telephone call to her. Kelly’s four children; her friend, Katie Kelly; and a friend of Katie’s were also present. King entered tire house without a shirt and was visibly bleeding from his chest. He told Kelly he had been injured while fighting with a friend. He then grabbed a beer from the kitchen, sat down in the living room, and started arguing with Kelly. Both Kelly and Katie testified that King slapped Kelly across tire face with an open hand while they were arguing.

A short time later, Theresa called to warn Kelly about King’s behavior at the baseball game. Kelly told Theresa that King had already slapped her and that she would call if she needed help. After a while, Theresa called again. Kelly answered the telephone crying, and Theresa could hear King throwing things in the back[959]*959ground. Theresa asked to talk to King to see if she could calm him down. King took the telephone and stated that it was his house, and he would burn it down if he wanted.

James also called Kelly and told her someone had hit his cars. Kelly asked King if he caused the damage. He denied responsibility and said he was driving a yellow car. James decided to make the 5-minute walk to Kellys house. He saw a white flatbed truck with a damaged front end parked near Kelly s house. James confronted King about the damaged cars. King again denied responsibility and started physically fighting with James. While they were fighting, Kelly noticed the white flatbed truck, but she could not tell if there was any damage to the front end.

When the fighting ended, King got back into the white flatbed truck, and headed in the direction of James’ house. James also returned to his house where he found that his van had been further damaged and his El Camino had been damaged. The eyewitness testified that the same white flatbed truck and driver she had seen earlier returned approximately 5 to 10 minutes after the original incident. She observed the truck slam into James’ vehicles again. At trial, the eyewitness identified King as the driver of the truck.

While King and James were fighting, Katie put Kelly’s children into Katie’s car and took them to Shawn and Amanda Velasquez’ house. Shawn and Amanda had known King and Kelly for many years, but King and Amanda did not get along. Then, Katie returned with Amanda and another woman. King was gone when they first arrived, but he returned before they went into the house. When King saw Amanda, he yelled at her, told her she had no business on the property, and told her to leave before he started throwing things at her. Acting on his words, King started throwing handfuls of small rocks at Amanda, a few of which hit her.

Meanwhile, Kelly called Shawn, who quickly arrived and began physically fighting with King. Kelly, Amanda, and Katie were within 15 feet of the fight. Each of them testified about threats King made. Kelly testified that King yelled that he was going to shoot everyone, everyone was going to die, and everyone was going to get shot if they did not get off his property. While making these threats, King reached behind his back as if he had a gun. Amanda [960]*960testified that King told them to get off his property and that he kept putting his hand in his back pocket. Amanda further testified that King was directing the threats toward Shawn.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
305 P.3d 641, 297 Kan. 955, 2013 WL 4041563, 2013 Kan. LEXIS 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-king-kan-2013.