State v. Kladis

238 P.2d 522, 172 Kan. 38, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 406
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 8, 1951
Docket38,396
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 P.2d 522 (State v. Kladis) 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. Kladis, 238 P.2d 522, 172 Kan. 38, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 406 (kan 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Price, J.:

Here the defendant was charged with burglary and larceny of a grocery store in Overland Park. He was acquitted of the larceny charge but convicted of burglary, and has appealed.

The state’s evidence established substantially the following:

The witness Rauch, employed as a truck driver for the store, stopped to service it at approximately midnight on August 2, 1949. The store was brilliantly lighted at the time. The rear door was open and “pushed right on in.” As he entered the rear storeroom a man that “didn’t have any shirt on” ran out of the meat department, past the witness and into the darkness. Rauch immediately notified the sheriff’s office at Mission. Stevenson, the officer on duty, testified that about 12:08 a. m., in response to such a call, he dispatched a patrol car to the store.

Witness Stevenson further testified that about 12:50 a. m. he re *39 ceived a telephone call from a woman who said her name was Kladis, at 8601 Woodward, and told him that “someone is breaking in the house,” and that a minute or minute and a half later the same party called back, giving the same name and address and said “cancel the call, that it was her husband coming home.” On cross-examination he testified that he did not know Mrs. Kladis, wife of defendant, had never talked to her on the telephone before or since; that he had never heard the voice before; did not later verify the number given to him as belonging to Mrs. Kladis; and that he did not know whether the two calls were made from the same place or that they were made from 8601 Woodward, or whether they were made from defendant’s residence.

In response to Stevenson’s action in dispatching a patrol car, officers arrived at the store within a few minutes. One of them, Burger, testified that he talked to Rauch, the truck driver, and that he, Burger, saw a 1949 Ford car parked across the street from the store. The keys to it were still in the ignition switch and included “a trunk key for the rear of the car and what I presumed to be a door key.” Investigation via radio with the sheriff’s office established that the car license had been issued to Kladis, the defendant. An ax, bumper jack and a hacksaw frame were found in the car; also a man’s shirt in the back seat. A steel casement window in the back of the store had been broken out and one of the crossbars had hacksaw marks. Officer Burger was unable to find the Kladis residence and enlisted the aid of one Holland, who resided in the vicinity, to assist him. Burger, together with other officers and Holland, went to the Kladis home at 8601 Woodward at about 1:00' o’clock a. m. Mrs. Kladis came to the door. Upon observing there was no car in the driveway, she asked, “Where is our car?” Burger inquired for Mr. Kladis, who, upon being called by his wife, appeared. Apparently there was some conversation concerning his whereabouts during the evening, and he told the officers where he had been up until 9:00 o’clock of the evening before. Upon being asked if he owned a 1949 Ford he replied that he did but that he did not know where it was. He then requested that the officers bring his car home or leave it where it was until the next morning. The officers then placed him under arrest and took him to the store. Rauch was still there and identified defendant as being the man “that ran out of the store.” Defendant had a cut on his hand at the time of his arrest.

*40 The manager of the store arrived at the scene about 2:00 o’clock a. m., and he testified as to finding blood on the floor of the washroom and on the cash register and meat counter; that a steel knob had been knocked from the door of the safe; that he found a part of a hacksaw blade under the window that was broken out; that the cash register showed a loss of $12.87, and that he saw splotches of blood on the ground near a building immediately north of the store.

The sheriff testified that on the next afternoon he and officer Burger brought defendant before the county attorney, at which time the four of them discussed the night’s events. According to this witness, the county attorney advised defendant of his rights, whereupon defendant made some sort of a proposition in which he inquired if it would be possible for him to receive a parole — assuming that he would admit his guilt and tell how it all took place due to the fact he had a few too many drinks the night before on account of being worried over business conditions; that the county attorney advised him that he could not offer any promises and that such matters rested entirely with the court. It further appears that during this conversation the sheriff said something to the effect that it would cost him (the defendant) “ a lot of money to fight it and would be taking food out of his babes’ mouth.”

The sheriff also testified as to a search he made of defendant’s home but that he found nothing which had been taken from the store; and, further, that in the glove compartment of defendant’s car was found a billfold containing $100. It was not contended that this money was stolen from the store.

The county physician testified that in the afternoon following the alleged burglary he examined the defendant and cleansed and treated a laceration on the palm of his hand which bled rather profusely. He further testified that during his examination of defendant he noticed a number of scratches and cuts on his shoulders, chest and arms, obviously the result of contact with a very sharp object, and that they could have been produced by sharp pieces of glass.

In behalf of defendant, a banker of Overland Park testified that on the day before the alleged burglary and larceny defendant had made a deposit of $600 in his bank; that defendant had always carried a satisfactory account with the bank, both savings and checking account; and that several years previous defendant had obtained a loan from the bank in which diamonds appraised at from $3,000 to $4,000 were put up as collateral.

*41 Another witness, a real-estate broker in Overland Park, testified that defendant had purchased two houses from her; that he did not owe her any payments on the home in which he was then living; that he had always met his obligations, and that his reputation in the community for honesty and integrity was good.

A third witness testified as to defendant’s good reputation in the community, and that even after his arrest the people in the community still had the same high opinion of him.

The witness Holland, whose assistance in locating the Kladis residence was sought by officer Burger and who went with the officers to defendant’s home, testified that when the officers knocked on the door Mrs. Kladis answered and the officers inquired if Mr. Kladis was home; that she replied: “Just a minute, I will call him.” That defendant came to the door and wanted to know “what was going on”; that he, the witness, followed in his car when the officers took defendant to the store that night, and that when the truck driver Rauch looked at defendant he, Rauch, said: “It looks like the man,” and that Rauch did not positively identify defendant on that occasion. He further testified that about a day and a half after the night in question he examined defendant for any cuts or scratches on his body and found none.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P.2d 522, 172 Kan. 38, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kladis-kan-1951.