State v. Leaper

238 P.3d 266, 291 Kan. 89, 2010 Kan. LEXIS 621
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 3, 2010
Docket98,403
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 238 P.3d 266 (State v. Leaper) 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. Leaper, 238 P.3d 266, 291 Kan. 89, 2010 Kan. LEXIS 621 (kan 2010).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nuss, J.:

Tyrone Leaper was convicted of second-degree murder for fatally shooting Christopher Lovitch and received a sentence of 620 months’ imprisonment. The Court of Appeals affirmed. We granted Leaper’s petition for review; our jurisdiction is under K.S.A. 20-3018(b).

Leaper’s issues on appeal, and our accompanying holdings, are as follows;

1. Did the district court err in denying Leaper’s motion for a mistrial? No.
2. Did the district court err in its procedures for the jury’s use of transcripts during its deliberations? Not preserved for review.
3. Did cumulative error deny Leaper a fair trial? No.
4. Did the district court improperly sentence Leaper to a higher sentence without submitting his criminal history score to the jury? No.

Accordingly, we affirm the decisions of the Court of Appeals and the district court.

Facts

On May 12, 2006, Tyrone Leaper left work and went to his sister’s apartment. Upon arriving, Leaper saw his brother, Roderick, sitting outside with his girlfriend’s brother, Christopher Lovitch. When Leaper attempted to enter the apartment, Lovitch ac[91]*91cused him of being “in violation” and attacked him. They ended up on the porch of neighbor Georgetta Laster, where the fight was broken up.

After the fight, Leaper went into his sister s apartment to tend to his bleeding eye. Leaper testified that he called a friend named Crystal to pick him up, but Roderick later told police that he heard Leaper ask someone on the phone to “come through.” Leaper left the apartment, but once outside the door, Lovitch attacked him again.

Laster watched this second fight from her nearby apartment. She testified that at some point Leaper struck Lovitch with a wooden pole. After being hit, Lovitch regained his composure and threw Leaper against an exterior apartment wall. Laster then called 911. While on the phone, Laster heard a gunshot. Her mother, Nina Jensen, and her son, I.M.H., were inside her apartment and watched the second fight. Both testified that they saw Leaper shoot Lovitch from the top of a staircase overlooking the courtyard.

Leaper denied shooting Lovitch. He testified that he fell to the ground after Lovitch slammed him against the wall. While on the ground, Leaper heard someone say “get off my cousin” and realized that his cousin Travis was present. After hearing the gunshot, Leaper ran to a parking lot in the opposite direction from the staircase where Jensen and I.M.H. placed him. Leaper testified that his cousin Travis, and not Leaper, was at the top of the stairs when the shot was fired.

Leaper’s brother Roderick testified that during the first fight between Leaper and Lovitch, Travis had the pole and was “trying to jump in the fight.” Roderick also testified that during the second fight, Leaper was on the ground near Laster s apartment when Roderick went inside to call his girlfriend, Misty Murphy. Murphy is the mother of 3 of Roderick’s children and is also Lovitch’s sister. While on the phone, Roderick heard the gunshot. He admitted seeing cousin Travis at the apartment with a gun but denied seeing who actually fired the shot. According to Roderick, Lovitch walked into the apartment soon after the gunshot and started talking to him. Lovitch collapsed without identifying the shooter.

[92]*92Murphy testified contrary to the testimony of her boyfriend, Roderick. According to Murphy, Roderick told her while they were on the phone that Leaper shot Lovitch.

Lovitch died from a single gunshot to his chest. Based upon the bullet entry wound, both the pathologist and crime scene investigator determined that the shot was fired from a higher level than Lovitch. Officer Bruce Cobbins testified that Lovitch was shot while inside the apartment screen door, looking up toward the hill. No gun or shell casing was ever recovered from the scene.

Although Roderick testified that Travis had a gun at the scene, he had not mentioned this detail when the police had earlier questioned him. To point out this discrepancy, the prosecutor handed him a copy of his transcribed police statement. When Roderick expressed difficulty in reading it, the State offered to play the audio tape of his interview. The judge excused the jury, and Roderick listened to his recorded interview.

When the jury returned, the State continued Roderick’s cross-examination and eventually offered the tape into evidence. The defense objected, and the judge took the matter under advisement. Following the testimony of Roderick and another witness and the jury’s departure for the day, the judge asked for the tape. However, the parties were unable to find it. During their search, they discussed whether Roderick had taken it from the courtroom, with the judge suggesting that Roderick “may have put it in his pocket.” The bailiff then entered the courtroom and the following colloquy occurred:

“Bailiff: Are you looking for the tape?
“Court: Yes.
“Bailiff: One of the jurors told me that Roderick took it.
“Court: Oh.
“Bailiff: Put it in his pocket.
“Court: Well, I will need to- -
“Bailiff: They said as he left, he grabbed it, put it in his pocket.”

When Roderick was brought back to the courtroom, he denied taking the tape. He encouraged and voluntarily submitted to a search of his person, but the tape was not found. The court concluded:

[93]*93“Court: Well, I don’t — if he did [take it], he doesn’t have it now in any event and I could not tell you that he, in fact, took it even though one of the jurors may have thought he did. I don’t know. I don’t know. But that’s neither here nor there.”

The next morning, the defense filed a motion for a mistrial, claiming that a juror s observation of Roderick taking the tape prejudiced Leaper and that no instruction could cure the problem. The defense argued that if no mistrial was to be declared, then the court should poll the jury to determine if any other juror saw anything.

The motion stated in relevant part:

“6. That the tape was missing and the bailiff informed the court and the parties that one of the jurors told her that the witness had taken it and put it in his[] pocket when he left the witness stand.
“9. That the fact that the juror saw what happened prejudices the Defendant.
“10. The Defendant did not take the tape, but the jury may decide this testimony of the witness not based on what he said but what he did and there is no curative instruction that can be given.
“11. That the Court should grant a mistrial immediately or poll the jury to determine if any other juror saw anything.
“12. That [K.S.A.] 22-3423(l)(c) contemplates granting a mistrial when prejudicial conduct, in or outside the courtroom, makes it impossible to proceed with the trial without injustice to either the Defendant or the prosecution.

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State v. Leaper
238 P.3d 266 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P.3d 266, 291 Kan. 89, 2010 Kan. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-leaper-kan-2010.