State v. Melanson

325 A.2d 14, 1974 Me. LEXIS 328
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 4, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 325 A.2d 14 (State v. Melanson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Melanson, 325 A.2d 14, 1974 Me. LEXIS 328 (Me. 1974).

Opinion

WERNICK, Justice.

Indicted for having violated 17 M.R.S.A. § 3551, defendant, Robert J. Melanson, was tried before a jury in May of 1972 in the Superior Court (York County). He was found guilty as charged, the jury determining that the property involved was of the value of more than IIOO.OO.1 Defendant was sentenced to serve a term of one to three years in the Maine State Prison and has appealed from the judgment of conviction.

The appeal presents two issues: (1) whether the charge of the presiding Justice requires reversal of the judgment of conviction because, allegedly, a segment of the charge contravened the law of Maine concerning defendant’s “knowing [the property] to be stolen . . . ” as delineated in State v. Beale, Me., 299 A.2d 921 (1973); and (2) whether the totality of the evidence was legally sufficient to prove that defendant bought stolen property “knowing it to be stolen . . . ” within the State v. Beale doctrine.

The evidence clearly warranted jury findings of the following facts.

On November 29, 1971 four youths, intending to take and sell any valuable and saleable property they would find, committed a break and entry into a house in Ken-nebunk, Maine, owned by Edward and Margaret Richardson. Once inside the house, the “four” assembled the property they decided to take and sell (including furniture, glassware and various miscellaneous items) in the living-room on the first floor of the house.

[16]*16At approximately five or six o’clock in the evening of November 30, 1971 the four youths went to the vicinity of an antique shop in Wells, Maine, owned and operated by the defendant, bringing with them, from among the property they had assembled in the Richardson house, two andirons and a brass kettle. Two, Scott Burgess and Timothy Butler, then entered the store with the andirons and kettle. They asked defendant whether he was interested in purchasing the items. After some discussion defendant bought the andirons and kettle, paying $40.00 for them.2 The “four” then left defendant’s store and forthwith rented a U-haul truck which they took to the Richardson house and loaded with the other merchandise collected in the living-room. This took approximately four hours, after which the youths again went to defendant’s shop. Defendant greeted them at the door and spoke with them for a short time. Working together, the four young men backed up the truck to the front door of the store and unloaded the merchandise, taking everything (except a large desk) to an empty room on the second floor of the store. At this time, defendant paid $160.00 in cash and told the “four” to return the next day when, after he had opportunity more carefully to assess the value of the property, he would pay them the balance of the price he thought fair. The four youths returned to the store the next day, and defendant told them that he would pay them an additional $200.00. At first the young men were dissatisfied with the offer but ultimately accepted it after defendant informed them that they could go elsewhere if they didn’t like the price he was willing to pay.

After the young men had received the $200.00 in cash and were about to leave the store, defendant tapped Scott Burgess on the shoulder and said that he wanted to speak further with him “that evening.” Burgess returned to defendant’s shop that same evening, accompanied by Butler,3 to learn what defendant had on his mind.

As to the conversation which then occurred Burgess testified that defendant

“ . . . said that he didn’t want any more goods from them because his place was being watched.”

In his own testimony defendant, although acknowledging that there had been such a discussion, claimed that he was unable to remember when it had occurred. Defendant admitted that he had told Burgess that he did not want any more merchandise from them. He denied, however, that he had made any statement that his place was being watched and asserted that the reason he had mentioned was that he had heard “rumbles” of a “break” in the Ken-nebunk area.

In the evaluation of defendant’s contention on appeal that the judgment of conviction must be reversed because of error in the instructions of the presiding Justice to the jury, we must note, initially, that defendant failed to save the issue for appellate cognizance by adequate compliance with Rule 30(b) M.R.Crim.P.4 In [17]*17the instant appeal, then, error in the charge of the presiding Justice, if any, will be given cognizance only if a reversal of the judgment of conviction is required because there was manifest error causing serious injustice to defendant. Rule 52(b) M.R.Crim.P.; State v. Niemszyk, Me., 303 A.2d 105 (1973); State v. McKeough, Me., 300 A.2d 755 (1973) ; State v. Collins, Me., 297 A.2d 620 (1972).

Defendant’s argument focuses upon three sentences extracted from the entirety of the charge to the jury in which the presiding Justice said:

“Now in the trial of the case, there has been — and when I say knowing, our courts have defined knowing with knowledge means merely a knowledge of the existence of the facts. That is knowing, are the existing facts. Do you know these existing facts ?

Defendant claims that the references to “existing facts” in conjunction with the words, “do you know”, (emphasis supplied) had a tendency to inform the members of the jury that they were to put themselves in defendant’s place and if they then concluded that, as reasonable people, they would think that the goods were stolen, the jury should decide that defendant had acted “knowing . . . [the property] to be stolen . . . .” Thus, asserts defendant, the presiding Justice instructed contrary to State v. Beale, supra, because, in effect, he told the jury to use the objective approach rejected in State v. Beale, supra, — i. e., whether

“a person of ordinary intelligence and average capacity to comprehend and evaluate facts” (299 A.2d at p. 924)

would in the circumstances have believed that the goods were stolen.

Defendant’s postition is unsound. Even if we assume, without deciding, that the three sentences isolated by defendant for microscopic scrutiny have the significance defendant attributes to them, the instructions of the presiding Justice taken in their entirety cannot be held manifest error causing serious injustice to defendant.

Throughout his charge the presiding Justice told the jury, repeatedly, that defendant could be found guilty only if he had “known” that the merchandise he was purchasing was stolen property. Prior to stating the three sentences defendant has extracted for complaint, the presiding Justice said:

“Now when he bought the property, at the moment of the purchase did he know that that property was stolen? That is the burden of proof that the State has to carry.” (emphasis supplied)

In instructions given after the segment under attack the presiding Justice told the jury:

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Related

State v. Inman
350 A.2d 582 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1976)
State v. Jackson
331 A.2d 361 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1975)
State v. Hanson
331 A.2d 375 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
325 A.2d 14, 1974 Me. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-melanson-me-1974.