State v. Moncla

936 P.2d 727, 262 Kan. 58, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 56
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 18, 1997
Docket74,774
StatusPublished
Cited by122 cases

This text of 936 P.2d 727 (State v. Moncla) 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. Moncla, 936 P.2d 727, 262 Kan. 58, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 56 (kan 1997).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Davis, J.:

The defendant, David A. Moncla, was convicted of first-degree premeditated murder in the death of Diane Swinney, a local bar owner in Wichita. He was sentenced to serve a hard 40 sentence under the provisions of K.S.A. 1993 Supp. 21-4635. He appeals his conviction and sentence, raising six errors relating to the admission of evidence, trial court instructions, and sentencing procedures. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the defendant’s conviction and sentence.

The defendant was charged with first-degree murder on February 1, 1995, in Sedgwick County District Court. The victim was a friend of the defendant’s. She was found in her apartment by Kevin Robertson, who assisted her at the bar. Robertson picked the lock to her apartment after employees, friends, and roommates, believing she was asleep, periodically pounded on her door throughout the day in order to wake her.

The coroner who performed the autopsy found at least 18 blows to Swinney’s head as well as bruises and contusions on other areas of her body which the coroner believed were, in part, defensive injuries. The coroner opined that the weapon used was a claw hammer that the police found in the bathroom of her apartment. The *61 coroner concluded the cause of death was injuries to the brain and skull.

Friends and employees detailed their last encounters with Swinney on the night of her death. Swinney worked at her bar, Star’s Club, until approximately 2 a.m., when she closed with the help of an employee, Linda Brown. She left the bar with eight cans of beer and drove to her home, located a block or two from the bar. Other than the defendant’s testimony, this was the last information known about Swinney before her death.

Swinney rented the upstairs apartment of the house from Ricky Eugene “Norm” Hall. She had lived there for approximately 3 months. At the time of Swinney’s death, Pat Berry, Katherine “Cat” Cunningham, and the defendant were staying at the house. Berry and Cunningham slept on couches and mattresses in the downstairs area of the house. The defendant often slept in a recliner upstairs in Swinney’s room, but at times he also slept downstairs. He had been living there for less than a week when the murder occurred.

Pat Berry testified that the defendant left the house on foot early in the morning of the day Swinney’s body was discovered. The defendant told Berry that he was leaving because he was late to work and because Swinney was upstairs having sex with someone and he did not want to watch. The landlord, Hall, who was half asleep at the time, heard Berry and the defendant talking but could only remember a small part of what they said.

Carl Guy testified that the defendant knocked at his door that morning about 9:00. The defendant asked Guy for a ride to work. On the way, Guy stopped at a gas station, and the defendant pumped the gas. While he was filling the car, the defendant spilled gasoline on his jeans. Guy testified that he dropped off the defendant at a QuikTrip.

John Bayliff testified that the defendant arrived at his house on foot between 9:00 and 9:30 that morning. The defendant told Bayliff that people were after him and he needed a place to stay. The defendant spent the day with Bayliff, and at 6 p.m. they watched the local news. When the defendant saw the broadcast about Swinney’s murder, he spoke to Bayliff about what he had witnessed at *62 Swinney s house. His story, as repeated by Bayliff at trial, was by and large consistent with the defendant’s testimony at trial. The defendant remained with Bayliff for several days, until he was arrested.

The defendant testified that on the morning of the murder, he was sleeping on Swinney’s recliner when he was awakened by a man hitting him over the head with a gun. He noted that there were three men in the room and that they were wearing the gang colors of Los Foresteros, a motorcycle gang. His attacker pushed the defendant around the comer from the bedroom and into the bathroom, where he could no longer see Swinney. He heard several slaps or hits and heard someone say: “[W]e’re going to have to take a loss on this one.” He also heard the name Kevin. At trial, the defendant testified that upon seeing Kevin Robertson on the stand, he became convinced that Kevin Robertson was the man who had hit him.

After the men left, the defendant reentered the bedroom and saw Swinney crying on the floor with a pillow over her head. He removed the pillow and knelt beside her. She was beaten up but still alive. The defendant testified that Swinney asked him to “stay out of it,” so he left her and left the house.

The State presented testimony concerning the physical evidence found at the scene. A pillow and a woman’s coat were found near Swinney’s body, each bloody and ripped. The defendant’s fingerprints were on several beer cans Swinney had brought to her house after closing the bar the night of her death. His prints were also found on several discarded cans in her wastebasket. In the bathroom, the police found a claw hammer under a cabinet with human blood under its head.

Police investigators discovered bloodstains on the defendant’s jeans. The defendant explained that the blood on his jeans was probably from kneeling at the victim’s side after she had been attacked. The authorities were unable to identify the blood on the defendant’s jeans as the victim’s blood because gasoline had been spilled on his jeans.

A Kansas Bureau of Investigation forensics scientist, Kelly Robbins, testified that using Lumninol testing, she observed a blood *63 spatter impact pattern on the jeans the defendant was wearing the night of the murder. She testified that an impact pattern is created by force coming into contact with blood. While Robbins concluded that the jeans showed several small stains from the knee down that were consistent with impact force, she also concluded those stains were inconsistent with contact stains that would be created by the act of kneeling in blood.

The defendant testified on his own behalf and claimed that others had committed the crime. He presented evidence of Swinney’s mounting debts to suggest a motive. He also attacked the police investigation as inadequate in following up leads on other suspects. The defendant claimed that Robertson, the man who found the body, was involved in the murder and that a man named Danny Long committed the murder. The police had received a Crime Stopper tip on Long. In addition, Robert Wisley, a friend of Long’s, testified that Long approached him in a bar and confessed to Swinney’s murder, specifying that he used a hammer to do it.

The defendant argues that his conviction must be reversed for errors in: (1) the admission of polygraph evidence; (2) the admission of past crimes and bad acts; (3) the trial court’s instruction on premeditation; (4) the failure to instruct on the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter; and (5) the admission of gruesome and repetitive photographs. The defendant also claims that his hard 40 sentence must be set aside because the law authorizing its imposition has not been followed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
936 P.2d 727, 262 Kan. 58, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-moncla-kan-1997.