State v. Nile

557 A.2d 950, 1989 Me. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 21, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 557 A.2d 950 (State v. Nile) 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. Nile, 557 A.2d 950, 1989 Me. LEXIS 99 (Me. 1989).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Justice.

The defendant, Dennis C. Nile, appeals from his convictions of kidnapping with a dangerous weapon (Count I), 17-A M.R.S. A. §§ 301(1)(A)(3), 1252(4) (1983); criminal threatening with a firearm (Count II), 17-A M.R.S.A. §§ 209, 1252(4) (1983); gross sexual misconduct (Count III), 17-A M.R.S.A. § 253(1)(A) (Supp.1988); and possession of a firearm by a felon (Count IV), 15 M.R.S. A. § 393 (1980), after a jury trial in the Superior Court (Kennebec County; Brody, C.J.). 1 We affirm the judgments.

Based on the evidence presented at trial, the jury would have been warranted in finding that in October 1987, the defendant’s wife, Lynn Nile, because of past physical abuse by Nile, filed for divorce and moved out of their marital home in Farmington with their two-year-old son. Nile had previously threatened to kill her if she left him, and Mrs. Nile feared for her life.

The day after Mrs. Nile moved out of the marital home, Nile appeared at the Big Apple Store in Farmington where his wife was employed as manager. Nile forced her to leave with him at knifepoint, threatening to kill her and everybody in the store if she refused. Nile forced his wife into his truck and continued to threaten her as the truck, operated by Robert Smart, a friend of Nile’s and a co-defendant in the trial, 2 was driven to the Nile home. Nile forced his wife out of the truck and into the house, and forced her to call the babysitter and say that Smart would pick up the couple’s baby. From several of his guns located in the home, Nile took and loaded a rifle and forced his wife to call the Big Apple and tell a co-worker that she, Mrs. Nile, would be killed if the police were called. Nile then forced her to walk with him into a wooded area where they remained for several hours and where he repeatedly threatened her with the rifle and a knife, and forced her to perform oral sex, and on one occasion, to engage in sexual intercourse.

Nile released his wife after she promised, under threat with a knife, to move back in with him and not to tell the police about the kidnapping.

I.

Nile first contends that the State failed to prove that he used or possessed a *952 “firearm” within the meaning of the charges in Count II, criminal threatening with a firearm, 17-A M.R.S.A. §§ 209, 3 1252(4) 4 and Count IV, possession of a firearm by a felon, 15 M.R.S.A. § 393. 5

The rifle used by Nile was not introduced into evidence and Nile argues that the State failed to demonstrate that the rifle was “operable” within the meaning of State v. Smith, 379 A.2d 722, 726 (Me. 1977). Prior to 1983, “firearm” was defined as a weapon “which will expel a projectile by the action of an explosive.” 17-A M.R.S.A. § 2(12-A) (1983) (emphasis added). In Smith we held that the State was required to prove that the gun was operable in its proof of a crime defined as involving a firearm. 379 A.2d at 726-27. See also State v. Morris, 440 A.2d 1035 (Me.1982). In 1983, however, section 2(12-A) was amended and the requirement of operability was deleted. 6 That section now reads in pertinent part:

‘Firearm’ means any weapon, whether loaded or unloaded, which is designed to expel a projectile by the action of an explosive and includes any such weapon commonly referred to as a pistol, revolver, rifle, gun, machine gun or shotgun. ...

17-A M.R.S.A. § 2(12-A) (Supp.1988) (emphasis added). That this was one of several guns owned by Nile, that he loaded it with ammunition, pointed it at Mrs. Nile and threatened her with it, is sufficient evidence to allow the jury, correctly instructed by the court as to the definition of a firearm, to find that the rifle possessed and used by Nile to threaten his wife was a firearm. See State v. Millett, 392 A.2d 521, 527-28 (Me.1978) (finding that defendant committed crime with firearm not de-pendant upon production of weapon as evidence at trial).

II.

Nile next argues that his sentence on Count I of fifteen years was unlawful. Count I of the indictment alleged that Nile kidnapped Mrs. Nile with a dangerous weapon. 7 Kidnapping is a violation of 17-A M.R.S.A. § 301 (1983). Subsection 3 provides:

Kidnapping is a Class A crime. It is however, a defense which reduces the crime to a Class B crime, if the defendant voluntarily released the victim alive *953 and not suffering from serious bodily injury, in a safe place prior to trial.

The evidence presented at trial established, and the court specifically found, that Nile voluntarily released Mrs. Nile alive and not suffering from any serious bodily injury in a safe place prior to trial. 17-A M.R.S.A. § 301(3) thus served to reduce the kidnapping, as a threshold matter, from a Class A offense to a Class B offense, 8 with a maximum sentence of no more than ten years in prison. The court, however, applied the sentence enhancement provisions of 17-A M.R.S.A. § 1252(4) and imposed fifteen years in prison, a sentence within the twenty-year allowable maximum for a Class A crime.

Here, the State did plead and prove at trial that Nile had used a dangerous weapon to kidnap Mrs. Nile. Nile argues that to allow the court to apply the enhancing provisions of section 1252(4) to increase to Class A a kidnapping already reduced to Class B under section 301(3), would contravene the policy behind section 301(3) of providing an incentive to kidnappers to release their victims unharmed 9 and render section 301(3) a nullity. We disagree.

17-A M.R.S.A. § 1252(4) provides in pertinent part:

If the State pleads and proves that a Class B, C, D or E crime was committed with the use of a dangerous weapon then the sentencing class for such crime is one class higher than it would otherwise be.... This subsection shall not apply to a violation or an attempted violation of section 208 or to any offense for which the sentencing class is otherwise increased because the actor or an accomplice to his knowledge is armed with a firearm or other dangerous weapon.

Although the policy behind section 301(3) is to encourage kidnappers to release their victims unharmed, section 1252(4) manifests an equally strong public policy of discouraging the use of weapons by law breakers. There is nothing in the plain language of either section 301(3) or 1252(4) to indicate that a kidnapping designated as a Class B offense under section 301(3) should not be enhanced under section 1252(4).

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Bluebook (online)
557 A.2d 950, 1989 Me. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nile-me-1989.