State v. Nunnery

891 So. 2d 67, 2004 La.App. 4 Cir. 1560, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 3238, 2004 WL 3030194
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 2004
DocketNo. 2004-KA-1560
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 891 So. 2d 67 (State v. Nunnery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nunnery, 891 So. 2d 67, 2004 La.App. 4 Cir. 1560, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 3238, 2004 WL 3030194 (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

LLEON A. CANNIZZARO, JR., Judge.

. The defendant, Gregory Nunnery, was convicted of unauthorized entry of an inhabited dwelling. He was also found to be a habitual offender and sentenced to serve six years at hard labor as a third felony offender. He is now appealing his conviction.

[68]*68STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Mr. Nunnery was charged in a bill of information with simple burglary of an inhabited dwelling in violation of La. R.S. 14:62.2. He pled not guilty at his arraignment. After a preliminary hearing, the trial court found probable cause to charge him, and his motion to suppress a photo identification was denied. After a trial on the merits, a jury found him guilty of the lesser offense of unauthorized entry of an inhabited dwelling, a violation of La. R.S. 14:62.3.

The State of Louisiana then filed a bill of information charging Mr. Nunnery as a habitual offender under the Habitual Offender Law, La. R.S. 15:529.1. Mr. Nunnery’s sentencing hearing in connection with the conviction of unauthorized entry of an inhabited dwelling and the trial on the habitual offender charge were |2both held the same day approximately three months after the verdict against him was rendered. Mr. Nunnery was originally sentenced to four years in the custody of the Louisiana Department of Corrections with full credit for the time he had already served.

After Mr. Nunnery was sentenced, the trial court denied Mr. Nunnery’s motion for a new trial and his motion for post verdict judgment of acquittal. A trial was then held on the habitual offender charge. Mr. Nunnery was found guilty as charged of being a third offender under the Habitual Offender Law. His original sentence for the crime of unauthorized entry of an inhabited dwelling was then vacated, and he was sentenced to serve six years at hard labor in the custody of the Louisiana Department of Corrections with full credit for the time he had already served.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

Mr. Nunnery was originally charged with burglarizing the home of Gina Martin. At the trial Ms. Martin testified that she had known Mr. Nunnery for almost twenty years, that she considered him to be a family friend, and that she often saw him two to three times a week. In the past she had allowed him to sleep at her house when he was “fixing things in her home” and had no other place to sleep.

Mr. Nunnery had been at Ms. Martin’s house working on a broken lock on Ms. Martin’s front door, and he was supposed to hang some Halloween decorations at her home. A friend had given Mr. Nunnery a ride to Ms. Martin’s house that day |3in a “blue F150”.1 Because the projects Mr. Nunnery had undertaken were not completed the day he arrived, he spent the night at Ms. Martin’s house. The next morning she had to take her children to a doctor’s appointment. When Ms. Martin and her children left her house for the appointment, she also took Mr. Nunnery with her. She planned to drive him to Port Street in New Orleans to “a place he usually sleeps sometimes,” but Mr. Nunnery wanted to get out of the car about a half of a block before she got to Port Street, so she let him out of her car there. Although Mr. Nunnery was supposed to return to Ms. Martin’s house that afternoon to complete the work he was doing for Ms. Martin, he never returned. She did not see him again until the trial.

The reason that Ms Martin took Mr. Nunnery with her when she and the children left for their appointment was that she never permitted him to be in her house when she was not there. Ms Martin testified that Mr. Nunnery knew that he did not have permission to be in her house when she was not there.

[69]*69When Ms. Martin and her children returned home later that morning, the children noticed that their Playstation and X-Box video game systems were missing. The game systems had been on top of the television in the living room near the area where Mr. Nunnery had been working earlier. Additionally, a DVD player and some video games were missing. After the items were discovered to be missing, Ms. Martin called the police.

|4Ms. Martin testified at the trial that the lock on her front door was broken and that, consequently, the door could be opened easily without a key. She also said that a large dog, a Rottweiler, was in her house when she left her house to take her children to their appointment.

Ms. Martin said that her dog was very aggressive with strangers. Because of that, she was not afraid to leave her home unattended while the lock on her front door was broken. She also said that the dog was familiar with Mr. Nunnery, who had known the dog since he was a puppy, and that the dog was friendly to him.

One of Ms. Martin’s neighbors, sixteen-year old Jovana Landry, who had known Ms. Martin for more than two years, testified at the trial. She stated that on the morning that the video game systems were discovered to be missing, she had walked with her baby to a nearby store. When she passed Ms. Martin’s house on the way to the store, she saw Mr. Nunnery open the front door and enter Ms. Martin’s house. Although Ms. Martin’s car was not at her house, there was a vehicle parked near the house. Ms. Landry testified that she thought that Mr. Nunnery was going in the house “to fix something around the house because that’s what he normally do.”

Ms. Landry testified that she had spent approximately twenty minutes at the store. She further testified that when she walked past Ms. Martin’s house on her return from the store, she did not see the “green or blue looking 1500 Ram ear, a truck” that had been parked near Ms. Martin’s house, but she did notice that the door to the house was ajar. Later in the day, Ms. Landry spoke to Ms. Martin and told her that she had seen Mr. Nunnery entering Ms. Martin’s house that morning.

UMs. Landry identified Mr. Nunnery in open court at the trial. When she was questioned about the Rottweiler that lived with Ms. Martin, Ms. Landry said that if the dog did not know a person, he would bark at or snap at the person. She did not hear the Rottweiler barking when Mr. Nunnery entered Ms. Martin’s house.

New Orleans Police Department Detective Regina Williams investigated this case, and she testified at trial that she had prepared a photo lineup that she had shown to Ms. Landry. She further testified that Ms. Landry had identified Mr. Nunnery’s photograph as that of the person she saw entering Ms. Martin’s home. At the trial Ms. Landry also identified the photograph she had selected from the photo lineup as that of Mr. Nunnery, the person she saw enter Ms. Martin’s house on the day in question.

ERRORS PATENT

We have reviewed the record in this case, and we have found one error patent. La.C.Cr.P. art. 873 provides as follows:

If a defendant is convicted of a felony, at least three days shall elapse between conviction and sentence. If a motion for a new trial, or in arrest of judgment, is filed, sentence shall not be imposed until at least twenty-four hours after the motion is overruled. If the defendant expressly waives a delay provided for in this article or pleads guilty, sentence may be imposed immediately. .

[70]*70In State v. Augustine, 555 So.2d 1331, 1334 (La.1990), the Louisiana Supreme Court held that the trial court’s failure to observe the twenty-four hour delay did not constitute harmless error even where the defendant failed to raise that issue on appeal. In Augustine,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
891 So. 2d 67, 2004 La.App. 4 Cir. 1560, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 3238, 2004 WL 3030194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nunnery-lactapp-2004.