State v. Patterson

332 N.E.2d 770, 43 Ohio App. 2d 63, 72 Ohio Op. 2d 208, 1974 Ohio App. LEXIS 2726
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 5, 1974
DocketC-73518
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 332 N.E.2d 770 (State v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Patterson, 332 N.E.2d 770, 43 Ohio App. 2d 63, 72 Ohio Op. 2d 208, 1974 Ohio App. LEXIS 2726 (Ohio Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Palmee, J.

Defendant, the appellant herein, was indicted on counts of assault with intent to rob, and with the unlawful killing of one Walter Hemmig while attempting to perpetrate a robbery. A trial by jury was had on the pleas of not guilty, resulting in verdicts of guilty on both counts, and sentence was thereafter passed as ap *64 pears of record. A motion for new trial was timely filed, argued, and in due course overruled.

Defendant raises two assignments of error phrased as follows: (1) that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of the defendant’s handling of a .22 caliber revolver subsequent to the date of the crime and of the armed robbery of the St. Bernard Kroger Store solely for the purpose of impeachment by contradiction, and (2) that the court erred in failing to grant defendant’s motion to dismiss, at the close of the state’s case and again at the conclusion of all the evidence, because the state failed to establish beyond a reasonable doubt the element of “attempting to perpetrate robbery, ’ ’ as charged in the indictment. The second of these assignments, requiring a factual review, will be considered first.

The record reveals that on April 14,1972, Walter Hem-mig was operating his business, known as Hemmig’s Food Market, at 301 Emming Street, Cincinnati. This store had only one entrance, the front, the back having been boarded up. At about 7 p. m., Carol Bowman, her five year old son, and Sharon Harris entered the store for the purpose of purchasing cigarettes. The two adults testified that Walter Hemmig was behind the counter by the cash register, and that the only other persons in the store were three black youths, one on the telephone with his back turned, another drinking a bottle of beer, and a third, who stared for some moments at Carol. This third youth was subsequently identified as the defendant, in a police lineup following his arrest and in court by both Carol and Sharon. Such identification followed the viewing and rejection by both of numerous police photographs of other suspects at various times during the year that elapsed between the incident and the arrest. The identification of defendant by both Carol and Sharon, as well as by a later witness, Becky Young, was positive and convincing.

Completing their purchase, Carol, the child, and Sharon left, noting as they did so that two twelve year old girls, Becky Young (Carol’s sister) and Annette Gibson, were approaching the front door of the store. A few moments *65 later, as they were crossing the street, both heard a shot, turned and saw the three black youths running out of the store followed by Walter Hemmig holding his chest and hollering that he had been shot. They rushed to assist Hem-mig, with other neighbors attracted by the noise, carrying him, into the entry way of the store where he then or very shortly thereafter expired.

Becky Young, one of the twelve year old girls, testified that as she and Annette were about to enter the store, she saw the defendant standing behind Walter Hemmig in back of the counter with one hand over Hemmig’s mouth and the other arm behind Hemmig’s back. They were struggling, and Hemmig was “screaming for help.” Frightened, she turned around and started to run away but before getting very far, heard a shot, and turned around to see defendant and “two other guys running out of the store.” Becky’s companion, Annette, called as a witness for defendant, testified similarly, stating:

“Well, I was going to the store, and I got right to the door, and there was three guys in the store and Walter. One was behind the counter, and the other two was like getting waited on. So they was like struggling, and the gun went off and then I ran. I turned back around to go back into the store, and the two of them ran past me and the other one bumped right into me, and he just kept on going down the street.”

The one who bumped into her was the one she saw struggling behind the counter with Hemmig, and Annette saw that he still had a gun in his hand. Annette was not, however, able to identify this individual as the defendant.

A police officer, who arrived at the scene some twenty minutes after the shooting, observed the interior of the store, noting items of stock or boxes strewn about the floor and noting that the drawer of the cash register, behind which the struggle took place, stood open. Photographs of this were taken and introduced in evidence. No cash or other property was found missing.

The defendant’s primary defense was alibi, supported by his mother, sister, girl friend, and by his own testimony. *66 This testimony directly conflicted with, the identification of defendant by three witnesses for the state, and was obviously not credited by the jury. Defendant concedes the competence and authority of the jury to determine this disputed issue, and relies on the argued absence of credible evidence that defendant was engaged in “attempting to perpetrate a robbery.” We cannot agree.

While it is clear that no consummated robbery took place, since no property was found to be missing, it is also clear to us that there was substantial credible evidence of probative value from which the jury could have found that the killing occurred, as charged in the indictment, while defendant was attempting to consummate the robbery. The fatal tussle behind the counter and cash register between the armed defendant and the struggling and protesting victim, the open cash register drawer and items strewn about the floor, and the flight from the scene of defendant and his companions immediately following the revolver shot, lead, irresistibly it seems to us, to the inference, proper for the triers of fact to draw, that defendant was attempting a robbery which was never completed in the panic that attended the victim’s unexpected resistance and its fatal outcome. Defendant’s second' assignment of error is accordingly overruled.

Defendant’s other assignment of error, calling into question the propriety of an evidentiary examination by the state into an offense unconnected with the instant incident, raises a more serious problem, it seems to us. At the outset of the case, the state indicated its intention to adduce evidence under É. C. 2945.59 of the defendant’s involvement in an armed robbery at a Kroger store in St. Bernard, Ohio, on March 22,1973. The trial court granted a voir dire examination, out of the presence of the jury, of the state’s witnesses expected to testify to this later incident. Two witnesses, employees of Kroger, were called and testified on voir dire to defendant’s involvement in an armed robbery at that store on the date in question, in which defendant was armed with a .22 caliber pistol and fired several shots into the floor of the store. Following the completion of the *67 state’s case in chief, as outlined in the earlier pages of this decision, the state indicated its intention of calling the two Kroger Company employees to testify as to the 1973 robbery. Defendant entered his objection to this testimony, citing State v. Hector, 19 Ohio St. 2d 167, and the court sustained the objection without, however, indicating the grounds therefor. The state thereupon rested its case without further reference to the subsequent robbery.

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Related

State v. Tharp
361 N.E.2d 469 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
332 N.E.2d 770, 43 Ohio App. 2d 63, 72 Ohio Op. 2d 208, 1974 Ohio App. LEXIS 2726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-patterson-ohioctapp-1974.