– State v. Pruitt –

453 P.3d 313
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 6, 2019
Docket118448
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 453 P.3d 313 (– State v. Pruitt –) 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. Pruitt –, 453 P.3d 313 (kan 2019).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 118,448

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

HOWARD R. PRUITT, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. Prosecutor's statement in summing up testimony about alleged murder weapon, "This seems to be the shotgun, folks. I don't think there's a lot of question about that at this point," was an impermissible personal opinion; but it does not require reversal of the defendant's premeditated first-degree murder conviction.

2. Prosecutor's statement that the victim deserved jurors' "consideration" was not error, when the context of the statement demonstrates that the prosecutor was not attempting to invoke the jury's sympathy.

3. Prosecutor's statement, "Folks, if you're convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that those three elements exist, you must find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree, as he has been charged," was not an impermissible misstatement of the law because it forbade jury nullification.

1 4. Even if the district judge's failure to instruct sua sponte on reckless second-degree murder and reckless involuntary manslaughter in this case is assumed to be error, the error is not reversible under a clear error standard, when there was overwhelming evidence that whoever shot the victim to death did so by firing a shotgun loaded with triple-aught buck from close range after lying in wait for about 10 minutes, and strong evidence demonstrates that the person who shot the victim was the defendant.

5. A district judge's instructions to the jury, (a) "Such law you must follow, and you must not substitute for it opinions of your own as to what you think the law should be"; (b) "At the end of the case, I will instruct you on the law that you must apply to the evidence in order to reach a verdict"; and (c) "It is my duty to instruct you in the law that applies to this case, and it is your duty to consider and follow all of the instructions. You must decide the case by applying these instructions to the facts as you find them," are correct statements of the law and not erroneous under State v. Boothby, 310 Kan. 619, 448 P.3d 416 (2019). They do not direct a verdict of conviction or prevent a jury from exercising its power of nullification.

6. The district judge in this case did not abuse his discretion in finding that no fundamental failure due to jury misconduct occurred in the trial of the defendant's case. The judge was able to observe the defendant's daughter, who testified about observing a juror sleeping, and evidently made a negative credibility judgment. The judge also made a careful record of other, unrelated trial participants' recollections, including his court reporter's and his own; and those recollections did not match that of the defendant's daughter.

2 7. Defendant is not entitled to reversal of his conviction under the cumulative error doctrine.

Appeal from Butler District Court; CHARLES M. HART, judge. Opinion filed December 6, 2019. Affirmed.

Peter Maharry, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, argued the cause and was on the briefs for appellant.

Cheryl M. Pierce, assistant county attorney, argued the cause, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, was with her on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

BEIER, J.: This direct appeal by defendant Howard Pruitt raises five challenges to his first-degree premeditated murder conviction for the shotgun killing of Phillip Little.

Pruitt asserts that the prosecutor committed error during closing argument, that the district judge should have instructed the jury on lesser included offenses of reckless second-degree murder and reckless voluntary manslaughter, that the jury's power of nullification was improperly foreclosed by erroneous instructions, that a new trial should have been granted because one juror slept during part of the proceedings, and that his conviction is infected by cumulative reversible error.

We reject all of Pruitt's arguments on error save two, and we conclude that, even if we find one error and assume the existence of another, those two errors do not individually or collectively command reversal of Pruitt's conviction. This is a case in

3 which the defendant's guilt of first-degree premeditated murder was supported by truly overwhelming evidence. The errors could not have made a difference in the outcome.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Bad blood developed between Pruitt and Little before the fatal shooting. Nathan Coe, aware of their ongoing disagreement and having come to understand that Pruitt was interested in harming or paying someone else to harm Little, called Pruitt on the night of the shooting to let him know that Little was at Skylar Morgan's trailer home.

Coe and his father had been hanging out with Little and others at Morgan's that evening. The others at the trailer were Morgan, Bobbie Myers, and Matthew Kreusel. About 11 p.m., Coe and Myers left to buy liquor, eventually obtaining vodka at the home of Michelle Morris. When they returned to the trailer, they disagreed on whether the correct amount had been paid for the vodka, and Kreusel drove Myers back to Morris' house to settle the issue. This left Coe, his father, and Little awake at the trailer; Morgan was already asleep in his bedroom.

According to Coe, while Myers and Kreusel were gone, he and Little stepped onto the porch of the trailer and Pruitt, who had been waiting outside, immediately fired a shotgun at Little. Pruitt then fled, while Coe ran back into the trailer. Morgan would testify at Pruitt's eventual trial that Coe woke him up and told him Little was dead on the porch. Morgan called 911 and "got everybody in the bedroom because [he] was scared." When Coe asked to borrow Morgan's truck, Morgan told him, "Yeah, take my truck; get out of here. I'm scared; you're scared."

When Myers and Kreusel returned a few minutes later, Morris was with them. As they pulled up, Myers noticed that both Morgan's truck and the car Coe and his father had

4 arrived in were gone. When Myers saw Little lying on the porch, she screamed for Morgan to come help her. Morgan came outside and told her Little had been shot and directed her to "step away."

When El Dorado police officers arrived at Morgan's trailer, they found Little dead on the porch and Morgan, Myers, Kreusel, and Morris at the scene. They soon learned that Coe and his father also had been at the trailer that evening. Eventually, Coe returned; and the officers brought him into their station for an interview.

Coe's story shifted from less to more detailed over the series of interviews that followed. At first he shared only the basics: He heard a "boom" when he left the trailer with Little, realized Little had been shot, went into the trailer and asked to borrow Morgan's truck, and left. His later version of events included his identifications of the gun as a .410 double-barreled sawed-off shotgun and the shooter as Pruitt. He also told law enforcement that Pruitt and Jake Perry had put a "bounty" on Little, which Little had mentioned when they talked at Morgan's. Coe claimed "there had been $5,000 offered" but Little had "laughed it off."

According to the interviewing detective, Coe said

"that he had contacted Mr. Pruitt by telephone and informed Mr. Pruitt that . . . Mr. Little was at the trailer. [Coe] said that he was aware that Mr. Pruitt was . . . looking for Mr. Little. And he had also said that Mr. Little had made comments throughout the evening that he was wanting somebody to bring Mr. Pruitt to him.

....

"He'd explained . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
453 P.3d 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pruitt-kan-2019.