State v. Ruhl

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 15, 2019
Docket113181
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Ruhl (State v. Ruhl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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. Ruhl, (kanctapp 2019).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 113,181

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

TYLER A. RUHL, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; JOSEPH BRIBIESCA and DEBORAH HERNANDEZ MITCHELL, judges. Opinion filed February 15, 2019. Affirmed.

Michael P. Whalen, of Law Office of Michael P. Whalen, of Wichita, for appellant.

Matt J. Maloney, assistant district attorney, Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before GARDNER, P.J., ATCHESON and POWELL, JJ.

PER CURIAM: A jury sitting in Sedgwick County District Court convicted Defendant Tyler A. Ruhl of attempted first-degree murder, attempted aggravated robbery, and criminal possession of a firearm. On appeal, Ruhl contends jury instructions on the attempted murder charge and a lesser included offense confused the jurors, the district court erred in denying his pretrial motion for a new lawyer, and his lawyer failed to competently represent him during the trial. Among those complaints we find nothing warranting relief for Ruhl and, therefore, affirm his convictions and sentence.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Given the focused and largely self-contained issues on appeal, we need not delve deeply into the trial evidence, including the somewhat extended sequences of events that led to the shooting of Timothy Gurley at his home in Wichita. We offer an abbreviated narrative, recognizing that the parties are well versed in the details.

Gurley owned a small construction company and hired crews to perform subcontracts for roofing, siding, and demolition on larger jobs. From time to time, Travis Sites and Heath Vaughn worked for Gurley. Ruhl hung around with Sites and Vaughn but never worked for Gurley. Sites and Vaughn had a simmering feud with Gurley during the summer of 2013 because he hadn't paid them for a job. Gurley kept explaining the general contractor hadn't paid him and he would take care of them when he received his money.

In late August 2013, Sites and Vaughn confronted Gurley at his house and demanded they be paid. As their verbal exchange escalated in volume and profaneness, Ruhl jumped in to threaten Gurley with physical harm. Sites and Vaughn decided to stand down and figuratively had to drag the still aggressive Ruhl away. Gurley paid Sites and Vaughn part of what he owed them within a few days.

On September 6, Sites and his live-in girlfriend hosted a party that Vaughn and Ruhl, among others, attended. Sites and Ruhl left together around midnight. Gurley was shot about five hours later. The jurors heard conflicting accounts of Ruhl's whereabouts during that time.

Ruhl told the jurors Sites drove him to his aunt's home, where his mother was staying. Ruhl said he spent the night there and didn't leave until the next morning. Both

2 Ruhl's aunt and mother confirmed that account. Some aspects of Ruhl's trial testimony differed from what he had told law enforcement officers investigating Gurley's shooting. But the gist of his version remained constant—he was sleeping at his aunt's home when Gurley was shot.

Gurley testified that his girlfriend was awakened about 5 a.m. by loud knocking on the front door and, in turn, awoke him. The knocking got louder and more persistent. Gurley opened the door to see Sites standing on the porch. Sites loudly and profanely demanded the rest of his money. As the two argued, Gurley saw a man he described as over 6 feet tall with a bandana across his face step onto the porch. The man pointed a handgun at Gurley and fired a single shot, striking Gurley in the torso. Gurley staggered back inside and collapsed. As a result of the shooting, Gurley was hospitalized for nearly a month and remains paralyzed from the waist down. Gurley never could identify the shooter, although he was sure Sites did not fire the gun.

Sites entered into an agreement with the State to plead to aggravated battery and attempted aggravated robbery and to testify at Ruhl's trial. Sites told the jurors he and Ruhl met Shannon Harden and Kara Aukes and went to the women's home where they drank and smoked methamphetamine. While they were there, Harden produced a handgun wrapped in a black bandana. The four, along with the gun, drove around northcentral Wichita and, at Sites' direction, wound up at Gurley's house. Sites and Ruhl went to the house. The women remained in the car parked across the street. Sites testified that Ruhl shot Gurley.

Harden entered pleas to charges of attempted aggravated robbery, aggravated battery, and criminal possession of a firearm. She testified at Ruhl's trial, although that was not a condition of her plea agreement with the State. Harden's account generally paralleled Sites' testimony. She told the jurors that after they parked the car near Gurley's house, she was in the driver's seat. When Ruhl and Sites ran back to the car, she drove

3 away. Harden told the jurors that as Ruhl got back in the car, he exclaimed, "I shot him in the heart."

After hearing evidence in the five-day trial in late August and early September 2014, the jurors considered these charges against Ruhl: (1) attempted first-degree murder with a lesser included charge of attempted intentional second-degree murder and an alternative charge of aggravated battery, all related to the shooting of Gurley; (2) attempted aggravated robbery; and (3) criminal possession of a firearm. The presiding juror marked the verdict form to show Ruhl guilty of both attempted first-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder and of aggravated battery, attempted aggravated robbery, and the firearms offense. The verdicts were published that way, and in a poll, each juror confirmed those verdicts.

At a later hearing, the district court imposed a controlling prison term of 661 months on Ruhl, consisting of consecutive sentences of 618 months for attempted first- degree murder, 34 months for the attempted aggravated robbery, and 9 months for criminal possession of a firearm. The district court discarded the conviction on the alternative charge of aggravated battery. The district court placed Ruhl on postrelease supervision for 36 months and ordered that he register as a violent offender upon his release from prison. Ruhl, Sites, and Harden were jointly and severally liable for nearly $24,000 in restitution due the Crime Victims Fund for a payment it made to Gurley. This court granted Ruhl's motion to appeal out of time.

LEGAL ANALYSIS

Jury Instructions on Attempted First-Degree Murder

Ruhl contends the district court's written instructions to the jurors explaining how to deal with the attempted first-degree murder charge and the lesser included offense of

4 attempted intentional second-degree murder were contradictory and, thus, impermissibly confusing. One of the instructions was modeled on PIK Crim. 4th 68.080 that generally addresses lesser included offenses. The instruction informed the jurors that Ruhl could be convicted of one of the two attempted murder charges. And it explained that if the jurors had a reasonable doubt about his guilt of one rather than the other, then they should convict on the lesser crime of attempted second-degree murder. The instruction also reminded the jurors they had the option of finding Ruhl not guilty. Another instruction, drawing language from PIK Crim. 4th 54.140 on second-degree murder, advised the jurors to consider attempted second-degree murder only if they could not agree Ruhl was guilty of attempted first-degree murder.

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State v. Ruhl, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ruhl-kanctapp-2019.