State v. Ryun

549 S.W.2d 141, 1977 Mo. App. LEXIS 2515
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1977
DocketNo. 28672
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 549 S.W.2d 141 (State v. Ryun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri 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. Ryun, 549 S.W.2d 141, 1977 Mo. App. LEXIS 2515 (Mo. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

ANDREW J. HIGGINS, Special Judge.

Appeal from conviction by a jury of burglary, second degree, of a dwelling house, and stealing. §§ 560.045, 560.156, 560.110, RSMo 1969. Appellant charges errors going to the sufficiency of evidence and the prosecuting attorney’s opening statement, the verdict-directing instruction, and in permitting an exhibit to go to the jury room. His contentions present, as a question of-first impression, whether the victims’ mobile home is a dwelling house within the meaning of Section 560.045, supra. Affirmed.

Euel Leonard Nix and his wife, Eleanor, reside in a house trailer or mobile home, situated on a farm in Platte County, Missouri, owned by Dr. Robert W. Butcher. They had been in such residence for three years under an arrangement with Doctor Butcher in which Doctor Butcher furnished the dwelling place and Mr. and Mrs. Nix looked after cattle and machinery on the farm. Mr. and Mrs. Nix and Doctor Butcher had keys to the trailer house; Mrs. and Mrs. Nix owned the personal property within the dwelling.

On the morning of December 4, 1975, Mr. Nix left home to go to work in Kansas City, Kansas, leaving Mrs. Nix at home. He received a call at 4:30 p.m., advising that his home had been broken and entered. When he arrived home, police officers and his wife were present. He noticed a glass broken in the front door, and his belongings were “pretty well messed up.” His television set, a Philco 27" console, was sitting in an unusual place. It was not connected to the electrical circuit and the lead wire to the rooftop antenna had been torn apart. Further check revealed the loss of a pair of binoculars. He was unacquainted with anyone named Hoisted or Ryun and had given no one permission to enter his home and take his property.

Mr. Nix identified a photograph, Defendant’s Exhibit D, as depicting, among other things, the trailer house or mobile home in which he and Mrs. Nix resided. It is a typical mobile home, detached from the tow vehicle by which it may be moved. It has a “skirt” from the floor level to the ground to block, air passage under the floor, and is connected to an electricity transmission line.

Mrs. Nix described her home as a living room, containing divan, television, two end tables, three lamps, coffee table, and desk; kitchen, containing refrigerator, stove, sewing machine, table, and chairs; their own bedroom; and a second bedroom which they did not use. There was a door at each end of her home.

On December 4, 1975, she left home around 1:00 or 1:30. Doctor Butcher and his assistant, Miss Herman, were at the barn. She locked her home when she left; her television set was in place, connected to the electricity; the front door glass was intact except for a crack in the corner.

Mrs. Nix returned home after 3:00 or 3:30 p.m. Glass from the front door was on the floor, the television set had been moved, and her home had been ransacked. She also missed the binoculars on the day following the burglary. She also was unacquainted with Stanley Ryun, and had not given him or anyone else permission to enter her home.

Robert W. Butcher, M.D., resides in Clay County, Missouri, practices medicine in [143]*143Kansas City, and is the owner of a farm in Platte County. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Nix reside on the farm in a house trailer which he purchased and had delivered and parked on his farm in October, 1972. Mr. and Mrs. Nix owned the personal property in the trailer home, and he and Mr. and Mrs. Nix had keys to the home.

Around noon on December 4,1975, Doctor Butcher and his technician, Jeanne Herman, arrived at the farm. While around one of the barns, he observed a youngster in a blue coat run from the house trailer and jump into a bronze Chevrolet Nova. In his own automobile, he followed the Nova, noticed that the trunk was open, and that a “wide T.V.,” the Nixes’ T.V., was “upside down in the trunk.” He continued to follow the Nova out of the farm and onto the road and succeeded in stopping the Nova. He attempted to persuade the vehicle and its occupants to accompany him to a cafe operated by Deputy Sheriff Troy McClanahan and his wife, and did persuade them to return to the farm. Upon arrival at the farm, defendant Stanley W. Ryun and an adult companion, Floyd Hoisted, removed the T.V. from the car, disappeared around the corner, and carried the T.V. into the trailer house. Defendant attempted to persuade Doctor Butcher to let them go because the incident was a mistake. He kept the occupants of the Nova under surveillance at gunpoint and called the deputy sheriff. Officers ultimately arrived and arrested defendant, Hoisted, and Holsted’s juvenile son.

The officers described the arrest, the location of the television set in the Nix home, and the general disarray of the home.

Appellant contends (I) that the court erred in failing to enter a judgment of acquittal “in that the evidence of the state * * * established that the purported unlawful entry was into a trailer and not a dwelling house and, accordingly, it was impossible as a matter of law for the defendant * * * to be found guilty of burglary not in the first degree [burglary, second degree] of a dwelling house.” He argues that because the structure in evidence was a “trailer,” breaking and entering such structure would be tampering with a motor vehicle of a type subject to licensing under Section 301.010(29), RSMo Supp.1975, in violation of Section 560.175, RSMo 1969, rather than burglary, second degree, of a dwelling house.

Elements of the statutory offense of burglary, second degree, are breaking and entering a dwelling house with intent to commit a felony or steal therein. State v. Brunson, 516 S.W.2d 799, 801[1] (Mo.App. 1974).

“At common law and under statutes declaratory thereof * * * a dwelling house * * * may be generally defined as any kind of structure used as a place of habitation and occupied by persons other than defendant.” 12 C.J.S. Burglary § 17, p. 678. The terms commonly used to indicate the place subject to burglary, second degree, are dwelling or dwelling house. The word “dwelling” imports a human habitation and, as a matter of common law, burglary, second degree, “is strictly an offense against the habitation.” Perkins on Criminal Law (Second Edition), p. ' 200. “The breaking and entering, to constitute a burglary, must be ordinarily into the dwelling-house of another; that is to say, a house in which the occupier and his family usually Reside, or, in other words, dwell and lie in.” Wharton’s Criminal Law, Ninth Edition, Vol. 1, § 781. See also State v. Huffman, 136 Mo. 58, 37 S.W. 797 (1896); and see State v. Auger, 434 S.W.2d 1, 5 (Mo.1968), to effect that a place regularly used as one’s abode is his dwelling house for purposes of burglary.

In Missouri, “the term ‘dwelling house’ is not defined by the [burglary] statutes. At common law it included any place with some degree of permanency in which one or more persons resided * * *. Whether * * * one room of a building [or a building itself] regularly occupied by a person constitutes a dwelling house under those burglary statutes which use the term in the common law meaning depends upon the use to which the room [or building] is put. * * applying this test it has been uniformly [144]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
549 S.W.2d 141, 1977 Mo. App. LEXIS 2515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ryun-moctapp-1977.