State v. Sinclair

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMay 8, 2020
Docket120677
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Sinclair (State v. Sinclair) 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. Sinclair, (kanctapp 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 120,677

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

PATRICIA E. SINCLAIR, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Douglas District Court; PAULA B. MARTIN, judge. Opinion filed May 8, 2020. Affirmed.

Kasper Schirer, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Kate Duncan Butler, assistant district attorney, Charles E. Branson, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before LEBEN, P.J., SCHROEDER, J., and LAHEY, S.J.

PER CURIAM: Patricia E. Sinclair appeals her jury conviction for arson. She now argues there were several points of error that denied her the opportunity for a fair trial. She alleges the district court committed judicial comment error, the prosecutor committed prosecutorial error, and the statements she made to a fire investigator while she was in the hospital resulted in a custodial interrogation and should have been suppressed. Sinclair claims these errors are reversible both individually and cumulatively. Upon our review, we find no errors sufficient individually or cumulatively to warrant reversal. We affirm her conviction.

1 FACTS

Sinclair was convicted by a jury of arson based on a fire at her house on October 11, 2016. At trial, the State presented evidence reflecting Sinclair knowingly set fire to her house on the day she was scheduled to be served with an eviction notice after the completion of foreclosure proceedings.

Sinclair owned her house, but she failed to make her mortgage payments to U.S. Bank (the Bank). Based on the delinquent loan, the Bank foreclosed on the property. On October 11, 2016, Lieutenant Clark Rials with the Douglas County Sheriff's Office tried to serve Sinclair with the eviction notice. Before he arrived, someone from the sheriff's office had called Sinclair to tell her someone would be by to serve the eviction notice.

When Rials arrived at the house, he noticed a car parked in the driveway. He banged on the front and back doors and announced his presence, but no one answered. As he returned to the front door, he heard a tapping sound and followed it to the east side of the house near the gas meter. Rials said it sounded as if someone was tapping on a metal gas line in the basement. He knocked on the front door a second time and then left.

That same day, Melissa Warren, a retired firefighter and Sinclair's neighbor two houses down, was outside observing a contractor crew pour concrete in her garage. She heard what sounded like a heavy metal tool banging on a pipe coming from Sinclair's house. She went to the house and determined the noise was coming from the basement. Warren yelled into the basement window and asked Sinclair whether she was all right, but no one responded. Hours later, Warren saw smoke coming from the back door of the house. One of the contractors called 911, and Warren started moving furniture, boxes, and other debris obstructing the front door to help the firefighters make entry. She tried to open the front and back doors, but both were locked.

2 The Lawrence Fire Department (the Department) responded to the fire. Lieutenant Jeff Holland testified the fire was still growing when the firefighters arrived. Holland and another firefighter forced open the front door. Due to the amount of debris in the house, even after the door was opened, they were able to open the door barely wide enough to squeeze through. The house was heavy with white smoke, so they used a thermal imaging device to locate Sinclair in the kitchen.

According to Holland, he made it to the kitchen by crawling on top of the clutter. When he announced his presence, Sinclair immediately asked him to get out of her house. He said Sinclair appeared angry and repeatedly resisted their attempts to remove her. Holland and another firefighter carried Sinclair out of the house through the back door.

Sinclair was taken to an ambulance and treated for smoke inhalation. According to one medic, Sinclair appeared very angry and was cussing and saying things like, "They should have left me there to die," and "I can't believe the police were smoking me out." Sinclair mentioned to the medic she had taken pills and admitted she had tried to commit suicide. Another medic similarly testified Sinclair had mentioned she wanted to die. Sinclair was air-lifted to a hospital in Kansas City for treatment.

Jason Love, a lieutenant and fire investigator with the Department, investigated the house to determine the fire's origin and cause. He took photographs of the house to document his investigation, which the State admitted into evidence. Love ruled out an extension cord, the chimney, the electrical panel, and the furnace as the origin. By tracing the smoke, burn, and char patterns throughout the house, he concluded someone had intentionally started the fire a few feet inside the basement door. He found a used match surrounded by burnt debris at the origin of the fire. In the kitchen adjacent to the basement, Love found a box of matches and a metal-headed hammer next to a green wooden chair. He testified the matches in the kitchen, like the match recovered from the basement, had wooden stalks with square-shaped ends.

3 About two weeks after the fire, as part of Love's investigation, he interviewed Sinclair at the hospital. Love made an audio recording of the interview, which the State admitted into evidence. According to Love, when he asked Sinclair during the interview whether she had started the fire, Sinclair responded, "[A]nything's possible."

The defense's overall theory was the State provided only speculative evidence Sinclair had the required motive to burn the house. Sinclair testified she was 71 years old at the time of the trial. She said the foreclosure process on her house was incredibly long and very painful. She admitted she was aware at the time of the fire the house was owned by the Bank. Sinclair testified her health limited her mobility before the fire and it was hard for her to get up and down the stairs to the basement.

Sinclair could recall very little about the day of the fire. She denied knowing the sheriff's department was going to serve her with eviction papers. All she remembered about the fire was being in a state of unconsciousness or nothingness and sitting on her kitchen chair when she saw smoke going out the small opening in her kitchen window. When the firefighters came to rescue her, she was worried they would hurt her shoulders as they carried her. Sinclair explained she used the matches found next to the chair she was sitting on during the fire to relight the pilot light on her gas stove and furnace. She denied having suicidal thoughts that day.

Sinclair remembered Love visiting her at the hospital in October 2016. She testified they got along fine but he asked her some really ridiculous questions. She said, "[T]here was a point in time where I thought he'd gone too far in terms of saying I'd said things and trying to get me to say things that weren't true." She denied lighting a match in the basement to burn down the house.

4 The jury convicted Sinclair of arson, and she was sentenced to 18 months in prison, suspended to 24 months' supervised probation. Sinclair timely appealed. Additional facts are set forth as necessary herein.

ANALYSIS

No reversible judicial comment error

Sinclair argues the district judge engaged in reversible judicial comment error by misstating the legal reasoning for an admonishment to the jury and by relying on the State to clarify the district court's explanation of the admonishment to the jury.

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State v. Sinclair, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sinclair-kanctapp-2020.