State v. Sperry

978 P.2d 933, 267 Kan. 287, 1999 Kan. LEXIS 254
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 4, 1999
Docket78,966
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 978 P.2d 933 (State v. Sperry) 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. Sperry, 978 P.2d 933, 267 Kan. 287, 1999 Kan. LEXIS 254 (kan 1999).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Allegrucci, J.:

Jeffrey Sperry appeals his conviction by a jury of one count of premeditated first-degree murder. He was sentenced to fife imprisonment (hard 25), K.S.A. 22-3717(b)(1).

In the mid-afternoon on November 25, 1995, Kansas City, Kansas, police were dispatched to 25th and New Jersey, where they found a man in the driver’s seat of a red car backed into a telephone pole. He had blood coming from his mouth and no pulse. A folding cellular telephone was open in his lap. There was no one else around. The key was in the ignition, the engine was running, and the back-up lights were on. There was a bullet hole in the windshield on the driver’s side at the steering wheel level. A shell casing was found in a private drive across the street from the car. From the location of the shell casing and the way the vehicle’s wheels were turned, police determined that the car had backed from the *288 private drive across the street into the pole. Tire marks in the drive indicated that the car left the drive at a high rate of speed.

The victim carried no identification. Police learned that he was Lonnie Mallicoat from his former wife, who called on the cellular telephone during the crime scene investigation.

An autopsy revealed that Mallicoat died as a result of a gunshot wound in his chest. Police recovered from a car that defendant had been driving a partially full box of shotgun shells. One of the shells had the name “Lonnie” scratched on it. Defendant’s friend, Clinton “Bud” Bice, told police that “whenever Mr. Sperry was very angry at somebody, he would write their name on a bullet that he said he was going to shoot.” Rice also told police that defendant and Mallicoat were friends, that defendant had supplied Mallicoat with money to manufacture some methamphetamine, and that defendant was angry because Mallicoat had not produced the drugs.

Defendant testified that he and Mallicoat were friends. He said he was “having dealings” with Mallicoat in November 1995 and that he was involved in drugs with Mallicoat “[t]o a very limited extent.” He had loaned Mallicoat $600 for a car.

With regard to the shotgun shell with Mallicoat’s name on it, defendant said that it was part of a private joke between the two of them.

Defendant testified that on the morning of Mallicoat’s death, they made arrangements by telephone to meet at a restaurant. Mallicoat had only $400 of the $600 he owed. Defendant was supposed to find Reagan Brown and get Mallicoat’s gun from her. Mallicoat said that by the time defendant got the gun, he would have the other $200. Defendant said that he would call Mallicoat to arrange getting together later.

Defendant met with other people during the day and by the time he met Mallicoat again, there were several other people accompanying defendant. The meeting place was a parking lot. Defendant had the pistol he had gotten from Brown. He took the pistol without the clip when he got out of the car to look for Mallicoat. Defendant found Mallicoat, told him he had the gun, and asked about the money. Mallicoat did not have it. They exchanged *289 some jealous words about Brown. Several people who had accompanied defendant left.

Defendant concluded that he would give Mallicoat the gun and hold the clip as collateral for the $200. For this purpose, he walked over to where Mallicoat was sitting in his car. Defendant testified that just as he got to the car it lurched backwards, cut to the right, “and the front end of the car come back.” The pistol in defendant’s hand caught against the door frame, the fender hit his legs, and he staggered backward. Then Mallicoat stopped his car and put it in drive. Defendant pointed the gun at the car “and the gun just went off.” Then, according to defendant, Mallicoat shifted the car back into reverse and backed out of the lot.

Defendant testified that he thought the gun was empty and that he did not aim at Mallicoat. He did not know how the gun got cocked. He described pointing the gun at the car as “an instinctive reaction” to the expectation that he was going to be run over.

Defendant’s appellate counsel raises five issues on appeal. Defendant filed a pro se brief, raising several additional issues and expanding on the issues raised by appellate counsel. We first address the issues raised by appellate counsel. The first issue is whether the trial court erred in excluding evidence that might tend to show that defendant believed the victim to be a murderer.

Appellate counsel portrays this issue as a matter of exclusion of evidence necessary to defendant’s theory of self-defense, which would constitute denial of his due process right to a fair trial under Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284, 302, 35 L. Ed. 2d 297, 93 S. Ct. 1038 (1973). Examination of the record and pertinent authorities, however, shows that there is nothing more than an ordinary evidentiary ruling at issue.

Defendant complains that the trial court excluded a portion of the statements he made in an interview with Detective Shomin and District Attorney Nick Tomasic on May 15, 1996. Defendant took the stand on his own behalf. In the course of his testimony, defendant told of sending a letter to Shomin requesting an interview, which he hoped to paríay into a lowered bond amount. He testified that when the interview began, he declined to have his attorney present because he was going to give them information *290 about cases other than the one against him. The prosecutor objected:

“What I anticipate him saying, what he told Shomin was that Lonnie MaUicoat and Bud Rice had done some homicides in Missouri. It has no relevance in this case. AU he is trying to do is drag their names through the mud, and there’s been no charges against them.”

Defense counsel responded:

“I anticipate [the prosecuting attorney] will be bringing Mr. Tomasic and Detective Shomin in for rebuttal to rebut his testimony and to discuss things that occurred in that meeting. If that meeting is going to come into play, I think the entire contact of that meeting is relevant. I’m just trying to bring out my case in chief for tactical purposes, to make sure we are not trying to hide anything.”

The district court ruled that testimony about Missouri homicides was not relevant.

On rebuttal, the State recalled Detective Shomin, whose testimony during the prosecution’s case in chief had not touched on the interview with defendant. Shomin testified that he and Tomasic had met with defendant at the latter’s request, that defendant had told them he was in a motel in Raytown when MaUicoat died, and that Reagan Brown had kiUed MaUicoat. The State also called Tomasic on rebuttal. With regard to the interview, he testified that defendant had told them he was in a motel in Raytown or Grand-view at the time MaUicoat died and that either Reagan Brown or Bud Rice had kiUed MaUicoat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
978 P.2d 933, 267 Kan. 287, 1999 Kan. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sperry-kan-1999.