State v. Thoms

781 S.W.2d 578, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1847, 1989 WL 153620
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 1989
DocketNo. 16110
StatusPublished

This text of 781 S.W.2d 578 (State v. Thoms) 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. Thoms, 781 S.W.2d 578, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1847, 1989 WL 153620 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

CROW, Presiding Judge.

A jury found John LaDean Thoms (“defendant”) guilty of two counts: attempting to steal a motor vehicle, §§ 564.0111 and 570.030, and having methamphetamine under his control, § 195.020. The jury assessed punishment at two years’ imprisonment on the first count and five years’ imprisonment on the second. The trial court imposed those sentences, ordering that they run concurrently.

Defendant appeals, maintaining the trial court erred in denying defendant’s pretrial motion to suppress as evidence a bottle containing the methamphetamine, and in receiving the bottle and its contents in evidence over defendant’s objection at trial.

[579]*579Ricky Staples testified that a week or two prior to June 30, 1988, he placed a “For Sale” sign bearing his address in his 1969 Ford pickup and parked it on a shopping center parking lot in Marshfield. Staples locked the doors with a key — the only way to do it as the “knobs” in the doors that are normally pushed down to lock the vehicle had fallen “down in that little hole.”

On June 30, 1988, a few minutes after noon, Staples was riding past the shopping center with his cousin when he noticed a man inside his pickup. Staples and his cousin drove onto the parking lot to investigate.

The man, identified by Staples at trial as defendant, had the ignition switch of Staples’ pickup in his hand. Staples asked defendant if he was interested in buying Staples’ pickup. Defendant, according to Staples, pointed to another man standing nearby and stated the pickup belonged to him. Defendant explained to Staples that he (defendant) “was taking some numbers and stuff down there.” Staples noticed that the man to whom defendant pointed had a gun “poked down in his britches.”

Asked what he told defendant, Staples replied, “I told him that it was my truck.” Staples instructed his cousin to go get Staples’ father and the title to the pickup.

Staples told defendant to put the ignition back together. About that time an acquaintance of Staples, Allen Dudley, was leaving a store at the shopping center. Dudley saw Staples and defendant, so he stopped. Dudley observed defendant with the ignition of Staples’ truck in his hand “trying to put it back in.” Staples, according to Dudley, was “mumbling about somebody trying to steal his truck.”

Staples testified that during the two or three years he had owned the pickup he had painted it, installed bucket seats, put in carpet, cut the shifter down and mounted a knob on it, replaced the steering wheel with a sport steering wheel, put in a stereo, added clearance lights, and changed the wheels to five-spoke models. Staples asked defendant whether the other man’s pickup was similar in all those respects. Defendant, according to Staples, replied, “I guess.”

Dudley recalled the other man stating his truck was like Staples’ truck “[t]o the exact tee.”

Staples’ father, Lawrence, arrived at the scene and inquired of defendant why he had not called the police. Asked at trial about defendant’s response, Ricky Staples testified: “[Defendant] said that they didn’t want to go through the — all the red tape, you know. If it wasn’t their truck in the first place, they didn’t want to — you know, they was wanting to make sure before they called the cops.”

Dudley telephoned the police. Officer Scott Lance was dispatched to the scene, arriving about 12:40 p.m. Ricky Staples told Lance what had occurred. Lance then talked to defendant and his companion, one William Johnson. They were standing between Ricky Staples’ pickup and a 1987 Ford pickup registered to Johnson. Defendant and Johnson told Lance they were looking for the vehicle identification number on Staples’ pickup because Johnson owned a similar pickup which had been stolen two to three weeks earlier in Springfield and they were trying to determine whether the vehicle identification number on Staples’ pickup matched that of the stolen pickup. According to Lance, Johnson stated he had reported the theft two to three weeks earlier. Johnson supplied Lance a series of numbers that Johnson said were from the stolen pickup. Lance ran a computer check of those numbers and learned no such vehicle was on file, “no stolen, nothing, no title, no registration.”

Ricky Staples pointed to Johnson and informed Lance that Johnson initially had a gun but that Johnson had placed it in Johnson’s pickup before Lance arrived.

Lance looked in Johnson’s pickup and saw the grip of a handgun protruding from beneath a newspaper on the seat on the driver’s side. Lance retrieved the gun; its clip contained four rounds of ammunition.

Lance also noticed a “small prescription bottle” on the passenger seat. The bottle had a rubber band around it and the label was up so Lance could read it. Lance [580]*580walked from the driver’s side of Johnson’s pickup to the passenger side and, upon looking in, saw that the label on the bottle said: “Nitroglycerine 0.4mm. Turn in bottle for a refill.” Lance noticed the label was from an Arizona pharmacy and there was no name on it identifying the person for whom the medicine was prescribed. According to Lance, the bottle “didn’t look brand new.”

Lance picked up the bottle and could see it contained several small packages which did not appear to be nitroglycerine. Three small pills in the bottom did, however, appear to be nitroglycerine.

Defendant and Johnson were behind Lance. Lance asked, “Who does this belong to?” Defendant responded that it was “his nitro,” and that he had heart trouble.

Lance removed the bottle cap and looked inside, seeing several packages of “an off-white brownish substance.”

Lance radioed the Webster County sheriffs office for assistance, then took defendant to Lance’s patrol car. Inside the car Lance gave defendant the “Miranda Warning.” 2 Lance showed defendant the bottle again and asked if it belonged to him. Defendant said yes. Lance reached inside the bottle, removed a small plastic packet containing the off-white substance, and asked defendant if he knew what it was. Defendant took the packet, smelled its contents, and stated it appeared to be “crank.” At trial Lance explained that crank is the “street name” for methamphetamine.

Defendant told Lance he (defendant) did not know the crank was in the bottle, he thought there was only nitroglycerine. Lance asked defendant to again explain what he was doing in Ricky Staples’ pickup. Defendant repeated his earlier explanation.

Lance finished talking to defendant, then began questioning Johnson. Sheriff Eugene Fraker of Webster County arrived during that phase of the investigation. After Lance finished talking to Johnson, Lance told Fraker what Lance had learned and showed Fraker the handgun and bottle.

Lawrence Staples asked defendant how he had entered Ricky Staples’ pickup. Defendant, in the presence of the Stapleses, Fraker and Lance, demonstrated how he had opened the “wing window,” reached inside, rolled down the large window, removed the bolts from the inner panel of the door with an electric screwdriver, and tripped the lock. Lawrence Staples asked defendant why he had removed the ignition. Defendant responded that he was looking for the vehicle identification number.

At the conclusion of the investigation at the scene, Lance arrested defendant for the two crimes for which he was ultimately convicted. Lance arrested Johnson for attempted stealing.

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Bluebook (online)
781 S.W.2d 578, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 1847, 1989 WL 153620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-thoms-moctapp-1989.