State v. Warner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 9, 2018
Docket118096
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Warner (State v. Warner) 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. Warner, (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 118,096

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

STEVEN LENIER WARNER, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Shawnee District Court; CHERYL A. RIOS judge. Opinion filed November 9, 2018. Affirmed.

Clayton J. Perkins, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Steven J. Obermeier, assistant solicitor general, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before LEBEN, P.J., GREEN and MALONE, JJ.

PER CURIAM: A jury convicted Steven Lenier Warner of theft of lost or mislaid property for taking a money bag containing $25,000 that Kim Walker accidentally left behind in a cart at Walmart. Warner appeals his conviction. First, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence presented at trial. He argues that the State failed to submit sufficient evidence of the following: (1) that he knew or learned that Walker was the lawful owner of the bag and (2) that he failed to take reasonable measures to restore the bag to Walker. Second, Warner argues that the trial court committed reversible error by

1 denying his request for a jury instruction on theft of property valued between $1,000 and $24,999. For the reasons stated later, we reject these arguments. Accordingly, we affirm.

Walker and Dwayne Whitaker were an engaged couple living in Oklahoma. The pair ran a restaurant called the Wild Country Café; Whitaker was the president of the corporation and Walker was the vice president. In late 2015, a friend of Walker's died and left her a $50,000 life insurance policy. Walker and Whitaker decided to use some of the proceeds from the insurance policy to buy an RV and then travel to the Alamo.

The couple saw an RV listed for sale in Hays, Kansas, and decided to drive to Hays and buy it. On December 14, 2015, Walker withdrew $40,000 from her bank. She intended to deposit $25,000 into a new account at a second bank and use the remaining $15,000 to buy the RV. At the second bank, however, the teller erred when setting up Walker's new account, and she could not deposit the cash at the bank. As a result, Walker was left with $40,000 in cash as she and Whitaker began their trip to Hays. Walker put the cash in a zippered money bag labeled "Wild Country Café." Whitaker controlled the bag during the trip. In addition to the $40,000 in the bank bag, the couple also brought separate money on the trip. Whitaker brought a separate $9,000 in cash which he kept in his pocket.

After finishing at the second bank the couple drove up to Hays. They reached Hays the evening of December 14 and bought the RV. They paid for the RV with $15,000 in cash from the money bag; both Whitaker and the RV seller counted out the cash. After paying for the RV, exactly $25,000 remained in the money bag. Throughout the trip Whitaker also put several signed gas receipts in the bag. The couple did not use the money from the bag to buy anything else besides the RV.

2 The couple spent the night in the RV in Hays. The next morning, they left Hays and headed east. The couple did not get very far because the RV overheated outside of Topeka. They called a wrecker to tow the RV to Topeka for repairs.

Whitaker paid the wrecker with cash from his separate $9,000 kept in his pocket. He pulled $200 too much from his pocket to pay the wrecker, so he put the extra $200 in the money bag with Walker's $25,000. The couple checked into a hotel while waiting on the repairs. Walker paid for the hotel with cash, but not cash from the money bag. That evening the couple ate at a restaurant. Whitaker paid for the meal with cash from his $9,000. The restaurant food severely upset Whitaker's stomach for the next few days.

The next day, December 16, the couple went to the Walmart near their hotel. They brought the money bag into the store and kept it in the child seat of their cart while they shopped. When they checked out, they paid with the $200 that Whitaker had placed in the money bag after paying the wrecker. Whitaker started feeling ill, so the couple quickly headed for the exit.

A man later identified as Warner was also at Walmart on December 16. Warner visited the Subway restaurant located in Walmart for 15 to 20 minutes. He then walked from Subway, past the Walmart checkout lanes, towards the store foyer. Walker and Whitaker passed through the same aisle at the same time on their way to exit the store. Warner walked behind the couple at a distance of about five to six checkout lanes apart. Walmart's security footage captured Walker, Whitaker, and Warner all in the same security camera shot of the area.

The couple rounded the corner from the aisle to the foyer and hurriedly grabbed their bags from the cart. Once Warner, who had been slightly behind the couple, reached the corner, he stopped. Walker and Whitaker parked their cart in the store foyer and removed the shopping bags from the child seat area of the cart. They then left the store

3 and drove away. The couple failed to take the money bag out of the cart when they took the shopping bags, and they left the store without the money bag.

About 20 seconds after the couple left the store without the money bag, Warner went straight to Walker and Whitaker's cart. Warner leaned on the cart, then picked up the money bag and put it inside his jacket. He continued to lean on the cart for about a minute and fiddled with the bag inside his jacket. Then, he exited the store with the bag in his jacket. He walked across the street away from the store.

While stopped at a light on the way back to the hotel, Whitaker realized he had left the money bag in the cart. The couple drove back to the store as quickly as possible. They were away from the store for only 5 to 10 minutes.

When Walker and Whitaker returned to Walmart, Walker first asked an employee cleaning in the foyer if he had seen the couple's cart. The employee had not. Whitaker went to the restroom. Walker went to the service desk and the service desk called Walmart's security.

Walmart security called the Topeka police and Officer Larry Gonzalez responded. Walker explained to Officer Gonzalez that she was missing a blue or green money bag with "Wild Country Café" written on it. Walker completed a signed statement for the officer stating that there was $30,000 in the missing bag. Whitaker then returned from the bathroom. Whitaker spoke with Walker and told her she had misinformed Officer Gonzalez: there was only $25,000 in the bag. Walker then told Officer Gonzalez that the correct amount was $25,000, not $30,000.

Walker and Whitaker left Topeka after their RV repairs were finished. Topeka police continued to investigate the missing bag after the couple left. The police issued two bulletins with photos from Walmart's security footage, seeking the identity of the

4 person shown taking the money bag from the cart and leaving the store. Police issued the first bulletin in December 2015. Police issued the second bulletin with clearer photos in January 2016.

Warner called his ex-wife Teresa Grant in January 2016. Warner told Grant that the police were looking for him because they accused him of taking money. He asked her to meet him and give him food and money. Grant agreed to help. After she ended the call with Warner, she looked up the Crime Stoppers bulletin containing photos from Walmart's security footage. Grant had no doubt that Warner was the man pictured in the bulletin, so she called the police.

Warner called Grant again while she was talking to the police. The police had Grant agree to meet Warner and ask him where he was staying. Warner told Grant he was staying at a hotel. Grant told the police the name of the hotel. The police then arrested Warner at the hotel.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Warner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-warner-kanctapp-2018.