Tate v. State

1975 OK CR 232, 544 P.2d 531, 1975 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 504
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 16, 1975
DocketF-75-387
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1975 OK CR 232 (Tate v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tate v. State, 1975 OK CR 232, 544 P.2d 531, 1975 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 504 (Okla. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

BUSSEY, Judge:

Appellant, John Ward Tate, hereinafter referred to as defendant, was charged, tried and convicted in the District Court, *533 Tulsa County, Case No. CRF-74-2366, for the offense of Knowingly Concealing Stolen Property in violation of 21 O.S.1971, § 1713. The court fixed his punishment at four (4) years’ imprisonment, and from said judgment and sentence a timely appeal has been perfected to this Court.

At the trial, Jerry E. Resetz testified that he was employed as an operator in a Texaco cat extracting unit and lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma; that at 12:30 A.M. on August 30, 1974, he stopped at a club near 51st Street and South Union Avenue in Tulsa, taking his keys inside with him, hut leaving his 1967 Ford pickup which had a shell camper on the back, unlocked in the parking lot. At 2:00 A.M. the club closed and he emerged to find that his pickup was gone. He walked across the street to a convenience grocery store and called the Tulsa police to report the theft of his pickup. Later the same morning he took the receipt for the purchase of the pickup as proof of title and went to the police station where he filled out a theft report. In court, Resetz recalled the serial number on the camper unit and its location on the camper. He related that on the day following the theft, as a result of information from the Creek County Sheriff’s Office he went to Summer’s Garage in Sapulpa, Oklahoma, where he reclaimed his pickup but discovered that the camper was no longer attached. Although he never saw his camper again, he subsequently learned that it had been recovered and he identified State’s Exhibits 1-4 as being pictures of the shell camper. Resetz further testified that he had not given anyone permission to take his pickup or camper and he had never attempted to regain possession of his camper because he had received a full settlement from his insurance company.

On cross-examination Resetz testified that his insurance settlement had been finalized sometime in September of 1974; that his camper had been manufactured by the Sooner-Knapp Company and he did not know whether all Sooner-Knapp campers carried the same serial number.

James Barry Mahoney testified that he was eighteen years old and lived with his father whose home was located between Sapulpa and Sand Springs. He identified the defendant as an acquaintance of his. He related that in August of 1974, he had been living with his grandmother in Kie-fer, Oklahoma, and during the early morning hours of August 30th, he and his mother’s boyfriend, 'Chuck Strain, had hotwired a red 1967 Ford Ranger pickup and stole it from the parking lot of the Rock-Away Lounge located at 51st Street and South Union Avenue in Tulsa. Mahoney and Chuck Strain drove the stolen pickup to a bar where they met Mahoney’s uncle, James Nigh, and transferred roofing materials which they had found in the stolen pickup to Nigh’s pickup. During the remainder of the night the three men used the stolen pickup to transport plywood and tools which they had stolen from a construction site, to Mahoney’s grandmother’s house in Kiefer. When they had finished moving the stolen goods they took the camper off of the pickup and left the camper in Mahoney’s grandmother’s yard. Mahoney then took the stolen pickup out to old Lone Star Road in Sapulpa, where he abandoned it. Mahoney further testified that about a week after the theft of the Ford pickup, Chuck Strain stole a white Chevrolet pickup and put the stolen camper on the back of it and used this pickup for transportation. In September, Mahoney’s grandmother got into an argument with his mother about the stolen goods accumulating in the yard and Chuck Strain took Ma-honey’s mother and sisters to the Viva Motel north of the Turner Turnpike in Tulsa. One day in early September, the defendant, whom Mahoney knew as a friend of Chuck Strain, came to Kiefer to find Strain and talk to him about some money Strain owed him. Mahoney told the defendant that Strain was staying at the Viva Motel and they went to the motel to find him. Maho- *534 ney testified that the defendant had a derringer and threatened Mahoney with it; ordering him to stay outside the motel room and sit on the sidewalk. The defendant got into an argument with Mahoney’s mother and threatened to hurt her. The defendant left the motel but later returned and wanted to take the truck and the defendant told Strain that there was no way to stop him from doing so because he knew the truck was stolen and they could not report it to the police. Mahoney testified that the defendant forced him, at gun point, to drive the Chevrolet pickup with the camper on the back, to a house in Oak-hurst, Oklahoma, and then the defendant drove him back to the Viva Motel. Maho-ney further testified that he decided that he wanted out of this activity and reported the foregoing matters to Leroy Hughes of the Kiefer police. Officer Hughes took Mahoney to Roy Clugston of the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office and Clugston drove Mahoney out to the defendant’s house where Mahoney identified the camper then on the back of the defendant’s pickup, as the camper which Mahoney had helped steal on August 30, 1974. Mahoney was able to identify the camper by virtue of a dent on the right upper top and a broken handle on the right side. He also identified State’s Exhibits 1-4 as picturing defendant’s pickup with the stolen camper on it. Mahoney also related that on the night before he received his subpoena for the preliminary hearing, the defendant offered him $1,000.00 if he would refuse to testify and threatened to harm him if he decided to testify.

Roy Clugston testified that he was a deputy sheriff in the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office, assigned to the Intelligence Division; that on October. 2, 1974, he went to the defendant’s residence with James Mahoney and Mahoney pointed out a shell camper that was mounted on defendant’s pickup truck and alleged that it was stolen property. Shortly after noon on October 2, 1974, Officer Clugston called Dave Gurthet who worked the stolen vehicle division at the Tulsa Police Department, and asked him if he had received a report of a red 1967 Ford Ranger pickup with a camper on it, as being stolen from the vicinity of 5lst Street and Union. After checking his file, Officer Gurthet called back to advise that he did have a report of a stolen pickup matching the description of the one inquired about, and he passed along the serial number of the shell camper. Later on that same day Officer Clugston had an opportunity to return to the defendant’s residence to assist Officer Gary James on a search warrant. At that time he inspected the camper on the pickup parked in the defendant’s driveway and saw a serial number which matched the serial number which Officer Gurthet had communicated to him. Officer Clugston arrested the defendant, advised him of his rights, and called the Spears Wrecker Service from Prattsville to tow the pickup with the camper to their garage for storage. Officer Clugston concluded his testimony by identifying State’s Exhibits 1-4 as photographs depicting defendant’s pickup with shell camper attached, as they appeared on the day that he arrested the defendant.

David K.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1975 OK CR 232, 544 P.2d 531, 1975 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-state-oklacrimapp-1975.