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The State of Kansas, Appellee, v. Daniel C. Austin, Appellant

Kansas Supreme Court1972-04-08No. No. 46,117
209 Kan. 4495 P.2d 969

Summary

Holding. The court affirmed Austin's conviction for first-degree robbery, finding the evidence sufficient to support the jury's verdict and rejecting all claimed trial errors.

Daniel Austin was convicted of first-degree robbery following an altercation at a tavern in Wichita. After losing at pool and being ejected from the establishment, Austin and an accomplice named Patterson confronted the victim Soupene outside. During the assault, Patterson took Soupene's wallet containing approximately $140 while Austin held the victim down. Both men fled and were arrested hours later with money in their possession, including bills matching those from the stolen wallet. Austin argued on appeal that he had no intent to steal and that Patterson alone took the wallet.

The court rejected Austin's sufficiency of evidence claim, finding that the physical evidence and circumstances—including matching currency found on both assailants, their joint assault and coordinated flight, and their false denials when questioned—provided sufficient grounds for a reasonable inference of guilt. The court also addressed Austin's procedural challenges, noting that certain evidentiary objections were not timely raised and that the state's comment about Austin's failure to call Patterson as a witness did not constitute reversible error because Austin never attempted to determine whether Patterson would waive his privilege against self-incrimination.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Sufficiency of evidence to support first-degree robbery conviction based on joint assault and theft
  • Timeliness of objections to alleged hearsay evidence
  • Permissibility of prosecution's argument regarding defendant's failure to call accomplice as witness

Procedural posture

The defendant appealed his first-degree robbery conviction and sentence of twenty to forty-two years in the Kansas State Penitentiary.

Authorities cited

No cited authorities resolved to law.co cases yet.

Opinion

majority opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fontron, J.:

The defendant, Daniel C. Austin, was convicted of first-degree robbery. He was sentenced to the Kansas State Penitentiary for a term of not less than twenty nor more than forty-two years. The present appeal followed.

In brief, the salient facts are as follows: In the early hours of February 7,1969, the defendant and one Lewis B. Soupene engaged in a friendly game of pool at the Outer Limits tavern in Wichita. Soupene lost three games at a dollar a game, whereupon the ante was raised to two dollars per game and Soupene won the next three games. An argument ensued during which Mr. Soupene hit Mr. Austin in the face. At this juncture the proprietor arrived on the scene, blackjacked both disputants and threw them out the door.

Soupene re-entered the tavern to retrieve his hat and pool cue. Upon re-emerging he was accosted by Austin and a companion by the name of Patterson. Austin demanded an apology from his erstwhile pool playing friend. When this was refused, Austin struck Soupene and Patterson tackled him around the legs, throwing him to the ground. Austin began to kick Soupene in the ribs and face as he lay on the ground and then fell on him and grabbed his head while Patterson grabbed his wallet, which contained some $140. When Soupene said “Man, please don’t take my wallet”, both men jumped up and ran for the car.

The victim ran back to the tavern and said he had been rolled. On receipt of this information the proprietor went out and hollered to Austin and Patterson, who departed at a high rate of speed. The couple was arrested about two hours later emerging from another tavern. Neither man had Soupene’s wallet but Austin had $70 in currency on his person and Patterson $57. The wallet was found at a later time, stripped of its contents. Additional facts will be related as they become pertinent.

Several points of error are alleged and will be discussed in order.

First, the defendant contends that hearsay evidence was erroneously admitted. This claim grows out of the testimony of a Wichita police officer with respect to a trip made by several officers and Mr. Patterson to an area on South Broadway. In response to a question propounded by the state as to why they were going to the south part of town, the witness replied “Mr. Patterson was going to try and show us where he’d thrown the billfold.”

No objection was interposed to this answer nor was any motion made to strike the same. Accordingly, the question is not before us for review. Our rule is that an error alleged in the admission of evidence is not subject to appellate review in the absence of a timely and specific objection addressed thereto. (See 2 Hatcher’s Kansas Digest [Rev. Ed.] Criminal Law, § 425, p. 273.)

In the second place, Mr. Austin contends the evidence is insufficient to establish robbery on his part. The gist of his argument is that Patterson took Soupene’s wallet and Austin had nothing to do with that — nor had any thought of theft ever entered his mind. This is an argument which could have been and probably was presented to the jury. However, we deem the evidence amply sufficient to sustain the verdict. Both Austin and Patterson attacked Soupene and threw him to the ground. Austin continued his attack, throwing himself upon Soupene and holding his head while Patterson wafted his wallet. Both fled the scene in haste as the tavern owner yelled at them. Both men feigned surprise when the arresting officer mentioned Soupene’s billfold and both men said they knew nothing about it.

As we have already said, Mr. Soupene had approximately $140 in currrency in his wallet. He carried his currency folded over. Four twenty-dollar bills were among the bills taken and one of those had been tom in two and pieced together with scotch tape. Two folded twenty-dollar bills were found in the possession of each of Soupene’s assailants and one of the two twenty-dollar bills in Patterson’s possession was pieced together by scotch tape of the same width and in similar fashion to the one carried in Soupene’s wallet.

It is true that Austin, in an effort to account for the $70 in his possession, offered evidence that a few days previously he had received and cashed a $100 check. This evidence was a matter for the jury’s consideration in pondering the issue of guilt or innocence — and apparently the explanation was given little weight.

We have often stated our rule to be that on appellate review the question is not whether the evidence established guilt beyond a reasonable doubt but whether the evidence was sufficient to form the basis for a reasonable inference of guilt. We believe that test was met in this case. (State v. Fouts, 169 Kan. 686, 221 P. 2d 841; State v. Mitchell, 181 Kan. 193, 310 P. 2d 1063; State v. Burgess, 205 Kan. 224, 468 P. 2d 229.)

A third assignment of error relates to a portion of the state’s final argument wherein attention was directed to Austin’s failure to call Patterson as a witness. It is contended this deprived the defendant of a fair trial.

Patterson had been tried and found guilty prior to Austin’s trial. His motion for a new trial was still pending and his time to appeal had not expired. Patterson was present in court, at the state’s behest, for at least a part of Austin’s trial and the state alluded to this fact in posing the question “Why wasn’t he put on?”

Overlooking the fact that no objection was interposed to the state’s argument, we believe no error flowed from the state’s argument, or that Austin was denied a fair trial thereby. The applicable rale is set out in 2 Wigmore, Evidence, 3d Ed., § 286, p. 167, where, in discussing the principle that the failure to produce available evidence may give rise to an inference that it would have been adverse to the party who could have produced it, Mr. Wigmore states:

“When the -witness is privileged, and the privilege is independent of the party’s control, the witness’ claim of privilege renders the party unable to use his testimony; but it would seem that the witness should at least have been summoned and asked, for he may waive his privilege. . .

In the instant case the defendant did not see fit to call Mr. Patterson to ascertain whether that gentleman would or would not waive his privilege against self incrimination. Accordingly, we cannot say that the state’s argument constituted error.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.