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265 Kan. 166 No. 79,155 STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee, v. CLEAVE SIMS, Appellant. 1. In a criminal action, a trial court must instruct the jury on the law applicable to the defendant's theories for which there is supporting evidence. When considering the refusal of the trial court to give a specific instruction, the evidence must be viewed by the appellate court in the light most favorable to the party requesting the instruction. 2. In order to rely on self-defense as a defense, a person must (1) have a belief that the force used was necessary to defend himself or herself and, also, (2) show the existence of some facts that would support such a belief. 3. It is the duty of the trial court to instruct the jury on self-defense so long as there is any evidence tending to establish self-defense, although the evidence may be slight and may consist solely of the defendant's own testimony. 4. Before a defendant is entitled to a self-defense instruction, relevant evidence must be produced that (1) the defendant honestly and sincerely believed it would be necessary to kill in self-defense, and (2) a reasonable person would have perceived the necessity of self-defense. 5. Evidence of gang affiliation indicating a defendant is a member of a gang or is involved in gang-related activity is admissible to show a motive for an otherwise inexplicable act. Such evidence, however, is only admissible where there is sufficient proof that such membership or activity is related to the crime charged. 6. A party must make a timely and specific objection to the admission of evidence at trial in order to preserve the issue for appeal. K.S.A. 60-404 states that a verdict or finding shall not be set aside, nor shall the judgment or decision based thereon be reversed, by reason of the erroneous admission of evidence unless there appears of record objection to the evidence timely interposed and so stated as to make clear the specific ground of objection. Appeal from Sedgwick district court; DAVID W. KENNEDY, judge. Opinion filed May 29, 1998. Affirmed. Richard Ney, special appellate defender, argued the cause, and Jessica R. Kunen, chief appellate defender, was with him on the brief for appellant. Charles R. Reimer, assistant district attorney, argued the cause, and Nola Foulston, district attorney, and Carla J. Stovall, attorney general, were with him on the brief for appellee. The opinion of the court was delivered by ABBOTT, J.: This is a direct appeal by the defendant, Cleave Sims, from his convictions by a jury in Sedgwick County, Kansas, of one count of first-degree felony murder, two counts of aggravated battery, and one count of criminal discharge of a firearm. In total, the trial court sentenced Cleave to life in prison plus a consecutive 60 months. Cleave appeals his convictions and sentences. This is a drive-by shooting case. Cleave's brother, Essex T. Sims, rode in the front passenger seat and did some of the shooting while Cleave drove the car. Many of the issues in Essex's case are controlling in this case and will be referred to as the various issues are discussed. See State v. Sims, 262 Kan. 165, 936 P.2d 779 (1997). Essex and Cleave were jointly tried. Thus, the facts are the same and are fully set forth in 262 Kan. at 166-68. We will not repeat them here except as necessary in discussing the issues. Cleave's defense counsel requested that the trial court instruct the jury on self-defense pursuant to PIK Crim. 3d 54.17. The trial court denied his request and refused to provide the jury with an instruction on self-defense. Cleave challenges the trial court's ruling on appeal. Essex also raised this issue in his appeal, which this court rejected. In rejecting Essex's claim, this court stated:
Cleave acknowledges this court's ruling regarding this same issue when it was previously raised by Essex in his appeal. However, Cleave claims that the issue presented herein is different than the issue presented in Essex's appeal. This is because Cleave specifically requested a self-defense instruction at trial; whereas, Essex made no such request at trial for an instruction on self-defense. Thus, Essex's appeal of this issue to this court was analyzed under a "clearly erroneous" standard of review. Cleave asserts that this standard of review does not apply to his appeal of this issue since he requested a self-defense instruction at trial. As such, Cleave asks this court to reanalyze this issue in his appeal, regarding an instruction on self-defense, under a less rigid standard of review. Cleave is entitled to a different standard of review in his appeal of this issue than Essex was entitled to. Essex did not request a jury instruction on self-defense at trial. This court found that the trial court's failure to give an instruction on self-defense was not clearly erroneous and thus was not in error. However, Cleave did specifically request an instruction on self-defense at trial.
In analyzing this issue, the court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to Cleave, the party who requested the instruction, as opposed to viewing it under a clearly erroneous standard of review, as the court did in Essex's appeal. As such, Cleave is entitled to an independent analysis of this issue, under a different standard of review, regardless of this court's ruling in Essex's case. The circumstances in which a defendant is entitled to an instruction on self-defense are discussed in State v. Childers, 222 Kan. 32, 48, 563 P.2d 999 (1977), wherein this court stated: "[I]n order to rely on self-defense as a defense, a person must [1] have a belief that the force used was necessary to defend himself and, also, [2] show the existence of some facts that would support such belief." Further, the Childers court stated that in judging whether the evidence justifies a self-defense instruction, "'it is well to remember the test is not how much but is there any'" evidence that a defendant believed force was necessary to defend himself. 222 Kan. at 49. Also, Cleave cites State v. Hill, 242 Kan. 68, 78, 744 P.2d 1228 (1987), which held: "It is the duty of the trial court to instruct the jury on self-defense so long as there is any evidence tending to establish self-defense, although the evidence may be slight and may consist solely of the defendant's own testimony." According to Cleave, there was some factual evidence presented at trial which indicated that he had a reasonable belief that force was necessary to defend himself. For instance, Lamont Sanders, the person who sat in the back seat of Cleave's car on the day in question, testified that as the car drove by the house on Fountain Street, he saw Carlton Stokes, who was standing in the yard outside the house, point a handgun at the car. Sanders testified that it was not until after Stokes pointed his gun at the Sims' car that the shooting began. Further, Cleave claims that the evidence presented at trial clearly proved that some shots were fired from the house. Gary Miller, a tool marks and firearm examiner for the Wichita Police Department, testified that two of the spent shell casings recovered from around the location of the shooting came from a gun that was found in the Fountain Street house in a clothes dryer. There is evidence that vehicles on the opposite side of Fountain Street from the house in question were hit by bullets, indicating that shots were fired from the house in the direction of the car Cleave was driving. Finally, one of the neighbors, Martin, testified that gunfire came from the house toward the cars driving past the house. Martin stated the shots came from the car first. However, because gunfire from the house returned the gunfire from the car so quickly, Cleave claims that a person at the house, such as Stokes, may have already been pointing a weapon at the car at the time the gunfire from the car began. According to Sims, it seems unlikely that anyone from the house could have gotten off any gunshots in the time it takes for a car to pass a residence, unless a weapon was already in hand, ready to be fired. In refusing to give Cleave's requested self-defense instruction, the trial court explained: "With respect to the self-defense instruction, the defense is, [']we were there but we didn't do anything['] and, therefore, there's no testimony that would justify a self-defense instruction, and I'll refuse to give it." On appeal, Cleave claims that the question at issue was not how the trial court characterized the evidence, but how the jury might have characterized the evidence in light of a self-defense instruction, if given the opportunity. In response, the State points out that "before a defendant is entitled to a self-defense instruction, relevant evidence must be presented that (1) the defendant honestly and sincerely believed it would be necessary to kill in self-defense and (2) a reasonable person would have perceived the necessity of self-defense." State v. Sims, 262 Kan. at 172 (citing State v. Tyler, 251 Kan. 616, 625, 840 P.2d 413 [1992]). Cleave relies on the same evidence that Essex did to support his argument for a self-defense instruction: (1) a Glock pistol found inside the residence had fired at least two shots; (2) vehicles parked across the street from the Thomas home were hit by bullets; (3) a neighbor heard return fire from the house; and (4) the testimony of Lamont Sanders that he was a back seat passenger in the Sims car, and that he saw Carlton Stokes, one of the individuals outside the Thomas home at the time of the attack, aim a Glock pistol at the Sims car immediately before the shooting started. State v. Sims, 262 Kan. at 172. In Essex's appeal, this court rejected his request for an instruction on self-defense because his theory of defense was that he did not participate in the shooting at all; not that he shot at the house in self-defense. For instance, at trial, Essex attempted to discredit witnesses who said they saw him holding a gun. Further, the primary defense witness, Sanders, denied knowledge of any guns in the Sims car or of any cars following behind their car. 262 Kan. at 172-73. In Essex's appeal, this court concluded that there was "absolutely no evidence proving the subjective component of self-defense, that [Essex] Sims honestly believed he had to kill in self-defense." 262 Kan. at 173. To qualify for an instruction on self-defense, there must be some evidence presented at trial that Cleave reasonably believed force was necessary to defend himself. See Childers, 222 Kan. at 48-49; Hill, 242 Kan. at 78. There was at least one State witness who admitted that she heard gunshots coming from the house. However, this witness testified that she did not hear gunshots from the house until after she heard gunshots coming from the passing cars. Thus, the testimony of this witness does not support a theory of self-defense on behalf of Cleave. One defense witness, Sanders, also testified that he saw Stokes point a gun at the car Cleave was driving. Sanders then dove down in the back seat of the car and heard gunshots for the first time. This evidence might have possibly supported a theory of self-defense, but the rest of Sanders' testimony discounts this theory. Sanders testified that he did not recall seeing a car behind Cleave's car as it drove down Fountain Street. Further, Sanders claimed that he was not aware of a Tec-9 gun in the car, even though the witnesses of the drive-by shooting testified that they saw Essex shooting a Tec-9 gun from a car driven by Cleave. Finally, there was no testimony from Sanders or anyone else that Essex or Cleave actually saw Stokes with a gun, or that Essex or Cleave might have seen Stokes, or ever could have seen him, from their vantage point in the car. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendant, Cleave was not entitled to an instruction on self-defense. The trial court did not err in denying Cleave's request for a self-defense instruction. This issue fails. On October 16, 1995, the prosecution filed a motion seeking permission to introduce evidence of gang affiliation and practice. The State argued in its motion: "Evidence of gang affiliation and practice in this case may provide motive for what is otherwise apparently a motiveless crime." At the pretrial hearing, the State produced the testimony of Officer Kent Bauman, assigned to the Wichita Police Department Gang Intelligence Unit. Bauman testified that the records of the unit disclosed that Essex had been identified in September 1992, more that 2 1/2 years before the shooting, as a member of the Neighborhood Crips gang. He identified Cleave as an "associate" of the Neighborhood Crips. Bauman admitted during cross-examination that the only reason Cleave was listed as a gang "associate" was the fact he was arrested in this case with other gang members. The prosecution concluded its evidence at the pretrial hearing by soliciting the following testimony from Bauman:
At trial, Angela Fair testified that she went to see her grandmother, Althea Thomas, at her grandmother's house on Fountain Street on the afternoon of March 22, 1995. Angela testified that while she was at her grandmother's house, she saw a girl in the front yard make what she described as a "gang sign." According to Angela, the sign consisted of the girl placing her thumb and forefinger together and raising the other three fingers in the air. Angela testified that the girl who made this gesture had been at the Fountain Street house for awhile that day, but she did not know who the girl was, nor could she see to whom, if anyone, the gesture was made. Angela testified that later, while she was in the living room of her grandmother's house, she saw the back of a brown Monte Carlo a short distance beyond the driveway. She looked away and immediately heard shots. Angela said she had seen the same Monte Carlo before at Essex and Cleave's house and had seen them driving the car. Al Smith also testified at trial that Althea Thomas is his grandmother, and he had been at her house in Wichita when a shooting incident took place there. Smith said he was looking out of the front door of the residence when he saw a brown Cutlass automobile containing two men pass by the house. After the car rolled past the house a short ways, Smith lost sight of the car and heard approximately 15 gunshots. At trial, Smith did not recall telling the police that he had seen "gang signs" displayed by anyone prior to the shooting. Officer Bauman testified that he had questioned Smith regarding the shooting and Smith had told him that earlier on the day of the shooting a car had driven by and one of its occupants had flashed a "gang sign" at people in the yard at 1726 North Fountain. According to Bauman, Smith had said that the sign made from the car was "BK" for "Blood Killer." Bauman testified that Smith told him an unknown girl at the residence made a "B" for "Blood" sign back to the car. Bauman also testified concerning gang affiliation and practices, as allowed by the court's pretrial order. Bauman defined a gang for the jury as "two or more people that join together and have common symbols, signs, mannerisms, and who individually or collectively commit crime." Bauman identified Essex as having been classified as a Neighborhood Crips gang member in September 1992. Bauman also gave the following testimony concerning Cleave:
Bauman was permitted to offer his opinion that merely flashing a disrespectful sign at a member of another gang is sufficient provocation to cause a shooting and that this had happened "many times" in the past. After Bauman's direct testimony, Judge Kennedy gave the jury the following instruction:
On appeal, Cleave challenges the admission of this evidence regarding gang affiliation. Cleave acknowledges that
According to Cleave, this evidence of gang affiliation was not related to the crime charged, nor was it admitted to show a motive for the crimes charged. Thus, Cleave claims that evidence of his gang affiliation was improperly admitted into trial, thereby violating K.S.A. 60-455 and his constitutional right to a fair trial. Essex's appeal also raised the issue that gang affiliation was improperly admitted at trial. In regard to Essex's issue, this court stated:
Just like Essex, Cleave failed to timely object to the evidence regarding gang affiliation when it was presented at trial. Thus, this issue was not properly preserved for appeal. See State v. Cheeks, 258 Kan. 581, 593, 908 P.2d 175 (1995). This issue fails. Cleave was convicted of felony murder based on a killing which occurred during the course of an underlying felony--criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied dwelling. Cleave was also independently convicted of criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied dwelling. Cleave claims that he was improperly convicted of felony murder based on this underlying felony, which he was independently convicted of, because the underlying felony of criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied dwelling merges into the charge of felony murder. Essex also raised this issue in his appeal to this court. 262 Kan. at 171-72. Essex's appeal was unsuccessful. In so holding, this court stated:
Cleave acknowledges that Essex has previously raised this issue on appeal to this court without success. However, Cleave claims that he is asserting this issue again on appeal because he believes that this court's ruling in Essex's appeal was in error. Cleave asks this court to reconsider its ruling in Essex's appeal and grant him relief under this issue. We decline to do so. Cleave raises the exact arguments which Essex raised in his appeal. The opinion regarding Essex's appeal is well reasoned. This court's ruling in that appeal was not in error. This issue fails. The trial court sentenced Cleave to life in prison for his felony-murder conviction. The trial court also sentenced Cleave to 13 months in prison for his conviction of criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied dwelling, with the sentence to run consecutive to his life sentence. Finally, the trial court sentenced Cleave to 47 months in prison for each of the aggravated battery convictions, with these two sentences to run concurrent with each other but consecutive to the sentences for the other counts. The trial court imposed a total controlling sentence of life in prison plus a consecutive 60 months. On appeal, Cleave claims that his consecutive sentences for criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied dwelling and his sentence for felony murder violate his constitutional protections against double jeopardy. Essex was also sentenced to consecutive sentences for these crimes, and he raised this same issue in his appeal to this court. Essex's appeal was unsuccessful. In so holding, this court stated:
Cleave acknowledges that Essex previously raised this issue on appeal to this court without success. However, Cleave claims that he is asserting this issue again on appeal, because he believes that this court's ruling in Essex's appeal was in error. Cleave asks this court to reconsider its ruling in Essex's appeal and grant him relief under this issue. We decline to do so. Just as in Essex's case, this double jeopardy issue was not raised to the trial court and is not properly before this court on appeal. See Sims, 262 Kan. at 173 (citing State v. Steadman, 253 Kan. 297, 306, 855 P.2d 919 [1993]). As such, this issue fails. Affirmed. END |
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