Ronk v. State ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •                                 Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION III
    No. CR-15-670
    CHARLES RONK                                   Opinion Delivered:   February 24, 2016
    APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM THE COLUMBIA
    V.                                             COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    [NO.CR-2014-56-5]
    STATE OF ARKANSAS
    APPELLEE HONORABLE DAVID W. TALLEY,
    JR., JUDGE
    AFFIRMED
    WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge
    Appellant appeals from his conviction in circuit court of kidnapping. 1 On appeal,
    appellant’s sole argument is that the circuit court erred in denying his motion for directed
    verdict on his kidnapping charge. We affirm.
    Appellant was arrested on February 28, 2014, and charged by information with
    kidnapping on March 12, 2014. 2 A trial on the matter was held on April 10, 2015. The
    testimony was as follows.
    1
    Appellant was also convicted of false imprisonment in the first degree, domestic
    battery in the second degree, two counts of aggravated assault on a family member, two
    counts of terroristic threatening in the first degree, a terroristic act, and two counts of
    endangering the welfare of a minor in the first degree. He does not appeal these convictions.
    2
    An amended information was later filed reducing the number of kidnapping counts
    from 547 to 1. Other changes are irrelevant to this appeal.
    Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    Brittney Morgan, a convenience store employee, testified to seeing a “small elderly
    lady” come in the store who had been crying, was “shy and nervous,” and “seemed terrified
    and as if she wanted to tell [Morgan] something.” The lady told her she had just “escaped”
    from her son’s house; that she was “scared” of him; that she was “trying to get away”; and
    that her son “abused her, choked her and locked her in a room” that she had been in for
    “awhile.” The more the lady talked, the farther she backed away from the store’s door. The
    lady stated that she wanted Morgan to call the police when asked. She told Morgan that she
    “didn’t want to go back to her son’s home” and said she was “terrified” of him. The woman
    was later identified as appellant’s mother, Kazuko Ronk (“Ms. Kay”). 3
    Lieutenant Corey Sanders, of the Magnolia Police Department at the time, testified
    that he responded to Morgan’s call to police. He found Ms. Kay in the store appearing as if
    she were trying to hide. He described her as having a “shaky” voice, “messy” hair, and dirty
    clothing with a “really strong odor about her body.” Ms. Kay told him that she was afraid
    of her son; “did not want her son to find her”; and wanted to get out of her son’s home
    because he “hits her, had been kicking her and he locked the doors so she could not go
    outside.” When asked if she locked herself in her room or if appellant locked her in her
    room, she stated that “[appellant] locked [her] in.” She told him that her son had choked
    her on four or five occasions, had “struck her across the top of her back and shoulders with
    a metal pipe or metal rod,” and had threatened her with a gun “many times.” She said he
    used a black gun with a red light that he would shine in her eyes while telling her that he
    would kill her the “next time.” She stated that she believed he was going to kill her. She
    3
    In all testimony below, Kazuko Ronk is referred to as “Ms. Kay.”
    2
    Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    identified appellant as her son. Lieutenant Sanders admitted that he knew of no reports of
    abuse or domestic violence by Ms. Kay to police.
    Lieutenant Sanders helped execute a search warrant on appellant’s house, at which
    time appellant was arrested without issue. Lieutenant Sanders described the home as
    “completely trashed” with “anything you can imagine piled a couple feet high all through
    the house.” He testified that while one can lock most bedroom doors from the inside, the
    door knob to Ms. Kay’s room “had been reversed where you could lock it from the
    outside.” There was evidence that “extra measures had been taken to secure the doors where
    [Ms. Kay] couldn’t open them from the inside, with nail and wood screws.” He noted
    seeing a throw latch on the rear door that appeared to have once been screwed down, but
    the screws were missing. Ms. Kay told him that she had removed the screws.
    Ms. Kay testified that before the last year and a half—“it started getting bad about a
    year and half” ago—she could move around the house, smoke on the porch and go for
    walks. She testified that she eventually could not walk anywhere because of the “lock on
    the door; [appellant] lock [sic] the door every time” and there was “no exit.” She did not
    state exactly when these limitations were imposed. She also testified that “there came a time
    when [she] couldn’t get out of [her] room” for what she believed was two weeks’ time
    though she was “not exactly sure.”
    She testified that appellant put a pillow over her face once so that she could not
    breathe. She stated that appellant had kicked her; choked her; threatened her with a gun,
    fired shots in her room four times; and hit her with a pipe. She stated that she was “always
    scared of [appellant],” but she never left because she “never [thought she] could get out.”
    3
    Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    Regarding the day she ran away, she said she turned up the sound on the television
    to make appellant believe she was watching it while she ran away. She said she was hiding
    behind a counter in the store because she was “so scared he [sic] come in, follow [her].”
    Jessica Ronk, appellant’s wife, testified that the lock on the door on Ms. Kay’s room
    was “on backwards to where the lock was on the living room side of the door” and that the
    door was “always” locked. She denied believing Ms. Kay was in danger. She agreed that
    Ms. Kay “liked to walk,” was “pretty free to do what she wanted to do” and “always came
    back” at an earlier time, but stated that Ms. Kay’s going out of her room “became less and
    less” with her not being allowed to go anywhere and her walks stopping “within a year” of
    their arrest. 4
    Jessica denied seeing appellant physically abuse Ms. Kay, asserting that she was not
    allowed in the room during their arguments, but she testified to hearing Ms. Kay “calling,
    falling, crying” and hearing things “being knocked off.” She heard appellant tell Ms. Kay
    that he would kill her “many times” and that he “wished [Ms. Kay] were dead.” She stated
    that appellant “always had a weapon on him,” had fired shots from his gun in the home,
    and that her stepdaughters were present when he did so. She testified that she had previously
    withheld information because she was “afraid to tell the truth” and “afraid” of appellant.
    She stated that the last three years had “a lot of drug use”; “a lot of guns”; and “a lot of
    violence, both physical, verbal, emotional, for all members of the house.” She said she was
    4
    Jessica was also arrested and charged in connection with Ms. Kay’s treatment.
    4
    Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    fearful of her husband, noting that he had shot a gun at her. However, she denied that
    appellant ever hit her, admitting that she hit him.
    R.R., appellant’s 13-year-old daughter, testified that she saw appellant choke Ms.
    Kay once, saw him pull a gun on Ms. Kay, and had heard him threaten to kill Ms. Kay. She
    had seen appellant point “more than one gun at people,” including Ms. Kay and Jessica. 5
    She testified that Ms. Kay seemed scared. She helped her dad put the screws in the door to
    prevent Ms. Kay’s exit. She stated that Ms. Kay was stuck in her room “two or three months
    before the arrest” and she “never seen [sic] [her] grandmother go outside the door.” She
    did not know why she “couldn’t let her out.” She testified that she left a screwdriver in Ms.
    Kay’s room.
    Detective Colton Burks, then of the Magnolia Police Department, testified he helped
    execute the search warrant. He recounted what Ms. Kay told him, which corroborated prior
    testimony. He noted that one door was barricaded. He observed another door with a “hotel
    lock” that could freely open while in Ms. Kay’s room, but he noticed two screw holes
    where screws had been. Ms. Kay said she used a screwdriver to remove the two screws from
    the “hotel lock[,]” and he found the screws wrapped in a paper towel on a corner table as
    Ms. Kay said he would. He verified that the screws found on the table fit the holes. He
    found what he believed were bullet holes in Ms. Kay’s room and in the porch connected
    to her room.
    5
    It appears that R.R. refers to Jessica as her “mom.”
    5
    Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    After Detective Burks’s testimony, appellee rested and moved for a directed verdict
    on the kidnapping charge. The motion was denied.
    Following the denial of his motion for directed verdict, appellant testified. He denied
    that he kidnapped Ms. Kay, falsely imprisoned her, terrorized her, exposed her to serious
    physical injury, pointed a gun at her, or threatened her. Things that he did not flatly deny,
    he gave an excuse for. He admitted putting locks on her doors, but stated that he did so
    because “[Ms. Kay] couldn’t be trusted to walk outside and be by herself for more than an
    hour,” having to be looked for on two occasions, and because the family was being harassed.
    He asserted that the locks were for her “own good.” He also testified that the reversed
    doorknobs were that way when he moved in, and he just never switched them around.
    He admitted shooting a hole in the bathroom floor, but asserted that it was an
    accident as he was not intentionally trying to shoot Jessica and that the children were outside
    playing when it happened. He also admitted shooting a hole in Ms. Kay’s room and in the
    porch just outside her room, but asserted that on the two separate occasions, he was trying
    to shoot an alligator and a raccoon outside the house. He admitted being “verbally and
    emotionally abusive at times,” but denied being physically abusive, though he admitted
    shoving Ms. Kay “several times throughout the years.” He said he did not cover Ms. Kay’s
    face with a pillow, but threw it at her. Furthermore, he stated that he did not hit Ms. Kay
    with a pipe; he threw a pipe that “deflected off [a cabinet] and bounced onto her.” Despite
    the locked doors, he asserted that Ms. Kay had access to the basement which had an exit
    from the house.
    6
    Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    Dr. Julia Wood, a forensic psychologist, testified to what appellant told her during
    an August 5, 2014 evaluation, but she did not give any opinion about his mental capacities.
    Appellant renewed his motion for directed verdict after Dr. Wood’s testimony and it was
    denied. The jury subsequently found appellant guilty of kidnapping, and the circuit court
    sentenced him, according to the jury’s recommendation, to twenty-five years’ imprisonment
    in the Arkansas Department of Correction. This timely appeal followed
    On appeal, appellant argues that the circuit court erred in denying his motion for
    directed verdict on the kidnapping charge. Appellant’s sufficiency argument regarding the
    kidnapping charge is preserved; however, appellant has changed the scope of his argument
    on appeal. To the extent that he argues that his mother “willingly lived” with him—that
    she consented to live with him and therefore could not be kidnapped—we agree with
    appellee that appellant did not make this argument below. We also agree with appellee that
    appellant did not make the argument below that the circuit court did not find the three
    factors necessary to permit kidnapping as a separate offense from an underlying offense. 6 It
    6
    Appellant concedes in his brief that sufficient evidence existed to convict him of
    false imprisonment, but cites Hickey v. State, 
    2010 Ark. 109
    , in support of his argument that
    sufficient evidence did not exist to support a conviction for a separate offense of kidnapping.
    He quotes Hickey for the statement that “[a]mong the factors that have been considered by
    courts in determining whether a separate kidnapping conviction is supportable include
    whether the movement or confinement (1) prevented the victim from summoning
    assistance; (2) lessened the defendant’s risk of detection; or (3) created a significant danger
    or increased the victim’s risk of harm.” The case Hickey cites, Lee v. State, 
    326 Ark. 529
    ,
    
    932 S.W.2d 756
    (1996), makes it clear that these factors are to be considered in determining
    the sufficient amount of restraint needed incidental to rape to permit an additional charge
    of kidnapping. See Mayes v. State, 
    351 Ark. 26
    , 28, 
    89 S.W.3d 926
    , 927 (2002). Appellant
    concedes that he restrained Ms. Kay, so even if this point were preserved, this case would
    be irrelevant.
    7
    Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    is well settled that a party is bound by the nature and scope of the objections and arguments
    made at trial and may not enlarge or change those grounds on appeal. 7 Otherwise, we
    address the sufficiency of the evidence pursuant to appellant’s directed verdict motion and
    affirm.
    We treat a motion for directed verdict as a challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence. 8 In reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support a criminal
    conviction, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, considering only
    the evidence that tends to support the verdict. 9 We will affirm if the finding of guilt is
    supported by substantial evidence, direct or circumstantial. 10 Substantial evidence is that
    which is of sufficient force to compel a conclusion one way or the other beyond suspicion
    or conjecture. 11 The weight of the evidence and credibility of the witnesses are matters for
    the fact-finder, not for the trial court on a directed-verdict motion or this court on appeal. 12
    
    7 Stew. v
    . State, 
    2012 Ark. 349
    , at 8, 
    423 S.W.3d 69
    , 74 (citing Frye v. State, 
    2009 Ark. 110
    , 
    313 S.W.3d 10
    ).
    
    8 Will. v
    . State, 
    2011 Ark. App. 675
    , at 5–6, 
    386 S.W.3d 609
    , 61 (citing Sparacio
    v. State, 
    2009 Ark. App. 350
    ).
    9
    Ingram v. State, 
    2014 Ark. App. 707
    , at 7, 
    452 S.W.3d 595
    , 599 (citing Satterfield v.
    State, 
    2014 Ark. App. 633
    , 
    448 S.W.3d 211
    ).
    10
    
    Id. 11 Id.
              12
    
    Id. 8 Cite
    as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    The fact-finder is free to believe all or part of a witness’s testimony and may resolve all
    questions of conflicting testimony and inconsistent evidence. 13
    A person commits the offense of kidnapping if, without consent, the person restrains
    another person so as to interfere substantially with the other person’s liberty with the purpose
    of facilitating the commission of any felony or flight after the felony, inflicting physical
    injury upon the other person, or terrorizing the other person or another person. 14 Appellant
    argues that while there was evidence that he restrained Ms. Kay, as evidenced by his
    concession that the charge of false imprisonment was proved, 15 appellee failed to prove that
    he did so with the purpose of facilitating the commission of any felony or flight after the
    felony, inflicting physical injury upon the other person, or terrorizing the other person or
    another person. We disagree.
    There was substantial testimony from Ms. Kay regarding appellant’s threats to kill her
    and his physical harm to her. Her testimony was virtually identical to what she told
    Lieutenant Sanders and Detective Burks. Appellant’s wife testified that he was verbally and
    emotionally abusive; he admitted this. Though he denied any physical abuse, R.R. testified
    to seeing him physically abuse Ms. Kay. Despite his assertion that he only stated that he
    13
    
    Id. 14 Ark.
    Code Ann. § 5-11-102(a)(3)(4)&(6) (Repl. 2013).
    15
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-11-103(a) (Repl. 2013) states that a person commits the
    offense of false imprisonment in the first degree if, without consent and without lawful
    authority, the person knowingly restrains another person so as to interfere substantially with
    the other person’s liberty in a manner that exposes the other person to a substantial risk of
    serious physical injury.
    9
    Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 126
    wished Ms. Kay were dead and did not threaten to kill her, both Jessica and R.R. testified
    that they heard him threaten Ms. Kay’s life. Though appellant denied or explained these
    witnesses’ testimony in all material aspects, the jury is free to disbelieve the appellant’s self-
    serving testimony. 16 The credibility of witnesses is an issue for the jury and not the court. 17
    The trier-of-fact is free to believe all or part of any witness’s testimony and may resolve
    questions of conflicting testimony and inconsistent evidence. 18 The evidence, when viewed
    in the light most favorable to appellee, was sufficient to support appellant’s kidnapping
    conviction. We affirm.
    Affirmed.
    VAUGHT and HOOFMAN, JJ., agree.
    Louis L. Loyd, for appellant.
    Leslie Rutledge, Att’y Gen., by: Adam Jackson, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
    16
    See Halliday v. State, 
    2011 Ark. App. 544
    , at 5, 
    386 S.W.3d 51
    , 55; Goodman v.
    State, 
    2009 Ark. App. 262
    , 6, 
    306 S.W.3d 443
    , 446.
    
    17 Will. v
    . State, 
    2011 Ark. App. 675
    , at 6, 
    386 S.W.3d 609
    , 613 (citing Morgan
    v. State, 
    2009 Ark. 257
    , 
    308 S.W.3d 147
    ).
    18
    
    Id. 10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CR-15-670

Judges: Waymond M. Brown

Filed Date: 2/24/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/17/2016