People v. Acklin , 2020 IL App (4th) 180588 ( 2020 )


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    2020 IL App (4th) 180588
                           FILED
    October 27, 2020
    NO. 4-18-0588                            Carla Bender
    4th District Appellate
    IN THE APPELLATE COURT                              Court, IL
    OF ILLINOIS
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                       )       Appeal from the
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                              )       Circuit Court of
    v.                                               )       Livingston County
    MARC ACKLIN,                                               )       No. 16CF241
    Defendant-Appellant.                             )
    )       Honorable
    )       Jennifer H. Bauknecht,
    )       Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE DeARMOND delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Harris and Holder White concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1             Following a bench trial in March 2018, the trial court found defendant, Marc
    Acklin, guilty of residential burglary (720 ILCS 5/19-3(a) (West 2016)), a Class 1 felony, and
    theft (720 ILCS 5/16-1(a)(1) (West 2016)), a Class A misdemeanor. In June 2018, pursuant to an
    agreement between the parties, the court sentenced defendant to five years in the Illinois
    Department of Corrections (DOC) followed by two years of mandatory supervised release.
    Defendant filed two posttrial motions—a motion to reconsider the sentence and a motion for a
    new trial—which the court denied following a hearing in August 2018.
    ¶2             On appeal, defendant argues the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt of residential burglary because it did not show he entered the house with intent
    to commit a theft or felony. We agree.
    ¶3                                       I. BACKGROUND
    ¶4             In July 2016, the State charged defendant with two counts: residential burglary
    (720 ILCS 5/19-3(a) (West 2016)), a Class 1 felony, and theft (720 ILCS 5/16-1(a)(1) (West
    2016)), a Class A misdemeanor. After defendant waived his jury trial right, the matter proceeded
    to a bench trial in March 2018.
    ¶5             The State called three witnesses: the two victims, Giovanny Suarez and Vincent
    Elias, along with Lieutenant Michael Smudzinski of the La Salle Police Department. Suarez
    testified he went to a party with defendant and B.B. at approximately 10 p.m. on July 23, 2016.
    Suarez explained he met defendant that day and was not “super familiar” with him. Nevertheless,
    after returning from the party at “around four or five in the morning” on July 24, Suarez allowed
    defendant and B.B. to stay at his house because they were all drunk. Suarez testified he permitted
    defendant and B.B. to sleep in his bedroom while he slept on the couch. Suarez awoke at 8 a.m.,
    feeling confused about what happened the prior evening. B.B. and defendant awoke shortly
    afterward, and Suarez asked them if they had a ride home because his boss was on the way to
    pick him up for work at 9 a.m. They said they had a ride coming for them. Suarez testified the
    three sat in the living room as they waited for their rides.
    ¶6             Suarez testified his boss arrived ahead of defendant’s ride. Before leaving, Suarez
    locked his and his roommate’s bedroom doors and told B.B. and defendant they could wait in the
    living room for their ride. Suarez testified he returned home at 11 p.m. and found his bedroom
    door open, and he noticed some of his property was gone, including a watch, a speaker, video
    games, a cell phone, and other electronics. Suarez denied giving defendant or B.B. permission to
    enter his room or take his property after he left for work.
    ¶7             Elias testified he lived at 913 E. 12th Street in Streator, Illinois, with Suarez, on
    the date in question, July 24, 2016. He explained he woke up early that morning because he had
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    to leave for work at 6:30 a.m. He said he did not go to the party the night before. Elias testified
    he woke up and saw people sleeping in Suarez’s room and another person sleeping on the couch,
    which did not shock him. He testified he closed his bedroom door before he left for work. When
    Elias returned home from work at approximately 4:30 p.m., he found the front door open, which
    he described as unusual. Elias testified he entered the home cautiously and saw “both [his] room
    and [Suarez’s] room doors were open and broke into.” When Elias noticed some of his
    belongings were missing, he called the police. He reported his phone, electric guitar, backpacks,
    and television had been taken. He testified those items were in his room when he left that
    morning for work. Elias testified he did not know defendant and never met him. He
    acknowledged he neither invited defendant into the home nor asked him to leave the house.
    Likewise, he did not give defendant permission to take his property. Elias testified he did not
    know who removed his belongings from his room that day.
    ¶8             Lieutenant Smudzinski, a City of La Salle police officer, testified he assisted in
    investigating this Livingston County case. He interviewed defendant about multiple burglaries in
    La Salle and Livingston Counties. Defendant gave the following written statement to Lieutenant
    Smudzinski regarding this burglary:
    “I was driven to a party with Ben and Bobby. The party was described as a
    ‘Project X’ party. There were tons of people, everyone was drunk. Ben had told
    me that the people who were hosting the party had done him wrong in the past.
    We woke up and he asked me to help him carry things out of the house. We took
    items that did not belong to us and left the house. We brought it back to the
    [apartment]. My brother Larry was outside when we brought it. It was 2 T.V.’s a
    guitar, speakers, amplifier, and bags. I told my friend Kevin I got it from Chicago
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    from my mom. I had some of the items at the [apartment]. We also pushed the
    door in to get the other items.”
    ¶9             Defendant testified as the lone witness in his defense. He explained he stayed the
    night at Suarez and Elias’s home on the night of July 23 and 24 because his friend B.B. knew
    them. He said he did not know either Suarez or Elias—and he had never seen Elias before he
    testified in court that day. Defendant testified no one asked him to leave the house and he was
    still asleep when Elias and Suarez left the home. Defendant admitted helping B.B. remove
    property from the house, once the two woke up in the morning.
    ¶ 10           The State’s closing argument emphasized the limited authority doctrine outlined
    in People v. Wilson, 
    155 Ill. 2d 374
    , 
    614 N.E.2d 1227
    (1993), which provides that defendant had
    limited authority to be in Suarez’s home but taking property from the house negated that
    authority. By contrast, the defense’s closing argument relied upon People v. Bush, 
    157 Ill. 2d 248
    , 
    623 N.E.2d 1361
    (1993), which provides that a defendant who entered a dwelling with
    authority and without intent to commit a felony cannot be convicted of residential burglary. The
    trial court rendered its decision on the record, observing, “this [case] almost boils down more to
    a legal argument than a factual argument, although some facts are in dispute based upon the
    Defendant testifying.” The trial court found “Mr. Suarez was much more credible” than
    defendant because defendant “failed to explain why his testimony today is contrary to what he
    told the lieutenant at the time of his interview.” The trial court found defendant guilty on both
    counts, stating:
    “I do think the State’s argument is correct and the correct law is that there is this
    limited authority, particularly when you look at the actions that were taken by Mr.
    Suarez to assure that the property at least in the bedrooms was secure by locking
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    those doors. And the Defendant admits to taking that. So they had no permission
    to take that property at all; and that’s pretty clear by the testimony from both Mr.
    Suarez and Mr. Elias; and [defendant] admits taking it.”
    The trial court ordered a presentence investigation report and set the matter for sentencing.
    ¶ 11           At the sentencing hearing in June 2018, the parties informed the court they agreed
    on a sentence of 5 years in DOC, with defendant receiving credit for 259 days served. The court
    sentenced defendant according to the agreement and recommended defendant for placement in a
    substance abuse program. Defendant filed two posttrial motions seeking reconsideration of the
    sentence and a new trial, but the trial court denied them both following an August 2018 hearing.
    ¶ 12           This appeal followed.
    ¶ 13                                      II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 14           Defendant challenges his conviction for residential burglary alone, arguing the
    State failed to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. We agree and reverse that
    conviction. Since defendant does not challenge his misdemeanor theft conviction, we will not
    address it.
    ¶ 15           “The due process clause of the fourteenth amendment to the United States
    Constitution requires that a person may not be convicted in state court ‘except upon proof
    beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is
    charged.’ ” People v. Cunningham, 
    212 Ill. 2d 274
    , 278, 
    818 N.E.2d 304
    , 307 (2004) (quoting
    In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 364 (1970)). When a defendant appeals his convictions, contending
    the State failed to satisfy this burden of proof, a reviewing court will not retry the defendant but
    asks “ ‘whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any
    rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable
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    doubt.’ ” (Emphasis in original.) 
    Cunningham, 212 Ill. 2d at 278
    (quoting Jackson v. Virginia,
    
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979)). But in applying this standard, we will neither reweigh evidence nor
    judge witness credibility; rather, we defer to the fact finder’s credibility determinations. See
    People v. Smith, 
    185 Ill. 2d 532
    , 542, 
    708 N.E.2d 365
    , 369 (1999).
    ¶ 16           A person can commit residential burglary in one of two ways. The statute
    specifically provides:
    “A person commits residential burglary when he or she knowingly and without
    authority enters or knowingly and without authority remains within the dwelling
    place of another, or any part thereof, with the intent to commit therein a felony or
    theft.” 720 ILCS 5/19-3(a) (West 2016).
    Here, defendant was charged with the former: “knowingly and without authority entered into”
    the home “with the intent to commit therein a theft.”
    ¶ 17           Based on how the charging instrument described the count, in order to prove
    defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of residential burglary, the State had to establish two
    elements: (1) defendant knowingly and without authority entered the dwelling at 913 E. 12th
    Street in Streator, Illinois, and (2) defendant did so with intent to commit a theft or felony
    therein. See 
    Wilson, 155 Ill. 2d at 380
    (“The crime of residential burglary requires a person to
    knowingly and without authority enter the dwelling of another with the intent to commit a felony
    or theft therein.” (citing Ill. Rev. Stat. 1989, ch. 38, ¶ 19-3)). Defendant admits the theft and that
    he formed the intent to commit the theft after he was given authority to enter and to remain,
    essentially conceding in his reply brief he could have been convicted of the second form of
    residential burglary—“remains within” the home, “or any part thereof, with the intent to commit
    therein a theft.” Defendant, nevertheless, challenges the sufficiency of the State’s evidence as to
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    both elements in the charging information, arguing he had authority to enter the dwelling and he
    did not intend to commit a felony when he entered. We take each element in turn.
    ¶ 18                       A. Without Authority to Enter the Dwelling
    ¶ 19           The parties agree Suarez gave defendant permission to enter the dwelling. Indeed,
    Suarez, whom the trial court found credible, testified he allowed defendant and B.B. to sleep in
    his bedroom when they returned to the house from the party and he allowed them to remain in
    the living room to wait for their rides the next morning. But by invoking the limited authority
    doctrine, the State argued defendant’s act of taking the property from the house obviated
    Suarez’s authorization for defendant to be in the dwelling—thereby rendering defendant’s entry
    into the home without authority. In Bush, our supreme court described the limited authority
    doctrine as, “when a defendant comes to a private residence and is invited in by the occupant, the
    authorization to enter is limited and *** criminal actions exceed this limited authority.” 
    Bush, 157 Ill. 2d at 253
    ; see also People v. Priest, 
    297 Ill. App. 3d 797
    , 805, 
    698 N.E.2d 223
    , 229
    (1998) (“The limited authority doctrine provides that when a defendant is invited into a private
    residence by an occupant, the authorization to enter is limited.”). In other words, the “ ‘consent
    given for a defendant’s entry is vitiated by criminal actions engaged in by the defendant after
    entering, thus making his entry unauthorized.’ ” People v. Peeples, 
    155 Ill. 2d 422
    , 487-88, 
    616 N.E.2d 294
    , 325 (1993) (quoting People v. Sanders, 
    212 Ill. App. 3d 773
    , 778, 
    571 N.E.2d 836
    ,
    839 (1991)). There is no dispute Suarez invited defendant into the dwelling to sleep off a night’s
    partying and allowed defendant to remain there when he left for work in the morning.
    Furthermore, there is no dispute (he admitted it) defendant unlawfully removed Elias’s and
    Suarez’s property from the dwelling after they left for work. Defendant’s criminal act, therefore,
    negated the authorization Suarez gave him to enter the home, meaning he entered without
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    authority. But authority is only one part of residential burglary and the limited authority
    doctrine—there must still be criminal intent. To be sure, the two elements go hand-in-hand
    because the limited authority doctrine cannot fully apply to make an authorized entry
    unauthorized if the defendant did not possess the requisite intent at entry. See 
    Bush, 157 Ill. 2d at 254
    (explaining “the [ultimate] determination of whether an entry is unauthorized depends upon
    whether the defendant possessed the intent to perform a criminal act therein at the time entry was
    granted”). Consequently, we turn now to defendant’s intent when he entered the dwelling.
    ¶ 20                  B. Intent to Commit a Theft or Felony in the Dwelling
    ¶ 21           The State may prove a defendant’s intent through circumstantial evidence and the
    reasonable inferences arising from such evidence. People v. Snow, 
    124 Ill. App. 3d 955
    , 961, 
    464 N.E.2d 1262
    , 1266 (1984) (“As evidence of intent is usually not direct, it may be proved
    circumstantially by inferences reasonably drawn from the circumstances of defendant’s
    conduct.”); see also People v. Hopkins, 
    229 Ill. App. 3d 665
    , 672, 
    593 N.E.2d 1028
    , 1032 (1992)
    (“The State can prove a defendant’s intent by inferences drawn from his conduct and from
    surrounding circumstances.”). When considering a defendant’s intent, “relevant circumstances
    *** include the time, place, and manner of entry into the premises, the defendant’s activity
    within the premises, and any alternative explanations which may explain his presence.” 
    Hopkins, 229 Ill. App. 3d at 672
    .
    ¶ 22           None of the trial testimony provided direct or circumstantial evidence of
    defendant’s intent when he entered the dwelling. Suarez’s testimony, which the trial court
    credited, did not touch on defendant’s intent when entering the home. He testified he allowed
    him to sleep there when they were all drunk after a night of partying. He then testified he
    allowed him to stay in the home to wait for his ride the next morning. Suarez’s explanations for
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    why defendant was in his home do not induce a reasonable inference defendant entered the
    dwelling with intent to commit a theft or felony therein. Likewise, Elias’s testimony did not raise
    any reasonable inferences that defendant intended to commit theft or a felony when he entered
    the home. Elias woke up with defendant already in the home—he did not know defendant and
    never talked to him. Lieutenant Smudzinski’s testimony, however, did touch upon defendant’s
    intent, if even obliquely. Lieutenant Smudzinski recounted defendant’s interview where he
    admitted,
    “during or after the party [B.B.] had advised him that the dudes having the party
    did him wrong; and they decided to remove items from the house And at one
    point when nobody, when the—they stayed there overnight; and at one point
    when everybody was gone *** they removed some items from this house, also
    removing items from two locked bedrooms in the house.”
    Lieutenant Smudzinski’s testimony reflected defendant’s written statement, where he wrote:
    “I was driven to a party with Ben and Bobby. The party was described as a
    ‘Project X’ party. There were tons of people, everyone was drunk. Ben had told
    me that the people who were hosting the party had done him wrong in the past.
    We woke up and he asked me to help him carry things out of the house.”
    While these statements may raise reasonable inferences as to defendant’s intent to commit theft
    at the party and the next morning when he woke up at Suarez’s and Elias’s home, they provide
    nothing as to his intent when he entered Suarez’s and Elias’s home. We could infer from these
    statements that defendant and B.B. intended to steal from the hosts of the party because they did
    B.B. wrong in the past. But Suarez and Elias did not host the party. Suarez testified the group
    (him, defendant, and B.B.) left his home to go to the party and returned to his home afterwards,
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    meaning the party was not at Suarez’s house. We can also infer from defendant’s statements that
    he developed intent to steal when he woke-up—after he entered the dwelling and while he
    remained therein. Taken together, none of the testimony raised the reasonable inference
    defendant intended to commit a theft or felony when he entered Suarez’s and Elias’s home at 4
    a.m. on July 24, 2016.
    ¶ 23           Nor do the circumstances surrounding his entry into the dwelling raise a
    reasonable inference he entered with intent to commit a theft or felony. Although defendant
    entered the home in the early morning hours when it was presumably still dark, he did so at
    Suarez’s invitation. He was drunk and went to bed. He did not wait until his host passed out on
    the couch to get up and remove property from the home. Instead, he slept several hours, woke
    up, and removed the property in daylight. These circumstances (the time, place, manner of entry,
    and defendant’s activity in the home) suggest defendant entered the dwelling with the intent to
    sleep off a night’s partying, but he and B.B. decided to commit theft when they found themselves
    alone in the home after Suarez and Elias left for work. Even “when viewing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the prosecution” and deferring to the trial court’s determination that
    Suarez and not defendant provided credible testimony, we cannot conclude a rational fact finder
    could find the State proved the second essential element of residential burglary beyond a
    reasonable doubt—i.e., defendant entered the dwelling with intent to commit a theft or felony
    therein. See 
    Hopkins, 229 Ill. App. 3d at 672
    . Had the State charged defendant with remaining
    burglary (he knowingly and without authority remained in the dwelling with intent to commit a
    theft or felony therein), it would have proved criminal intent beyond a reasonable doubt based on
    these facts; defendant as much as says so in his reply brief. See People v. Boose, 
    139 Ill. App. 3d 471
    , 474, 
    487 N.E.2d 1088
    , 1091 (1985) (“A criminal intent formulated after a lawful entry will
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    satisfy the offense[ ] of *** burglary by illegally remaining,” but “[i]t will not *** satisfy the
    offense of burglary by illegal entry.”). But the State did not charge “remaining” burglary. The
    State instead charged defendant with burglary by unauthorized entry, which it did not prove
    beyond a reasonable doubt.
    ¶ 24           Though defendant’s act of removing Suarez’s and Elias’s property from their
    dwelling rendered his entry into the dwelling without authority, i.e., defendant’s criminal actions
    negated Suarez’s consent to enter the dwelling, the limited authority doctrine (and residential
    burglary’s elements) still required the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt defendant’s
    intent to commit a theft or felony at the time of entry. Neither direct nor circumstantial evidence
    allowed a rational fact finder to reasonably infer defendant possessed the requisite criminal intent
    at the time he entered Suarez’s and Elias’s home. The limited authority doctrine, therefore,
    cannot apply here. Since no evidence established defendant’s intent beyond a reasonable doubt,
    the State failed to meet its burden on the residential burglary count.
    ¶ 25                                    III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 26           For the reasons stated, we reverse the trial court’s judgment on the residential
    burglary count. Since defendant did not challenge the misdemeanor theft conviction, it remains.
    ¶ 27           Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
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    No. 4-18-0588
    Cite as:                 People v. Acklin, 
    2020 IL App (4th) 180588
    Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Livingston County, No. 16-CF-
    241; the Hon. Jennifer H. Bauknecht, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                James E. Chadd, Catherine K. Hart, and Sarah Inskeep, of State
    for                      Appellate Defender’s Office, of Springfield, for appellant.
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                Randy Yedinak,      State’s    Attorney,      of Pontiac (Patrick
    for                      Delfino, David J. Robinson, and Rosario David Escalera Jr., of
    Appellee:                State’s Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for
    the People.
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