Joel David Searcy v. Commonwealth of Kentucky ( 2016 )


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  •          IMPORTANT NOTICE
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED OPINION
    THIS OPINION IS DESIGNATED "NOT TO BE PUBLISHED."
    PURSUANT TO THE RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE
    PROMULGATED BY THE SUPREME COURT, CR 76.28(4)(C),
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    RENDERED AFTER JANUARY 1, 2003, MAY BE CITED FOR
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    RENDERED: AUGUST 25, 2016
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    oi5ujarttut Court of TcAtufutitv
    2015-SC-000357-MR
    JOEL DAVID SEARCY                                                       APPELLANT
    ON APPEAL FROM FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT
    V.                  HONORABLE THOMAS L CLARK, JUDGE
    NO. 13-CR-1096
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                                  APPELLEE
    MEMORANDUM OPINION OF THE COURT
    AFFIRMING
    A circuit court jury convicted Joel David Searcy of second-degree
    manslaughter, first-degree robbery, and multiple counts of unlawful
    imprisonment, for all of which he was sentenced to twenty-five years'
    imprisonment.
    In this matter-of-right appeal from the resulting judgment', Searcy does
    not challenge the validity of the manslaughter and unlawful imprisonment
    convictions. He challenges only his first-degree robbery conviction. He argues
    that the trial court erred by failing to direct a verdict on the robbery charge or,
    alternatively, that the trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury on criminal
    attempt to commit robbery as a lesser-included offense.
    I Ky. Const. § 110(2)(b).
    We hold that the trial court did not err in declining to grant a directed
    verdict on the robbery charge or in failing to instruct the jury on attempted
    robbery. So we affirm the judgment below.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND.
    Searcy contends that a paranoid-delusional episode brought on by his
    active methamphetamine addiction explains his conduct on the day in
    question. On that day, Searcy drove his childhood friend, Mahailey Harrod, and
    her children to a doctor's appointment. On the way back home, they drove past
    the mobile-home park where Searcy worked, and he became paranoid after
    seeing people there. He believed people were out to get him, and his goal then
    became to not stop the car. When forced to stop at an intersection, Searcy
    snapped. He believed a man on a moped behind him reached for a gun to shoot
    him. He accelerated and rammed a truck in front of him. The terrified Harrod
    demanded that he stop the car so that she and her children could exit. When
    he stopped, he took off running into the road, waving his arms and calling for
    help. An elderly man, later identified as Donald Cooke, stopped his car and
    Searcy got in.
    The two took off down the road, with Cooke driving and Searcy crouching
    in the passenger seat to avoid detection. After Cooke turned onto the same
    street where Searcy's former heroin dealer lived, Searcy became increasingly
    paranoid. He grabbed the steering wheel, and a struggle ensued. Cooke's car
    ended up in a nearby parking lot, with Searcy and Cooke fighting for control of
    the car. Searcy threw Cooke from the driver's side door, tossed Cooke's oxygen
    2
    tank tossed on top of him, and launched his small dog through the car window.
    Some eyewitnesses approached the scene, and Searcy jumped out of the car
    and ran down the street. He was apprehended moments later.
    Cooke was 82 years old at the time of the scuffle. On arrival at the
    hospital, his admitting physician found Cooke had a punctured lung,
    numerous bruises, and was in respiratory failure. He was sedated and placed
    on a ventilator, but he never regained consciousness. Cooke died a little over a
    week after he was admitted to the hospital. An autopsy revealed that the cause
    of death was subdural hematoma and multisystem organ failure as a result of
    blunt impacts to the trunk and extremities, rib fractures, and pneumothorax.
    Searcy was indicted on one count of capital murder, one count of robbery
    and four counts of first-degree unlawful imprisonment. He was later convicted
    on one count of second-degree manslaughter, one count of first-degree robbery,
    and five counts of second-degree unlawful imprisonment. He was sentenced to
    a total term of twenty-five years' imprisonment.
    II. ANALYSIS.
    A. Searcy was not Entitled to a Directed Verdict.
    Searcy contends that the trial court should have granted a directed
    verdict in his favor for the first-degree robbery charge. He claims that his
    actions were out of a legitimate fear for his life—no matter the fact that they
    were simply methamphetamine-induced paranoia—and that he did not wield
    the criminal intent permanently to deprive Cooke of his automobile. Searcy
    3
    points to his escape on foot shortly after Cooke was ejected from the vehicle as
    proof that he did not intend to commit a theft at all.
    The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment "protects the
    accused against conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of
    every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged." 2 On
    denial of a directed verdict, our analysis is whether, under the evidence as a
    whole, it would be clearly unreasonable for the jury to find Searcy guilty. 3 We
    construe all evidence below in a light most favorable to the Commonwealth. 4
    Underthisaofvw,erctainSywsoeldta
    directed verdict.
    The Kentucky Penal Code contemplates a variety of forms of criminal
    activity that may qualify as first-degree robbery. The statute defines that
    crimes as follows:
    (1) A person is guilty of robbery in the first degree when, in the
    course of committing theft, he uses or threatens the immediate
    use of physical force upon another person with intent to
    accomplish the theft and when he:
    a. Causes physical injury to any person who is not a
    participant in the crime;
    b. Is armed with a deadly weapon; or
    c. Uses or threatens the immediate use of a dangerous
    instrument upon any person who is not a participant of
    the crime. 5
    2    In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 364 (1970).
    3 See Commonwealth v. Fletcher, 
    59 S.W.3d 920
    , 921 (Ky. 2001). See also
    Commonwealth v. Benham, 
    816 S.W.2d 186
    , 187 (Ky. 1991).
    4    See Commonwealth v. Jones, 
    283 S.W.3d 665
    , 668 (Ky. 2009).
    5   KRS 515.020.
    4
    The first-degree robbery statute thus contains several elements, each of
    which must be met before a defendant may be convicted of the crime. But of
    those elements, Searcy only questions his subjective intent to commit a theft of
    Cooke's property. He alleges that he did not intend necessarily to steal the
    vehicle, evidenced by his decision to flee the scene on foot shortly after Cooke
    was ejected from the car. He additionally hypothesizes that he could not have
    the requisite intent to steal based on his drug-induced paranoia and the
    resulting fear he had for his own life at the time of the incident.
    Searcy offers no evidence in support of his claim that he did not intend to
    take Cooke's vehicle. Quite the opposite, there is ample evidence in the record
    to support the inference that he in fact did intend to commit a theft. The
    Commonwealth appropriately points to Searcy's statements to a law-
    enforcement officer that he was going to get in the driver's seat and drive
    Cooke's vehicle after he was pushed out of the car. A witness testified that
    Cooke said Searcy was trying to take his car. Searcy had Cooke's keys in his
    possession when he was apprehended. We think there is ample evidence for a
    reasonable jury to conclude Searcy was guilty of first-degree robbery.
    We are unprepared today to allow a defendant's drug-fueled paranoia to
    insulate him from the realities of his actions. It is beyond dispute Searcy and
    Cooke were engaged in a struggle for control of Cooke's vehicle. Searcy used
    physical force to gain control of the car. It matters not why he felt he needed to
    control the car—whether he delusionally feared for his life or if he simply
    wished to have Cooke's car for his own. What does matter is that he
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    intentionally engaged in a course of physical actions that culminated in him
    forcefully expelling Cooke from the vehicle (and ultimately killing him), so
    Searcy could presumably take the car for his own use—whatever his subjective
    goals may have been. We have no trouble agreeing that any reasonable jury
    could convict Searcy under these circumstances. So we accordingly conclude
    that he was not entitled to a directed-verdict for this offense.
    B. Searcy Was Not Entitled to an Attempted Robbery Instruction.
    Searcy next argues that the trial court erroneously refused to instruct
    the jury on attempted robbery as a lesser-included offense of first-degree
    robbery. At trial, Searcy's counsel tendered an instruction for first-degree
    criminal attempt to commit a robbery. The trial court rejected this instruction
    and included criminal-attempt language in its instruction for first-degree
    robbery. Searcy contends there was ample evidence for a jury to find he was
    guilty only of attempting to steal Cooke's vehicle by concluding that he failed to
    actually steal the car. We disagree.
    Under Kentucky Rules of Criminal Procedure (RCr) 9.54, a trial court
    must instruct the jury on the whole law of the case. Likewise, in Manning v.
    Commonwealth, we held that the trial court must instruct on every theory of
    the case reasonably deducible from the evidence. 6 And most recently, we held
    that "Each party to an action is entitled to an instruction upon his theory of
    the case if there is evidence to sustain it." 7 On appellate review of a trial court's
    6   See 
    23 S.W.3d 610
    , 614 (Ky. 2000).
    7   Sargent v. Schaffer, 
    467 S.W.3d 198
    , 203 (Ky. 2015).
    6
    refusal to give an instruction we "must ask ourselves, construing the evidence
    favorably to the proponent of the instruction, whether the evidence would
    permit a reasonable juror to make the finding the instruction authorizes." 8 The
    trial court's decision is reviewed for an abuse of discretion, reversing only upon
    a finding that the court's ruling was "arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or
    unsupported by sound legal principles." 9
    The Kentucky Penal Code contemplates the possibility of criminal
    attempts to perform acts designated criminal within the code. In Kentucky, one
    is guilty of an attempted crime when, consistent with the kind of intent
    otherwise required for the commission of the crime, he "intentionally does or
    omits to do anything which, under the circumstances and he believes them to
    be, is a substantial step in the course of conduct planned to culminate in his
    commission of the crime." 19
    The Commonwealth's primary justification for the trial court's ruling on
    this issue is that it used a model instruction for first-degree robbery from
    Cooper's treatise on model juror instructions, and that model instruction
    includes criminal-attempt language to instruct on this crime itself. The
    instruction given to the jury in the instant case, is stated as follows:
    First-Degree Robbery
    8   Springfield v. Commonwealth, 
    410 S.W.3d 589
    , 594 (Ky. 2013).
    9   Commonwealth v. English, 
    993 S.W.2d 941
    , 945 (Ky. 1999).
    10   KRS 506.010(1)(b).
    7
    You will find the Defendant guilty of First-Degree Robbery
    under this instruction if, and only if, you believe from the evidence
    beyond a reasonable doubt all of the following:
    A. That in this county on or about August 1, 2013, and before the
    finding of the Indictment herein, he stole or attempted to steal
    a car from Donald Cooke; AND
    B. That in the course of doing so and with intent to accomplish the
    theft, he caused a physical injury to Donald Cooke by using
    physical force.
    It is therefore the Commonwealth's position that Searcy's theory of attempted
    robbery was incorporated in the larger first-degree robbery instruction and
    supported the possibility that the jury may conclude that he only attempted to
    steal Cooke's vehicle to support a conviction for first-degree robbery. And sure
    enough, under Kentucky law one may in fact be guilty of first-degree robbery
    without succeeding in forceful theft—the criminal intent to permanently
    deprive another of their property is sufficient. 11
    As we discussed above, we are comfortable with the notion that a
    reasonable jury could determine beyond a reasonable doubt that Searcy was
    guilty of first-degree robbery despite the fact that he did not physically drive
    away with Cooke's vehicle. Likewise, we are confident that the trial court did
    not abuse its discretion in refusing him an instruction for attempted robbery.
    Searcy used physical force against Cooke to seize control of the vehicle—he
    intended to deprive Cooke of the use of his automobile and in fact
    11 See Travis v. Commonwealth, 
    327 S.W.3d 456
    (Ky. 2010) ("A defendant who
    uses physical force with the requisite intent is guilty of robbery regardless of whether
    any of the property intended to be taken is in fact taken.") (referring to Kirkland v.
    Commonwealth, 
    53 S.W.3d 71
    , 76 (Ky. 2001)).
    8
    accomplished that goal, finding himself in possession of the keys to the vehicle
    at the end of the altercation. Because there is ample evidence to conclude that
    Searcy actually completed the crime, the trial court acted reasonably in
    deducing that criminal attempt is unavailable under these circumstances.
    Because we conclude that Searcy was not entitled to a criminal-attempt
    instruction, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by refusing
    to instruct the jury on that lesser offense.
    III.      CONCLUSION.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court's judgment.
    All sitting. All concur.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:
    Julia Karol Pearson
    Assistant Public Advocate
    Department of Public Advocacy
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE:
    Andy Beshear
    Attorney General of Kentucky
    Courtney J. Hightower
    Assistant Attorney General
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