STATE оf Missouri, Respondent, v. Jessie E. KIRKLAND, Appellant.
No. WD 35118.
Missouri Court of Appeals, Western District.
Nov. 7, 1984.
Motion for Rehearing and/or Transfer to Supreme Court Overruled and Denied Dec. 26, 1984.
Application to Transfer Denied Feb. 26, 1985.
John Ashcroft, Atty. Gen., Janet E. Papageorge, Asst. Atty. Gen., Jefferson City, for respondent.
Before DIXON, P.J., and SHANGLER and SOMERVILLE, JJ.
SOMERVILLE, Judge.
Defendant, an inmate in the Missouri Intermediate Reformatory (“Algoa“), was charged as a “prior offender” in a two-count information, to-wit, Count I, attemрt to do injury to a building (
Defendant does not question the sufficiency of the evidence to support the dual convictions. The points of error, three in number, relied upon by defendant are: (1) the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on the “defense of necessity” with respect to Count II, escape from confinement; (2) defendant‘s conviction for attempt to do injury to a building (
A brief review of the evidence is required to put the three points in proper perspective for appellate disposition. Defendant was incarcerated in the Missouri Department of Corrections on January 21, 1982, for a term of four years. On or about December 2, 1982, defendant was confined in “Dorm 6” a “lock-down dorm” at Algoa, and shared a cell with inmate Roger Hawkins. Defendant had been placed in “Dorm 6” following his intervention in an altercation involving two other inmates which precipitated a threat or attempt to “knife or stab” defendant in retaliation. His placement in “Dorm 6” was a “protective measure“. Defendant‘s cell mate had a saw blade. According to the testimony of defendant‘s cell mate, who was called as a witness by defendant, the two “agreed” on December 9, 1982, to cut the restraining bars on the window of their cell and escape. Defendant‘s cell mate did the sawing and defendant kept а “lookout“. According to defendant‘s testimony he did not entertain any plan or thought of escaping until December 11, 1982, when he was told that he would be put back into “general population” on December 14, 1982. Further, according to defendant‘s testimony, he was afraid that some of the friends of one of the inmates involved in the altercation he had intervened in would try to “stick him” if he was returned to “general population” and for that reason he decided to escape with his cell mate when the latter completed sawing the restraining bars. The sawing of the restraining bars was completed about 1:00 a.m. on December 13, 1982, and defendant and his cell mate effected their escape. Defendant and his cell mate were “at large” approximately fifteen hours, as they were not apprehended until about 4:15 p.m. on December 13, 1982, at a “church” approximately 3 1/2 miles from Algoa. During the fifteen-hour interval just mentioned, defendant made no effort to report or surrender himself to the proper authorities. Moreover, defendant made no effort to report his fear or apprehension of being returned to “general population” after being advised thereof on December 11, 1982.
The defense of “justification“, the crux of defendant‘s first point, which is functionally synonymous with the defense of “necessity“, is statutorily embodied in
A conflict between Baker, supra, a decision by the Missouri Court of Appeals, Western District, and Daniels, supra, a decision by the Missouri Court of Appeals, Southern District, immediately emerges regarding submissibility of the defense of “justification” or “necessity“.
In Baker, this court, after an exhaustive analysis of relevant cases from other jurisdictions, found the following factors “to be important in the evidentiary matrix surrounding the defense: 1) a present and imminent danger, the definition of danger being based upon the facts of a defendant‘s confinement and the imminence of the danger not being solely based on a time interval but upon the entire fact situation; 2) exhaustion of remedies or evidence that attempts to do so had been futile and that the imminence of danger of threatened harm is such that no alternative is available; 3) evidence that the escapee did not use force or violence against innocent persons in perfecting the escape; 4) and a duty on the part of the escapee to surrender when the threatened danger has been avoided.” State v. Baker, supra, 598 S.W.2d at 545. As perceived by this writer, the court went on, however, in Baker and expounded the view that factors 2) and 4), supra, although bearing on the issue of the credibility of an escapee‘s claim of “justification” or “necessity“, are not essential elements of the defense. State v. Baker, supra, 598 S.W.2d at 545-46. This conclusiоn is sustained by the following excerpt from State v. Baker, supra, 598 S.W.2d at 546: “To summarize, the essential element which permits the submission of the defense of necessity is the imminence of danger to the person of the escapee. Voluntary return or attempts to do so and, in some instances of continued harassment, recourse to administrative and legal remedies will bear on issues of credibility. These issues bearing on the credibility of the prisoner‘s claim can be developed in the evidence and cross-examination.... The defense should be submitted when the offered evidence, if believed by the jury, would support a finding by them that the offense of escape was justified by a reasonable fear of death or bodily harm so imminent or emergent that, according to ordinary standards of intelligence and morality, the desirability of avoiding the injury outweighs the desirability of avoiding the public injury arising from the offense committed to avoid injury to the prisoner.”
In Daniels, the Missouri Court of Appeals, Southern District, quoted with approval the four factors found in State v. Baker, supra, “‘to be important in the evidentiary matrix surrounding the defense‘” of “necessity” or “justification“. State v. Daniels, supra, 641 S.W.2d 489. If correctly perceived by this writer, the court in Daniels, however, held that all four factors, supra, are essential elements of the defense of “necessity” or “justification“, and a failure of proof as to element 4) exonerated the trial court of any error in failing to instruct on defendant‘s “affirmative defense” that his escape was occasioned by “duress and necessity“. This conclusion is sustained by the following excerpt from State v. Daniels, supra, 641 S.W.2d at 490: “[T]he glaring deficiency in the defense advanced herein is the total failure of any proof by defendant, or otherwise, that he did or attempted to report or surrender to a single police agency when he attained a position of safety from the averred threats of the Jasper County jail personnel.” This court sees no escape from the conclusion that an irreconcilable conflict exists between State v. Baker, supra, and State v. Daniels, supra.
Notwithstanding the conflict heretofore noted between State v. Baker, supra, and State v. Daniels, supra, defendant‘s first point in the instant case, on its facts, lends itself to being disposed of within the divergent holdings of both cases. The total failure of any proof by defendant, or otherwise, that he reported or surrеndered him
Due to the bifurcated nature of defendant‘s second point, the dual contentiоns contained therein will be separately addressed for purposes of clarity. First, defendant contends that his conviction for attempt to do injury to a building (
Second, defendant contends that his conviction for attempting to do injury to a building cannot stand because the acts committed with respect thereto were part of a continuing course of conduct in perpetrating the offense of escape from confinement. Neither offense was included in the other, supra, even though they occurred in a continuing course of conduct, and each
Defendant‘s third and final point, that his сonviction for attempt to do injury to a building cannot stand because the evidence unequivocally proved a completed act as opposed to a mere attempt to do injury to a building, is without merit. The advent of the Criminal Code, more particularly
Judgment affirmed.
SHANGLER, J., concurs in majority opinion.
DIXON, P.J., concurs in result in separate concurring opinion.
DIXON, Judge, concurring.
I concur in the result on the issue of submissibility of the defense of necessity. My reasons for concurrence аre somewhat different than those expressed in the majority opinion.
My examination of the record reveals the following facts. The defendant asserts he became involved in an altercation between two other prisoners when he attempted to prevent a black prisoner from stabbing a white prisoner. He further asserts the black prisoner tried to stab him. The black prisoner was relegated to the “hole” (administrative segregation), and the defendant says that same night, friends of the black prisoner again “tried to stick him.” The defendant was then sent to the “Special Adjustment Unit,” which was later identified as “Special Adjustment Unit, 9 Dorm.” The escape was from “6 Dorm,” a “lock down” dormitory. There is no еvidence as to the duration of the defendant‘s stay in the “Special Adjustment Unit Dorm 9.” The defendant had been in “6 Dorm” for about 10 days. Thus, there is no evidence of any kind, nor any inference to be drawn from the facts, concerning the length of time between the altercations and the escape.
The defendant would be entitled to the submission of the defensе if there was evidence from which a reasonable person could conclude that his escape was motivated by a reasonable fear of imminent death or bodily injury.
The time interval between the altercations and the escape is crucial to a determination of that issue. If the event were fresh and within a reasonable time, the defense would be submissible. The vital linkage of the time of the earlier attacks
