Lake v. State, 53S00-8808-CR-738

Decision Date23 January 1991
Docket NumberNo. 53S00-8808-CR-738,53S00-8808-CR-738
PartiesFarron D. LAKE, Appellant, v. STATE of Indiana, Appellee.
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

Lisa A. Farnsworth, Monroe County Public Defender, Bloomington, for appellant.

Linley Pearson, Atty. Gen., Lisa Anne McCoy, Deputy Atty. Gen., Indianapolis, for appellee.

DeBRULER, Justice.

Following a jury trial, appellant, Farron D. Lake, was convicted on two counts of criminal confinement, I.C. 35-42-3-3, a Class B felony. Appellant received the presumptive ten-year sentence for his conviction on Count One, and that sentence was enhanced an additional ten years for aggravating circumstances. For his conviction on Count Two, appellant received the presumptive ten-year term. The trial court ordered that the sentences run concurrent to each other.

The facts adduced at trial were as follows: In July of 1986, appellant and Pam Matlock began seeing each other on a daily basis. At this time, appellant was twenty-three years old while Pam was fifteen years old. In August of 1986, at appellant's invitation, Pam decided to leave home and go to Texas with appellant. Pam's mother, Mary Gill, filed a complaint with the prosecutor's office in September of 1986, charging appellant with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. After three months, they returned to Indiana from Texas. It was at this time that Pam realized that she was pregnant with appellant's child. On December 26, appellant was arrested for contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

Appellant remained in jail until March of 1987. While he was in jail, appellant asked Pam if she would marry him. Pam testified that she told appellant that she did not want to marry him because of his drug use and propensity for violence. She stated that appellant issued threats against her from jail. Upon his release from jail, appellant often went to Pam's house trying to see her. Pam testified that appellant made several attempts to enter the house forcibly. Pam and her mother stated that they often called the police in an effort to keep appellant away from their house.

On May 27, 1987, Pam's brother helped appellant enter the rear of the house so he could speak to Pam. After returning home from a picnic, Pam went upstairs to change clothes. She heard a noise in her brother's room and then saw appellant. Pam stated that appellant grabbed her by the hair and held a knife to her throat. He then told Pam to call her mother. Mary Gill testified that she came running upstairs and saw appellant holding a knife to her daughter's throat while he clutched her hair. Appellant told Mary Gill to go down and start her car and to wait for him and Pam. When appellant exited the house, he was holding the knife against Pam's body. Pam's sister, Lisa, called the police after Mary drove the three of them away. On appellant's instructions, Mary drove to Whitehall, whereupon appellant told Mary to drive back the way she came; he then took Pam with him and they ran toward a wooded area.

Pam and appellant first went to a house belonging to Ronnie White, a friend of appellant. Pam testified that she did not tell Ronnie that she was being held against her will because appellant had threatened to cut her throat if she told anyone. They spent the first night sleeping in a car parked outside of Ronnie's place of work. They were awakened by security guards asking what they were doing there. Appellant told the guards that he and Pam were married and were waiting for Ronnie to get off work. Pam testified that she did not say anything to the security guards because she was scared. Pam saw several other people during the three days she spent with appellant following her abduction, but she stated that she was afraid to inform anyone as to her situation.

On the morning of May 30, Pam got up to use the restroom and noticed that all the other people in the trailer where she and appellant were staying were asleep. She sneaked out the front door and ran across the highway to a neighbor's house to call the police. She told the person who answered the door all that had happened to her. The police arrived shortly thereafter and, after a two-hour stand-off during which appellant threatened to kill himself, he gave himself up.

Appellant now brings this direct appeal arguing that he is entitled to a new trial because, in failing to admonish the jurors prior to each recess, the trial court failed to ensure that appellant received a fair trial by an impartial jury. Appellant also contends that, if his request for a new trial is not granted, his sentence should be revised as the sentence imposed by the trial court was manifestly unreasonable.

A statute in relation to state criminal trials in force at the time of appellant's trial, I.C. 35-37-2-4(a), provides that the court shall admonish the jurors in the preliminary instructions, before separating for meals, and at the end of the day. An admonishment should inform the jurors that it is their duty not to converse among themselves or permit others to converse with them on any subject connected with the trial, or to form or express any opinion about the case until the cause is submitted to them. Id. The reading of the admonishment to the jurors at the prescribed times is mandatory.

A review of the trial record in the present case shows that the trial lasted three days and the trial judge accurately admonished the jurors in the preliminary instructions, at the conclusion of testimony on the first day of trial, at a recess on the second day of trial, before lunch on the second day of trial, and at another recess on the second day of trial.

Appellant identifies three points in the trial where he insists the court failed to follow the statute and did not properly admonish the jury. One such point identified by appellant was reached on the second day of trial just before a brief thirty-minute recess. The statute, however, requires the court to admonish the jurors in only three specific instances: in the preliminary instructions, before separating for meals, and at the end of the day. The statute, therefore, did not require an admonishment before this thirty-minute recess. Nonetheless, the trial judge did remind the jurors of their admonishment at that time, although he did not read the admonishment in its entirety. The failure to admonish the jury before this brief recess cannot be said to have constituted error, as the statute does not require an admonishment at such a point.

Likewise, the second point that appellant identifies as an instance where the trial court should have admonished the jury is not a point at which the statute calls for an admonishment. Late in the afternoon on the second day of trial and following the presentation of evidence by the State and the defense, the trial judge announced that there was going to be a recess and then a prompt resumption of testimony by the State's rebuttal witnesses. When the jury reconvened, however, the trial judge stated that any testimony by rebuttal witnesses would be postponed until the third and final day of the trial. An admonishment prior to this break was not required by the statute. This break was only a brief recess, and did not occur before a meal or at the end of the day.

The third point identified by appellant, however, is one at which a jury admonition is required. When proceedings resumed following the...

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5 cases
  • Johnson v. State
    • United States
    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • January 27, 1992
    ...417 N.E.2d 889. An error may be deemed harmless on appeal if it has not prejudiced the substantial rights of appellant. Lake v. State (1991), Ind., 565 N.E.2d 332. In light of the overwhelming evidence marshalled by the prosecution this evidentiary error was harmless at all stages of the Ap......
  • Parker v. State
    • United States
    • Indiana Appellate Court
    • February 18, 1991
    ...when no reasonable person could consider the sentence appropriate to the particular offense and the particular offender. Lake v. State (1991), Ind., 565 N.E.2d 332. IND.CODE 35-38-1-7 11 provides trial courts with a non-exclusive list of aggravating factors which may be considered in determ......
  • Cardosi v. State
    • United States
    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • August 7, 2019
    ...inadequate jury admonishments, waiving his argument for traditional appellate review. Br. of Appellant at 22. See Lake v. State , 565 N.E.2d 332, 335 (Ind. 1991) (reiterating that, "while the terms of the statute are mandatory in their call for an admonition of the jurors at specific times,......
  • Small v. State
    • United States
    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • October 19, 2000
    ...fails to give the requisite admonishment, a timely objection must nevertheless be made to preserve error for appeal. Lake v. State, 565 N.E.2d 332, 335 (Ind.1991); Choate v. State, 462 N.E.2d 1037, 1046 (Ind.1984). In Lake, we concluded that although the statute mandated that the trial cour......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

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