State v. Dolbeare, C1-93-573

Decision Date28 January 1994
Docket NumberNo. C1-93-573,C1-93-573
Citation511 N.W.2d 443
PartiesSTATE of Minnesota, Respondent, v. Edward Potter DOLBEARE, Appellant.
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

Syllabus by the Court

There was no reversible error with respect to evidentiary rulings, jury instructions, or the prosecutor's conduct; conviction for first degree murder affirmed.

Affirmed.

John M. Stuart, State Public Defender, Susan K. Maki, Asst. Public Defender, Minneapolis, for appellant.

Hubert H. Humphrey, III, Atty. Gen., St. Paul, and Michael O. Freeman, Hennepin County Atty., J. Michael Richardson, Asst. Hennepin County Atty., Minneapolis, for respondent.

Heard, considered, and decided by the court en banc.

SIMONETT, Justice.

A Hennepin County jury convicted defendant-appellant Edward Potter Dolbeare of first degree felony murder in the death of Russell Miller. On appeal, defendant Dolbeare alleges erroneous admission of testimony, an improper jury instruction and prosecutorial misconduct. We affirm.

Russell Miller lived alone in an apartment at the Calhoun Beach Club. On the evening of January 20, 1992, just before midnight, two women in the apartment below Miller's heard "crashing noises" coming from Miller's apartment. They heard a voice begging, "Please let me go. Please let me go," a crash, and then a hoarse voice say, "I'm sorry." They heard what sounded like someone having trouble breathing. After a minute or two, the breathing stopped. The two women went to the front desk of the club to get help. Eventually, the night manager and a janitor entered Miller's apartment. They found the apartment a mess and Miller dead.

A guest of a Calhoun Beach Club resident reported to the police that at 11:10 p.m. on January 20, as he was leaving the club, he noticed a young black man sitting in an old, rusted car in the parking lot. About an hour later when the guest returned, he noticed the car was still there, and he saw the young man, wearing polka dot shorts, walking toward the front lobby of the club. Because he suspected that this might be the person who had stolen a hubcap from his car three weeks earlier, he wrote down the license number of the car, which turned out to be registered to defendant Dolbeare's father. The night manager reported to the police that at 12:05 on the morning of the 21st, a young man wearing polka dot shorts and carrying a garbage bag got off the elevator in the lobby of the club, where he met another young man wearing polka dot shorts, and that the two had left the club together.

The police suspected that whoever had been in Miller's apartment had stolen his credit cards, and they alerted local merchants. Before the day was over, the police arrested defendant at a department store where he was attempting to use one of Miller's credit cards. Defendant was wearing one of Miller's jackets and Miller's designer shoes. Also arrested was defendant's cousin, Derrick Green, who was with defendant.

Defendant's initial story was that he had found Miller's credit cards in a restroom. After the police told him that his father's car had been seen in the Calhoun Beach Club parking lot the previous evening and that his father had told police that defendant had the car that night, defendant admitted that he killed Miller.

In a formal statement, defendant said that he and Derrick Green had gone to the Calhoun Beach Club to steal meat from a freezer in the club's restaurant. Defendant went inside while Green waited in the car. Finding the freezer locked, defendant said he decided to look around the club. When he found the door to Miller's apartment open, he went in and began looking in Miller's closets, at which time Miller attacked him with a knife. The two men wrestled, and Miller fell on the knife. Defendant stated that Miller lay on the floor, bleeding from the face or chest, trying to move and coughing; but that when he noticed Miller was no longer moving, he stayed in the apartment for 20 to 25 minutes. Defendant further stated that he put some of Miller's clothes in a plastic bag and took Miller's billfold, and then wrote "KKK" and "nigger lover" with a marker on the wall to throw off the police. Despite stating earlier that Miller had stopped moving, defendant said that when he left the apartment Miller was still moving and making sounds. Defendant then met Green in the Calhoun Beach Club lobby and went home. Defendant said he had been drinking that evening and felt slightly intoxicated, but that he did not mean to kill anyone.

At trial, the state offered the testimony of an assistant medical examiner who examined Miller's body in the apartment on the morning of January 21 and performed an autopsy later that day. His opinion was that the knife wounds on Miller's neck were inflicted after Miller died. In the examiner's opinion, Miller died from blows delivered to his neck and chest, possibly made by a slugging or stomping motion, which fractured the larynx and caused Miller slowly to asphyxiate. A patterned area on Miller's chest and neck was consistent with the blows being delivered by the sole of a shoe. There were also lacerations on the top of Miller's head that extended all the way to the surface of the skull; these cuts were consistent with Miller's head being repeatedly struck against a flange that held a gas pipe to the kitchen wall in Miller's apartment.

Evidence was received that Dolbeare had previously stolen food from the Calhoun Beach Club and that he had committed a robbery at the club on January 15, 1992. It was also shown that a man by the name of Scott Beecham had checks stolen from his apartment at a different location on January 17, 1992, and that defendant Dolbeare had possession of five of these checks (plus

Beecham's driver's license) and had forged the checks to purchase merchandise. Additionally, the state called as a witness a bank teller, who testified that on January 21 she cashed a check on Russell Miller's account for $150, payable to Scott Beecham and dated January 20, 1992. A documents examiner testified that it was Miller's writing on the check, that the writing had a "very agitated, erratic flow," and that the endorsement of Scott Beecham was in defendant Dolbeare's handwriting.

Defendant's formal statement of January 21, 1992, was received in evidence, as was a second formal statement he gave on January 23. In his second statement, defendant admitted that Miller might have hit his head on the stove or on the floor when they were wrestling. He admitted kicking Miller twice in the chest or neck. He said...

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8 cases
  • State v. Crims
    • United States
    • Minnesota Court of Appeals
    • 28 November 1995
    ...to appeal that issue unless the trial court committed plain error. State v. Shannon, 514 N.W.2d 790, 793 (Minn.1994); State v. Dolbeare, 511 N.W.2d 443, 446 (Minn.1994). On occasion, a trial court commits plain error by refusing to give supplemental instructions. For example, if the prosecu......
  • State v. Gisege
    • United States
    • Minnesota Supreme Court
    • 20 March 1997
    ...law and results in substantial and material prejudice to defendant's rights. Minn.R.Crim.P. 26.03, subd. 18(3); State v. Dolbeare, 511 N.W.2d 443, 446 (Minn.1994). The failure to include a self-defense instruction before each charged crime is not error if the instructions "as a whole make i......
  • State v. Pollard
    • United States
    • Minnesota Court of Appeals
    • 10 July 2017
    ...instruction modified, if the defendant claims that he did not intend to kill the victim); see also State v. Dolbeare , 511 N.W.2d 443, 446 (Minn. 1994) ("[E]ven where death has resulted from a defendant's action, the judge should use [the general instruction] if the defendant's theory does ......
  • State v. Oates
    • United States
    • Minnesota Court of Appeals
    • 20 June 2000
    ...admission of "other crimes" evidence may be harmless if the other evidence of guilt is sufficiently strong. See State v. Dolbeare, 511 N.W.2d 443, 446 (Minn.1994). The supreme court has indicated that Spreigl error must be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, i.e., the verdict must be surely......
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