Stone v. Com.

Decision Date17 February 1967
Citation418 S.W.2d 646
PartiesBernes B. STONE, Appellant, v. COMMONWEALTH of Kentucky, Appellee.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Court — District of Kentucky

William E. Rummage, Owensboro, for appellant.

Robert Matthews, Atty. Gen., Robert D. Preston, Asst. Atty. Gen., Frankfort, for appellee.

HILL, Judge.

Appellant was convicted and sentenced to four years in prison under an indictment charging him with maliciously burning a store building, denounced by KRS 433.020.

We go directly into the numerous questions relied on by appellant for reversal after stating the following salient facts about which there is no dispute. The fire occurred January 18, 1964, in a two-story building, which appellant did not own but the first floor of which was rented and in use by appellant in connection with a retail jewelry business. Appellant left the store about 5:00 p.m., and the fire was discovered approximately thirty minutes later. He was in debt; his business was not thriving; and he had obtained a large insurance policy on his merchandise two months previous to the fire.

First it is insisted by appellant that the court should have instructed the jury on the question of whether appellant consented to the search of the ruined premises. John A. Kennedy, a private investigator for Allstate Insurance Company, appellant's insurer, testified appellant consented to his inspection of the premises after the fire. This is denied by appellant. It is argued that the rule in Mattingly v. Commonwealth, 202 Ky. 343, 259 S.W. 710, required the submission of this question to the jury. We find no fault with the rule in Mattingly; but for reasons to be later discussed herein in connection with the nice constitutional question of evidence obtained by a private citizen as distinguished from evidence obtained by an officer of the law, it will not be necessary to apply the rule in Mattingly.

Assigned as error was the failure of the trial court to allow Randall Aull to testify for appellant. This witness admitted he was in the courtroom at the time two of his fellow firemen testified on behalf of the Commonwealth. An order authorized by CR 43.09 was duly entered providing for the exclusion of the witnesses from the courtroom. This section of the Rules, as well as its predecessor 601 of the previous Code, has been uniformly construed to give the trial judge a broad discretion in the matter of permitting or refusing to permit a witness to testify who has violated the rule. See Murphy v. Phelps, 241 Ky. 339, 43 S.W.2d 1010, and 88 C.J.S. Trial § 65.

The avowal of the witness Aull indicated he was the only one of the three firemen who reached the second floor, where the Commonwealth's witnesses inferred 'accelerant' fumes must have emanated from. Aull's avowal stated he did not smell fumes from the second floor window, but he said he 'didn't stay too long because the smoke came bellowing out then,' and 'Captain Freeman hollered and told' him 'to come off the ladder.' This testimony had a slight tendency to contradict the negative testimony of his two fellow firemen, who said they did not notice fumes. But the nature of Aull's testimony was not so vital or convincing as to require the trial court to allow it. Certainly, we cannot say the trial judge abused his discretion. In any event, the order for exclusion was violated, and it was within the sound discretion of the trial court to allow or not permit the witness to testify.

Next appellant contends the court erred in allowing the introduction by the Commonwealth of certain photographs and 'charred wood.' Appellant moved for the production by the Commonwealth of all photographs and articles to be used on the trial pursuant to the provisions of RCr 7.24. The Commonwealth did produce a number of articles and some photographs, but the 'charred wood' was at that time en route to or from Chicago, Illinois, for testing and was not delivered to attorney for appellant. In fact, these items were in the possession of Allstate Insurance Company and its agent. Appellant, himself, authorized Allstate to take possession of the 'charred wood,' although he denied this at the trial. In any event, appellant had the right under RCr 7.24 for the production of these articles. Furthermore, it cannot be said that the articles desired by appellant 'were in possession of' the Commonwealth at the time the motion was made under RCr 7.24.

Complaint is made of the ruling of the trial court, after the jury was empanelled and sworn, allowing the Commonwealth to amend the indictment. The original indictment charged appellant with 'setting fire to and burning the storehouse known as Stone Jewelers' and listed KRS 433.020. The amendment added the following charge: That he 'aided, counselled or procured the burning of a storehouse,' and again cited the statute.

An indictment may be amended under RCr 6.16 'any time before verdict' providing the 'substantial rights of the defendant are not prejudiced.' Instruction number one followed the language of the statute, and the verdict found appellant guilty under instruction one. In our view, the substantial rights of the defendant were not prejudiced by the amendment. See Brown v. Commonwealth, Ky., 378 S.W.2d 608 (1964) and Hines v. Commonwealth, Ky., 390 S.W.2d 152 (1965).

This brings us to the fifth error assigned by appellant, in which he contends all the testimony of the witness John A. Kennedy should not have been admitted for the reason Kennedy searched his premises without his consent and without a search warrant.

The Commonwealth counters to this argument by saying, first, Kennedy got the evidence by 'consent' of appellant; second, by taking the untenable position that appellant had no possession of the premises after the fire, and that the possession reverted to appellant's landlord; and third, that Kennedy, being a representative of Allstate, was a 'private individual,' and evidence obtained by him as a private citizen does not violate section ten of the Constitution of Kentucky or the fourth amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

The first part of the Commonwealth's counter argument will be answered in the discussion of the third argument. The second counter argument, relative to possession of the wrecked and charred building, is without merit. It is sufficient to say that appellant had possession at least for a reasonable time to enable him to recover any property not destroyed by fire. He may have had possession for as long as the rent was paid or until a new building could be constructed.

The third counter argument is one that may have merit. But in this jurisdiction, and in many others, evidence obtained by private individuals by search or observation has not been excluded under section ten of our Constitution and the fourth amendment to the Constitution of the United States. See Chapman v. Commonwealth, 206 Ky. 439, 267 S.W. 181, from which we quote:

'It has often been written that that section (10) was directed at the sovereignty, acting through its public officers; and the evidence thus disclosed to public officers in an illegal search or seizure has been declared incompetent against the defendant to the end that the constitutional provision may be made more effectual than if he was left alone to his remedy in trespass against the officer. It has never been held, however, to embrace or be applicable to a private individual who, through a process of spying or other form of trespass, discloses evidence against another. Manifestly as against such private individual the aggrieved party is left to his remedy in trespass.'

The rule above discussed is treated in 50 A.L.R.2d, p. 571, in this manner:

'The exclusionary rule stated in section 7(a), supra, under which evidence obtained by an unlawful search and seizure is not admissible against an accused, has been held not to apply where the unlawful search was made by a private individual acting on his own initiative.'

Cases cited under the foregoing section of A.L.R. include those in California, Mississippi, Missouri, Oregon, the United States in Burdeau v. McDowell, 256 U.S. 465, 41 S.Ct. 574, 65 L.Ed. 1048 (1921), and our own state of Kentucky.

Also in 16 Am.Jur.2d, Constitutional Law, section 557, p. 960, it is written:

'It is the established general rule that the provisions of the due process clause in a state constitution and in the Federal Constitution are inhibitions upon the power of government and its agencies, not upon freedom of action of private persons.'

This jurisdiction has continued to follow Chapman, supra, in Gilliam v. Commonwealth, 263 Ky. 342, 92 S.W.2d 346, and in many other cases. See also the recent case of United States v. Goldberg, 3 Cir., 330 F.2d 30 (1964), certiorari denied July 1, 1964. We can discern nothing at present or on the horizon to justify a departure from the sound constitutional law announced in Chapman, supra, and later cases. It is without reluctance that we follow that rule.

Appellant contends he is entitled to a reversal for failure of the trial court to sustain his motion for a new trial on the ground the jury reached its verdict by lot. Appellant filed affidavits of three of the jurors; the Commonwealth filed affidavits of eleven of the jurors. Appellant's affidavits did not fix the time at which each juror submitted on separate slips of paper his preference for the length of term of the sentence. The affidavits for the Commonwealth showed the balloting did not take place until all twelve jurors had voted unanimously that appellant was guilty as...

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