Welfare of R.L.N., Matter of

Decision Date16 July 1985
Docket NumberNo. C7-84-2112,C7-84-2112
PartiesIn the Matter of the WELFARE OF R.L.N.
CourtMinnesota Court of Appeals

Syllabus by the Court

The evidence is sufficient to sustain an adjudication of delinquency based on attempted theft.

William R. Kennedy, Hennepin Co. Public Defender, David M. Duffy, Asst. Public Defender, James Schanandore, Law Clerk, Minneapolis, for appellant.

Hubert H. Humphrey, III, Atty. Gen., St. Paul, Thomas L. Johnson, Hennepin Co. Atty., Vernon E. Bergstrom, Chief, Appellate Section, Michael Richardson, Asst. Co. Atty., Minneapolis, for respondent.

Heard, considered and decided by LANSING, P.J., and LESLIE and NIERENGARTEN, JJ.

OPINION

LANSING, Judge.

R.L.N. appeals from an adjudication of delinquency based on an attempted theft in violation of Minn.Stat. Sec. 609.17, subd. 1; Sec. 609.52, subds. 2(1) and 3(5) (1984). He contends the evidence of his intent is insufficient to support the conviction and the trial court erred in excluding certain hearsay statements. We affirm.

FACTS

The incident giving rise to these charges took place in an apartment building at 6508 N. Zane Avenue. R.L.N. was a 16-year-old runaway who lived in the building with a friend from January through March 1984. On May 3, 1984, at about 10:30 p.m., a tenant named Donald Johnson heard noises in the laundry room and went to investigate. The tenants' storage lockers, located in the laundry room, were approximately seven feet high with an open 18" by 24" space from the top of the locker doors to the ceiling. When Johnson entered, R.L.N. was hanging over the top of Johnson's storage locker, looking inside it with the aid of a flashlight. L.H., a friend, was standing nearby. Although some boxes had been moved, nothing was missing from Johnson's locker. Johnson called the police and reported an attempted theft.

At trial R.L.N. testified that while he was living in the building another tenant, Dick Jensen, had encouraged him to sell pornographic video tapes. R.L.N. testified that Jensen had given him beer and shown him some of the tapes. After he moved out, Jensen continued to contact and harass him. When R.L.N. went to the building on May 3, he said he planned to:

* * * talk to [Jensen] and tell him to leave me alone and stuff and see what he was planning on doing. That's why I brought my friend, because I was real scared about it. And then I was going to take the tapes and, with him, I was going to call the cops and stuff.

R.L.N. said that he could not remember in which apartment Jensen lived, and the mailboxes in the lobby were not labeled with apartment numbers. R.L.N. had reason to believe that the tapes were stored in Jensen's storage locker, and the storage lockers were labeled with apartment numbers. Therefore, he said, when Johnson found him he was searching the storage lockers for the tapes in order to identify Jensen's apartment number.

L.H. testified that R.L.N. asked him to go along in order to find the man who had the tapes and that they intended to turn both the tapes and the man over to the police.

Craig Schmidke, the police officer who responded to the call, testified that R.L.N. told him he was looking for Jensen's locker and was going to "try to find the video tapes so that he could turn them over to the police and then notify the police of what was going on." R.L.N.'s lawyer attempted to elicit a conversation Officer Schmidke had with Jensen, the alleged pornography vendor, but the prosecution objected on hearsay grounds. R.L.N.'s lawyer offered to prove that Officer Schmidke would testify that Jensen approached him and said, "in a joking manner," that R.L.N. would probably say that Jensen was encouraging him to sell pornographic tapes. The trial court sustained the objection on hearsay grounds.

The delinquency petition alleges that R.L.N. "intentionally and without claim of right attempted to take from the possession of [D]onald Johnson certain property contained in a storage locker," in violation of Minn.Stat. Sec. 609.52, subds. 2(1) and 3(5). In finding the petition proved, the trial court rejected R.L.N.'s explanation for being in the laundry room and concluded that "he was trying to steal something from someone:"

The best I can say is that perhaps he was trying to steal the tapes from Mr. Jensen, which would actually make a little more sense than going into what was unknown in Mr. Johnson's locker. * * *

The only real question that remains in my mind is the transfer of intent issue. And I am finding at this point that it

makes no difference whether he got into the right locker or not, that he is guilty of attempted theft. Whether he was trying to steal from Jensen or steal from Johnson. He was simply in a locker with an intent to steal something from that locker. * * * I am satisfied at this point to rule from the Bench that it does not matter which locker that he was trying to get into * * *. He's criminally culpable for his action.

ISSUE

Is the evidence of R.L.N.'s intent sufficient to sustain the trial court's conclusion that R.L.N. committed attempted theft?

ANALYSIS

In reviewing a claim of insufficiency of the evidence, this court is limited to...

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1 cases
  • U.S. v. Solomon
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Eighth Circuit
    • July 12, 1993
    ... ... intent to commit a crime, and (2) a substantial step taken toward the crime's commission." Matter ... of Welfare of R.L.N., 371 N.W.2d 84, 86 (Minn.Ct.App.1985) (citing State v. Olkon, 299 N.W.2d ... ...

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