Court Opinion

ID: 6344872
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-27 16:07:05.416453+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:03:35.203891
License: Public Domain

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

                                              No. 122,954

               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

                                          STATE OF KANSAS,
                                              Appellee,

                                                    v.

                                        WILLIAM L. GREINER,
                                             Appellant.

                                   MEMORANDUM OPINION

        Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; DAVID J. KAUFMAN, judge. Opinion filed May 27, 2022.
Affirmed.

        Rick Kittel, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

        Matt J. Maloney, assistant district attorney, Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt,
attorney general, for appellee.

Before GARDNER, P.J., HILL and HURST, JJ.

        PER CURIAM: William L. Greiner appeals from his jury conviction of one count of
intentional criminal threat stemming from an incident involving a police officer, an
illegally parked trailer, and his desire to retrieve his gun. Greiner alleges his conviction
should be reversed because: (1) the jury had insufficient evidence to support his
conviction; (2) the district court erred by denying his motion to suppress; and (3) the
district court erred by including a jury instruction that limited his ability to assert a
defense of self-defense. Only two of Greiner's claims are properly before this court, and

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this court finds sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could convict Greiner of
intentional criminal threat and no error in the court's jury instructions. Greiner's
conviction is affirmed.

                          FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

       On July 25, 2018, while addressing issues of graffiti and blight, Officer Charles
Byers of the Wichita Police Department saw a detached trailer belonging to Greiner
illegally parked on the street in violation of the city ordinance requiring trailers parked on
the street to be attached to a vehicle. Officer Byers knocked on the door of the house the
trailer was parked in front of, but when no one answered he left the scene to continue his
work. Officer Byers returned about 90 minutes later and put a tow warning sticker on the
trailer and then left the scene.

       Shortly after leaving, Officer Byers received a call from the police station
notifying Officer Byers that the owner of the trailer wanted to talk to him about the tow
warning sticker. Officer Byers returned to the location of the trailer and his body video
camera recorded the subsequent interaction between himself and Greiner, and is part of
the evidence relied upon by the jury at trial and this court on appeal.

       When Officer Byers returned to the location of the trailer, he was in a marked
patrol vehicle, wearing a tan police uniform with his badge visible, and Greiner was in
the street near his trailer sweeping debris from around the trailer. As Officer Byers tried
to explain the tow warning sticker, Greiner became upset and argued that he understood
the law to allow him to park his detached trailer in the street—and stated he had parked in
this manner for several years. Officer Byers attempted to explain the applicable city
ordinance and Greiner became more frustrated, raised his voice, and argued the trailer
was legally parked on his property.

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       After a few minutes of fruitless attempts at explaining the law, Officer Byers
walked toward his car to leave the scene and told Greiner the trailer would be towed in
two days if it was not moved. Greiner was obviously upset and was still sweeping the
area around the trailer and called Officer Byers an "asswipe." Officer Byers responded by
walking back toward Greiner and saying "Okay, see now you're going to get a ticket from
me." Officer Byers then walked from the street where the trailer was parked toward
Greiner, who was now in his front yard walking toward his porch. Greiner pointed the
broom he was holding toward Officer Byers and said, "[y]ou're not allowed on my
property. You're officially trespassing." At this point, Greiner was holding a cordless
phone in his hand and called 9-1-1, a recording of which is part of the record on appeal.
Officer Byers then walked back to his patrol car to issue Greiner a ticket.

       Once in his car, Officer Byers decided to forgo the ticket and instead write the
violated ordinance number on a piece of paper for Greiner to review himself. Officer
Byers exited his police car and walked toward Greiner, who was standing on his front
porch on the phone with the 9-1-1 dispatcher, repeatedly yelling at Officer Byers "you are
not allowed on my property." Officer Byers asked Greiner to calm down and tried to give
him the piece of paper with the city ordinance number on it by approaching Greiner's
porch with his hand holding the piece of paper extended toward Greiner. Officer Byers
asked Greiner, "Do you want the ordinance or not, sir?" Greiner, talking into his phone,
told the 9-1-1 operator "He's on my property right now" and then looked at Officer Byers
and said "He's on my—I'm getting my gun" and then entered the doorway of his house.

       Officer Byers immediately ran from Greiner's front yard to take cover behind his
patrol car and radioed to dispatch, "put me out, put me out." Officer Byers remained
behind his patrol car and communicated with dispatch that he was "behind cover"
because Greiner said he was going to get a gun. Shortly thereafter Greiner returned to his
porch without a weapon, and was arrested without incident.

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        The State charged Greiner with one count of criminal threat. Before Greiner's trial,
he filed a motion to suppress evidence, arguing all evidence obtained by Officer Byers,
including Greiner's statement that he was getting his gun, should be suppressed because it
arose from an unlawful, warrantless seizure of Greiner. Agreeing with the State, the
district court denied the motion, relying on State v. Peterman, 42 Kan. App. 2d 761, 765-
66, 216 P.3d 710 (2009), to find the exclusionary rule did not prohibit use of the
evidence.

        After a jury trial in which Greiner testified on his behalf, the jury found him guilty
of intentional criminal threat and the district court sentenced him to 12 months of
probation, with an underlying prison term of nine months. Greiner appealed.

                                         DISCUSSION

        On appeal, Greiner argues that (1) the State lacked sufficient evidence to support
his conviction for criminal threat; (2) the district court erred in denying his motion to
suppress evidence; and (3) the district court erred in its jury instructions. This court will
address each allegation in turn.

   I.       Sufficient evidence supports the jury's verdict.

        Greiner argues that the State lacked sufficient evidence to sustain his conviction
for criminal threat because it failed to show beyond a reasonable doubt that he made a
threat to commit violence, or that he intended to place another in fear. In an appeal
challenging the sufficiency of the State's evidence, this court determines whether
sufficient evidence exists such that a rational fact-finder could have found the defendant
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. This court reviews the record to determine whether
evidence exists that, when viewed in the light more favorable to the State, supports each
element of the crime. State v. Chandler, 307 Kan. 657, 668, 414 P.3d 713 (2018); State v.

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Kettler, 229 Kan. 448, 471, 325 P3d 1075 (2014). The relied-upon evidence may be
circumstantial, and this court may draw all logical inferences from the evidence that
supports the conviction. Chandler, 307 Kan. at 669; State v. Jefferson, 297 Kan. 1151,
1167, 310 P.3d 331 (2013). In all instances, this court will uphold a conviction so long as
"the essential elements of the charge are sustained by any competent evidence." State v.
Van Pham, 234 Kan. 649, 668, 675 P.2d 848 (1984).

       The district court instructed the jury that, in order to establish the charge of
criminal threat, the State was required to prove:

       "1. The defendant threatened to commit violence and communicated the threat with the
           intent to place another in fear.
       "2. This act occurred on or about the 25th day of July, 2018, in Sedgwick County,
           Kansas."

This required the State to prove two things–that Greiner: 1) threatened to commit
violence; and 2) intended to place Officer Byers in fear with his threat.

       Greiner argues that his statement, "I'm getting my gun" was not a threat of
violence—but merely a statement about going inside to get a gun. Greiner argues it was
not a threat because he never said he was coming back outside with the gun, or that he
intended to shoot Officer Byers with the gun. Greiner argues that while at the scene
during the fractious interaction, Officer Byers falsely claimed to other officers that
Greiner said "he was going to go inside and get a gun and come back out at me," and that
Greiner "tried to come out and shoot me." Greiner claims that these statements by Officer
Byers are what led the jury to believe Greiner threatened violence. However, at trial
Officer Byers clearly testified that he never saw Greiner with, or holding, a gun and that
Greiner never said he was coming back outside with the gun. Moreover, Greiner testified
that he never retrieved a gun and he did not even own a gun. The jury had ample

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evidence that Greiner never said he was returning outside with a gun, that he never
expressly stated he was going to shoot Officer Byers, and that he never displayed a gun to
Officer Byers.

   a. Greiner threatened to commit violence.

       The first issue then, is whether the jury had sufficient evidence to prove that
Greiner threatened to commit violence. A "threat" is "a communicated intent to inflict
physical or other harm on any person or on property." K.S.A. 2020 Supp.
21-5111(ff); see State v. Stevenson, 59 Kan. App. 2d 49, 65, 478 P.3d 781 (2020). A
person acts with intent to threaten "when it is such person's conscious objective or desire
to engage in the conduct or cause the result." K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5202(h). A person's
intent to threaten violence can be inferred from the circumstances surrounding the threat.
See e.g., State v. Johnson, 310 Kan. 835, 841, 450 P.3d 790 (2019) (using the
surrounding circumstances to determine if Johnson committed an intentional threat and
remanding to determine if the conviction still stands in light of State v. Boettger, 310
Kan. 800, 450 P.3d 805 [2019]); State v. Williams, 303 Kan. 750, 762-63, 368 P.3d 1065
(2016) (affirming Williams' conviction after finding sufficient evidence of intentional
criminal threat).

       It is undisputed that Greiner communicated within Officer Byers' hearing range,
"I'm getting my gun." This was communicated during a contentious interaction with
Officer Byers after Greiner had raised his voice at Officer Byers, contested Officer Byers'
assertion that Greiner's trailer was illegally parked, Greiner called Officer Byers an
"asswipe," and Greiner repeatedly yelled at Officer Byers to get off his property and
accused him of trespassing. While Greiner was on his porch, Officer Byers approached
and Greiner yelled several times "you are not allowed on my property" as Greiner pointed
his finger at Officer Byers. Then, as Officer Byers raised his right hand and asked
Greiner if he wanted the piece of paper containing the city ordinance Greiner had

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violated, Greiner looked directly at Officer Byers and said, "I'm getting my gun," as he
quickly went inside his home. At that time Officer Byers ran to his patrol car, took cover,
and called for assistance.

       Greiner attempts to detach his statement, "I'm getting my gun," from the
surrounding circumstances and his other statements—as though he and Officer Byers
were having a pleasant conversation at the time—but this court cannot ignore the
circumstances of his statement. See e.g., Johnson, 310 Kan. at 840-41 (using statements
and surrounding circumstances to establish intentional criminal threat); Williams, 303
Kan. at 762-63 (permitting inferences to support a conviction for intentional criminal
threat). At the time Greiner threatened to get his gun, he was also yelling at Officer Byers
to get off his property and accusing him of breaking the law. Greiner was also on the
phone with 9-1-1 reporting Officer Byers as a trespasser who refused to leave. He
reported to the police dispatcher that Officer Byers was "breaking the law" and stated that
"I'm in danger yes, he has a gun, he is threatening me, and he's not allowed on my
property."

       Greiner's threat to get his gun was directly related to, and resulting from, his
indignation that Officer Byers was on his property despite being told to leave. Officer
Byers was contemporaneously aware of Greiner's threat and the surrounding
circumstances. He knew Greiner was calling 9-1-1, and Greiner's stated belief that
Officer Byers was trespassing. In Williams, the Kansas Supreme Court upheld a criminal
threat conviction when the target of the threat did not hear the threat from the person who
made it and was not contemporaneously present when the threat was made. 303 Kan. at
761. Greiner asserts that because he never said he was going to bring the gun outside or
use the gun to shoot Officer Byers—his statement was not a threat of violence. However–
this court cannot reweigh the evidence or substitute its judgment for that of the jury–and
must review the evidence in a light more favorable to the State. See Chandler, 307 Kan.
at 668. Given the totality of the evidence and circumstances surrounding Greiner's

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statement that "I'm getting my gun"—this court cannot say the jury was without sufficient
evidence, including logical inferences, for a rational fact-finder to find beyond a
reasonable doubt that Greiner intended to, and did, threaten violence against Officer
Byers.

   II.      The district court did not violate Greiner's due process rights.

         In addition to his sufficiency of the evidence argument, Greiner raises two alleged
violations of his constitutional due process rights: first, that the district court erred by
denying his motion to suppress evidence, including his statement that he was getting his
gun, and second, that the district court erred by including a jury instruction explaining the
inapplicability of a claim of self-defense to the lawful conduct of police officers. Both
arguments fail.

   a. Greiner failed to preserve his claim for erroneous admission of evidence.

         First, Greiner couches an objection to the admission of evidence as a due process
claim by alleging that he was wrongly detained and thus his statements during that
detention cannot be used at trial. Greiner filed a pretrial motion to suppress evidence
from the interaction with Officer Byers, including his statement, "I'm getting my gun,"
and after an evidentiary hearing the district court denied the motion. However, Greiner
failed to object to the admission of the evidence at trial, which generally prohibits
appellate review of the issue absent an applicable exception. See K.S.A. 60-404
(requiring contemporaneous objection to admission of evidence); State v. Potts, 304 Kan.
687, 700, 374 P.3d 639 (2016) (declining to address an objection to admitted evidence
when the defendant failed to contemporaneously object at trial even when the defendant
had filed a pretrial motion to suppress that the district court denied).

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       As Greiner points out, this court may elect to decide a constitutional claim raised
for the first time on appeal if the claim meets one of three well-known exceptions.
Greiner argues that his claim meets two exceptions—that it involves a question of law
arising on proved or admitted facts that is finally determinative of the case, and that its
consideration is necessary to serve the ends of justice or to prevent denial of fundamental
rights. See State v. Johnson, 309 Kan. 992, 995, 441 P.3d 1036 (2019) (explaining the
three exceptions to the general prohibition against hearing a constitutional issue for the
first time on appeal). Although Greiner frames his issue as one of constitutional due
process—it is an evidentiary objection—and even if the evidentiary objection raises
constitutional issues, it is properly precluded from appellate review by Greiner's failure to
object at trial. See State v. Solis, 305 Kan. 55, 63-64, 378 P.3d 532 (2016) (refusing to
hear an evidentiary claim alleged to implicate due process when the defendant failed to
timely object at trial). Moreover, the Kansas Supreme Court has consistently declined to
extend the caselaw exceptions argued by Greiner to circumvent the legislative mandate of
K.S.A. 60-404. Solis, 305 Kan. at 63 (The Kansas Supreme Court has "refused to allow
the contemporaneous objection rule to be circumvented by the caselaw exception that is
designed to serve the ends of justice or prevent a denial of a fundamental right.").
However facile Greiner's argument, his claim that the district court erroneously admitted
evidence from Officer Byers is not preserved for appeal, and the district court's denial of
his pretrial motion to suppress is affirmed.

   b. The district court did not err in its jury instruction.

       Greiner next argues that the district court violated his due process right to present
a complete defense by including language in the jury instructions that limited his ability
to raise a self-defense argument. The State counters that the instruction was legally and
factually appropriate, but if not, any error was harmless. This court follows a four-step
process when reviewing alleged error in jury instructions: (1) it exercises unlimited
review in determining the reviewability of the issue–that is, whether the court has

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jurisdiction and whether the issue is properly preserved; (2) it exercises "unlimited
review to determine whether the instruction was legally appropriate"; (3) it determines
whether there was sufficient evidence to support the instruction; and finally (4) if this
court finds an error, it "must determine whether the error was harmless." State v. Perez-
Medina, 310 Kan. 525, 533, 448 P.3d 446 (2019).

       As to the first step, the State does not allege this court lacks jurisdiction or that
Greiner failed to preserve this issue for appeal. At trial, the State wanted to use the entire
PIK Crim. 4th 52.280 (2012 Supp.), which includes language prohibiting a defendant
from arguing self-defense when resisting arrest by a law enforcement officer. The
challenged instruction stated:

       "A person is not authorized to assert the defense of self-defense of the person or the
       person's property as a defense to the commission of the crime of criminal threat when the
       person commits the criminal threat against a police officer while the police officer is
       lawfully performing his duties, even if the person believes the police officer is not
       performing his duties lawfully."

Greiner acknowledges that the challenged instruction was drafted based on PIK Crim. 4th
52.280, which provides:

       "A person is not authorized to use physical force, threaten to use physical force, [or]
       display a means of force to resist an arrest which he knows is being made by a law
       enforcement officer even if the person believes that the arrest is unlawful, and the arrest
       is, in fact, unlawful."

Greiner's counsel objected to this instruction, stating, "[I]t's my position that . . . this
instruction muddies the waters to what this jury's looking at, whether or not a true
criminal threat took place." Greiner preserved this issue for appeal and this court has
jurisdiction over this question.

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       For the second step, this court exercises unlimited review to determine if the
challenged instruction is legally appropriate, which means it "must always fairly and
accurately state the applicable law." State v. Kleypas, 305 Kan. 224, 302, 382 P.3d 373
(2016); Perez-Medina, 310 Kan. at 533. Greiner contends the challenged jury instruction
is legally inappropriate, although not legally inaccurate, because it denied him the right to
"a meaningful opportunity to present a complete defense," as it "prevented the jury from
considering the question of whether Mr. Greiner's actions were reasonable and justified if
[Officer] Byers was not acting within his lawful authority."

       The challenged jury instruction conforms to Kansas self-defense statutes which
provide that a person may use force when they "reasonably believe[] that such use of
force is necessary to defend such person or a third person against such other's imminent
use of unlawful force," (K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5222[a]), or when that person "reasonably
believes that such use of force is necessary to prevent or terminate such other's unlawful
entry into or attack upon such person's dwelling . . . . " (Emphases added.) K.S.A. 2020
Supp. 21-5223(a). While discussing the jury instructions, Greiner's counsel told the
district court, ". . . specifically I haven't raised the self-defense argument, I don't intend to
raise it on closing, either." And when the court sought clarity and asked, "you are not
seeking those instructions because you just told me this isn't a self-defense case,"
Greiner's counsel confirmed, "[t]hat's right. I'm not, Your Honor." Greiner did not
ultimately request any jury instructions on self-defense or defense of a dwelling as a
defense to his criminal threat charge. But Greiner now argues that he was entitled to
allow the jury to consider self-defense as a defense because Officer Byers' actions were
unlawful—which appears inapposite from his statements to the district court. What
Greiner actually wants is to present—and permit the jury to consider—self-defense and
defense of dwelling as a legal defense without providing any legal authority supporting
the defense.

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       The challenged jury instruction simply states that a person cannot assert self-
defense against a police officer's actions when the officer is lawfully performing their
duties. There can be no dispute that the challenged jury instruction fairly and accurately
states the applicable law. In fact, the challenged jury instructions only applied to lawful
police conduct, so to the extent Greiner hoped the jury believed Officer Byers' conduct
was unlawful—he may have received the benefit of an inference that self-defense would
have applied in such a case. The jury instruction did not prevent Greiner from making his
arguments at trial, it merely accurately articulated the applicable law.

       The third step requires this court to determine if the challenged instruction was
factually appropriate—that is, whether there was sufficient evidence viewed in the light
favoring the requesting party, in this case the State, to support the instruction. Perez-
Medina, 310 Kan. at 533. Before trial, Greiner submitted proposed jury instructions that
included PIK 51.050 (2020 Supp.), an instruction which referenced the assertion of self-
defense and defense of a dwelling. At a pretrial hearing, Greiner's counsel stated that "the
fact that Mr. Greiner owned this property and felt his property was invaded is relevant to
a self-defense argument." In response to the State's assertion that Greiner was not legally
entitled to claim self-defense under the circumstances, the court stated it would permit the
defense to present its case and would determine the appropriate instructions after viewing
the evidence presented at trial.

       After the close of evidence, the district court added the now-challenged jury
instruction because Greiner had testified that he was "within [his] legal right" to get a gun
because he believed Officer Byers was a trespasser. Although Greiner's counsel stated, in
opposing the jury instruction, that he did not intend to raise self-defense as a defense in
his closing arguments—Greiner had already placed the issue before the jury. When asked
why it was necessary to tell Officer Byers that he was getting his gun, Greiner testified,
"[a]t that point, he was a trespasser and he was coming at me with what I felt was a gun. I
felt my life was on the line." He also testified that "it is within my legal right" to get a

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gun "because [Officer Byers] is a trespasser at this point." Greiner clearly placed the issue
of his legal authority to defend himself and his property from Officer Byers at issue in the
trial. An instruction is factually appropriate if it "is supported by the particular facts of
the case." Kleypas, 305 Kan. at 227. The challenged jury instruction is factually
appropriate because Greiner put forth facts alleging Officer Byers acted illegally and thus
Greiner believed he had a right to defend himself.

       Because the challenged jury instruction is legally and factually appropriate, the
district court did not err and this court's inquiry into Greiner's claim ends.

                                           CONCLUSION

       There is sufficient evidence to support Greiner's conviction for criminal threat, and
the district court did not err in the jury instructions. Greiner failed to preserve his
objection to the district court's denial of his motion to suppress. The district court is
affirmed.

   Affirmed.

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