Oct 27 2015, 8:57 am
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Deborah Markisohn Gregory F. Zoeller
Marion County Public Defender Attorney General of Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana Eric P. Babbs
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Jonathan E. Powell, October 27, 2015
Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No.
49A02-1503-CR-135
v. Appeal from the Marion Superior
Court
State of Indiana, The Honorable Rebekah Pierson-
Appellee-Plaintiff Treacy
Trial Court Cause No.
49G19-1410-CM-46248
Vaidik, Chief Judge.
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Case Summary
[1] Jonathan Edward Powell was convicted in a bench trial of Class A
misdemeanor criminal trespass after a bouncer at a downtown Indianapolis bar
escorted him out of the bar and he refused to comply with an off-duty police
officer’s request that he leave the premises. However, because the State failed
to prove that Powell was on the bar’s property when the officer asked him to
leave, there is insufficient evidence to support his criminal trespass conviction.
We therefore reverse.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] On October 3, 2014, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Officer
Matthew Cook was working off-duty at Bartini’s in downtown Indianapolis.
Officer Cook explained his duties as follows: “[I] stand outside the – out of
police presence. If there is a disturbance inside, one they can’t handle then I
will go inside and deal with it. Otherwise, I stay – [bouncers] bring people
outside that need to leave. I make sure they go away.” Tr. p. 8.
[3] At some point in the evening, a Bartini’s bouncer asked Jonathan Edward
Powell to leave and escorted him out of the bar. Once outside, Powell, who
appeared intoxicated, was told by Officer Cook that he had to leave. Powell
responded that he did not want to leave and that he was going back inside the
club. The officer explained to Powell that he would be arrested for trespassing.
Powell began screaming at the officer and people walking by the club, and the
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officer “had to move him from Bartini’s side of the sidewalk over to – over
across the street to the other sidewalk to get him away from people.” Id. at 22.
[4] Powell was arrested and charged with one count of criminal trespass and one
count of public intoxication. Following a bench trial where Officer Cook was
the only witness, the trial court convicted Powell of criminal trespass but
dismissed the public intoxication charge. Powell appeals his conviction.
Discussion and Decision
[5] Powell argues that there is insufficient evidence to support his conviction for
criminal trespass as a Class A misdemeanor. When reviewing the sufficiency of
the evidence to support a conviction, we do not reweigh the evidence or judge
the credibility of the witnesses. Gorman v. State, 968 N.E.2d 845, 847 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2012), trans. denied. We consider only the probative evidence and the
reasonable inferences therefrom that support the conviction. Id. We will affirm
if the probative evidence and reasonable inferences from that evidence could
have allowed a reasonable trier of fact to find the defendant guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt. Id. Further, where the State has offered no evidence on an
essential element of a charged crime, we cannot draw inferences favorable to
the State from non-existent evidence. Semenick v. State, 977 N.E.2d 7, 10 n.6
(Ind. Ct. App. 2012).
[6] To convict Powell of Class A misdemeanor criminal trespass, the State had to
prove that Powell knowingly or intentionally refused to leave the Bartini’s real
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property after Officer Cook asked him to do so, and that Powell did not have a
contractual interest in the property. See Ind. Code § 35-43-2-2(b)(2). Powell’s
sole argument is that the State failed to present evidence that he was on
Bartini’s property when Officer Cook asked him to leave. We agree.
[7] Our review of the evidence reveals that the Bartini’s bouncer escorted Powell
out of the club. When Powell got outside the club, the officer told him that he
had to leave. Tr. p. 18. Powell responded that he wanted to go back inside the
club, and when the officer refused to allow him to do so, Powell began
screaming at the officer and people walking by the club. The officer then
moved Powell from Bartini’s side of the sidewalk to the sidewalk across the
street. In this limited testimony from Officer Cook, there is no specific
information as to where Powell was standing when the officer ordered him to
leave. Thus, the State failed to prove that Powell refused to leave the bar’s real
property after Officer Cook told him to do so, and we therefore find insufficient
evidence to support Powell’s conviction for criminal trespass. See I.C. § 35-43-
202(b)(2).
[8] The State nevertheless directs us to Walls v. State, 993 N.E.2d 262 (Ind. Ct. App.
2013), in support of its argument that even if Powell was not on Bartini’s
property when Officer Cook asked him to leave, this Court can still affirm his
conviction. However, the facts in Walls are distinguishable from the facts in this
case. In the Walls case, an intoxicated Walls awakened apartment resident
Kristy Zurita at 5:15 a.m. by kicking her front door and asking to enter her
apartment. When Zurita refused to let in Walls, he continued to bang on her
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door and yell. Walls then turned his attention to another apartment, and when
refused entry, Walls attempted to put his foot through the threshold of that
apartment. After those tenants pushed Walls out of their apartment, shut the
door, and locked it, Walls continued to bang on the door.
[9] Walls was convicted of criminal trespass. On appeal he argued that only the
apartment complex or its agent could ask him to leave the common area of the
apartment complex. This Court held that the tenants in an apartment complex
have a sufficiency possessory interest in, “at a minimum, their apartment doors,
the threshold of their apartments, and the immediate areas by which they
accessed their leased apartment units” to allow a criminal trespass conviction
when the defendant refused to leave those specific areas after being requested to
do so. Id. at 267. Here, however, we do not know where Powell was in
relation to the bar. The only testimony from Officer Cook was that Powell was
on Bartini’s side of the sidewalk. There is no indication that Powell attempted
to re-enter the bar or put his foot across the threshold. Walls provides no basis
to affirm Powell’s conviction.1
1
The State also relies on a footnote in Alves v. State, 816 N.E.2d 64 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004), trans. denied. In the
Alves case, this Court affirmed Alves’ criminal trespass conviction where Alves was seen standing on a
property owner’s gate that had a No-Trespassing sign attached to it and was located thirty to forty feet from
the road. In a footnote, we explained that the State was not obligated to show Alves climbed over the fence
and set foot on the ground on the other side because trespass is not confined to an invasion of the surface. Id.
at 66, n.4. Rather, we further explained that an intrusion into air space above the surface and an invasion
below the surface may both be trespass. Id. Here, however, there is no evidence that Powell intruded into air
space above Bartini’s or invaded below its surface. Powell’s reliance on this footnote is therefore misplaced.
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[10] Last, the State contends that even if the evidence did not show that Powell was
on Bartini’s property when Officer Cook told him to leave, there is sufficient
evidence to support Powell’s conviction for criminal trespass because a
reasonable inference could be made that while inside the bar, Powell refused the
bouncer’s request that he leave. First, the State’s theory at trial was that Powell
committed the trespass after the bouncer brought him outside and he refused to
leave. Second, we find no evidence to support this contention where Officer
Cook was the only witness at trial, and he was not in the bar at the time of
Powell’s expulsion. There is insufficient evidence to support Powell’s
conviction.
[11] Reversed.
Robb, J., and Pyle, J., concur.
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