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Redfern v. State 246 Ga.App. 572 Court of Appeals of Georgia. REDFERN v. The STATE. No. A00A1481. | Oct. 31, 2000. Synopsis Defendant was convicted

Redfern v. State 246 Ga.App. 572 Court of Appeals of Georgia. REDFERN v. The STATE. No. A00A1481. | Oct. 31, 2000. Synopsis Defendant was convicted in a jury trial in the Superior Court, Thomas County, Altman, J., of burglary of building arising from incident in which defendant parachuted off television broadcast tower. Defendant appealed. The Court of Appeals, Andrews, P.J., held that broadcast tower was not a "building" under burglary statute. Reversed. Attorneys and Law Firms **701 *576 Culpepper & Horne, Robert Culpepper III, Cairo, Melvin R. Horne, for appellant. J. David Miller, District Attorney, Robert R. Auman, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee. Opinion *572 ANDREWS, Presiding Judge. William Earl Redfern was found guilty by a jury of burglary based on the charge that he entered a building without authority with the intent to commit a felony therein. On **702 appeal he claims the evidence was insufficient to support the guilty verdict. Because we find the State failed to prove that the structure he entered was a building within the meaning of the burglary statute, we agree and reverse the judgment of conviction. The indictment charged that on March 13, 1998, Redfern committed the offense of burglary by "enter[ing] a building, to-wit: W.C.T.V. Tower" with the intent to commit therein the felony of criminal damage to property in the second degree. The State presented evidence that on the night of March 13, 1998, at about 10:30 p.m. an engineer employed by WCTV, who lived near the WCTV television broadcast tower, noticed that there was a problem with the lights atop the 2,000-foot-high tower. The engineer drove to the tower located inside a fenced-in tower compound area, which itself was located inside a fenced-in 180-acre site surrounding the tower. The tower compound area was comprised of a building which serviced the tower and the tower structure itself which was located adjacent to the service building. The engineer testified that he discovered someone had broken a door to gain entry into the service building and stolen a key from the building that unlocked a control box on the tower which secured the controls operating the tower elevator. He further testified that he found the elevator control box had been unlocked, the missing key was in the lock lying on top of the box, and the elevator was being *573 used by someone to go up the tower. Parachuting equipment he found near the building led the engineer to suspect that someone was attempting to parachute from the top of the tower. In fact, the engineer testified that they had caught people on previous occasions parachuting from the tower. Police arrived within a few minutes, and the engineer and a police officer brought the elevator back down and took it to the top of the tower to investigate. No one was found at the top of the tower, but they observed what appeared to be flashlights being carried by people on the ground moving away from the area of the tower. Officers investigating the lights discovered a car parked near the tower property covered by a parachute. A check of the car's tag revealed that it was a rental car rented by Redfern. A bag was found near the car containing a parachute and an owner identification card bearing Redfern's name. The State presented additional evidence that over $500 of damage was done to the tower on the night of March 13. Part of the damage was to lights high on the tower, and the State presented evidence that a tower light alarm device showed that the light damage occurred at or near the time the break-in was discovered at the service building on the night of March 13. Although Redfern initially told police he was not at the tower, he testified at trial and admitted he was there on the night of March 13 with two other people. He admitted they trespassed on the tower property, took the elevator to the top of the tower and parachuted from the top, then left their car and hid when the police arrived. Redfern denied, however, that he or anyone with him broke into the service building, stole a key, or damaged the tower. According to Redfern, he was associated with a group of persons who had parachuted on numerous occasions off the WCTV tower and other high buildings, antennae towers, bridge spans, and natural precipices as part of an activity called BASE (building, antennae, span, and earth) jumping. He testified that on a previous visit to the tower for BASE jumping, he had obtained a number off the bottom of the Master Lock on the elevator control box and used the number to obtain a duplicate key to the lock from a locksmith. Redfern said he used his duplicate key to gain access to the elevator control box on the night of March 13. The State alleged in the indictment that Redfern committed the offense of burglary when, without authority, he entered "a building, to-wit: W.C.T.V. Tower" with the intent to commit therein the felony offense of criminal damage to property in the second degree. The offense of burglary is defined as follows: A person commits the offense of burglary when, without authority and with the intent to commit a felony or theft therein, he enters or remains within the dwelling house of *574 another or any building, vehicle, railroad car, watercraft, or other such **703 structure designed for use as the dwelling of another or enters or remains within any other building, railroad car, aircraft, or any room or any part thereof. OCGA 16-7-1(a). Accordingly, in order to prove the offense of burglary as charged in the indictment, the State was required to prove that the WCTV tower unlawfully entered by Redfern was a building within the meaning of the burglary statute and that Redfern intended to or committed the felony offense of criminal damage to property in the second degree in that building. As to the element of unlawful entry, there was direct evidence that Redfern entered the WCTV tower, and the State produced additional circumstantial evidence that Redfern entered the service building adjacent to the tower to steal the key to the elevator control panel. The only evidence which the State produced proving the element of commission of the felony offense of criminal damage to property in the second degree was circumstantial evidence that, after entering the WCTV tower, Redfern caused over $500 of damage to the tower. Although the State does not clearly set forth its theory, it appears that to prove the charge that Redfern unlawfully entered the alleged building with the intent to commit the charged felony therein, the State intended to show either: (1) that the WCTV tower, standing alone, was a building for purposes of the burglary statute, or (2) that, even if the tower standing alone would not be considered a building, it was a building under the burglary statute because it was part of the adjacent service building. We find no evidence to support a claim that the 2,000-foot-high broadcast tower should be considered a building because it was part of the adjacent service building. Although photographs show there was a walkway between the service building and the tower, they were clearly two separate structures. The base of the tower was a short distance from the service building, and the tower was independently supported by guy wires running from the tower to the ground. Moreover, testimony from the WCTV engineer indicated that he had to exit the service building to walk to the elevator control panel located on the tower. Compare Floyd v. State, 207 Ga.App. 275, 280, 427 S.E.2d 605 (1993) (where we concluded that a garden center contiguous to a store was part of the store's main building). [1] Accordingly, the issue which controls this case is whether the broadcast tower was a building within the meaning of the burglary statute. "Georgia's [burglary] statute is very broad and does not limit its application to buildings of any particular type or in any particular condition." Smith v. State, 226 Ga.App. 9, 11, 485 S.E.2d 572 (1997) *575 (unfinished house was a building under the burglary statute). The statute has been interpreted as applying to buildings of "whatever kind." Id.; Franks v. State, 240 Ga.App. 685, 687, 524 S.E.2d 545 (1999) (enclosed metal trailer used to store goods was a building under the burglary statute). For example, in Floyd, 207 Ga.App. at 280, 427 S.E.2d 605, we noted that the Supreme Court in Williams v. State, 105 Ga. 814, 815, 32 S.E. 129 (1898) held that a chicken coop enclosed only by wire and covered by shingles was within the meaning of a criminal statute prohibiting theft not only from "any dwelling-house, store, shop, [or] warehouse" but also from "any other building." Williams defined the term building as "an edifice for any use; that which is built, as a dwelling-house, barn, etc." (Citation omitted.) Id. at 815, 32 S.E. 129. Similarly, in construing the burglary statute in Smith, 226 Ga.App. 9, 485 S.E.2d 572, we referred to another broad definition of a building as a structure in the nature of a house built where it is to stand; as commonly understood, a house for business, residence, or public use, or for shelter of animals or storage of goods, and very generally, but not always, the idea of a habitation for the permanent use of man, or an erection connected with his permanent use. (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Id. at 10-11, 485 S.E.2d 572. [2] Nevertheless, the broad meaning given to the term building under the burglary statute does not encompass every type of structure. One element common to the various structures found to be buildings under the statute is that they provided an enclosure of some type for people, animals, or goods. We find this element to be lacking in the **704 WCTV broadcast tower at issue. The purpose of the 2,000-foot-high tower was not to enclose anything but to provide a tall structure from which the television broadcast signal could emanate. The tower was a slender structure constructed of steel beams and held upright by guy wires running from the tower to the ground. It was open to the elements from all sides from top to bottom. To the extent a means was provided by stairs or elevator to ascend the tower, the only apparent purpose for this was tower maintenance. We conclude this is not the type of structure the legislature intended to protect as a building under the burglary statute. Accordingly, the illegal entry upon and alleged damage to the tower caused by Redfern were covered not by the burglary statute but by the criminal statutes related to criminal trespass and damage to property set forth in OCGA Title 16, Chapter 7, Article 2.1 Judgment reversed. RUFFIN and ELLINGTON, JJ., concur. All Citations 246 Ga.App. 572, 540 S.E.2d 701 When a party loses a court case at trial, that losing party generally has at least one opportunity to appeal the case to a higher court within its jurisdiction. This higher court is called an appellate court, and it usually consists of more than one appellate judge making the decision. The appeal cannot simply state that the losing party thinks the trial court decision was bad. There must be legal grounds for the appeal. In order to articulate those legal grounds to the appellate court, the losing party files an appellate brief to set out their legal argument as to why the trial court decision should be overturned. Likewise, once an appeal and its accompanying brief have been filed, the other (winning) party has the opportunity to submit a brief to the appellate court explaining why the trial court was legally correct in its decision. The party that files the appeal is called the appellant, and the party being appealed against is called the appellee. Once both parties have filed their briefs (and sometimes after both parties have presented oral arguments to the appellate courts in support of their briefs), the appellate court makes a ruling based on their briefs, and it issues an opinion. This opinion is written by one of the appellate judges who hears the case, and the other appellate judges who agree with the opinion concur with it. A majority of the appellate judges who hear the case have to agree (concur) for the decision to be binding. 1. Who are the parties to this case? 2. What was the defendant charged with at the trial court level? 3. What conclusion was reached at the trial court level? 4. Which party appealed the case? In other words, which party was the appellant and which party was the appellee? 5. What legal grounds was this appeal based on? To ask this more simply, the legal definition of which word in the statute is at issue and why? 6. Which appellate court made this decision? 7. Which party did the appellate court side with? In other words, which party's brief did the appellate court obviously find more persuasive? 8. Was the trial court's decision affirmed or reversed? 9. What was the name of the judge who wrote this opinion and what year was the opinion published? 10. How many other appellate judges concurred with this decision

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