Adams v. State

2007 MT 35, 153 P.3d 601, 336 Mont. 63, 2007 Mont. LEXIS 54
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 2007
Docket05-610
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 2007 MT 35 (Adams v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. State, 2007 MT 35, 153 P.3d 601, 336 Mont. 63, 2007 Mont. LEXIS 54 (Mo. 2007).

Opinion

JUSTICE LEAPHART

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

*65 ¶1 Larry DeWayne Adams appeals from the Twenty-First Judicial District Court’s denial of his amended petition for postconviction relief. We affirm.

¶2 Adams raises the following issues on appeal:

¶3 1. Did the District Court err in denying Adams’ amended petition for postconviction relief alleging Adams received ineffective assistance of counsel when his attorneys failed to file a motion to dismiss for lack of speedy trial?

¶4 2. Did the District Court err in denying Adams’ amended petition for postconviction relief alleging Adams received ineffective assistance of counsel when his attorney failed to object to a jury instruction on aggravated assault as a lesser included offense of the attempted deliberate homicide charge?

¶5 3. Did the District Court err in denying Adams’ amended petition for postconviction relief alleging Adams received ineffective assistance of counsel when his attorney failed to move for a directed verdict regarding aggravated assault?

¶6 4. Did the District Court legally sentence Adams when it imposed a ten-year weapon enhancement?

BACKGROUND

¶7 On October 2,1998, the State charged Adams by information with attempted deliberate homicide, obscuring the identity of a machine, possession of a switchblade knife, criminal possession of dangerous drugs, and criminal possession of drug paraphernalia. The information included a notice that, pursuant to § 46-18-221, MCA (1997), Adams could receive an enhanced sentence for the attempted deliberate homicide offense because he used a weapon in the commission of the offense.

¶8 Adams was tried by a jury on September 20 and 21,1999. The jury found Adams guilty of aggravated assault, a lesser included offense of attempted deliberate homicide, not guilty of obscuring the identity of a machine, guilty of possession of a switchblade knife, guilty of criminal possession of dangerous drugs, and guilty of criminal possession of drug paraphernalia.

¶9 Adams’ charges arose out of an altercation between Adams and his girlfriend, Jackie Wright, on September 14, 1998. Early that morning, Adams returned to the home he and Wright shared in Victor, Montana, after several hours of drinking at a nearby bar. Adams and Wright started to argue. Adams began throwing things, including loose change, boots, lamps, and a coffee table. He picked up a .9 millimeter pistol and started waving it around, then fired it into the wall a couple feet to Wright’s left and a few inches above her head. He then knelt down in front of Wright, yelled at her, and put the gun to her chest. Wright looked *66 Adams in the face, thinking he was going to kill her. She heard the gun click, then saw a look of surprise on Adams’ face, as if he was shocked the gun did not fire.

¶10 After the gun failed to fire, Adams went down a hallway then came back without the gun. According to Wright, he then threw another lamp toward her. She picked up the lamp and tried to defend herself with it as Adams came at her. Adams grabbed Wright and started hitting her on the head and chest with his fists. They fell to the floor and Adams straddled her, grabbing her hair and hitting her head on the floor. Wright looked up and saw Adams with the coffee table over his head as he brought it down on her. She put up her left arm to protect herself, but was hit on the head with the table. She felt herself losing consciousness and realized that she had wet herself. She came around when she felt warmth on her neck. Adams was walking down the hall again and Wright thought he was going to retrieve the gun. She got up and ran out of the house toward the neighbor’s house. She got to the neighbor’s door and saw Adams following her. She started slamming the screen door to try to wake up the neighbors. She then tried the door knob, found it was unlocked, and entered the house and locked the door behind her.

¶11 The neighbors in the house testified they woke up to the sound of Wright slamming the screen door. They found Wright in their living room. She was telling them to help her, her boyfriend was trying to kill her. The neighbors called the police and tried to calm Wright down. She refused to sit on their furniture because she had lost control of her bladder. The neighbors said she appeared to have been beaten and her ear was bleeding.

¶12 After law enforcement arrived and secured the area, Wright was transported to the hospital by ambulance. The emergency room doctor stitched up a tear in her ear and admitted her to the hospital overnight to observe her because of her head injury. The doctor diagnosed Wright as having a concussion, which meant that Wright had either been knocked unconscious or hit hard enough on the head to be dazed. Wright also had a laceration of her ear and multiple contusions and abrasions. The doctor testified Wright’s injuries were consistent with being beaten by a fist and hit by the edge of a table. Wright testified that as a result of the incident, she had pain in her ribs that lasted for about six months, and still bothered her when driving long distances. She also testified that the pain in her head from the concussion lasted for a month or two.

¶13 Adams testified on his own behalf at trial, asserting that the gun was sitting on the kitchen counter, already cocked. When he picked it up to unload it, Wright started to grab for it, and it went off and hit the wall. He said he then ejected the magazine and threw the gun and the magazine against the wall. He said Wright then started to swing at him, *67 so he laid her on the floor and she pulled her earring out of her own ear. When he went to get her a washcloth from the bathroom down the hall, Wright ran out the door and down the driveway toward the neighbors’ house. He ran after her because he did not want her to make a fool of herself in the little red and black, lacy, waist-length nighty he said she was wearing that night. He testified that when he saw her banging the neighbors’ screen door against her own head, he gave up and went home and went to bed.

¶14 Law enforcement officers testified that when they searched the home later, they found the gun laying against a wall with the magazine still in it. They also testified that Wright was wearing a white nightshirt when they found her at the neighbors’ house, and it was stained yellow on the bottom. At Adams’ house, the officers found the coffee table upright in the middle of the living room with Adams’ wallet lying on it. They saw several lamps had been broken. They also saw a bullet hole in the wall. They recovered a bullet casing in the living room and a fired .9 millimeter bullet in a hall closet.

¶15 Adams’ defense counsel hired a ballistics expert that testified that the gun did not fire every time the trigger was pulled, and that it was not predictable when it would or would not fire. The expert testified that in order for Wright to hear a clicking sound coming from the gun, one of two things would have happened: either the trigger was pulled and the hammer fell, causing a round to fire, or the trigger was pulled and the hammer fell, and the gun did not fire, but in that case, the round in the chamber would be marked. He said the round found in the chamber that night was not marked.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. S. Griebel
2024 MT 295N (Montana Supreme Court, 2024)
State v. S. Dominguez, Jr.
2024 MT 221N (Montana Supreme Court, 2024)
Com. v. Cruz, G.
2024 Pa. Super. 174 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2024)
Wittal v. State
2023 MT 191N (Montana Supreme Court, 2023)
State v. S. Pine
2023 MT 172 (Montana Supreme Court, 2023)
Peterson v. Fletcher
D. Montana, 2022
M. Ilk v. State
Montana Supreme Court, 2021
State v. K. Jones
2020 MT 110N (Montana Supreme Court, 2020)
State v. J. Warren
2020 MT 92N (Montana Supreme Court, 2020)
State v. Kurtz
2019 MT 127 (Montana Supreme Court, 2019)
A. Golie v. State
2017 MT 191 (Montana Supreme Court, 2017)
State v. B. Hooper
2016 MT 237 (Montana Supreme Court, 2016)
State v. Ghostbear
338 P.3d 25 (Montana Supreme Court, 2014)
Stock v. Montana
2014 MT 46 (Montana Supreme Court, 2014)
Ellison v. State of Montana
2013 MT 376 (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)
State v. Haldane
2013 MT 32 (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)
State v. Whalen
2013 MT 26 (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)
Larry Adams v. State
2013 MT 23N (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)
State v. Danny Sartain
2012 MT 164 (Montana Supreme Court, 2012)
Bomar v. State of MT
2012 MT 163 (Montana Supreme Court, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 MT 35, 153 P.3d 601, 336 Mont. 63, 2007 Mont. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-state-mont-2007.