Crozier v. State

723 P.2d 42, 1986 Wyo. LEXIS 595
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1986
Docket86-3
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 723 P.2d 42 (Crozier v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crozier v. State, 723 P.2d 42, 1986 Wyo. LEXIS 595 (Wyo. 1986).

Opinion

URBIGKIT, Justice.

Appellant Dennis Crozier, convicted by a jury of second-degree murder for the strangulation death of six-year-old Frederic Gilbert Touney, III (Freddie), was sentenced to the penitentiary for not less than 30 nor more than 50 years, and now appeals, claiming improper introduction of certain hearsay and bad-acts evidence, an unsatisfactory jury instruction on intoxication, and impermissible comment on his failure to testify. We find no adequately demonstrated basis for the asserted error, and affirm.

Crozier’s four assignments of error are more completely stated as:

I. allowing a hearsay statement of the victim to be presented to the jury by testimony of a school counselor;
II. permitting testimony about marijuana when such testimony had no relevance to the crime charged;
III. instructing the jury that the defense of voluntary intoxication applied in connection with first-degree murder only and not second-degree murder or manslaughter; and
IV. violating the constitutional right to silence by the prosecutor’s impermissible comment on appellant’s failure to testify. The State contrarily contends that:
I. “The victim’s hearsay statements were properly admitted under Rule 804(b)(6) of the Wyoming Rules of Evidence.”
II. “The trial court did not err in admitting into evidence statements of Bernadette Touney and Kathy McCord regarding appellant’s attempts to obtain marijuana on the night of the murder.”
III. “The trial court properly limited the applicability of Instruction 19, dealing with the effect of voluntary intoxication, to the charged offense of first degree murder, since second degree murder is not a specific intent crime.”
IV. “The prosecutor’s remarks during his closing argument were not comments on appellant’s decision to not testify in his own behalf.”

What Happened

The victim in this tragic affair was Freddie Touney, age six. His mother, Lorraine, worked for the Cheyenne newspapers as an inserter of fliers and advertisement sections, usually working split shifts, mostly at night. Crozier also had been employed as an inserter. In February, 1985, he came to work drunk, and Lorraine, who was su *45 pervising, decided that he was risking becoming caught in the machines. She pulled his time card, clocked him out and reported him to the night supervisor at the newspaper, and he was fired.

The Touney family lived in a trailer court in south Cheyenne. Fred Touney is an unemployed social security recipient, totally disabled. He did, however, help his wife Lorraine at her newspaper job, which included delivery of newspapers from the dock to the post office for mailing. Since this work involved night shifts, the Tou-neys slept much of the day, frequently leaving their children unattended at night. Crozier lived in the same trailer court, and he occasionally came to the Touney house and would stay with the Touney children— Bernadette, age 13, Jeaninne, age 10, Freddie, age 6, Erica, age 5, and Scott, age 2⅞.

This practice of visiting the Touney home continued even after Crozier was fired. One such evening was Sunday, March 3, 1985. Shortly after Crozier’s arrival, an altercation occurred when Freddie called Crozier a faggot, and Crozier then “popped him in the mouth.” Mrs. Touney scolded them, and then left the oldest child, Bernadette, with instructions to send Crozier home and Freddie to bed if there was further trouble. Mr. and Mrs. Touney left for work at about 9:30 p.m., and did not return home until approximately 2:30 a.m.

After the parents left, Crozier began watching television with the children. He had a cold, and he brought with him a pitcher of toddy which his roommate had mixed for him, containing a “whole bottle of brandy” (emphasis added) and a gallon of lemonade.

At about 10:00 p.m., Crozier asked Bernadette to go to a neighbor, Kathy McCord, to see if she would find him some marijuana. Bernadette complied, and Kathy and Bernadette returned together to the Tou-ney home, where Kathy told Crozier that she would try to locate some marijuana for him. Kathy and Bernadette left together, stopped at two neighbors’ trailers, but were unable to acquire any marijuana. On returning, Freddie and nine-year-old Jean-inne Touney were smoking cigarettes, causing Kathy and Crozier to start an argument over his letting these small children smoke. At some point, Kathy began playing with Freddie’s dog. Freddie thought she was hurting the dog, and called her a bitch. Crozier said to Freddie, “Shut up right now before I hit you.” Freddie responded, “You ain’t going to hit me,” to which appellant retorted, “You want to make a bet?” Bernadette intervened and the two stopped arguing. When Kathy McCord tried to leave, Crozier blocked the front door and chased her down the hall to the back door, dragging her back into the living room. More arguing ensued, after which Kathy got away and went home. The trial evidence was not pleasant, and the factual situation could hardly accord with the American dream.

Jeaninne went to bed, Freddie went to his parents’ bed as was his usual practice, and Bernadette and Crozier continued to watch television, although he repeatedly distracted Bernadette from watching television, and she repeatedly told him to “shut up.” He picked her up, and she said, “Put me down right now.” Crozier said, “Why, do you think I’m going to hurt you?” Bernadette responded, “I don’t know,” after which appellant said, “I wouldn’t hurt your family. The only one I might hurt was Freddie.”

Bernadette went to bed, stopping first to check on Freddie, who was resting in his parents’ bed. The boy was awake, and complained of a stomachache and a headache. Bernadette listened to her radio for a time after she went to bed, until about 11:30 p.m., when she saw Freddie walk down the hall past her room toward the living room. She heard him say hoarsely, “Dennis, I don’t feel well.” She fell asleep, and was awakened later, when Crozier came into her room to say that he was leaving. Bernadette heard the front door shut, went to the living room to assure herself that the door was shut, checked on two-and-a-half-year-old Scotty in her parents’ room, and then called to Freddie in *46 the darkness of her parents’ bedroom. He did not respond, and she went back to bed.

She was awakened when her parents returned home, and Mrs. Touney found Freddie’s limp body in his sister Erica’s bottom bunk bed. They carried Freddie to the living room, laid him on the floor, and began performing mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, while the father went to a neighbor’s house for a telephone to call an ambulance. Bernadette then went to the mobile home of Crozier and his roommate. Crozier followed Bernadette home and began helping Mrs. Touney with cardio-pulmonary resuscitation until a sheriff's deputy arrived to check Freddie for a pulse, and there was none. Crozier continued mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, and hollered at Freddie, “You can’t do this to me. No one dies around me.”

When the ambulance arrived, one of the attendants inquired about the marks on Freddie’s neck, to which no one responded.

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Bluebook (online)
723 P.2d 42, 1986 Wyo. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crozier-v-state-wyo-1986.