Gause v. State

65 So. 3d 295, 2011 Miss. LEXIS 314, 2011 WL 2536243
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 2011
DocketNo. 2010-KA-00127-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 65 So. 3d 295 (Gause v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gause v. State, 65 So. 3d 295, 2011 Miss. LEXIS 314, 2011 WL 2536243 (Mich. 2011).

Opinions

CHANDLER, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Curtis Wayne Gause was indicted on Count I, the capital murder of Jeffrey Swords with the underlying felony of burglary, and on Count II, the attempted aggravated assault of Tracy Gause. On Count I, the jury was instructed on capital murder with the underlying felony of burglary with the intent to commit an assault therein, murder, manslaughter, and burglary. A Pontotoc County jury found Gause guilty of manslaughter and burglary, and not guilty of attempted aggravated assault. The Circuit Court of Pontotoc County sentenced Gause to twenty years for manslaughter, and to twenty-five years for burglary, -with fifteen years suspended and five years on post-release supervision, to run consecutively, all in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections.

¶ 2. Gause appeals, raising three issues: (1) whether the trial court erred when it allowed the jury to consider a verdict on burglary; (2) whether the trial court erred by refusing to allow Gause to voir dire the State’s expert, Dr. Steven Hayne; and (3) whether the trial court erred by dismissing venire persons based on prior jury service, rather than allowing them to excuse themselves if desired. We affirm Gause’s conviction of manslaughter. We reverse and render Gause’s conviction of burglary.

FACTS

¶ 3. Gause and Tracy Gause were married on December 10, 1983, and had two children, Brittany Catledge, who was twenty-one years old at the time of the trial, and Cora Beth Gause, who was fifteen. Numerous persons testified that the marriage was tumultuous, and that for years, Gause and Tracy had a pattern of repeatedly separating and getting back together. In March 2007, Tracy and Cora Beth moved to a trailer on Old Swords Lane in Ecru, Mississippi, to live with Tracy’s paramour, Jeffrey Swords. Brittany lived in a trailer steps away from Tracy’s with her husband, Samuel Cat-ledge. Gause lived with various family members when he was not with Tracy, and occasionally visited Tracy and their children at her trailer. Gause did not have a key to the trailer.

¶4. In February 2008, Swords moved out of the trailer he had shared with Tracy. Tracy testified that, after Swords moved out, Gause spent the night at the trailer on two occasions, and that she had sex with Gause once, but she never had intended to get back together with Gause. On March 21, 2008, Tracy told Gause she was planning to have a yard sale the next day. That afternoon, Tracy came to the home of Gause’s sister, Amy Wages, where Gause was staying. Tracy talked to Gause and picked up items to sell at the yard sale. They talked about Gause coming to Tracy’s trailer the next morning to help set up for the yard sale, although it was disputed whether that plan was made final. Wages’s husband, Roy Wages, Jr., testified that Gause gave $40 to Tracy and that he heard Tracy and Gause tell each other “I love you” before Tracy left.

¶ 5. Tracy testified that she decided to go out with a friend at about 7:00 p.m. Tracy stated that when Gause called her at about 9:14 p.m., she told him she was not going to have the yard sale the next day because she was out that night. Tracy testified that she had not expected to see Gause the next morning, she had stayed up all night drinking, and she had met Swords at approximately 1:30 a.m. They [298]*298went back to her trailer, where they talked to Cora Beth and her friend, Audrey Jami-son, who was spending the night. At about 4:00 a.m., Tracy and Swords went to the restaurant where Tracy worked to open it for another employee. They left the restaurant at about 5:10 a.m. and returned to Tracy’s trailer at about 5:15 a.m. After talking to the girls, Swords and Tracy retired to Tracy’s bedroom, and the girls went to Cora Beth’s bedroom.

¶ 6. Early that morning, Gause walked from his sister’s house to Tracy’s trailer, a distance of 3.2 miles. Gause testified that when he saw Swords’s truck and Tracy’s truck parked outside Tracy’s trailer, he “saw red.” He began smashing the trucks, which awakened Cora Beth, Audrey, Brittany, and Samuel. According to Gause, he saw a nightlight on inside Tracy’s bedroom, peeked in the bedroom window through a space the curtain did not cover, and witnessed Tracy performing a sexual act on Swords. Gause broke in the front door of Tracy’s trailer, went to her bedroom, and opened the door. Gause, armed with a knife, stabbed Swords five times.1 Tracy, Cora Beth, and Brittany all witnessed Gause stabbing Swords. According to the forensic pathologist, Dr. Steven Hayne, Swords died from a stab wound to the neck that severed his left carotid artery; the other stab wounds were nonlethal.

¶ 7. While Gause attacked Swords, Tracy first tried to kick the knife out of his hand. Then, Swords told Tracy to go, and she ran to Brittany’s trailer, where they called 911. Brittany had come outside, and she briefly witnessed Gause stabbing Swords. Then, Tracy ran back to her own trailer to be with Swords. Gause had run into the woods behind the trailer. Tracy testified that Gause returned and began beating her. She got away and ran outside. Gause came out and yelled to Tracy and Cora Beth “I told y’all I was going to get that son-of-a-bitch.” Gause inflicted further damage on the trucks. Brittany testified that her father was behaving “like he had a demon in him.” Tracy testified that she had believed Gause was going to kill her when he had come into the bedroom.

¶ 8. When the police arrived, Gause walked up to a patrol car and was arrested. Two days later, after signing a waiver of his Miranda rights, he gave a typed statement, which he signed, and an audio-taped statement.2 Both statements were admitted into evidence. In the typed statement, Gause stated that, when he saw Swords’s truck at the trailer, he “saw red,” stabbed the trucks’ tires with his pocket knife, and broke the trucks’ windows with a metal pole he found in the back of one of the trucks. Then, he kicked in the trailer door, saw Tracy and “started to kill her first” but then saw Swords and “went crazy on him.” He threw the knife in the woods and waited for the police.

¶ 9. In the audiotaped statement, Gause stated that he had gone to Tracy’s to help [299]*299with a yard sale. He said that he had thought everything would be fíne if Swords was not there. But when he saw Swords’s truck, he “saw red.” He stabbed the truck tires with his pocket knife, broke the truck window, and then broke into the trailer. When he saw Swords and Tracy in bed, he began stabbing Swords with the pocket knife. He stated that he did not kill Tracy because Cora Beth was there. He said that, after the stabbing, he threw the knife into the woods behind the trailer and waited on the police.

¶ 10. At the trial, Gause testified that, in February and March 2008, he and Tracy had talked about resuming their relationship. This was corroborated by Clay Warren, who testified that Tracy had told him she and Gause were trying to reconcile, and by Roy Wages, Jr. Gause testified that he had stayed at Tracy’s trailer a dozen times during this period and that they had been intimate. Prior to that time, Tracy had dated Swords. Gause testified that Swords had threatened to kill him in the past and, on numerous occasions, had taunted Gause about the fact that Swords was sleeping with his wife. Cora Beth also testified that Gause and Swords had argued previously.

¶ 11. Gause testified that he walked to Tracy’s trailer on the morning of March 22, 2008, to help with the yard sale.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 So. 3d 295, 2011 Miss. LEXIS 314, 2011 WL 2536243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gause-v-state-miss-2011.