Holloman v. State

2002 WY 117, 51 P.3d 214, 2002 Wyo. LEXIS 123, 2002 WL 1759754
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 2002
Docket00-202
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2002 WY 117 (Holloman 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
Holloman v. State, 2002 WY 117, 51 P.3d 214, 2002 Wyo. LEXIS 123, 2002 WL 1759754 (Wyo. 2002).

Opinion

GOLDEN, Justice.

[¶ 1] In this appeal, the trial court failed to give a requested self-defense instruction to the jury during trial for one count of first degree premeditated murder. Our jurisprudence has established that the defenses of self-defense and accident are mutually exclusive when applied to the shooting death of a victim. However, in this particular case, Appellant Brian Keith Holloman claimed that his act of self-defense by striking blows against one victim resulted in the accidental falling death of a third party, and he was, therefore, entitled to his requested self-defense-against-assault instruction. Our review has determined that Holloman’s defense theory is recognized by the common law, the self-defense elements are supported by his testimony, and are corroborated by physical evidence. We, therefore, hold that it was reversible error to fail to instruct the jury on his self-defense theory. This ruling is dis-positive, and we do not consider Holloman’s issues regarding prosecutorial misconduct.

[¶ 2] Reversed and remanded for new trial.

ISSUES

[¶3] Holloman presents these issues for our review:

*216 I. Did the trial court commit reversible error by improperly refusing to give a jury instruction on self-defense where Mr. Hol-loman offered an instruction sufficient to apprise the court of his theory of the case and there was competent evidence presented to support that theory?
II. Was Mr. Holloman deprived of his rights to due process and a fair trial by the prosecution’s pervasive and varied misconduct, including (1) violating discovery rules (one violation constitutes independent reversible error), (2) ignoring exclusionary rulings by the court, (3) engaging in various forms of improper questioning, (4) eliciting a comment on Mr. Holloman’s exercise of his right to silence (which constitutes independent reversible error), (5) encouraging the jury to convict because of community bias and prejudice, and (6) making highly inflammatory and improper comments in summation (the combined summation comments constitute independent reversible error as well)?

The State rephrases the issues:

I. Was appellant entitled to a self-defense instruction where his defense at trial was that he killed his victim by accident?
II. Was there prosecutorial misconduct in appellant’s trial?

FACTS

[¶ 4] Holloman was a transient who arrived in Cheyenne on July 24, 1999, and planned to continue to El Paso, Texas. An admitted alcoholic, Holloman spent that day and night drinking with other men, and, sometime later that night, Holloman was attacked and slashed across the face. He received medical attention for his wound, which required a double row of stitches. The wound was described as a cut from above his right eye that went down his face, through his ear and into his neck. Holloman spent that night at a detoxification center.

[¶ 5] The next morning, Holloman and another man who had also spent the night at the detoxification center joined Herman Thunder Hawk and Douglas Johnson at a liquor store and all bought beer and vodka. The four then went to Thunder Hawk’s apartment at the Idleman Hotel in downtown Cheyenne. The four drank all of the alcohol they had bought, drank another half-gallon of vodka they bought in mid-afternoon and soon all passed out. The men awoke sometime that evening. At 7:13 p.m., local police were dispatched to the hotel following a report that a man was hanging out of a window of the Idleman Hotel.

[¶ 6] Police arrived within two minutes and observed a man hanging from the window and, within minutes, fall to his death. That man was Douglas Johnson. Before Johnson fell, the police observed that Johnson’s thighs were over the sash of the window and the rest of his body was hanging down facing the building. One police officer stated that he “fell” out of the window, and that he did not see anybody shove him out of the window. Police entered the building as Thunder Hawk and Holloman were attempting to exit it. Both were placed on the ground and handcuffed. The two began yelling at each other, and the officer in charge told the other officers not to ask them any questions and to write down everything that the two said to each other. Thunder Hawk accused Holloman of killing his friend, and Holloman made statements that he had killed him. Holloman’s statements were later admitted against him at trial.

[¶ 7] Holloman was tried for first degree murder. Under the State’s theory of the case, Holloman pushed Johnson out of the window and he hung suspended from the window for some minutes with his thighs on the window sash and one arm locked onto the window. Johnson was able to pull himself back in to where his waist was on the sash, and then Holloman forcefully ejected him out through the window causing him to fall to his death. Additionally, Thunder Hawk testified that he emerged from the bathroom and saw Holloman shoving Johnson out of the window. Thunder Hawk stated that he grabbed Johnson by the calves of his legs and held on to him. Holloman hit Thunder Hawk in the face numerous times causing Thunder Hawk to lose his hold. The State argued that Holloman did not lose his grip on Johnson but, instead, sent him out of the window with force to his death.

*217 [¶ 8] Several witnesses on the street observed Johnson hanging out of the window before he fell to his death. Although all agreed that someone was holding onto Johnson as he hung upside down out of the window, the stories conflicted as to whether he fell or was shoved out of the window. The time period between when Johnson was first sent out of the window and fell to his death was between five and ten minutes.

[¶ 9] In opening arguments, the defense explained its theory of the case. After Hollo-man awoke, he was struck in the face:

And so when he gets attacked, he does what anyone would do under the circumstances; he defends himself. He whips around, but you know what, he doesn’t see Douglas Johnson. As soon as he gets to where he can see, he sees Herman Thunder Hawk, and that’s all he sees. He does not even know that Douglas Johnson had gone out the window. He still thinks it’s Herman Thunder Hawk that just attacked him.
So he does start hitting Herman Thunder Hawk. He doesn’t even realize that Douglas Johnson is out of the window until he hears Herman Thunder Hawk say, “Oh, shit, he fell,” and Herman Thunder Hawk takes off.
⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
Now we’re not trying to say that in self-defense, Brian threw Douglas Johnson out a window. We are trying to say that he was defending himself, and in the course of defending himself, a tragic accident happened, but that’s all. It was a tragic accident, and not a crime.

[¶ 10] During trial, Holloman testified that he awoke to loud music on a tape player. Holloman got up and crossed to the tape player and turned it off. He stated that Thunder Hawk was in the room and seated on a couch next to Johnson, and as Holloman turned off the tape player, he was struck hard in his face on the wound with stitches. The blow knocked him into a wall and the intense pain blinded him for some moments, and he felt as if he might lose consciousness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 WY 117, 51 P.3d 214, 2002 Wyo. LEXIS 123, 2002 WL 1759754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloman-v-state-wyo-2002.