Immekus v. State

410 S.W.3d 678, 2013 WL 3991894, 2013 Mo. App. LEXIS 905
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 6, 2013
DocketNo. SD 32233
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 410 S.W.3d 678 (Immekus v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Immekus v. State, 410 S.W.3d 678, 2013 WL 3991894, 2013 Mo. App. LEXIS 905 (Mo. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

GARY W. LYNCH, J.

Mark Edward Immekus (“Movant”) appeals the motion court’s judgment denying his Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction relief from his conviction, following a jury trial, of first-degree assault, see section 565.050.1 He claims the motion court clearly erred in not finding that his trial counsel was ineffective for “failing to request a lesser-included jury instruction for assault in the second degree.” We determine the motion court did not clearly err in finding that trial counsel employed an objectively reasonable trial strategy in not making such a request, and affirm the motion court’s judgment.

Factual and Procedural Background2

Movant had dated Saveda Bollinger (“Victim”) before leaving the state, after which she started dating Mike McQueen (“McQueen”). On October 3,1996, Movant returned to Missouri, and Victim and McQueen took him to Victim’s home to get clothes and belongings that he had left [680]*680there before leaving the state. Victim and McQueen then took Movant to a motel in Rolla where Victim rented a room for Movant to spend the night. That evening, Movant called Victim and told her that he had taken pills from her home and that if she did not come alone to the motel to see him, he would attempt suicide by taking them.

Victim and McQueen started for the motel, but Victim dropped off McQueen at a grocery store and told him to walk to the motel. She instructed McQueen that if she was not outside when he arrived at the motel, it meant she was having trouble, and he should come to the door. When Movant answered Victim’s knock on the door, he threw her to the floor, hit her in the face, and pulled her by her hair onto a chair where he tied her up with a cord. Movant proceeded to hit Victim in the face several times. He cut her face with a single-edged razor, cut her hair to a length of 1½ inches (it had come to the middle of her back), cut the back of her head, and shaved off her eyebrows. At the same time, he told Victim that he was going to make her “as ugly as her boyfriend,” and he held a mirror in front of her and asked, “Aren’t you pretty now?” At one point, Movant told her that if she thought she had been beaten, “now you’re going to be beat.” He also told her, “Dead time, bitch.” In addition to hitting her in the face, Movant also ripped off Victim’s pants, tearing off the buttons on the fly, and kicked her in the lower part of the stomach with his cowboy boots. Movant used a tape recorder he had taken from Victim’s house to record some of his comments about what he had done to her and what he intended to do, including that he intended to inject her with methamphetamine. He also told her that his friend, Rick Fisher, was going to arrive and rape her.

The motel clerk’s office was directly beneath the room that Victim had rented for Movant. When the clerk heard loud banging coming from that room, she- thought someone was tearing up the room. She called the room and told Movant that he was going to have to curtail his activities because she didn’t want the room torn up, and he said “Okay.” McQueen then arrived at the motel and asked the clerk to call the room after he got no answer by knocking on the door to see if Victim was ready to go. The clerk called Movant again and asked to speak to Victim. Movant gave the phone to Victim who told the clerk, “Oh, help me, please God[.]” The clerk then called 911.

At some point, Rick Fisher arrived at the room. Although he was acquainted with Victim, he did not recognize her because of her condition. At that time, Victim was still bound in the chair and was bleeding from her wounds. Fisher said, “I don’t need this, I’m leaving[,]” and Movant said he was going with him. Movant untied Victim and threw her clothes at her. As soon as Victim could get her clothes on, she left the room and ran downstairs. Fisher then left the motel room and got in his car. Movant followed Fisher outside, got in the car with him, and they left. The police and an ambulance arrived at the motel shortly after they left. Some officers left the scene to look for Movant and Fisher, and one or more officers went to the room to see if anyone else was there. They entered the room through the door which Movant left open and saw the room in disarray, hair on the floor, a chair with a cord tied around the arms, and blood on the wall behind the chair. Shortly, word came that Fisher’s car had been stopped, and the officers in the room left to assist in the arrest, pulling the motel room door shut, which resulted in it being locked.

[681]*681Victim was taken to the hospital, where she was found to have cuts on both cheeks, a cut on the back of her head, and cut-off hair. Her eyes were severely swollen. The physician who examined her had to hold her eyes open in order to examine them because of the swelling. Although Victim was not hospitalized overnight, she went back the next day for a CT scan that revealed a fracture of the left orbital floor (the under part of the cavity or socket of the skull in which the eye is situated). The risks of a fractured orbital floor include the possibility of infection and paralysis of the eye by trapping the optic nerve. Also, Victim’s front tooth was loose and cracked, and it eventually fell out.

Movant was charged "with the class A felony of assault in the first degree by attempting “to kill or cause serious physical injury to [Victim] by cutting her with a razor blade and striking her with his fists and in the course thereof inflicted serious physical injury[.]” See Section 565.050.2.3 That Movant caused physical injury to Victim was undisputed during the jury trial on this charge and admitted by Movant in the opening statement by trial counsel. Movant’s defense was that he did not attempt to cause serious physical injury to Victim and did not cause serious physical injury to Victim.4

Because subsection 2 of section 565.050 provides that “[a]ssault in the first degree is a class B felony unless in the course thereof the actor inflicts serious physical injury on the victim in which case it is a class A felony[,]” the charge was submitted to the jury in two alternative verdict-directing instructions. Instruction 5 (class A felony) required the jury to find that Mov-ant “attempted to kill or cause serious physical injury to [Victim] by cutting her with a razor blade and striking her with his fists, and ... that [Movant] in the course of such conduct caused serious physical injury to [Victim].” (Emphasis added). Instruction 7 (class B felony) omitted the latter and required only that the jury find that Movant “attempted to kill or cause serious physical injury to [Victim] by cutting her with a razor blade and striking her with his fists.” In addition, at Movant’s request, Instruction 9 alternatively instructed the jury on the lesser-included offense of assault in the third degree, see section 565.070, a class A misdemeanor. That instruction required only that the jury find that Movant “attempted to cause physical injury to [Victim] by cutting her with a razor blade and striking her with his fist.” The jury, failing to find that Movant caused serious physical injury to Victim, found Movant guilty of the class B felony of assault in the first degree under Instruction 7.

In Movant’s direct appeal, this Court held that the evidence was sufficient to support a finding that Movant attempted to cause serious physical injury; however, the sentence was set aside and the case remanded for re-sentencing, due to an error in sentencing.

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

Related

Moss v. Griffith
E.D. Missouri, 2020

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
410 S.W.3d 678, 2013 WL 3991894, 2013 Mo. App. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/immekus-v-state-moctapp-2013.