Inman v. State

2012 WY 107, 281 P.3d 745, 2012 Wyo. LEXIS 112, 2012 WL 3174128
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 2012
DocketNo. S-11-0211
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2012 WY 107 (Inman 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
Inman v. State, 2012 WY 107, 281 P.3d 745, 2012 Wyo. LEXIS 112, 2012 WL 3174128 (Wyo. 2012).

Opinion

GOLDEN, Justice.

[11] Donald Inman (Inman) appeals his aggravated assault and battery conviction. Inman did not deny that he assaulted the victim, but claimed he acted in defense of himself and his family. On appeal, Inman asserts the district court erred in allowing a detective to provide lay opinion testimony as to the location of the assault. He also asserts the district court erred in denying his motions for judgment of acquittal, arguing that the victim's testimony was contradictory and so inherently unreliable that a reasonable juror could not have accepted the vie-tim's version of events and rejected Inman's claim of self defense. We affirm.

ISSUES

[12] Inman presents the following issues on appeal:

1. The denial by the Honorable District Judge John R. Perry of Defendant's Motion in Limine: WRE 701 dated January 5, 2011 and the admission of improper lay opinion evidence of Gillette Detective Becky Elger; and
2. The denial by the Honorable District Judge John R. Perry of Defendant's Motion for Judgment of Acquittal-Criminal Rule 29(c) dated March 25, 2011.

FACTS

[13] On September 14, 2010, Jerrod Wilson (Wilson) moved from Oklahoma to Gillette, Wyoming, with his wife and their infant son. Wilson's wife is Inman's sister, and when they arrived in Gillette, the Wilsons stayed with Inman in an apartment that he shared with his girlfriend and their two children.

[¥4] On September 17, 2010, Inman and Wilson went together to run an errand and to a bar to celebrate Wilson's new job. Over the course of about two hours, Inman drank two to three beers, and Wilson drank four beers and two shots of hard liquor. While they were drinking, Wilson told Inman that he had broken his wife's nose, pushed her down when she was pregnant, and had been unfaithful to her. Inman testified:

A. He told me about the stuff that happened with my sister in the past, about the times he hit her and broke her nose. And I believe he pushed her down when she was pregnant. And then I believe he said he was-hadn't been faithful as well.
Q. How did that make you feel?
A. Uneasy and not good, but, you know, I was still wanting to give him the benefit of the doubt. He came up here for a new start, and I was going to give it to him.
Q. How was his attitude about telling you about these things about your sister?
A. It sucked when he was talking about it. It's like he had like an I-don't-care attitude. -It was real-it disturbed me. It really did. It was a really shitty attitude.
Q. Did you think those things were a big deal?
A. Yes. That's my sister. Yeah. Yeah.
skok
Q. How was the ride back to your apartment?
A. It was pretty quiet. We really didn't talk much. I didn't want to talk to him that much to tell you the truth.

[15] When the two men returned to In-man's apartment, Wilson began arguing with his wife, who was upset with him for being gone too long. Inman intervened in the argument, exchanged words with Wilson, and ordered Wilson to leave the apartment. Wilson left the apartment and went to the parking lot of the apartment building. He sat down by a dumpster, became cold, and yelled to Inman, who was standing outside on the balcony, to throw him a jacket. Inman refused.

[16] Inman and Wilson provided different accounts of how the assault occurred. Inman testified that Wilson came back to the apartment, which was on the building's see-[747]*747ond floor, and began yelling, and banging and kicking on the door. Inman feared for the safety of his family and himself because of the way Wilson was acting and because he knew of Wilson's prior abusive behavior and that Wilson had been diagnosed with a bipolar condition. Inman grabbed a pipe from near the apartment's front door. He described the pipe as a safety rod with a V on one end that fits under a door handle and a sharp plastic tip on the other end that grips the carpet. Inman opened the apartment door and Wilson fled through the stairwell door and down the stairs. Inman chased Wilson down the stairs to make sure he left. When Inman reached the landing between the two sets of stairs, Wilson turned and charged back toward Inman, which was when Inman struck Wilson on the head with the pipe.

[T7] Wilson told a different version of events. He testified that when Inman would not throw a jacket to him from the balcony, he came back in the building to get the jacket. Wilson was just inside the building's entrance door on the main floor, when Inman came down the stairs carrying a pipe. In-man threatened Wilson with the pipe, and Wilson told Inman he just wanted a jacket. Wilson testified that Inman then hit him with the pipe and everything went black.

[18] Wilson was taken to the hospital by ambulance, and a three-inch laceration to his head was closed with sutures and staples. Because he was lapsing in and out of consciousness, Wilson was kept overnight in the hospital for observation.

[T9] On September 20, 2010, Inman was charged with one count of aggravated assault and battery. On January 3, 2011, Inman filed a motion to dismiss based on the statements contained in a document entitled "Affidavit of Non-Cooperation and Request for Dismissal of Jerrod Wilson." In his affidavit, Wilson attested that he did not remember much about Inman's assault on him because of the amount of alcohol that he had consumed earlier in the evening, and that he no longer wished to cooperate in the prosecution of Inman because Wilson had been acting irrationally that night and Inman struck him in self defense. The district court denied the motion to dismiss.

[T 10] On January 5, 2011, Inman filed a motion in limine seeking to prevent law enforcement officers from testifying, as lay witnesses, to their opinions regarding the physical evidence collected at the seene of Inman's assault. The district court denied the motion, explaining that the testimony at issue was not scientific, that the State had not performed any scientific analysis on the evidence at the seene, and that if the State were to perform such analysis, that information must be provided to Inman who would then be permitted to employ his own experts to verify the analysis.

[T11] A jury trial on the charges against Inman was held on March 14, 2011, through March 15, 2011. At the conclusion of the State's case, Inman moved for a judgment of acquittal. The district court denied the motion, ruling that evidence had been presented on all elements of the charged erime, that the quality of the evidence was such that the case would be allowed to go forward, and that a jury may infer that all of the elements of the crime were proven beyond a reasonable doubt. On March 15, 2011, the jury returned a guilty verdict.

[T 12] On March 25, 2011, Inman renewed his motion for judgment of acquittal alleging insufficient evidence to sustain the verdict. On April 5, 2011, the district court denied the motion, finding that "based upon the evidence presented at trial, the fact-finder could have reasonably concluded that the defendant committed the crime charged in the Information."

STANDARD OF REVIEW

[118] This Court reviews decisions regarding the admissibility of evidence for an abuse of discretion. Boucher v.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 WY 107, 281 P.3d 745, 2012 Wyo. LEXIS 112, 2012 WL 3174128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inman-v-state-wyo-2012.