Jackson v. State
This text of 594 So. 2d 20 (Jackson 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.
Opinion
John Michael JACKSON
v.
STATE of Mississippi.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*21 J. Niles McNeel, McNeel & Ballard, Louisville, for appellant.
Mike C. Moore, Atty. Gen., Charles W. Maris, Jr., Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.
Before HAWKINS, P.J., and BANKS and McRAE, JJ.
BANKS, Justice, for the Court:
John Michael Jackson seeks reversal of his conviction of aggravated assault upon his ex-wife with whom he was living and the five (5) year sentence imposed in its wake. He raises two issues: (1) whether the indictment for aggravated assault was fatally defective because it failed to allege that a weapon other than hands and fists was used to inflict the victim's injuries; and (2) whether the trial judge unduly limited Jackson in the presentation of evidence regarding the totality of events on the evening of the assault when it sustained three (3) objections by the State to testimony concerning a post-assault scuffle between the defendant and the victim's brother and stepfather. Finding no error we affirm.
I. Facts
John Michael Jackson has been convicted of inflicting bodily injury to Tammy Jackson, his ex-wife, with hands and fists, a means likely to produce serious bodily harm. Michael and Tammy were legally divorced at the time of the assault but had reconciled to the extent that Jackson was staying at Tammy's home in Ackerman, Mississippi.
The evidence established that Michael arrived at Tammy's house in Ackerman around midnight on the evening of the assault, after having been left by Tammy at a bar in Columbus. While present at this nightclub, Tammy had indicated she was ready to go home but Michael, who was drunk, talking crazy, and scaring Tammy, refused to leave. Although Tammy admitted *22 she left him stranded, Tammy attempted, albeit unsuccessfully, to obtain a ride for him back to Ackerman.
Tammy was asleep on the couch around midnight when Michael broke into the house through the carport door and headed straight for her bedroom. Tammy awoke from her slumber, escaped out the carport door, and, clad only in a night shirt, panties, and socks, ran toward the home of Joyce Carson, her neighbor. Michael pursued Tammy and overtook her inside the carport before Tammy reached the door. Michael, less than gingerly, began to drag her back toward her own home.
We interject at this point that Tammy is afflicted with a muscular disorder which causes her muscles to become progressively weaker as she exerts herself. As Tammy screamed for assistance from Joyce Carson, Michael began hitting Tammy and telling her to "shut up." Tammy sprayed mace in Michael's face which infuriated him. He took the mace from her, sprayed some of it inside her mouth, and began to drag her across the driveway to the house skinning her bare back in the process. Once reaching the carport, Michael grabbed Tammy by one leg and by the hair of her head and tossed her inside the kitchen. While Michael was washing the mace from his face, Tammy went to her bedroom and locked the door behind her. She telephoned Joyce Carson and Kenneth Jackson, Michael's father, and told him to come over at once.
Before Tammy could hang up the telephone, Michael broke through the bedroom door and asked her who she had called. When Tammy told him she had called his daddy, Michael became even more enraged. "Why'd you do that? Why'd you do that?," he screamed as he broke the telephone cord.
Tammy ended up on the floor next to the bed with Michael straddled over her. He screamed at her, began to hit her in the head with his fist "real hard", and called her a "stupid bitch." While Tammy was leaning against a wall, Michael, with his hand around her neck, began to bang her head against the wall over and over and to curse her. According to Tammy's testimony, this headbanging "seemed like forever." The repeated impact of her head against the wall created a split in the wall. The last thing Tammy remembers is looking up and seeing Michael's father come into the room.
Tammy finally escaped from the house and was later taken by neighbors to the emergency room where she was examined by Dr. Parsons. She could not hear out of her left ear which was hurting, and her "whole head felt like it was just exploding." As of trial, she was still experiencing pain in that ear.
A concise description of the blows to Tammy's head is found in the following colloquy:
Q When the Defendant hit you the first time in the bedroom, what did he hit you with?
A His fist.
Q When you say a fist, would you describe what you mean by that?
A A closed hand.
Q Where did he hit you?
A In my head.
Q Where in the head did he hit you?
A Like on the side of my head and the back part.
Q You're indicating around the left side and back of the head? When he hit you there in the head, what did it do to you?
A It hurt. But, it didn't knock me out.
Q Were you standing up or seated when he hit you?
A I was in the floor. He was down over me. I was kind of in a sitting position. I wasn't laying down flat. I was in the floor.
Tammy suffered multiple bruises and contusions to her face, the left side of her head, left ear, back, legs, and to her upper body. She also suffered a subconjunctival hemorrhage of the left eye and a definite rupture of the left eardrum which was serious enough to require surgical repair. Tammy was hospitalized for thirty-six (36) hours.
*23 II. Simple or Aggravated Assault?
Jackson claims his indictment for aggravated assault was fatally defective because it failed to allege that a deadly weapon was used to inflict the victim's bodily injuries. Because the assault consisted largely of blows administered by hands and closed fists, Jackson contends his crime, at best, was simple assault, a misdemeanor. Specifically, he contends the trial judge, as a matter of law, should have sustained his motion to reduce the charge from aggravated assault to simple assault. We disagree.
By virtue of Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-7(1)(a) (Supp. 1991), a person is guilty of simple assault if he "purposely, knowingly or recklessly causes bodily injury to another." By virtue of § 97-3-7(2)(b) (Supp. 1991), "[a] person is guilty of aggravated assault if he ... purposely or knowingly causes bodily injury to another with a deadly weapon or other means likely to produce death or serious bodily harm." [emphasis supplied]
The indictment in this case charged "that John Michael Jackson... on or about January 21, 1990, ... did unlawfully, feloniously, purposely and knowingly cause bodily injury to Tammy L. Jackson ... with a means likely to produce serious bodily harm, by striking the body of Tammy L. Jackson with his hands and closed fists and throwing her against a wall, thereby causing the rupturing of her left eardrum, ... ."
Jury instruction S-1 authorized the jury to return a verdict of guilty of aggravated assault if it believed from all the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt "... the defendant ... did unlawfully, feloniously, purposely and knowingly cause bodily injury to Tammy L. Jackson; and any such bodily injury was caused with a means likely to produce serious bodily harm."
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594 So. 2d 20, 1992 WL 15851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-state-miss-1992.