Livingston v. State

2013 Ark. 264, 428 S.W.3d 474, 2013 WL 3105836, 2013 Ark. LEXIS 297
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 20, 2013
DocketNo. CR-12-945
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2013 Ark. 264 (Livingston v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingston v. State, 2013 Ark. 264, 428 S.W.3d 474, 2013 WL 3105836, 2013 Ark. LEXIS 297 (Ark. 2013).

Opinion

CLIFF HOOFMAN, Justice.

|!Appellant Kathy Livingston appeals from her conviction for first-degree murder, for which she received a sentence of life imprisonment. On appeal, appellant argues that the circuit court erred (1) in failing to grant her motion to suppress physical evidence and (2) in denying her motion for a mistrial after her trial counsel’s father died during the trial. Our jurisdiction is pursuant to Ark. Sup.Ct. R. l-2(a)(2) (2012). We affirm.

Appellant was charged with capital murder in connection with the death of her husband, Bobby Livingston, on June 18, 2011. According to the evidence presented at trial, Dawn Sims, appellant’s daughter who lived across the street from the Livingstons in Lake Village, Arkansas, received a phone call from appellant at approximately 6:45 p.m. on June 18. Sims testified that appellant was intoxicated and that she stated, “Dawn, I shot Bobby. He’s dead.” Sims ran to appellant’s home and found her outside on the patio. Appellant yelled at Sims not to go inside the house, but Sims ignored her and went into the kitchen, | ¿where she found Bobby naked and lying on the floor in a pool of blood. Sims stated that Bobby did not appear to be alive. When appellant walked back into the kitchen, Sims noticed that appellant was also naked and covered in blood. Sims attempted to call 911, but appellant tried to stop her by wrestling the phone away. Sims struggled with appellant and pushed her out into the carport, locking the door. While Sims was on the phone with the 911 dispatcher, appellant came back into the house through another door carrying a gun. Sims was afraid that appellant would hurt her and ran out of the house. Appellant followed her and, according to Sims, mouthed to her that she was not going to hurt Sims but was instead going to hurt herself. Appellant walked back into the kitchen, and through the glass door, Sims witnessed her mother sit down on the floor next to Bobby and shoot herself in the chest. Sims attempted to apply pressure to appellant’s wound but appellant resisted, complaining that Sims was hurting her. Sims called 911 a second time to report that her mother had shot herself. Shortly afterward, the police and medical personnel arrived, and appellant was taken to the hospital. Appellant survived her self-inflicted gunshot wound, but Bobby was deceased when the paramedics arrived.

Lake Village Police Officers Mike Pitts and Cole Rice received the 911 dispatch concerning the shooting at the Livingston home and arrived on the scene at 6:52 p.m. They discovered Sims sitting outside on the driveway, with her face, neck, and arms covered in blood. Sims told the officers that appellant had shot Bobby and responded affirmatively when they asked if appellant was still in the house with the weapon. The officers went through the carport door into the kitchen and immediately saw both appellant and Bobby lying on the lafloor. Officer Pitts initially thought that both persons were deceased but then saw appellant take a deep breath. He also noticed that the weapon was underneath appellant’s leg. The officers backed out of the residence to wait on the paramedics and to avoid contaminating the scene.

Captain Bob Graham and Arkansas State Police Investigator Scott Woodward were summoned to the scene, and they prepared an affidavit for a search warrant for the residence. The affidavit recited that the victim had been shot in the chest and killed by appellant at approximately 6:51 p.m. and that appellant had been taken to the hospital with a gunshot wound to the chest. The warrant was issued by the Chicot County District Judge at 8:44 p.m., and the search of the home began at 8:49 p.m. From the living room area, the police collected blood samples found on the living room door, patio steps, recliner, and victim’s pants; a 9mm shell casing matching the weapon found at the scene; and one bullet. From the kitchen, police recovered blood samples and human tissue from the floor, sink, and wall; the 9mm handgun, which contained a spent shell casing; and another 9mm shell casing from the floor. Several days later, on June 21, 2011, another search warrant was issued, and additional evidence was collected from the kitchen after appellant’s father contacted the police and informed them that, while cleaning, another bullet was discovered lodged in the kitchen floor.

Prior to trial, appellant filed a motion to suppress the evidence found pursuant to the first search warrant, primarily arguing that there was no justification or authorization for a nighttime search contained in the affidavit or search warrant and that the officers’ reentry into the Livingstons’ home on the night of June 18, 2011, was therefore illegal. At the hearing on |4the motion to suppress, Officer Pitts testified that he and Officer Rice did not search the residence or seize any evidence when they responded to the 911 call from the residence. Pitts stated that they went only briefly into the kitchen to determine the status of the victim and the appellant, then went back outside to wait for the paramedics and the other officers. When Captain Graham arrived on the scene, just prior to the ambulance’s arrival, he instructed Pitts to take photographs of appellant and the victim before they were removed by the paramedics. Graham testified that, after the paramedics had left and the scene was secure, he and Investigator Woodward prepared the affidavit for the search warrant while sitting outside the residence. The warrant was issued at 8:44 p.m., and Woodward testified that he did not check any of the boxes to authorize a nighttime search warrant in his affidavit, nor did he indicate that there was probable cause for a nighttime warrant.

After the hearing, the circuit court took the motion to suppress under advisement pending posthearing briefs by both parties. In her brief, appellant challenged only the evidence from the living room and patio area of the residence because these items were seized pursuant to the warrant and were not in view during the officers’ initial warrantless entry into the kitchen, which was justified by exigent circumstances. The circuit court denied the motion to suppress by written order entered on July 16, 2012. The court found that, even if the nighttime search warrant was invalid, the evidence should not be suppressed because it would have inevitably been discovered pursuant to the second search warrant, which was valid. The court noted that Bobby Livingston’s father had been cleaning the residence when he noticed the bullet lodged in the kitchen floor and notified the police. The court stated, |fi“Since blood was also found in the living room, it is no stretch of the imagination to conclude that in cleaning he would have found the items earlier located in the living room had the police not seized them with the first search warrant, [and] notified the police, who would have secured a valid search warrant for their seizure.” Thus, the court ruled that the evidence from the living room and patio would not be suppressed.

At the trial, the crime lab personnel testified that all of the blood and tissue samples collected matched Bobby’s DNA, with the exception of the sample from the living room door, which contained DNA from more than one person, with Bobby being the major contributor. Charles Paul Kokes, the chief medical examiner, testified that Bobby sustained two gunshot wounds, one to the hand and one to the chest. Kokes stated that the chest wound was sustained while the handgun was in direct contact with the chest and that this shot went through Bobby’s heart, causing his death.

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Bluebook (online)
2013 Ark. 264, 428 S.W.3d 474, 2013 WL 3105836, 2013 Ark. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-state-ark-2013.