McQuarters v. State

45 So. 3d 643, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 524, 2010 WL 3785475
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 2010
Docket2009-KA-01674-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 45 So. 3d 643 (McQuarters 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.

Bluebook
McQuarters v. State, 45 So. 3d 643, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 524, 2010 WL 3785475 (Mich. 2010).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Mary McQuarters called 911 after discovering her boyfriend, Pete Jackson, dead in their bedroom with a deep cut on his wrist, a gash on the top of his head, and a small cut on his left eyebrow. When police arrived on the scene, and in a subsequent police statement later that evening, McQuarters in no way implicated herself in the incident. She suggested that one of Jackson’s close friends may have been responsible. Only in subsequent police statements did McQuarters disclose that she and Jackson had engaged in a violent domestic dispute the night before she discovered his body, and that in self-defense she had cut his forearm and thrown multiple glass objects at him. The coroner and forensic pathologist both concluded that Jackson died from blood loss resulting from a stab wound to his forearm.

¶ 2. McQuarters was indicted for the murder of Jackson. At trial, the Circuit Court of Adams County, Mississippi, granted McQuarters a directed verdict of acquittal on the murder charge, but allowed the case to proceed on the lesser offense of manslaughter. A jury found McQuarters guilty of manslaughter. The circuit court sentenced her to twenty years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC), with fifteen years to serve and the remaining five years suspended, to be served on formal, reporting, post-release supervision. Following the denial of her “Motion for a New Trial,” McQuarters filed a “Notice of Appeal.” On appeal, McQuarters contends that the circuit court should have applied the Weathersby 1 rule and granted her a directed verdict of acquittal on the manslaughter charge.

FACTS

¶ 3. McQuarters and Jackson lived together, on and off, for fourteen years. On September 28, 2007, the couple had just *645 resumed living together. McQuarters testified 2 that Jackson had arrived home with dinner that evening at around 9:00 or 9:30 p.m. Before they began eating, Jackson’s friend, Kevin Buchanan, arrived and “asked [Jackson] did he want to go to work the next morning with him and another friend[,] ... Clarence Brown.... ” After Buchanan had left, McQuarters and Jackson began arguing because “in the past, [Brown] had always caused a lot of problems [because] he was a drug dealer and [was] always taking all of [Jackson’s] money.” Jackson then “got angry, and ... asked me to stay out of his business,” at which point she told him that he could move back out “if you’re not going to change your lifestyle and respect some of my opinions.... ”

¶ 4. At that point, Jackson “took a big glass coffee table and pushed it ... on top of my foot[,]” shattering the glass. After removing her foot from her shoe, McQuar-ters attempted to leave through the front door, but Jackson “took the big floor mount television and pushed it over to prevent me from leaving....” McQuarters then began running down the hall, but slipped and fell, and Jackson:

grabbed me and started choking me around my neck, and I was asking him to please let me go, but he wouldn’t and I started getting dizzy, gasping for breath. So I reached over and ... grabbed a piece of glass ... with my left hand and stuck ... him with it,[ 3 ] but he still didn’t remove his hand.

(Emphasis added.) Jackson released McQuarters’s neck only when she bit his hand. She then continued to attempt to run down the hall, but Jackson grabbed her leg, stating, “I will kill you, low down black b* ⅜ * *, if you don’t stay out of my business.” 4 After McQuarters began kicking Jackson, he released her and fell against the wall, then “next thing I knew we were both standing in the kitchen ... and he ... showed me his arm and he said, ‘Look, what you did.’ ” At that time, Jackson was not bleeding profusely, “[j]ust dripping[,]” and when McQuarters asked if he needed medical attention he replied that “it will be all right.”

¶ 5. According to McQuarters, “normally when we fight one of us leaves.... So [Jackson] asked me ... can I just go ahead on and catch some fresh air and cool off and come back later.” She agreed, and as she was changing clothes, her nephew, Patrick Conner, arrived. 5 McQuarters “told [Conner] that I did something bad. That ... [Jackson] and I got into a big fight, and I think I cut him on the arm.” 6 *646 Before leaving, McQuarters informed Jackson that Conner’s friend, Dietrich Johnson Singleton, was taking her into town and that Conner was going to stay at home with him. 7 Upon leaving, Jackson “was sitting on the couch ... with the wash cloth ... on his hands[,]” and “said he would be okay....”

¶ 6. Singleton dropped McQuarters off at a local restaurant, Taste of Chicago, at 10:40 p.m. McQuarters then stayed up all night talking with friends and drinking beer. At approximately 5:00 a.m. on September 29, 2007, McQuarters called Conner “[t]o ask him how [Jackson] was and to come pick me up. [Conner] said he had to get up and go to work. He didn’t have time to pick me up.” That afternoon, McQuarters arrived at the Lunch Box restaurant and arranged to receive a ride home from employee Cathy Allen. Allen testified that, following her shift, she drove McQuarters home and “we didn’t discuss anything, but [McQuarters] was very upset, and she would not tell me what was wrong with her.... She was crying.” 8 According to Allen, she dropped McQuarters off around 4:15 or 4:20 p.m.

¶ 7. Upon arriving home, McQuarters “went straight to the sink and washed [some] físh, and [Conner] came in behind me, and he was telling me that he was sorry about something. So I told him I will talk to him ... after I cooked.” But several minutes later, McQuarters started to “wonder what he’s sorry about. So I went back outside to ask him where was [Jackson], and [Conner] told me he was in the house.” Shortly thereafter, McQuar-ters discovered Jackson on his knees at the foot of their bed, unresponsive. According to Conner’s third police statement, McQuarters then came outside and stated that “somebody killed” Jackson.

¶ 8. When police arrived on the scene, Bernard testified that McQuarters “stepped into my apartment ... and she just said that someone had killed [Jackson].” When Bernard “asked what had happened,” she testified that McQuarters “was like ... she didn’t do anything to him. They ... have got in a fight and ... she only cut him on the wrist or something....” McQuarters admitted that when she spoke with police officers on the scene, she did not mention her prior altercation with Jackson. According to Officer Danny Barber of the Natchez Police Department, McQuarters:

told me that she had just gotten in, and she went in the house and observed blood all over the house, and she walked through the house, and that’s when she found [Jackson] in the bedroom, and he appeared to be deceased. That someone had possibly hit him in the head....

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 So. 3d 643, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 524, 2010 WL 3785475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcquarters-v-state-miss-2010.