Nicholls v. People

2017 CO 71, 396 P.3d 675, 2017 WL 2655832
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 19, 2017
DocketSupreme Court Case 13SC68
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 2017 CO 71 (Nicholls v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicholls v. People, 2017 CO 71, 396 P.3d 675, 2017 WL 2655832 (Colo. 2017).

Opinion

JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 In November 2008, a jury convicted Deborah Lee Nicholls for the first degree murders of her three children, and for conspiracy, attempted theft, using a controlled substance, and possessing methamphetamine. On appeal, Nicholls argued, inter alia, that the trial court erred in admitting at trial the statements that her then-husband, Tim Nic-holls, made to his cellmate about Nicholls’ involvement in their children’s .deaths. Nic-holls contended that these statements violated her state constitutional right of confrontation and were inadmissible -hearsay. Nicholls also argued that the trial court erroneously admitted her mother’s testimony about Nic-holls’ reaction to her second 1 child’s death years earlier, and her- husband’s cellmate’-s testimony about that child’s cause of death from sudden infant, death syndrome (“SIDS”). Nicholls maintained that this testimony was both irrelevant and. unduly prejudicial. ■ ■ :

¶2 In an unpublished, unanimous opinion, the court of appeals affirmed Nicholls’ convictions. People v. Nicholls, No. 09CA137, slip op. at 1, 2012 WL 6200703 (Colo. App. Dec. 13, 2012). Relevant here, the court of appeals held that the husband’s nontestimo-nial statements to--his cellmate did not implicate Nicholls’ right of confrontation, and were admissible under Colorado’s evidentiary rules as statements against interest. Id. at 8-9. It further held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting Nicholls’ mother’s statements, id. at 21, and that any error in the admission of the cellmate’s brief testimony about her second, child’s death from SIDS was not plain error, id. at 22-23. We granted Nicholls’ petition for certiorari review 2 and now affirm the,judgment of.the court of appeals. , ■

I. Facts and Procedural History

¶3 On the night of March 6, 2008, Nicholls’ husband, Tim, set fire to their home while she was at their business, the. (Tailgate Bar. The fire killed their three children, ages.eleven, five, and three. After the fire consumed the house, Nicholls returned from the Tailgate Bar and claimed to have left candles burning inside the house. She showed little concern for the children and did not attend their funerals.

*678 ¶4 Nicholls and her husband maintained the fire was an accident. They submitted insurance claims for the loss of their house and personal property and specifically inquired about “child riders” to the husband’s life insurance policy that would have covered a child’s accidental death. Nicholls was upset to learn that her husband’s policy did not include such coverage.

¶5 Nicholls and her husband were charged and tried separately. The husband was charged with multiple counts of first degree murder, arson, and other crimes. While confined at the El Paso County Jail before his trial, the husband confessed to his cellmate that he had acted with Nicholls to bum down their house and kill their children to collect insurance proceeds. A jury convicted the husband of multiple counts in July 2006, and the court of appeals affirmed his convictions. People v. Timothy Nicholls, No. 07CA1248, 2010 WL 117741 (Colo. App. Jan. 14, 2010), cert. denied, No. 10SC124, 2010 WL 3389331 (Colo. Aug. 30, 2010).

¶6 In 2007, a grand jury indicted Nicholls on several charges, including three counts of first degree murder — felony murder; three counts of first degree murder — child under twelve; and three counts of child abuse resulting in death. These charges were joined with an earlier indictment for attempted theft, use of a controlled substance, and two counts of possession of a controlled substance.

¶7 At trial, the People’s theory was that Nicholls and her husband needed money for drug-related debts; they conspired to set their house on fire and kill their children so that they could collect $260,000 in expected insurance proceeds on their children’s lives and their home’s value.

¶8 Over Nicholls’ objections, the husband’s cellmate testified for the People about the statements the husband made to him regarding the fire. 3 According to the cellmate, the husband said that he and Nicholls planned the fire together and built fires in an outdoor fire pit in the months beforehand to accustom their neighbors to seeing flames in their yard. The husband stated that Nicholls wiped Goof-Off (a highly flammable solvent) on the furniture before leaving for work, and that he fed the children a snack on that furniture so that they would get Goof-Off on them pajamas. The husband said that he sprayed more Goof-Off around the house after putting the children to bed, and then set the house on fire by knocking over a candle. The husband explained that he opened the garage door to feed the fire, heard his son’s cries, went upstairs, and jumped out his bedroom window. The husband drew diagrams of the house and ' surrounding neighborhood and showed the cellmate where he sprayed Goof-Off. These diagrams were admitted as exhibits at trial. The husband told the cellmate that Nicholls was the mastermind of the crime, that she got “strung out” on drugs and convinced him to set the fire, and that his lawyer advised him not to divorce Nic-holls to ensure that neither could testify against the other. The cellmate also testified that the husband told him that Nicholls “killed her [second] baby¿’ and that that child’s death was ruled a SIDS death.

¶9 Nicholls’ mother also testified, over Nic-holls’ objection, that Nicholls cried non-stop for three days when her second child died years earlier of SIDS, yet she did not grieve when her three children died in the fire.

¶10 The People’s forensic and physical evidence corroborated the cellmate’s account about the fire. Investigators discovered cans of Goof-Off in the house and shrubs, and a chemical analysis confirmed the presence of an accelerant on the children’s pajamas. A trained fire detection dog alerted to petroleum products in the living room, and forensic experts testified the fire was intentionally set at several places in that room. Nicholls maintained her defense that the fire was accidental and that the cellmate fabricated the statements he claimed the husband made about the fire.

¶11 The jury found Nicholls guilty of all charges. Nicholls was sentenced to three consecutive life terms for the murders; twenty- *679 four years for conspiracy; and one year each for attempted theft, use of a controlled substance, and possession of a controlled substance.

¶12 The court of appeals affirmed Nicholls’ convictions. 4 Nicholls, slip op. at 41. This appeal followed.

II. Analysis

¶13 We first address Nicholls’ argument that the trial court’s admission of her husband’s statements to his cellmate violated her right of confrontation and were inadmissible hearsay. We then address Nicholls’ contentions that the trial court erred in permitting her mother and the cellmate to testify about the earlier death of her second child.

A. Husband’s Statements to His Cellmate

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 CO 71, 396 P.3d 675, 2017 WL 2655832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholls-v-people-colo-2017.