Nicholson v. State

892 S.W.2d 507, 319 Ark. 566, 1995 Ark. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1995
DocketCR 94-982
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 892 S.W.2d 507 (Nicholson 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
Nicholson v. State, 892 S.W.2d 507, 319 Ark. 566, 1995 Ark. LEXIS 98 (Ark. 1995).

Opinion

David Newbern, Justice.

Bobbie Nicholson was convicted of murdering her husband, Don Nicholson, with premeditation and deliberation in violation of Ark. Code Ann. § 5-10-101 (a)(4) (Repl. 1993). She was sentenced to life in prison without parole. Her points of appeal are (1) that the Trial Court lacked jurisdiction of the offense, (2) that hearsay testimony was erroneously admitted against her, and (3) that it was error to permit the testimony by an expert expressing an opinion which had not been provided to her before the trial. We find no error and affirm.

The evidence was circumstantial. From the testimony presented, these facts could have been determined by the jury. In the early morning hours of September 15, 1992, Don Nicholson died in a motel room in Marshall. The Searcy County Coroner ruled the death to be the result of a heart attack. A subsequent autopsy performed at the request of Mr. Nicholson’s children from a previous marriage revealed he had been poisoned with a combination of ethylene glycol, a substance found in anti-freeze, and tolbutamide, a drug used to treat diabetics. Codeine and Valium were also found in his system.

Mr. Nicholson maintained homes in Greenville, Mississippi, and in Jesseville. In September he was in Greenville where he had family and friends. He made some statements, which became the subject of the hearsay objection at the trial, that he was not satisfied with his marriage to Bobbie Nicholson and planned to file for divorce within a matter of weeks. While in Mississippi, he also mentioned he was seeing another woman.

Upon Mr. Nicholson’s return to Arkansas, he and Mrs. Nicholson, who worked on an “agency” or “as needed” schedule as a Licensed Practical Nurse, began a trip to Harrison to visit Mrs. Nicholson’s mother who was ill. At around 5:00 p.m., September 14, they stopped at Marshall because, Mrs. Nicholson later told officials, Mr. Nicholson was vomiting and was too sick to go on. Her statement to Mr. Nicholson’s children was that they stopped because he was just too tired to drive the additional forty miles to Harrison. She registered at the motel as “Bobbie Graham.” Chester Ballard, a guest at the motel, testified he helped get Mr. Nicholson, who was having trouble walking and talking, from the van into the motel room. He said Mrs. Nicholson explained to him that Mr. Nicholson was having a “seizure.”

Chay Phung, the owner and manager of the motel, stated that Mrs. Nicholson returned to the main lobby and restaurant about twenty minutes after checking in to get extra towels, a blanket, a glass of orange juice, and a vegetable plate. When he offered to help her carry these items back to her room, Mrs. Nicholson told Mr. Phung that she could handle it.

Gay Phung, Mr. Phung’s wife, testified she was working in the restaurant when Bobbie appeared to get the vegetable plate and orange juice. Both Mrs. Phung and Camilla Pratt, a waitress, testified that Bobbie appeared nervous and jumpy, and that she “stole” packets of sugar as she ordered the orange juice, apparently not wanting to be observed taking them.

The next contact Mrs. Phung had with Mrs. Nicholson came the following morning after it was discovered that Mr. Nicholson had died. Mrs. Phung testified that Bobbie added the name “Nicholson” to “Bobbie Graham” as it appeared on the motel registration card and told her it was to insure that her husband’s company would pay the motel bill.

Initially, Mrs. Nicholson was the only source of information concerning Mr. Nicholson’s last moments of life. She told police that he and she went to bed at about 10:00 p.m. and that she awoke at about 4:00 or 4:30 a.m. on September 15. She said Mr. Nicholson told her to shower first while he got more sleep. After she finished showering, she told police, she heard a moan and found Mr. Nicholson foaming at the mouth. Because the rooms at the motel did not have phones, she went across the street to a convenience store and told the clerk to dial 911 because her husband was having a heart attack.

The convenience store clerk was Jeffery W. Smith. Mr. Smith testified that Bobbie came into the store and asked him to dial 911. He said that he thought she was a traveler because her clothes were rumpled. It did not appear that she had just been in the shower as her hair was not wet. When he went over to the motel later that morning to offer help, he noticed that Mrs. Nicholson was dressed up and on her way back home.

Spring Lutz was one of the Emergency Medical Technicians (EMT) who responded to the call. She testified that when she arrived in the Nicholsons’ room, she found Mr. Nicholson in one of the beds. When she began to examine him, she found he was cold to the touch and that his blood had begun pooling, indicating that he had been dead for some time and that emergency procedures to revive him would be useless. She also testified that Mrs. Nicholson told her that Mr. Nicholson had gasped his last breath as she emerged from the shower approximately ten minutes before the ambulance arrived, which Ms. Lutz claimed was inconsistent with what she observed from the condition of the body. It was also inconsistent with Ms. Lutz’s observation that Mrs. Nicholson was wearing a “dressy” pantsuit, had make up on, and her hair curled when the EMT arrived.

After the Searcy County Coroner determined that the apparent cause of death was a heart attack, Mrs. Nicholson arranged for the body to be sent to Mississippi for burial. When she discussed Mr. Nicholson’s death with his children, her account of his last moments varied somewhat from the story that she had told the police, the EMT, and the coroner. Because of the suspicious circumstances of their father’s death, the children sought a court order for an autopsy. Mrs. Nicholson, who was opposed to the idea, called the prosecutor in an effort to convince him not to seek the order.

The autopsy and pathology report revealed the apparent cause of death was the combination of the ethylene glycol and the tolbutamide, and the location of these substances in certain organs indicated that they were ingested no more than twenty-four hours prior to death.

After the results of the autopsy were obtained, further investigation revealed that Mrs. Nicholson was the beneficiary of a $100,000 policy on Mr. Nicholson’s life and was the beneficiary of his will. Greenville, Mississippi, lawyer Steve Thomas, who was one of the witnesses who said Mr. Nicholson had said he was unhappy in his marriage and intended to end it, had prepared wills for the Nicholsons in 1988. Mrs. Nicholson was to receive Mr. Nicholson’s property if she survived him, and vice-versa, with their children as secondary beneficiaries. It was also discovered that she continued paying the insurance premiums after he had stopped making payments in May 1992 due to the financial difficulties of the company issuing the policy.

1. Jurisdiction

Mrs. Nicholson argues that the time Mr. Nicholson ingested the poisons was not definitely established, thus there is no evidence that the alleged murder took place in Searcy County.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
892 S.W.2d 507, 319 Ark. 566, 1995 Ark. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-state-ark-1995.