Reay v. Young

2019 S.D. 63
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 2019
Docket28760
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2019 S.D. 63 (Reay v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reay v. Young, 2019 S.D. 63 (S.D. 2019).

Opinion

#28760-a-MES 2019 S.D. 63

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

BRAD REAY, Petitioner and Appellant,

v.

DARIN YOUNG, Warden, S.D. State Penitentiary, Respondent and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT HUGHES COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA ****

THE HONORABLE JOHN L. BROWN Retired Judge

ROBERT T. KONRAD of Olinger, Lovald, McCahren, Van Camp & Konrad, P.C. Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for petitioner and appellant.

JASON R. RAVNSBORG Attorney General

PAUL S. SWEDLUND Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for respondent and appellee.

ARGUED AUGUST 27, 2019 OPINION FILED 11/20/19 #28760

SALTER, Justice

[¶1.] A jury convicted Brad Reay of first-degree murder in the death of his

wife, Tami. He received a mandatory sentence of life in prison without the

possibility of parole. After we affirmed Reay’s conviction on direct review, he sought

a writ of habeas corpus, alleging his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance.

The habeas court denied relief but issued a certificate of probable cause. Reay

appeals the habeas court’s determination. We affirm.

Background

[¶2.] The underlying criminal case dates back to late 2005. At the time,

Reay lived in Pierre with Tami and their daughter, Haylee, who was 13 years old at

the time of trial. Tami began an affair with a coworker in December of 2005, and

the Reays’ marriage rapidly deteriorated. Though the Reays lived in the same

home, they had separate bedrooms. Tami continued her affair and suggested they

divorce at the end of Haylee’s school year.

[¶3.] Tami was stabbed to death in an attack or series of attacks that most

likely began in her bed sometime during the overnight hours of February 7-8, 2006.

When she was reported missing the next day, investigators concluded that Reay

was involved in her disappearance and arrested him for first-degree murder. Two

days later, a South Dakota National Guard pilot flying over the Pierre area spotted

a body, later identified as Tami, by the emergency spillway at the Oahe Dam.

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[¶4.] The circuit court1 appointed Rapid City attorney Tim Rensch to

represent Reay, whose defense initially appeared to be that Tami was killed by an

unknown assailant. After several months, though, Rensch testified that Reay

mentioned “[t]here is another possibility[.]” Reay then, for the first time, explained

to Rensch that Haylee had murdered Tami after allegedly expressing anger about

her mother’s extramarital affair. Reay claimed that he had encountered Haylee in a

“catatonic” state immediately after the murder, still holding the hunting knife she

had used as the murder weapon.

[¶5.] This theory became Reay’s defense to the murder charge at his trial.

He claimed that he was guilty only of covering up evidence of the crime by cleaning

the house, disposing of the knife, and moving Tami’s body. Three areas of physical

evidence at trial figure prominently in this habeas appeal.

[¶6.] The first concerns a mark on Tami’s left breast noted by forensic

pathologist Dr. Donald Habbe during the autopsy. The mark was a broken straight-

line abrasion on the skin. Dr. Habbe was uncertain of its origin, but testified that it

could possibly be a bite mark or perhaps a mark from the hilt of the knife used to

inflict a nearby stab wound. Regardless, Dr. Habbe was unable to definitively

determine what caused the abrasion. At his trial, Reay argued that the mark was a

bite mark resembling Haylee’s gapped front teeth.

[¶7.] The second item of evidence was a towel that appeared to have a drop

of blood on it. The towel, believed to have been from the Reay home, was found

inside the vehicle Reay used to transport Tami’s body. Subsequent testing revealed

1. The Honorable Kathleen F. Trandahl, Circuit Court Judge, now retired.

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DNA belonging to Tami and a combination of DNA that could not be identified, but

forensic analysis determined that Reay could not be excluded as a contributor.

Reay argued at trial that the DNA testing results created the possibility of a third

unidentified source of DNA, suggesting it could be Haylee.

[¶8.] Finally, investigators recovered a tarp near the Oahe Dam spillway

that was stained with a large amount of blood and had a series of slits. The parties

disagreed about whether these slits corresponded with all of the stab wounds on

Tami’s body. Reay admitted at trial that he had used the tarp to remove and

transport Tami’s body, claiming he had done so to protect Haylee and help her avoid

responsibility for murdering her mother.

[¶9.] A jury convicted Reay of first-degree murder, and the circuit court

imposed a mandatory sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Reay appealed, and we affirmed his conviction in State v. Reay, 2009 S.D. 10, 762

N.W.2d 356.

[¶10.] In his amended habeas petition, Reay alleges that Rensch rendered

ineffective assistance because he did not engage any expert witnesses to evaluate

the possible bite mark, the towel, and the tarp. In Reay’s view, experts in these

areas would have been helpful to definitively tie the evidence to Haylee and

strengthen his defense. Reay’s habeas counsel also moved for the appointment of

expert witnesses in the areas of “bite marks, DNA testing, and tool marks.” The

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circuit court2 denied the motion, and Reay has not challenged that ruling on

appeal.3

[¶11.] Rensch was the only witness at the habeas hearing. He testified that

he did not engage experts in the areas Reay identifies because he could make

arguments consistent with the defense theory without the experts. Engaging

experts, in Rensch’s view, would have accomplished little or nothing for the case

and likely would have provided the State with some degree of notice, enabling

prosecutors to counter the defense experts with tactical arguments and experts of

their own.

[¶12.] The circuit court denied Reay’s habeas petition, concluding he had not

demonstrated that Rensch was ineffective. Reay presents one issue on appeal,

which we restate as follows: Whether the circuit court erred when it concluded

Reay was not deprived of effective assistance of counsel and denied his petition for

habeas relief.

Analysis

[¶13.] We review a circuit court’s determination of a Sixth Amendment

ineffective assistance of counsel claim as a mixed question, reviewing the court’s

decision on the constitutional issue de novo and its findings of fact for clear error.

Madetzke v. Dooley, 2018 S.D. 38, ¶ 8, 912 N.W.2d 350, 353. A petitioner’s

2. The Honorable John Brown, Circuit Court Judge, now retired.

3. The certificate of probable cause authorizes review only for the ineffective assistance of counsel claims.

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ineffective assistance claim is analyzed under the familiar two-pronged standard set

out in Strickland v. Washington:

First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient. This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the “counsel” guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment. Second, the defendant must show that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense.

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2019 S.D. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reay-v-young-sd-2019.