Segraves v. State

992 S.W.2d 296, 1999 Mo. App. LEXIS 528, 1999 WL 235624
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 23, 1999
DocketNo. 22502
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 992 S.W.2d 296 (Segraves v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Segraves v. State, 992 S.W.2d 296, 1999 Mo. App. LEXIS 528, 1999 WL 235624 (Mo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

CROW, Judge.

A jury found Appellant guilty of murder in the second degree and assessed punishment at twelve years’ imprisonment. The trial court entered judgment per the verdict. This court affirmed the judgment on direct appeal. State v. Segraves, 956 S.W.2d 442 (Mo.App.S.D.1997).

[297]*297Appellant thereafter commenced an action for post-conviction relief under Rule 29.15.1 The motion court denied relief after an evidentiary hearing. Appellant brings this appeal from the motion court’s judgment.

Appellant’s sole point relied on avers she was denied due process of law and a fair trial before an impartial jury “due to juror misconduct.” Specifically, Appellant maintains juror Dixie Ross “lied during voir dire.” Appellant alleges the two lawyers who represented her in the trial court (“Defense Counsel”) learned of juror Ross’s deception after trial and before the time for filing a motion for new trial, yet did nothing. Therefore, says Appellant, Defense Counsel rendered ineffective assistance.

Appellant directs this court’s attention to the following segment of voir dire:

“[Defense Counsel]: Before you came into this room this morning and the Judge began talking to you, had any of you heard anything about this case? If • you heard anything about the case before you got in your seats in here this morning, please raise your hand.
[[Image here]]
Anyone else over here? Ms. Ross.
VENIREPERSON ROSS: I just know what I read in the paper.
[Defense Counsel]: Okay.
VENIREPERSON ROSS: That’s all I know.
[Defense Counsel]: Can you—
VENIREPERSON ROSS: And that’s been some time ago, so I couldn’t be sure that I could remember details anyway from that. I think I could put it out of my mind.
[[Image here]]
[Defense Counsel]: Last question: Is there anything that Judge Sharp, [the prosecutor] or I have not touched on that causes any of you concern about whether or not you could sit in one of these chairs as a fair and impartial juror? Search your minds. Anything that we haven’t asked that you thought we probably should or that you think is important from the standpoint of whether or not you could be a good, fair and impartial juror?”

Venire member Ross made no response to the last question. Neither side challenged Ross2 for cause or peremptorily, hence she served on the jury.

As recounted in this court’s earlier opinion, the victim was a four-month-old child. 956 S.W.2d at 448. The State’s evidence showed the victim was “manually strangled” to death. Id. at 444., The homicide occurred in Dunklin County; Appellant was tried there.

As explained more fully later in this opinion, Defense Counsel engaged an investigator to interview the jurors after Appellant’s trial. The investigator interviewed Ross and thereafter submitted a report to Defense Counsel prior to the deadline for Appellant’s motion for new trial. Defense Counsel filed a timely new trial motion; it did not mention Ross.

Appellant’s pro se motion for post-conviction relief averred, inter alia, that Ross told the investigator she saw the autopsy report prior to trial and felt it was horrifying. Furthermore, pled the pro se motion, Ross told the investigator that the autopsy report left little doubt that Appellant was guilty.

The lawyer appointed to represent Appellant in the motion court (“Motion Counsel”) called Ross as a witness at the evidentiary hearing. Ross testified she retired after working over forty years as a deputy county clerk in Dunklin County. Enumerating her duties, Ross said she [298]*298“took care of all the county’s bills” and did some “filing.” Ross’s testimony continued:

“Q. Would some of those filings include autopsy reports?
A. They would in a sense, yes.
Q. What do you mean in a sense?
A. Well, all I had to do was just file it, stamp it filed and make a note to pay the cost of the autopsy.”

Motion Counsel handed Ross a seven-page document marked “Movant’s Exhibit # 1.” Ross identified the first page of the exhibit as “a cover sheet for an autopsy report.” A copy of the “cover sheet” is attached at the end of this opinion.

Ross testified — and the “cover sheet” confirms — that Exhibit 1 was filed with the County Clerk of Dunklin County on January 23, 1995, some twenty months before Appellant’s trial.3 The “cover sheet” displays, inter alia, the victim’s name, date of birth and date of death. It also shows:

“MANNER OF DEATH: Homicide
CAUSE OF DEATH: Manual Strangulation”

The “cover sheet” is signed by Michael D. Zaricor, a pathologist who testified at Appellant’s trial. 956 S.W.2d at 444.

Ross acknowledged that after Appellant’s trial she talked to a man who “said he was working for [Defense Counsel].”

Then, this:

“Q. Do you recall telling that investigator that you had read the autopsy report prior to trial?
A. No, I did not.
Q. You don’t recall, or you did not tell him that?
A. I didn’t tell him that.
[[Image here]]
Q. Do you recall telling that investigator that you found the report, quote, very horrifying, unquote?
A. No. I didn’t tell him that, because I didn’t read the report at all.
Q. Do you also recall telling him that, you felt it left little doubt that Mrs. Segraves was guilty?
A. No, I did not say that.
Q. Do you also recall talking to someone who represented himself as an investigator from my office?
A. I talked to someone. I can’t remember his name.
Q. Okay. If I told you his name was Lawndale Thomas, would that ring a bell for you?
A. The Lawndale sounds familiar, but I couldn’t be sure.
Q. It was in, roughly, March of this year [4]; is that correct?
A. It was this year. I don’t know about the date.
Q. Do you recall telling Mr. Thomas you read the first page of the autopsy report?
A. I told him I saw the cover sheet, because that’s what I had to have in order to pay the bill. I had to be sure — The Commission required that that bill be filed before it was paid, and I had to be sime that the autopsy report was filed.
Q. Okay. But you don’t recall telling him that you had actually read the first page of the report?
A. I told him that I saw it, but I did not read it.

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Related

Benford v. State
54 S.W.3d 728 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2001)
Brown v. State
33 S.W.3d 676 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
992 S.W.2d 296, 1999 Mo. App. LEXIS 528, 1999 WL 235624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/segraves-v-state-moctapp-1999.