Shawn Michael Yuille v. State of Missouri

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 11, 2022
DocketWD84802
StatusPublished

This text of Shawn Michael Yuille v. State of Missouri (Shawn Michael Yuille v. State of Missouri) 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
Shawn Michael Yuille v. State of Missouri, (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

SHAWN MICHAEL YUILLE, ) Appellant, ) WD84802 v. ) ) STATE OF MISSOURI, ) FILED: October 11, 2022 Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LIVINGSTON COUNTY THE HONORABLE RYAN W. HORSMAN, JUDGE

BEFORE DIVISION THREE: CYNTHIA L. MARTIN, P.J., LISA WHITE HARDWICK, AND W. DOUGLAS THOMSON, JUDGES

Shawn Yuille appeals the denial of his Rule 24.035 motion after he pled

guilty to second-degree felony murder and first-degree endangering the welfare

of a child. Yuille contends the motion court clearly erred in denying his post-

conviction motion because his sentence was grossly disproportionate. He also

argues defense counsel was ineffective for failing to argue proportionality at

sentencing and to object to the disproportionate sentence after it was imposed.

For reasons explained herein, we affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On November 25, 2017, Yuille, his five-year-old daughter (“I.R.Y.”), and

Jeremy Osburn went to a Wal-Mart in Chillicothe, where Osburn purchased a two-

pack of air duster. Air duster is a canned cleaning product containing

fluorocarbon and compressed air. As Yuille drove the truck away from Wal-Mart,

both he and Osburn inhaled or “huffed” the air duster.

Later, Yuille was driving on Washington Street when he took a second huff

from the air duster can. After Yuille inhaled this time, he passed out in the

driver’s seat with his foot on the accelerator. The truck accelerated to what

witnesses described as a “great rate of speed” and struck Danette Rardon’s car.

When it hit Rardon’s car, the truck was traveling at a rate of 88 miles per hour at

100% throttle with 0% braking. The speed limit in that area was 25 miles per hour.

Rardon was pronounced dead at the scene. Her body was pinned in the

driver’s seat and had to be cut out of her car. Yuille was found lying on the

ground just outside the driver’s side of the truck. Yuille and Osburn told officers

at the scene that, before the crash, Yuille was having trouble shifting the truck’s

transmission into drive and that, after he was able to put the car in drive, the

accelerator got stuck. Yuille had severe injuries and was flown by Life Flight to a

hospital in Kansas City. I.R.Y., who was not properly restrained in her car seat at

the time of the crash, had a significant laceration on her forehead, her face was

covered in blood, and she, too, had to be flown to a hospital in Kansas City.

Osburn had injuries to his lower extremities, but he refused medical assistance.

2 Later that day, Osburn confided to a friend that it was his idea to buy the air

duster. Osburn told his friend that Yuille had huffed the air duster twice and that,

after the second time, Yuille was unresponsive and had his foot pressed down on

the accelerator. Osburn said he had to reach over and grab the wheel, and he

attempted to weave the truck in and out of traffic before hitting Rardon’s car.

After Osburn’s friend reported what Osburn had told him, the police interviewed

Osburn. Osburn gave the police a statement that was consistent with what he had

told his friend. A mechanical evaluation of the truck’s acceleration pedal revealed

it had been functioning properly at the time of the crash.

Yuille was arrested five days after the crash. When officers interviewed him

following his arrest, his version of the events was consistent with Osburn’s

statement. Yuille claimed that he had restrained I.R.Y. in her booster seat but

“she often got herself loose.” Yuille also told the police that he had never inhaled

air duster before and thought it was “like helium.”

Yuille was originally charged with the class A felony of second-degree

felony murder and the class B felony of endangering the welfare of a child. The

State and Yuille entered into a plea agreement under which the State agreed to

amend the endangering the welfare of a child charge to a class D felony and

recommend that Yuille receive a total sentence of no more than 20 years for the

second-degree felony murder and endangering the welfare of a child charges.

During the guilty plea hearing on April 15, 2019, the State informed Yuille

that the range of punishment for second-degree felony murder was 10 to 30 years

3 in prison, and the range of punishment for endangering the welfare of a child was

up to seven years in prison, up to one year in the county jail, up to a $10,000 fine,

or any combination of those fines and incarcerations; thus, the possible total

sentence for the two offenses was 37 years. The court restated the ranges of

punishment and the possible total sentence. The court also advised Yuille

multiple times that it was not bound by the State’s recommendation of a 20-year

ceiling on his total sentence and that it could sentence him to anything within the

full range of punishment on each charge and run the two sentences consecutively.

Yuille stated that he understood and still wanted to plead guilty. The court

accepted Yuille’s guilty plea and ordered the completion of a Sentencing

Assessment Report (“SAR”).

Yuille’s SAR included a summary of the circumstances of the incident and

Yuille’s and Osburn’s statements about the incident. The SAR noted that, for his

role in the incident, Osburn was charged with and convicted of the misdemeanor

of second-degree endangering the welfare of a child. He was sentenced to 60

days in jail. The SAR further noted that, after Osburn served his 60 days in jail, he

was sent to prison for a 2016 conviction for distribution of a controlled substance

and was currently on parole supervision.

The SAR detailed Yuille’s criminal history. Yuille, who was 23 years old at

the time of the crash, had a criminal history that included the misdemeanors of

violating an adult order of protection and private peace disturbance in 2011;

speeding in 2014; the misdemeanors of receiving stolen property and second-

4 degree tampering with a motor vehicle in 2015; the felony of stealing a motor

vehicle in 2015; operating a motor vehicle in a careless and reckless manner in

2015; and the misdemeanor of making a false report in 2016. For the 2015 felony

of stealing a motor vehicle, Yuille received a suspended imposition of sentence

and five years of probation. The SAR discussed Yuille’s risk assets and liabilities

and other assessment factors and concluded that he was a moderate risk for

community supervision and an average risk for prison. The SAR noted that,

between fiscal years 2013 and 2018, the average prison sentence for second-

degree murder in Missouri was 21 years.

The SAR contained victim impact statements from Rardon’s mother, father,

and brother describing the enormity of their loss. The SAR also included a

description of the crash’s impact on I.R.Y. The SAR stated that, while I.R.Y. has

healed from her physical injuries, she has a scar across her forehead and is

engaged in weekly therapy to address her trauma.

During the July 2, 2019 sentencing hearing, defense counsel noted that the

SAR had erroneously stated that Yuille was unemployed when he was, in fact,

employed full time at a tire store at the time of the incident. The State then called

Rardon’s father and mother to testify about the impact of the death of their

daughter, a 39-year-old lawyer who was very close to her parents, brother, nieces,

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Shawn Michael Yuille v. State of Missouri, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shawn-michael-yuille-v-state-of-missouri-moctapp-2022.