Shunbrica Andrea Roby v. State of Mississippi

183 So. 3d 857, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 42, 2016 WL 347436
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 2016
Docket2014-KA-00621-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 183 So. 3d 857 (Shunbrica Andrea Roby v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shunbrica Andrea Roby v. State of Mississippi, 183 So. 3d 857, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 42, 2016 WL 347436 (Mich. 2016).

Opinion

LAMAR, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. A jury convicted Shunbrica Roby of deliberate-design murder, and the trial judge sentenced her to life in prison. Roby appeals to this Court, arguing (1) that the State’s evidence was legally insufficient and that her conviction was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence; (2) that her Sixth Amendment right to confrontation was violated; and (3) that the trial court erred in granting and/or refusing several jury instructions. We reverse and remand for a new trial based on the jury-instruction issue.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. On October 28, 2012, Shunbrica Roby drove to West Point to “bust the windows” out of her boyfriend Marcus Payne’s car, because he had been seeing other women. Her cousins Natisha and Latwanna Roby were with her. They saw Payne’s car at a gas station and pulled in behind him. Shunbrica got out with a *861 hammer and began to break the windows out of his car. Payne emerged from the store and a struggle ensued. Initially the struggle was between Payne and Shunbri-ca only, but her cousins joined in, and ultimately Payne was stabbed. He was taken to a hospital where he later died. A grand jury indicted Shunbrica for deliberate-design murder in violation of Mississippi Code Section 97-3-19. 1 Shunbrica was tried on April 7-9, 20Í4, and the jury found her guilty.

¶3. At trial, the State presented ten witnesses in its case-in-chief. And because Shunbrica challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, we detail the testimony:

Alexis Robinson

¶4. Alexis Robinson testified that she knew Payne because he was dating her neighbor, Raina Brooks, and Robinson and Payne got “real close.” On the night of October 28, 2012, she and Payne had gone to a party, and they then stopped at the One Stop Deli in West Point. Payne went into the store, and she noticed “somebody walking fast by the car, like with their hand, like, on the side of them, behind their back.” Robinson realized it was Shunbrica Roby. 2 Shunbrica looked at Robinson and then “rared back and ... hit the [car] window with the hammer.” Shunbrica then hit the windshield with the hammer, and Robinson jumped out of the car. Robinson was about to run to the store when Payne came outside, and he looked like “he seen a ghost.”

¶ 5. Shunbrica hit the window again, and she said “I told you about playing with me.” Payne ran to the car, and he and Shunbrica began “tussling” 'and “fighting.” Shunbrica was “slinging [Payne] against the car,” and “both of them were just fighting.” Robinson testified that she did not know whether Payne or Shunbrica had hit the other first, and that neither of them had anything in their hands during the fight. Payne was about Robinson’s size, and Shunbrica was bigger than he was. Robinson testified that, after Payne and Shunbrica had been tussling for about two or three minutes, Natisha and Latwanna jumped out of the car, and

they started holding [Payne] while she was fighting. All three of them, they were just grabbing and holding him, just — just beating him. They had his head, like — his head was down there. They had him by his hood. They kept pulling him, and they were just hitting him, just beating and jumping on him.

¶ 6. The cousins were saying “Get him, Brica, get him.” All three women were involved, and when the cousins jumped in, “it was just over with.” Robinson did not try to stop the fight, because “they was way bigger than me, and then I was nervous ... they was like ten times bigger than me ... both of us little, that would have been a demolish.” During the fight, someone said, “cut his 'neck, girl, cut his neck.” Shunbrica did not say “no, stop, don’t cut him.” Robinson saw only the hammer; she never saw a knife. After the fight, the women just “threw [Payne] to the side,” and he walked toward Robinson holding his' shoulder and making a “hissing” sound.

*862 ¶ 7. Robinson testified that someone was saying “run him over,” and that either Natisha or Hatwanna got into the car and tried to run over Payne. A man pushed Payne out of the way, and he slid down the car, stumbled to the back and fell. Robinson realized at that point that Payne had been stabbed, because blood “just started spewing there on the ground.”

¶8. Shunbrica started walking toward Payne, but someone yelled “call the police,” and Shunbrica ran and got into another car. Natisha and Latwanna had driven off and left Shunbrica. Robinson identified Shunbrica in the courtroom as the woman who got out of the car with a hammer and started the altercation.

¶ 9. On cross-examination, Robinson reiterated that she did not see a knife and that she could not say who stabbed Payne. She said that it was one of the other women yelling at the - gas station, not Shunbrica.

Juanita Yates

¶ 10. 'Juanita Yates was at the gas station that evening, and she waited in the car while her husband went in to get cigarettes. She saw a Honda pull up, and a “guy” got out and went into the store. About two .minutes later, another car pulled up with three females in it, and the driver [Shunbrica] — who was wearing a white t-shirt — got out and hit the back window of the Honda with “whatever she had in her hand.” The driver then hit the windshield, and the girl inside the car got out and ran to the store.

¶ 11. The driver of the Honda [Payne] came out of the store and said “What’s wrong with y’all? What y’all doing, messing with my car?” Shunbrica hit Payne on the shoulder with the object that she had in her hand. Payne tried to push her away, and he was saying ‘Y’all go on, man, you know, go on.” Yates did not see Payne hit Shunbrica, but she saw him try to push Shunbrica away from him. Payne and Shunbrica were “arguing and tussling,” and then the other two,women got out of the car. The women said “uh-oh, he messing with my cousin,” , “he hit my cousin.” Yates thought that the woman -wearing lime-green pants was just “regular punching” Payne, but then- she realized otherwise when she saw “a lot of blood.”

¶ 12. Yates testified that she, never saw a knife, but that “it had to be something, because once she — they were doing that, so I thought she was punching him at first, but then the blood came out, and I knew it had to have been something, you know, to hurt him.” Shunbrica was not with the other two women when Yates saw the blood. After Yates saw the blood, Shunbri-ca “got back in the car like she was trying to run [Payne] over.” Natisha and Lat-wanna jumped in the car and drove off, leaving Shunbrica. Shunbrica said “Marcus, Marcus, get up, get up. Please don’t die, don’t die.” Yates testified that, in her opinion, she didn’t “think the driver [Shun-brica] knew that the boy had been stabbed till she seen him collapse, you know, on the ground.”

¶ 13. Yates testified that you could “wring the blood” out of Payne’s jeans. After Natisha and Latwanna left, Shunbri-ca went to the road, and a car stopped and picked her up. Yates identified Shunbrica in the courtroom as the woman who had hit the car and had hit Payne.

' ¶ 14. On cross-examination, Yates reiterated that she did not see Shunbrica with a knife.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 So. 3d 857, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 42, 2016 WL 347436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shunbrica-andrea-roby-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2016.