State ex rel. S.T.

677 So. 2d 1071, 95 La.App. 1 Cir. 2187, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 1422, 1996 WL 374970
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1996
DocketNo. 95 KJ 2187
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 677 So. 2d 1071 (State ex rel. S.T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. S.T., 677 So. 2d 1071, 95 La.App. 1 Cir. 2187, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 1422, 1996 WL 374970 (La. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

J^GONZALES, Judge.

S.T., a child, was alleged by petition to be delinquent based on the commission of negligent homicide, a violation of La.R.S. 14:32. The child denied the allegation and, following an adjudication hearing, was adjudged delinquent. The child waived presentation prior to disposition, and the court placed the child on supervised probation until he reaches age twenty-one with several special conditions of probation.

The child now appeals his adjudication, urging in three assignments of error that the evidence was insufficient to support his adjudication. In a fourth assignment of error, he contends the judgment of disposition ordered an illegal or excessive fine and imposed an excessive or improper period of probation.1

On December 25, 1993, the child accompanied his father and a family friend to the friend’s private hunting camp in the Whiskey Bay area.' Early the next morning, while [1072]*1072situated in his portable deer stand perched high in a tree, the child fired a shot at what he believed to be a deer. Tragically, on going to retrieve the deer, he discovered he had shot and killed another hunter, later identified as Edward Estis, Sr.2

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR NUMBERS ONE, TWO, AND THREE:

The child contends in these three assignments of error that the court’s decision was contrary to law and the evidence adduced at the hearing. More particularly, the child argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a finding of negligent homicide, that the court’s findings of fact as to the degree of negligence do not constitute criminal negligence, and that the state failed to prove the requisite ^element of criminal negligence. These contentions have merit.

FACTS

At the hearing, Detective Patrick Nelson of the Iberville Parish Sheriff’s Office testified he responded to a reported shooting in the Whiskey Bay area. Nelson identified a seven millimeter Ruger that had been taken from the child. After speaking with the child’s father, Nelson arrested the boy and took him and his father to the Maringouin Substation where the boy gave a statement. Nelson confirmed that the incident had occurred in Iberville Parish during daylight. There was no evidence that the child had consumed alcohol or engaged in any “horseplay.”

Captain Scott Haydel of the St. Martin Parish Sheriffs Department testified that his office received the initial call reporting a fatal hunting accident in the Whiskey Bay area. Because it was unclear to him whether the accident had occurred in St. Martin Parish or Iberville Parish, Haydel, who also served as the Chief Medical Investigator for the Coroner’s Office, responded to the call. Haydel described the scene from photographs he had taken of the victim and the child’s deer stand.3 The victim lay in a path, a small area clear of thickets or briars. The deer stand, located about one hundred twenty yards from the victim, was also free of obstructions, briars, or thickets. However, looking from ground level near the deer stand, Haydel could not see the victim because of the extremely dense woods.4

Haydel, too, confirmed that there was no evidence the child consumed alcohol or was engaged in horseplay. This incident was the fourth hunting accident Haydel had investigated. When asked, as an expert, whether the boy should have fired the shot in the dense woods, Haydel was unable to give an opinion because he had not been in the stand at the time.

|4Edward Estis, Jr., the victim’s son, and Jody Meche, another member of the victim’s hunting party, recounted their activities that morning. After ascertaining everyone’s location, the victim set out stating, “[rjight after daylight I’m going to turn the dogs loose” to chase deer towards the hunters. At about 7:30 a.m., they heard the victim “whooping and hollowing [sic] with the dogs” up to about five hundred yards from them. Approximately five to eight minutes after they heard the last of the victim’s whooping, they heard a single shot fired. Each member of the party thought another member had killed a deer. Later sounds of shouting were interpreted as a young boy’s excitement on taking his first deer. A couple of hours later, they observed helicopters circling the area; and, at about 11:15, they abandoned their deer stands to return to their camp. While surmising the helicopters may have indicated a hunting accident somewhere, they remained under the belief that the one shot meant one of them would return to camp with a deer. None of the party went to the area where they guessed the shot had originated; they learned of the tragedy when they returned to [1073]*1073camp where law enforcement officers waited with the victim’s body.

The child, who was sixteen at the time of the incident and eighteen at time of the adjudication hearing, testified he scouted the area for placement of his deer stand the afternoon before the shooting. He selected the location for his deer stand because of deer markings on nearby trees and positioned himself in it about fifteen minutes before daybreak the next day. At about 7:45, he was using a “grunt call” (explained as a sound deer make during rutting season) to attract deer when he heard a noise and some water splashing behind him. He turned and saw a doe, but did not shoot as only bucks were in season. Because he heard similar sounds from the same area, he looked and saw the high neck and rear end of another deer. He put the deer in the scope of his rifle and “grunted” again; observing antlers on the deer, he “shot it”. From his position, he had not heard dogs or yelling and denied shooting blindly at what he had heard.

|5The juvenile testified that he did not leave his position in the tree stand immediately because the designated time for the hunt was nearly finished. Before descending the tree, he put on his orange vest, which he had hung on the tree. On going to get the deer, he discovered he had shot a man. He then returned to his camp in search of his friend, the camp’s owner.

On cross-examination, the prosecutor asked why the child’s earlier statement to the police did not include any mention of antlers. The child explained he was unable to remember everything at the time and did not write the statement.5 He again insisted, “[w]hen I shot, I saw a buck” with approximately six to eight horns or antlers which were “whitish brown” and repeated, “I saw a deer when I shot.” He testified his rifle was fitted with a telescopic sight and that he had aimed at the front shoulder of the deer when he fired. The child had been exposed to hunting since he was very young and had recently passed a hunting safety course; he has been unable to hunt since the incident.

NEGLIGENT HOMICIDE AND CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE

The instant petition alleges the child committed negligent homicide by shooting and killing Mr. Edward Estis. La.R.S. 14:32(A) defines negligent homicide as “the killing of a human being by criminal negligence.” Criminal negligence is defined in La.R.S. 14:12 as follows:

Criminal negligence exists when, although neither specific nor general criminal intent •is present, there is such disregard of the interest of others that the offender’s conduct amounts to a gross deviation below the standard of care expected to be maintained by a reasonably careful man under like circumstances.

In State v. Garrett, 525 So.2d 1235, 1238 (La.App.

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Bluebook (online)
677 So. 2d 1071, 95 La.App. 1 Cir. 2187, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 1422, 1996 WL 374970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-st-lactapp-1996.