State of Louisiana Versus John B. Gustave, Jr.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 28, 2022
Docket22-KA-139
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana Versus John B. Gustave, Jr. (State of Louisiana Versus John B. Gustave, Jr.) 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 of Louisiana Versus John B. Gustave, Jr., (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 22-KA-139

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

JOHN B. GUSTAVE, JR. COURT OF APPEAL

STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 19-6382, DIVISION "E" HONORABLE FRANK A. BRINDISI, JUDGE PRESIDING

December 28, 2022

FREDERICKA HOMBERG WICKER JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Fredericka Homberg Wicker, Jude G. Gravois, and Stephen J. Windhorst

AFFIRMED; REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING FHW JGG SJW COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE, STATE OF LOUISIANA Honorable Paul D. Connick, Jr. Thomas J. Butler Juliet L. Clark

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT, JOHN B. GUSTAVE, JR. Jane L. Beebe John B. Gustave WICKER, J.

Defendant, John Gustave, Jr., seeks review of his conviction for domestic

abuse battery by strangulation in violation of La. R.S. 14:35.3 and his subsequent

adjudication and sentence as a second felony offender under La. R.S. 15:529.1.

For the following reasons, we affirm defendant’s conviction and multiple offender

adjudication. However, we find an error patent on the face of the record reflects

that defendant’s enhanced sentence is illegally lenient; we thus remand this matter

to the district court with instructions for resentencing.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

On December 4, 2019, the Jefferson Parish District Attorney filed a bill of

information charging defendant, John B. Gustave Jr., with domestic abuse battery

by strangulation in violation of La. R.S. 14:35.3(L). Defendant was arraigned on

December 10, 2019, and pled not guilty.

On February 6, 2020, the State filed a “Notice of Intent to Introduce

Evidence of Other Acts.” After a hearing, on June 16, 2021, the trial judge granted

the State’s Notice of Intent. On December 13, 2021, trial began before a twelve-

person jury. On December 14, 2021, the jury unanimously found defendant guilty

as charged. That same day, defendant orally motioned for a new trial, which the

trial judge denied. After defendant waived sentencing delays, the trial judge

sentenced defendant to three years imprisonment at the Department of Corrections.

On December 15, 2021, the State filed a multiple offender bill of

information alleging defendant to be a second-felony offender. That same day,

defendant executed a “Waiver of Constitutional Rights Plea of Guilty Multiple

Offender” form and stipulated to being a second-felony offender. The trial judge

vacated defendant’s original sentence and resentenced him to four years

imprisonment at hard labor. This timely appeal followed.

22-KA-139 1 FACTS

Ms. Yearnater Scott testified at trial that she and defendant began dating in

November of 2017. While they were dating, defendant moved into her house in

early 2018, and they lived together for a few weeks. Ms. Scott testified that on

April 12, 2018, she and defendant got into a verbal argument. During that

argument, she asked defendant to leave her house. At that point, defendant became

physically violent. Ms. Scott testified that defendant punched her in the face and,

as he attempted to punch her in the face a second time, she dropped to the ground

causing defendant to punch a hole in a closet door. At some point, Ms. Scott

grabbed her cell phone, and defendant grabbed the phone from her and threw it

onto the ground, damaging the phone as he ran out.

Ms. Scott acknowledged that, in the April 2018 incident between her and

defendant, he did not choke or strangle her. She testified that she called 9-1-1 on

that date and explained to a deputy what occurred. She testified that her

relationship with defendant ended on that date, and that defendant did not

immediately move back into her home thereafter.

Ms. Scott testified that she and defendant began speaking again in 2019 and

that defendant asked if he could move into her home, as he had nowhere to live at

that time. Ms. Scott stated that she lived in the home with her stepdaughter, Ms.

Kayla White1, who was approximately sixteen years old at the time of the July 24,

2019 incident at issue, and her godchild, who was approximately thirteen years old

at the time of the incident at issue.

On July 24, 2019, defendant lived in the home with Ms. Scott but the two

were not dating. Ms. Scott testified that, on that date, defendant called her while

she was at work and asked her to give him a ride to his sister’s home. During her

1 Ms. Scott explained that Ms. White is in fact her ex-stepdaughter, but that Ms. White spent time with her in the summers and that she maintained a good relationship with her ex-stepdaughter.

22-KA-139 2 lunch break, Ms. Scott went home to pick up defendant. She and defendant started

talking, and it turned into an argument wherein defendant accused Ms. Scott of

sleeping with her “ex”, Ms. White’s father, who had been to the house the night

before.

Ms. Scott testified that the argument turned physical after defendant asked

her to have sex with him and she repeatedly told him no. Ms. Scott testified that

defendant began hitting her, punching her in the face three times, while accusing

her again of sleeping with her “ex.” She dropped to the ground and he continued to

hit her while she was on the ground. She eventually begged defendant to let her

clean her bloody face in the bathroom, and he allowed her to exit the bedroom into

the bathroom to clean her face. As she was rinsing the blood from her face in the

bathroom, defendant entered the bathroom, grabbed her by the neck, slammed her

into the bathroom door, and stated that she had “that little b*** calling the police

on him.” As Ms. Scott struggled to fight him off, defendant began to strangle her

with two hands and at some point, they fell into the bathtub, knocking down the

shower curtain rod. Ms. Scott testified that she was barely breathing and could hear

her heartbeat slowing down, and that she almost lost consciousness. Defendant

then ran out of the house before police arrived.

Ms. Scott viewed photographs introduced into evidence demonstrating

injuries to her face, including swollen lips and three scratches on her neck caused

by defendant’s fingernails to her neck.

Deputy Fidel Garcia with the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office testified that

on July 24, 2019, he was working as a patrol deputy and responded to a 9-1-1 call

at 3058 Aspen Drive in Marrero. When he arrived to the address, he first

encountered “Ms. Scott’s daughters” waiting outside the house. He noticed they

were visibly upset, but informed him that they did not witness the battery. He

proceeded into the house to speak to the victim, Ms. Scott. Deputy Garcia

22-KA-139 3 indicated that he spoke to Ms. Scott and developed defendant as a suspect. As he

spoke to Ms. Scott, he noticed swelling to her face, lacerations around her neck

with red marks, and a cut underneath her right eye where blood was still present.

Deputy Garcia reviewed and described several photographs of the scene and the

victim and testified that the photographs corroborated Ms. Scott’s account that she

was battered and strangled.

Ms. White testified that she was eighteen years old at the time of trial and

that Ms. Scott is her stepmother. Ms. White testified that on July 24, 2019, she was

staying at “3085” Aspen Drive2 with her stepmother and Ms. Scott’s goddaughter.

She indicated that she was sleeping when Ms. Scott’s goddaughter woke her up

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