STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. SAMUEL JERRY WHITAKER

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 29, 2020
DocketSD36011
StatusPublished

This text of STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. SAMUEL JERRY WHITAKER (STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. SAMUEL JERRY WHITAKER) 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
STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. SAMUEL JERRY WHITAKER, (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) v. ) No. SD36011 ) SAMUEL JERRY WHITAKER, ) Filed: October 29, 2020 ) Defendant-Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF IRON COUNTY

Honorable Kelly W. Parker AFFIRMED

Samuel Jerry Whitaker (“Defendant”) was tried for first-degree murder, armed

criminal action, and first-degree burglary. 1 The jury found Defendant not-guilty on the

burglary charge, guilty of the statutory lesser-included offense of voluntary manslaughter,

and guilty of armed criminal action. 2

In two points on appeal, Defendant claims the trial court erred in declining to

admit into evidence a certified copy of the victim’s 1991 Wisconsin aggravated battery

1 See sections 565.020, 571.015, and 569.160. Unless otherwise noted, all statutory citations are to RSMo 2000. 2 A defendant may be convicted of an offense included in an offense charged in the indictment or information if “[i]t is specifically denominated by statute as a lesser degree of the offense charged[.]” Section 556.046.1(2), RSMo Cum. Supp. 2013. Defendant was charged with first-degree murder. The lesser-degree offenses of first-degree murder include “[v]oluntary manslaughter under subdivision (1) of subsection 1 of section 565.023[.]” Section 565.025.2(1)(b). Section 565.023.1(1) addresses the offense of voluntary manslaughter involving a “death under the influence of sudden passion arising from adequate cause[.]”

1 conviction and erred in refusing to give one of Defendant’s two requested self-defense

instructions. Finding no merit in either claim, we affirm.

The Relevant Evidence

On or about October 28, 2013, Defendant shot and killed Carl Lee Streeval

(“Victim”), who was Defendant’s neighbor and the husband of Defendant’s stepdaughter,

Sierra Streeval (“Stepdaughter”).

Defendant lived on property in Wayne County that contained three trailer homes.

From around 2009 to 2013, Defendant lived in one of those trailers with his wife,

Tabitha, and their children. During that same timeframe, Stepdaughter moved into one of

the other trailers on the property (“the trailer”) with Victim and their children.

In March 2012, Victim and Stepdaughter executed a contract with Defendant to

purchase the trailer and the land around it for $9,600. About a year later, Victim moved

out of the trailer to live with his girlfriend, and a man named Hayden Swinford

(“Hayden”) moved in with Stepdaughter. Victim began making threats to Stepdaughter

and Hayden, and Stepdaughter obtained an order of protection against Victim.

Stepdaughter eventually left Hayden and moved to Texas.

On October 26, 2013 -- after Stepdaughter had moved to Texas and two days

before the charged events -- Victim, who had recently been released from incarceration,

intended to move back into the trailer, despite the fact that the order of protection

required him to stay away from the property. When Victim got to the trailer, he was

upset to find Hayden living in it. Victim and Hayden were arguing when Defendant

came outside of his trailer and approached them. Victim turned to Defendant and said

2 that he was going to “burn [Defendant’s] church[ 3] to the ground with [Defendant] in

it[.]” Law enforcement had been called, and an officer told Victim that he needed to

leave the property and was not to return.

Two days later, on the day of the shooting, Victim went to the sheriff’s office for

help in getting back into the trailer. Victim was told by someone at the sheriff’s office

that he would need to prove that he owned it. Victim left, and returned later, producing a

title certificate for the trailer, along with the purchase contract he had signed with

Defendant. At that point, Victim went back to the trailer with an officer accompanying

him. Hayden and his mother were already moving items out of the trailer when Victim

returned. The officer then left the property when everything appeared to be fine.

Later that day, Defendant went to the sheriff’s office and claimed that he had

previously reported the title to the trailer stolen. The deputy that Defendant spoke to

could find no proof that a report of a stolen title had been made. Defendant also applied

for an order of protection against Victim based upon their earlier confrontation.

Defendant next obtained the deed to his property at the recorder of deeds’s office.

He then took his deed to the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office, where he was unsuccessful

in trying to get help in removing Victim from the property. Defendant returned to his

trailer, where he encountered Victim “mouthing off.” Victim threatened to stab

Defendant with a steak knife that he was holding. Defendant went to the Chief of police

in Piedmont, as well as the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office, but neither were able to assist

him. Defendant then returned home.

At trial, Defendant provided the following testimony. After he returned to his

trailer, Defendant had dinner and some wine to calm his nerves. He could hear Victim

3 Defendant had built a “wilderness temple” on the property.

3 shouting throughout his dinner that Defendant had “until dark to get off the property.”

After he finished his dinner, Defendant went outside to feed his dog. Victim was still

outside, “mouthing off walking around with a gas jug telling [Defendant] he was going to

burn the church down with [Defendant] in it.” Defendant had his shotgun with him

because he was “not going to go outside with [Victim] unarmed[.]”

Victim approached Defendant and tried to take his gun away from him. In

response, Defendant shot Victim with a slug that grazed Victim’s head. Victim fell to the

ground, bleeding profusely from a non-fatal head wound. The two were still screaming

and yelling when Victim grabbed the gas jug and ran into the trailer. 4 Defendant looked

to the side and saw his son standing there. Defendant told his son “to get the keys to the

truck and get out of there” because “[w]e were at war[.]”

After Defendant’s son left, Defendant followed Victim into the trailer and got up

against the wall of the hallway. Defendant had seen Victim head straight down the

hallway into the master bedroom, and he could hear Victim screaming into the phone.

Defendant testified, “I told him I said [Victim], I’m sorry I said [Victim] I need to come

down there and get this gas jug and I persisted to go straight towards him.”

By the time Defendant reached the hall by the master bedroom, Victim had fled

into the master bathroom and closed the door. The gas jug was sitting on the carpet in the

hall outside the master bedroom. Defendant picked it up. As Defendant was returning

down the hallway with the gas jug, he testified that Victim smashed the bathroom door

4 No evidence indicated that anyone was inside the trailer at that time or that anyone believed that it was occupied.

4 against Defendant. 5 Defendant shot Victim (this time, fatally) and threw the door back at

him. Defendant then exited the trailer with his gun and the gas jug.

While he was hiding in the trailer’s bathroom, Victim was on the phone with the

9-1-1 dispatcher (“Dispatcher”). Dispatcher testified that “[Victim] was frantic and he

stated that someone was trying to break into his home and that he had been shot.” Victim

told Dispatcher that Defendant had shot him in the head, and he was feeling faint because

he was bleeding very badly. Victim told her that he had locked himself in the bathroom

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STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. SAMUEL JERRY WHITAKER, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-plaintiff-respondent-v-samuel-jerry-whitaker-moctapp-2020.