State of Missouri v. Calvin Hutson

487 S.W.3d 100, 2016 WL 1579615, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 381
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 2016
DocketWD78090
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 487 S.W.3d 100 (State of Missouri v. Calvin Hutson) 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 v. Calvin Hutson, 487 S.W.3d 100, 2016 WL 1579615, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 381 (Mo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

VICTOR C. HOWARD, JUDGE

Calvin Hutson appeals his convictions and sentences following a jury trial for murder in the second degree (felony), sec *104 tion 565.021; 1 robbery in the first degree, section 569.020; armed criminal action, section 571.015; and unlawful possession of a firearm, section 571.070, RSMo Cum. Supp.2013. Hutson raises four points on appeal challenging the admission of certain testimony by witnesses; the sufficiency of the evidence to support the felony murder, robbery, and armed criminal action convictions; and the giving of the hammer instruction to the jury. The judgment of convictions is affirmed.

Factual Background

Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence was as follows. On December 27, 2012, Justin Beasley and Alexzondrea Walker met with the appellant, Calvin Hutson, at an apartment in Jefferson City. Hutson made statements indicating that he wanted to rob someone of marijuana. Hutson asked Beasley to find him a gun. They drove to the home of a friend of Beasley’s and borrowed a nine-millimeter handgun. Hutson then made a phone call to a man named Andre Hudson, the victim.

That same evening, David Evans and the victim drove to the victim’s house in Holt’s Summit. Evans wanted to borrow a shotgun from the victim because he had had trouble with his stepdaughter’s boyfriend earlier in the day. The victim, the victim’s wife, and Evans then left in a Chevy Suburban to drive back to Jefferson City. The victim’s wife was driving. The three first stopped at a nearby gas station so the victim could buy liquor. The victim’s cell phone was ringing nonstop. Hutson was calling the victim, and the victim’s wife could tell from the conversations that the phone calls concerned a marijuana transaction. The victim told his wife that they were going to meet somebody to get some money.

In the meantime, Hutson and Beasley had gone to Zesto’s Drive-In restaurant in Beasley’s Dodge Stratus. The victim directed his wife to drive to Zesto’s and to pull into an alley above and behind the restaurant. Hutson told Beasley to follow the Suburban into the alley.

The two vehicles stopped in the alley, and the victim got out of the Suburban and into the back passenger seat of the Stratus behind Hutson. The victim had a handgun with him. Beasley testified that he had the music turned up loud and could not hear what was being said between Hutson and the victim. He said he heard someone yell and then a gunshot. He got out of the car and ran. He heard five or six more shots as he ran. Beasley testified that the victim fired the first shot.

As the victim’s wife sat in the Suburban, she saw the Stratus start to shake. She and Evans then heard multiple gunshots and saw muzzle flashes inside the car. Bullets shattered the back window of the Suburban. The victim’s wife saw the driver running, and she pulled the Suburban around to try to follow him as she called 911. She and Evans then saw Hutson walking down some steps. He was bloody and appeared dizzy but took off running when the victim’s wife said to Evans, “That’s him.” The victim’s wife then drove after Hutson. She hit Hutson with the SUV when he ran out in front of her as she drove down the alley. Hutson got up and ran away, but he only made it about a block before the police stopped him.

Meanwhile, Beasley returned to the Stratus and found the victim in the back seat. He believed the victim was dead. Beasley got into the car and drove off but only got a short distance before police started following him. He stopped the *105 car, got out, and ran back to his house where he changed clothes and fled. He eventually turned himself in. The officer who had been pursuing the Stratus found the victim’s body in the back passenger seat. The victim’s pockets contained $61 in cash, a bag of marijuana, and his phone.

At the scene, Hutson told the police that he was in a gray car with a man named Terion McDaniels when another vehicle pulled up and its occupants shot him. Hutson was taken to the hospital with three gunshot wounds to his left arm, side, and hip. At the hospital, Hutson gave police a different account of how he was shot. He said that he had gone to the area to meet a man named Jay who wanted to buy some DVDs or CDs from him. After Jay got into the back seat of the car and while they were talking, shots suddenly rang out inside the vehicle. Hutson said he was hit and got out and ran until he collapsed where police found him. Hutson denied having any weapons at the meeting.

Police found a blood trail running from the scene of the shooting to the location where Hutson was found. An officer who followed the trail found a bloody piece of carpet alongside a shed. He discovered a Hi-Point nine-millimeter pistol and two large bags of marijuana under the carpet. The slide of the handgun was in the look-back position, which commonly means that all of the bullets have been fired from the magazine. Hutson’s DNA was found on the opening of the gun’s barrel and on the grip.

Police found a Kel-Tec nine-millimeter pistol in the Stratus under the victim’s body. The victim’s DNA was found on the grip of that handgun. The magazine contained two rounds, and a third round was ejected from the chamber. A total of eight nine-millimeter shell casings and a bullet were found in the back of the car, including one shell casing that was under the victim’s body. Forensic tests showed that four of the shell casings had been fired from the High Point and three had been fired from the Kel-Tec. The eighth cartridge could not be matched to a particular handgun, but it had class characteristics consistent with being fired from a Hi-Point and inconsistent with being fired from a Kel-Tec.

Analysis of the recovered cell phones that belonged to Hutson and the victim showed that Hutson made several calls to the victim on December 27 beginning at shortly before 3:00 pm and ending shortly after 7:00 pm. The victim called Hutson about six minutes after the last phone call from Hutson.

An autopsy showed that the victim had been shot four times. He suffered wounds to both arms, a shoulder, and the head. The fatal wound entered the left eye damaging the brain.

Hutson did not testify. He presented the testimony of a man who lived near the scene of the shooting and recovered the shotgun that Evans had left near a shed. Hutson’s defense at trial was that he shot the victim in self-defense after the victim shot him first. He requested a self-defense instruction, and one was given.

The jury found Hutson guilty on all counts. The trial court sentenced him to consecutive sentences of life imprisonment for felony murder, fifteen years for robbery, fifteen years for armed criminal action, and a concurrent sentence of seven years for unlawful possession of a firearm. This appeal by Hutson followed. ■

Admission of Testimony

In the first two points addressed in this appeal, Hutson challenges the trial court’s admission of certain testimony of Walker and Beasley. Walker testified that when Beasley said he “didn’t feel right,” he *106 meant “he didn’t feel right about going with [Hutson] to rob somebody.” Beasley testified that when Hutson used the term “a lick”, he' meant a robbery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
487 S.W.3d 100, 2016 WL 1579615, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-calvin-hutson-moctapp-2016.