State of Missouri v. Carl Justin Townsend

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 2022
DocketED109061
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. Carl Justin Townsend (State of Missouri v. Carl Justin Townsend) 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. Carl Justin Townsend, (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals €astern District

DIVISION FOUR

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) No. ED109061 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of ) St, Charles County VS, ) 1811-CRO2707-01 ) CARL JUSTIN TOWNSEND, ) Honorable Michael J. Fagras ) Appellant, +) Filed: April 19, 2022

Michael E. Gardner, P.J., James M. Dowd, J., and Lisa P. Page, J. OPINION

Defendant Carl Justin Townsend appeals his convictions for first-degree assault, armed criminal action, and unlawful possession of a firearm resulting in a 26-year sentence following a jury tnai in which Townsend claimed self-defense. This case arose from a July 23, 2018, incident in which Townsend shot and wounded Ricky Koenen, the son of one of Townsend’s tenants on property Townsend owned in rural St. Charles County. Ricky Koenen’s mother Suzanne Koenen and Townsend’s other tenant, Rick Shuttleworth, had agreed to vacate the property that day in exchange for Townsend waiving the last 90 days of rent payment. Before the shooting, Townsend and Suzanne Koenen had engaged in a verbal altercation and Townsend

and Ricky Koenen had engaged in a verbal and physical altercation.

,

Townsend brings multiple points of error. We reverse and remand for a new trial because we find the trial court plainly erred in two respects each of which substantially compromised Townsend’s ability to fully assert his defense of self-defense. First, the trial court plainly erred by excluding Townsend’s testimony that an hour before the shooting the victim’s mother, Suzanne Koenen, threatened Townsend that her son Ricky Koenen was going to come to the scene and “blow your fuckin’ head off, you no good nigger” and that Townsend was “nothing but a no good nigger.” Second, the court plainly erred by allowing lay witness Lisa Poe to testify to Missouri’s specific legal requirements fo carry out an eviction when the undisputed record in this case was that this was not an eviction but an agreed-upon departure of the premises in exchange for waived rent payments, By allowing this testimony, the trial court permitted the State to improperly and without foundation insert the issue into this case that Townsend was unlawfully on the property and therefore had a duty to retreat from his confrontation with Ricky Koenen,

Our holding as to these related issues, which disposes of four of Townsend's seven points relied on, renders moot Townsend’s remaining three points though we briefly address the issues

raised in those points since they may recur upon retrial,

'Point [V: Townsend asserts the trial court abused its discretion by permitting, under the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule, the detective’s testimony that repeated Ricky Koenen’s prior statement to the detective because (1) the testimony did not satisfy the excited utterance exception, (2) it was cumulative of Koenen’s trial testimony, and () it improperly bolstered Koenen’s credibility.

Point ¥; Townsend challenges the court’s exclusion of evidence of Ricky Koenen’s methamphetamine use after Koenen testified he had not continued to use drugs after his 2002 court-martial conviction for drug use. Townsend sought to cross-examine Keenen with his prior deposition testimony that he used methamphetamine repeatedly, that he used it with his mother and the other tenant at the premises in question, that he used it as recently as within a week of the shooting, and that he tested positive for amphetamine at the hospital the day after the shooting. The trial court also disallowed the emergency room doctor’s testimony by way of an offer of proof that amphetamine generally takes two to four days to leave the body after ingestion.

2 Background

‘Townsend and his wife owned a 7-acre lot in rural St. Charles County. In April 2018, Leo Kruse deeded to Townsend the adjacent lot where Rick Shuttleworth resided as a tenant and Suzanne Koenen resided in a nearby mobile home and reportedly served as Mr. Shuttleworth’s caretaker. On the day Townsend assumed ownership of the property, he and Shuttleworth agreed that in exchange for Townsend waiving Shuttleworth’s obligation to pay rent for 90 days, Shuttleworth and Ms. Koenen would voluntarily vacate the premises on July 23, 2018.

When Townsend arrived to the property on the afternoon of July 23, 2018, he observed that Shuttleworth and Ms, Koenen were in the process of packing their effects to vacate the property, During Townsend’s initial encounter with Suzanne Koenen that day, she became upset and began profanity-laced verbal attacks on Townsend which, according to Townsend, included the threat that “my son is going to come here and blow your fuckin’ head off, you no-good nigger” and “you are nothing but a no-good nigger.” ‘Townsend left the property and returned to his own house nearby.

Approximately an hour later, Shuttleworth asked Townsend to come back to the property to unlock a shed so Shuttleworth could retrieve his lawnmower. Townsend’s wife, who was aware of the previous exchange between Townsend and Suzanne Koenen, recommended that Townsend take a firearm with him and he did so. When Townsend returned to the property to unlock the shed, Suzanne Koenen’s son Ricky Koenen had arrived to help his mother complete

her move-out, He was also armed with a pistol,

Point VII: Townsend claims the court plainly erred in failing to submit to the jury an instruction defining the term “lawfully remaining” as used in the self-defense instruction,

3 When Townsend observed Ricky Koenen throwing onto the ground large quantities of trash from a trailer Koenen owned that was parked on the property, Koenen and Townsend exchanged words regarding the trash. At that point, Suzanne Koenen renewed her verbal attacks on Townsend including “you're a dead nigger,” to which Townsend responded, “shut the fuck up and leave.”

Ricky Koenen testified that he brought his handgun with him from home to protect himself, He stated that when Townsend came to unlock the shed, Townsend had his gun drawn and was pointing it at Koenen ordering him to pick up the trash. Townsend claimed that when he approached, his gun was lodged in his back waistband, Then, after Townsend told Suzanne Koenen to “shut the fuck up and leave,” Ricky Koenen jumped down from the trailer to a position directly in front of Townsend and told Townsend, “don’t talk to my fuckin’ mother like that.’ Koenen testified that Townsend then swung his tight arm to hit Koenen but missed. Townsend, for his part, claimed he swung his fist at Koenen only after Koenen had pushed him, Koenen stated that at that point he no longer saw Townsend’s gun in either hand and that he put Townsend in a choke hold around his neck for 5-6 seconds. While the two struggled on the ground, Koenen then noticed the gun in Townsend's hand again. At that point, Koenen released his hold on Townsend and said he tried to run or back away when Townsend shot him wounding him in his right arm and buttocks.

Townsend claimed that after he managed to draw his weapon from his back waistband while the two struggled on the ground, Koenen released his hold and scampered away, and that after Koenen separated himself by several yards, he rose to his feet, drew his weapon, cocked it,

and pointed it at Townsend, At that point, Townsend fired his gun multiple times, ‘Townsend was charged as a prior and persistent offender? with one count each of first- degree assault, armed criminal action, and unlawful possession of a firearm. After a three-day jury trial beginning on February 4, 2020, in the Circuit Court of St. Charles County, Townsend was found guilty on all counts, The court sentenced him on July 14, 2020, to 26 years in the Missouri Department of Corrections. Townsend’s motion for new trial was denied and this appeal follows.

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State of Missouri v. Carl Justin Townsend, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-carl-justin-townsend-moctapp-2022.