State of Tennessee v. Stanley B.Hill

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 30, 2013
DocketE2012-00289-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Stanley B.Hill (State of Tennessee v. Stanley B.Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Tennessee v. Stanley B.Hill, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE January 29, 2013 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. STANLEY B. HILL

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Blount County No. C-14909 Michael H. Meares, Judge

No. E2012-00289-CCA-R3-CD - Filed August 30, 2013

The defendant, Stanley B. Hill, was convicted by a Blount County jury of the first degree premeditated murder of his wife, Vickie Hill, and sentenced to life imprisonment. On appeal, he argues that the trial court committed reversible error by: (1) allowing the medical examiner to use demonstrative evidence that was inherently unreliable, unfairly prejudicial, cumulative, and not disclosed to defense counsel prior to trial and (2) excluding a piece of physical evidence as a sanction for his violation of the reciprocal discovery obligations under Rule 16 of the Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure. Following our review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

A LAN E. G LENN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J EFFREY S. B IVINS and R OGER A. P AGE, JJ., joined.

Richard L. Gaines, Knoxville, Tennessee (on appeal); Jeffrey Z. Daniel, Knoxville, Tennessee, and James R. Scroggins, Jefferson City, Tennessee (at trial), for the appellant, Stanley B. Hill.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Renee W. Turner, Senior Counsel; Michael L. Flynn, District Attorney General; and Tammy M. Harrington and Robert L. Headrick, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

In this matter, the defendant was convicted of the first degree murder of his wife, unsuccessfully staging her death to appear as a suicide. The case presents uncommon facts and unusual issues.

At approximately 6:57 on the morning of December 31, 2003, the defendant called 911 to report he had just discovered that the victim had committed suicide by hanging herself in the garage of their home. When confronted with inconsistencies in the physical evidence, the defendant changed his story, telling investigators that he had, at the request of the victim, assisted in her suicide by devising a rope system that she used to hang herself from a bed and by straddling her body and holding her down to prevent her from inadvertently aborting the suicide during her death throes. He claimed that his staging of the suicide scene in the garage was also at the request of the victim, who had not wanted him implicated in her death, and that the injuries to the victim’s head occurred post-mortem when he dropped her to the floor as he was transporting her body to the garage and attempting to hang it from the rafters. The autopsy, however, revealed that the victim’s head injuries occurred before death, and the defendant was subsequently indicted by the Blount County Grand Jury with the first degree premeditated murder of the victim. Released on bond, the defendant fled the area. He was eventually discovered in July 2006 in Los Angeles, California, with several different identifications in his possession. He was arrested and brought back to Tennessee, where he was tried before a Blount County Circuit Court jury from May 12-16, 2008.

Trial

According to the State’s proof at trial, the first officer who responded to the defendant’s 911 call was met in the driveway by the defendant, who informed him that he had gotten up that morning, looked for the victim, and found her in the garage, where she had hanged herself. The defendant told the officer that the victim had attempted suicide about a year earlier by taking an overdose of her anti-depressant medication but that she had not mentioned suicide recently. When investigators arrived shortly thereafter, the defendant told them that he and the victim had been married about three years and had a two-year-old son, and that she had suffered from depression since the birth of her first child ten years earlier and had recently become severely depressed because she felt that she was a failure and her life was going nowhere. Before the investigators went out to examine the body more closely, the defendant told them that he had dropped the victim’s body when he cut her down from the rope, which had caused a knot on her head and a scrape mark on her side.

The victim’s body was in the back of the detached garage lying on its back on top of a comforter near an area where a knotted rope was attached to a pulley system hanging from a two-by-six board attached to the ceiling rafters. There was no suicide note. The initial story the defendant gave of having laid the victim on her back on the garage floor after cutting her loose from the rope was inconsistent with the physical evidence, which, among other things, included sawdust on the front of the victim’s pants, dirt and debris on the front

-2- part of her feet, a rectangular pattern impression on her stomach that matched the pattern of a pile of flooring materials in the garage, and two ligature marks on her neck. One of those two marks was shallow and went up, consistent with the mark left on a body that has been hanged, while the other one was deep and went straight back, inconsistent with a hanging. Investigators, therefore, ordered an autopsy on the victim and transported the defendant to the sheriff’s department for questioning.

The defendant initially repeated his story of the victim’s having committed suicide in the garage. He changed his story, however, after the investigators informed him that the autopsy showed that the victim was already dead at the time her body was hanged. In his new version, the defendant said that the victim wanted to commit suicide but was afraid that she would botch the job if she tried alone, so she asked him to help her prepare and execute the plan. He said she repeatedly begged for his help before he finally relented and devised a method for her to hang herself with a rope by rolling off the double bed in the bedroom of her older son, who was away from home at the time the victim ultimately chose to commit suicide. The defendant stated that the victim told him she would start “kicking and fighting” during the suicide and made him promise not to let her get up. She also made him promise to stage the scene in the garage because she was concerned about what would happen to their two-year-old son if the defendant was implicated in her death. The defendant’s statement reads in pertinent part:

I showed her how to set it up. She did it all. And, uh, then she basically rolled off the edge of the bed and it came pretty close to parallel. But it – all the pressure was on her neck. I promised her I’d do it and I did. I didn’t let her move, claw out.

The defendant stated that the victim had unsuccessfully attempted suicide at least twice in the past, that she lived on a roller coaster of emotions, that her anti-depressant medication had ceased working, and that she became tired of the roller coaster and begged him to help her end her life because she was convinced that she was making everyone around her miserable. The defendant said that the previous night the victim announced that it was time to execute the suicide plan. He described what occurred:

She said that last night was the night. She said that, uh, she didn’t want to go on anymore. She didn’t want to make anybody else miserable. She wanted me to set the rope up. All it was, was a loop that went around the bottom of the bed. And it had another loop and, uh, through that loop, you could twine the rest of the rope to make the noose. And then it had a long end on it. The long end was tied up. And what she did, she just rolled off the bed, which, uh, tightened the noose, left her head about that far off the ground, maybe. And,

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Related

State v. Witherspoon
681 S.E.2d 348 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2009)
State v. Dooley
29 S.W.3d 542 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 2000)
State v. Wiseman
643 S.W.2d 354 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1982)
State v. James
688 S.W.2d 463 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1984)
State v. Delk
692 S.W.2d 431 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1985)
State v. West
767 S.W.2d 387 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Stanley B.Hill, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-stanley-bhill-tenncrimapp-2013.