State v. Bagwell

519 So. 2d 875, 1988 WL 3624
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 20, 1988
DocketNo. 19324-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 519 So. 2d 875 (State v. Bagwell) 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 v. Bagwell, 519 So. 2d 875, 1988 WL 3624 (La. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinions

FRED W. JONES, Jr., Judge.

Indicted for second degree murder, the defendant Mrs. Dorothy Bagwell was tried by jury and found guilty of manslaughter. She was sentenced to prison for 12 years. [876]*876The defendant appealed, reserving five assignments of error. Finding reversible error in two of those assignments, we preter-mit consideration of the other assignments.

After some 20 years of marriage, James Bagwell and Dorothy Bagwell were separated in June 1985. As a consequence of legal proceedings, the husband was awarded temporary use of the family home while the wife was to receive alimony pendente lite. It was arranged that Mrs. Bagwell would visit the family home on the morning of August 3, 1985 to secure personal possessions and return some guns to her husband.

Mrs. Bagwell placed her husband’s loaded service revolver in her purse and returned to her former residence. Entering the house, she found Bagwell sitting on the commode with his pants down. Mrs. Bag-well returned to the living room with purse in hand, heard the commode flush, and went back to the bathroom door. The bathroom sink was located to her immediate right; next to the sink and along the right hand wall was the toilet; and the bathtub was parallel to the back wall, with the drain located next to the right hand wall. Mrs. Bagwell contended she laid the revolver on a bathroom cabinet, but grabbed it back when her husband reached for the weapon to shoot her with it. She fired several times at her husband, fatally wounding him, and also shot herself. This proceeding followed.

At the trial numerous friends, family members and acquaintances testified as to Mrs. Bagwell’s peaceful nature and reputation for non-violence. At age 60, Mrs. Bag-well had no prior criminal record and the State presented no evidence to contradict the testimony of Mrs. Bagwell’s character.

Those same witnesses testified as to Bagwell’s character and characterized him as an extremely violent, possessive and overbearing person. Numerous examples of the violence inflicted on Mrs. Bagwell during her 20 years of marriage to Bagwell were cited. Donna Pittman White, Mrs. Bagwell’s niece, testified that she saw Bag-well walk behind her aunt, grab her aunt by the hair of her head, shake her head and throw her head forward. He was always calling her a “crazy old woman” in Ms. White’s presence. Bagwell once stated to Ms. White that he was going to get rid of that old woman. When Ms. White asked if he meant a divorce, he responded and said, “no, there are other ways.”

Kathy and Paul Chriss, Jr., rented an apartment behind the Bagwell home for four years. They eventually moved because the apartment became too small and they were tired of listening to the Bagwells fighting. During one instance, Kathy heard yelling in the yard. When she looked out her kitchen window, Bagwell had Mrs. Bagwell by the hair and was dragging her across the ground as she kicked. Bagwell yelled at her to get in the house. Mrs. Bagwell responded by screaming, “no, I know what you’ll do when I get in there.” Bagwell dragged her into the house, pulling her by her hair. Although Mrs. Bagwell was kicking her legs trying to escape, she never fought back.

Another time Kathy was looking out her window and the Bagwells’ kitchen door was open. Bagwell hit Mrs. Bagwell in the face with his fist. She went down, apparently knocked out. Bagwell then ran out the back door, knocking the screen door off the hinges.

Kathy testified that she had heard Bag-well threaten Mrs. Bagwell but that Mrs. Bagwell never fought back. She stated to Kathy that she was afraid that Bagwell would kill her while she slept. Mrs. Bag-well was observed to have bruises on her wrists and arms and burns on her arms similar to cigarette burns.

Paul Chriss heard a racket in the yard and looked out his window. Bagwell was again dragging Mrs. Bagwell by her hair. Bagwell kicked at her and threw her in the house. He then tore the screen door off the hinges and bent it over his knee and threw it in the yard. He sat on the porch for a short period of time, got up, busted the door down and went inside. Paul could hear screaming from inside.

Mrs. Bagwell testified that shortly after her marriage to Mr. Bagwell, her son, [877]*877Mike, and daughter, Sheila, left to live with their grandmother because they could no longer stand to be around Bagwell. Both children were in their early teens. According to Mrs. Bagwell, the physical violence started after the third or fourth year of marriage to Bagwell. It began with milder incidents, where Bagwell would mash her fingers and pinch her arms to such an extent as to make her leave. He would later apologize and blame it on drinking. Bagwell was always drinking.

According to Mrs. Bagwell’s testimony, one of Bagwell’s favorite forms of torture was walking up behind her and pulling on her hair, so as to jerk her head around, hard enough to pull handfuls of hair out. There were also incidents where Bagwell tore the clothes off of her and would kick her and hit her with his fist. One time, Bagwell hit her in the eye hard enough that she suffered a detached retina.

Bagwell threatened to kill Mrs. Bagwell. He regularly told her that “I’m going to kill you, you crazy old woman.” Often, he would insinuate that her death was being contemplated by commenting that, while standing on the edge of a mountain if a body were to fall over the edge, it would probably be lost forever; or, while deep sea fishing the sharks would take care of any body tossed overboard.

In 1984, Bagwell started telling Mrs. Bagwell that the telephones were bugged and that he had recording devices hidden throughout the house. Anything that Mrs. Bagwell did, he would know of. When Bagwell informed her that he was recording her voice, Mrs. Bagwell felt that she had to try to protect herself by obtaining her own recorder and recording the conversations. Bagwell found and destroyed all the tapes that she had made except for one. In that tape, Mrs. Bagwell was wanting to buy a gift for her niece’s housewarming party. Bagwell refused to allow this. Mrs. Bagwell read to Bagwell from the Bible concerning the passage on turning the other cheek. He got mad, tore the Bible up, hit Mrs. Bagwell and threatened to kill her.

Henry Patterson, a fellow Mason with Bagwell, observed black and blue marks on Mrs. Bagwell’s wrist, face and jaw on two different occasions. He also heard Bag-well curse at his wife. Patterson became concerned and tried to discuss the situation with Bagwell. Bagwell responded that “he had to do her that way to keep her in line.”

Dorothy Rhodes, Mrs. Bagwell’s niece, and her husband Phillip, testified that Bag-well consistently called Mrs. Bagwell a “crazy old bitch” and stated that she was useless, wore out and stupid. Bagwell was fond of shaking Mrs. Bagwell like a child while in their presence. Mrs. Bagwell came to their residence five times after beatings. Bagwell once informed Phillip that he believed he could drive Mrs. Bag-well into committing suicide; he had already driven her crazy. On one occasion, Dorothy, while working as a secretary for Bagwell Pest Control, observed Bagwell curse out Mrs. Bagwell for buying him a recliner for Father’s Day. Bagwell forced the delivery man to take it back to the store.

James Hayes, Mrs. Bagwell’s brother, testified that he observed his sister with black eyes, bruised face, skinned up legs and a bruised arm. Mrs. Bagwell told him how she got hurt. Hayes went to talk to Bagwell.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Amato
698 So. 2d 972 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1997)
State v. Stewart
663 A.2d 912 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1995)
State v. Widenhouse
582 So. 2d 1374 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1991)
State v. Bagwell
523 So. 2d 1320 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1988)
Succession of Garnett v. State, Department of Revenue & Taxation
521 So. 2d 1156 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
519 So. 2d 875, 1988 WL 3624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bagwell-lactapp-1988.