State v. Bailey

889 P.2d 738, 256 Kan. 872, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1995
Docket70,476
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 889 P.2d 738 (State v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bailey, 889 P.2d 738, 256 Kan. 872, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 10 (kan 1995).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Abbott, J.:

This is a direct appeal by defendant, Steven C. Bailey, from his conviction for second-degree murder. He was sentenced to imprisonment for 15 years to life.

Defendant raises two issues on appeal. He first argues that he requested an attorney before being interrogated and that his confession and all evidence seized after the request should have been suppressed. His second claim is that the trial court erred in refusing to give a requested instruction on voluntary manslaughter.

Defendant was 37 years of age. The victim, Jenna Scott, was 18 years of age. They lived in Delphos, Kansas, and became engaged in July 1991. In August 1991, Scott moved to Topeka to attend a two-year paralegal program at Washburn University. In September, she terminated the engagement by telephone.

In November, defendant drove to Topeka to seek a reconciliation and, if that failed, to carry out a murder-suicide. The reconciliation failed and defendant, after telling Scott of his plan and showing her a handgun, returned to his home in Delphos.

Defendant returned to Topeka in January 1992 and, after a conversation with Scott, fired a .44 Magnum handgun four times at her. She was struck twice and died as a result of her wounds.

Later that evening, Deputy Sheriff King of the Ottawa County Sheriff’s Department observed a car matching the description of defendant’s car drive by defendant’s parents’ house in Delphos. Defendant engaged King and other law enforcement officers in a car chase at speeds exceeding 100 m.p.h. The chase ended when defendant’s car hit a guardrail. At 7:48 p.m. King read the Mir *874 anda warnings to defendant, and defendant indicated he understood them. Ottawa County Undersheriff Kindall asked defendant where the gun was, and defendant replied that the gun was under the seat.

Defendant was transported to the Ottawa County Sheriff’s Department, and he was Mirandized again on the drive. Upon arriving at the station, defendant was given a written Miranda waiver form, which he read with King and signed. He also signed a consent to search vehicle form. He never asked King if he could consult with an attorney. Defendant volunteered to King that he was on his way to Pike’s Trail Marker to kill himself.

Later that evening, defendant asked Undersheriff Kindall for advice concerning whether he should ask for an attorney at that time, and Kindall advised defendant that the Topeka detectives who would be interviewing him would answer all of his questions about an attorney. Sergeant Mills and Detective Fox of the Topeka Police Department arrived in Ottawa County to interview defendant. Fox read defendant his Miranda warnings. When Fox asked defendant if he would voluntarily give up his rights, defendant asked if he needed an attorney. Fox informed defendant that it was a decision only defendant could make, and defendant told Fox and Mills that he did not need an attorney.

Defendant admitted that he shot Scott. At least three eyewitnesses saw the shooting. Defendant told the officers that on January 27 he left Delphos at 12:30 p.m. and was feeling “down and out.” Defendant drove to Scott’s new apartment. He had found out her new address a week or so earlier by mailing a letter to her old address with a notation not to forward the letter but to return it to the sender with the new address, a trick he had learned by watching “Family Feud.” When he arrived, he spoke briefly with Scott and then waited for her while she ran an errand. They then talked in Scott’s front yard, and Scott showed defendant her apartment and introduced him to some friends. Defendant and Scott discussed that his parents were upset that she had broken their engagement suddenly and that her parents thought little of defendant because of the November incident when he threatened her with a gun. Defendant told Scott he hoped they could rebuild the relationship.

*875 Defendant and Scott went back outside. Defendant asked Scott if they could correspond, and she replied that she might drop him a postcard. Defendant thought Scott was “blowing him off.” Scott reached out her hand to shake hands with defendant, which defendant felt was cold and businesslike. (An eyewitness testified Scott hugged defendant.) As Scott walked back into her house, defendant pulled out a gun he had been carrying under his shirt in the front waistband of his pants. He knew the gun was loaded with six hollow point rounds. Scott was approximately 30 feet away from defendant when defendant fired the gun four times over a five- or six-second period. Defendant said he shot Scott as “punishment for what she had done to me.”

Defendant then drove back to Delphos. Along the way, he stopped to reload the gun, and he dumped the four empty shells out along the road. He claimed he intended to go to Pike’s Trail Marker to kill himself.

Sergeant Mills prepared a written statement based on the information defendant had provided. Defendant corrected two errors Mills had intentionally made and one grammatical error. Defendant signed the statement after reading it twice.

A search of defendant’s car revealed numerous items. Three weapons were recovered from the car, including a .44 Magnum revolver loaded with six rounds. A box of 240-grain bullets was found in a knapsack in the car. A 1972 Dodge City class ring was found on the passenger floorboard. There was also a photo album and a letter addressed to defendant’s parents. A 3” by 5” spiral notebook, a ring, and an envelope addressed to Scott were on defendant’s person at the time of his arrest.

Other evidence at trial revealed that a bullet recovered from the floor near where Scott’s body was found had been fired from the .44 Magnum found in defendant’s car. The written materials in defendant’s car and on his person were identified as having been written by defendant.

At trial, defendant presented testimony by friends and family that he was depressed and withdrawn after his first marriage ended approximately one-and-a-half years before he met Scott. However, after defendant met Scott his outlook on life changed *876 and he was more excited and happy. When Scott broke their engagement, defendant again became depressed and told a friend he had nothing to five for. He began having problems at work and was fired from his job on November 21, 1991, after missing work the previous day (when he had come to Topeka and threatened Scott).

Defendant presented a defense of diminished capacity. Dr. Fernando, a psychiatrist who evaluated defendant at Lamed State Security Hospital, testified that defendant was not suffering from a mental illness or major depression at the time he killed Scott or at the time he was evaluated at Lamed. Moreover, he opined that an individual suffering from a major depression would not necessarily be unable to think about what he was doing and act in a deliberate fashion.

Dr. Logan, the Director of the Department of Law and Psychiatry at the Menninger Clinic, also evaluated defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
889 P.2d 738, 256 Kan. 872, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bailey-kan-1995.