State v. Bell

950 S.W.2d 482, 1997 Mo. LEXIS 69, 1997 WL 501109
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 19, 1997
Docket79186
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 950 S.W.2d 482 (State v. Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bell, 950 S.W.2d 482, 1997 Mo. LEXIS 69, 1997 WL 501109 (Mo. 1997).

Opinions

WHITE, Judge.

Winston Bell was convicted of the first degree murder of his wife, Fay Allen, and sentenced to death. Several witnesses testified at trial that Ms. Allen told them of numerous previous incidents of abuse by her husband. This hearsay evidence was erroneously admitted and prejudiced Mr. Bell’s defense. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

On June 3, 1994, Ms. Allen called 911, asking for help and saying that her husband had set her on fire. When police and paramedics arrived, Ms. Allen was alert and told them that Mr. Bell had thrown gasoline on her and set her on fire. She suffered second and third degree burns over ninety-one percent of her body and, two weeks later, died [483]*483from her injuries. At trial, Mr. Bell claimed that his wife had attacked him with a cleaver and that, after he disarmed her, she tried to pour gasoline on him. When he struggled with her, he testified, she spilled gasoline on both of them, which she ignited with a cigarette lighter. He claimed that he put himself out and then attempted to extinguish Ms. Allen by pouring water on her, taking off her clothes, and putting her in the shower. He then left the house because, he claimed, Ms. Allen was still angry with him.

The State presented forensic evidence to attack Mr. Bell’s version of events, including evidence showing: that there had been no struggle over the gas can; that Ms. Allen was doused in the living room and hallway, not in the kitchen, where Mr. Bell said the altercation occurred; that Ms. Allen — not Mr. Bell — had extinguished the fire by getting into the shower and removing her own clothes; and that Mr. Bell’s clothing showed little or no evidence of having been soaked with gasoline or ignited.

Hearsay Evidence of Prior Assaults

The State also sought to challenge Mr. Bell’s version of events by introducing testimony that Ms. Allen had said that Mr. Bell had previously assaulted her. A co-worker of Ms. Allen’s, Annette Smith, testified that Ms. .Allen had often come to work showing signs of having been injured. Ms. Smith testified that she had seen Ms. Allen come to work with a split lip, with a black eye on three or four occasions, and once on crutches. Ms. Smith testified that when she asked Ms. Allen how she got these injuries, Ms. Allen initially said that she had fought with her cousin or had fallen, but that when Ms. Smith challenged her, she eventually said that Mr. Bell was responsible for the injuries. The State further offered the testimony of a police officer, Tommy Brown, who responded to a police call from Ms. Allen in March of 1994. He testified that Ms. Allen appeared to have been assaulted — she had abrasions on her face — and appeared frightened. He also testified that Ms. Allen told him that she and Mr. Bell had argued, that he had become enraged and had beaten her for more than an hour, and had tried to break her leg by twisting it. Another officer, Darren Burk-ette, testified that Ms. Allen had told him substantially the same facts.

The State argues that the testimony concerning Ms. Allen’s statements accusing Mr. Bell of prior abuse are admissible hearsay under the “declarant’s present state of mind exception” to the hearsay rule. Generally, “statements of a declarant’s present mental condition made out of court are excepted from the hearsay ban” and are admissible “in limited situations when they are relevant and the relevancy outweighs their prejudicial effect.”1 In Boliek, for instance, this Court held that admission of a statement by a murder victim that she was afraid the accused was going to kill her was not an abuse of discretion.2 Often, statements of fear are accompanied by recitals of facts explaining the state of mind.3 In such cases, factual assertions are admitted solely to show state of mind, and care must be taken to ensure that accompanying factual matter is not taken as evidence of the truth of the matter asserted.4 Because of the danger that such evidence might be considered for an improper purpose, its use is generally limited to cases where hearsay declarations of mental condition are especially relevant— particularly where the defendant has put the decedent’s mental state at issue by claiming accident, self-defense or suicide.5

[484]*484The testimony in this ease, however, whether it was more probative than prejudicial, does not fit within the exception because it is not a contemporaneous statement of fear, emotion, or any other mental condition. The testimony adduced at trial was that Ms. Allen said that Mr. Bell had beaten her on numerous occasions; no evidence was presented that Ms. Allen stated her current thoughts, feelings, or intentions to any of the witnesses. Courts have found that hearsay statements which do no more than recount past events, especially past acts by one not the declarant, are not proper subjects for this exception.

In the leading case in this area, Shepard v. United States, the United States Supreme Court wrote that “[djeclarations of intention, casting light upon the future, have been sharply distinguished from declarations of memory, pointing backwards to the past. There would be an end, or nearly that, to the rule against hearsay if the distinction were ignored.”6 Thus, the Court held testimony that the deceased said that the accused had poisoned her, although it negated the claim that she was suicidal, was inadmissible because “it spoke to a past act, and even more than that, to an act by some one not the speaker.”7 Missouri courts have consistently followed that logic and barred mere “narration of past events.”8 This Court has held that “[t]he underlying, essential characteristic of all the numerous cases admitting such evidence is that the statement must refer to the intention, design or state of mind of the declarant. Those parts of the statement referring to the acts and intentions past and present, of the defendants were pure hearsay as to them ... and are not within the excep-tion_”9 The hearsay testimony that Ms. Allen said Mr. Bell had previously abused her was not a declaration of her state of mind and was pure narration of past acts by another. Accordingly, it was inadmissible hearsay, and the trial court abused its discretion by allowing it to be presented to the jury.

Prejudice

Where a trial court has abused its discretion, reversal is required when that error has prejudiced the defendant, that is, where “there is a reasonable probability that, in the absence of the abuse, the verdict would have been different.”10 Mr. Bell was prejudiced by this evidence. His mental state at the time Ms. Allen was set on fire was essentially the only contested issue in the case. Though Mr. Bell claimed in his testimony that he did not intend to set Ms. Allen on fire, most of defense counsel’s efforts were directed towards highlighting the scarcity of evidence that Mr. Bell intended to kill Ms. Allen and that he deliberated before lighting her on fire. At one point, his counsel even argued to the jury: “Ladies and gentlemen, we’re not saying he’s not guilty of anything at all. But what we’re saying to you is that he’s not guilty of murder in the first degree. And nothing you look at proves to you beyond a reasonable doubt that he deliberated and engaged in cool reflection in the burning.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
950 S.W.2d 482, 1997 Mo. LEXIS 69, 1997 WL 501109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bell-mo-1997.