State v. Bird

729 P.2d 1136, 240 Kan. 288, 1986 Kan. LEXIS 441
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 5, 1986
Docket58,564
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 729 P.2d 1136 (State v. Bird) 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. Bird, 729 P.2d 1136, 240 Kan. 288, 1986 Kan. LEXIS 441 (kan 1986).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Prager, J.:

This is a direct appeal by the defendant, Thomas Bird, from a jury conviction of first-degree premeditated murder (K.S.A. 21-3401). The charge arose out of the death of the defendant’s wife, Sandra Bird, whose body was found on July 17, 1983, lying face down in a river in front of her overturned car. The death occurred below the Rocky Ford Bridge which is located south of the city of Emporia on a gravel road. Directly south of the Rocky Ford Bridge there is an S-curve consisting of two 90-degree angle turns.

Sandra Bird’s body was examined by Dr. Juan Gabriel, who performed an autopsy and determined that Sandra had died as the result of an automobile accident when her car missed the bridge and proceeded down an embankment into the river. The doctor noted that Sandra’s most serious injury was a transected kidney which he stated was the kind of injury people receive in motor vehicle accidents. At that time, no one seemed to question Dr. Gabriel’s decision. Shortly after the body was discovered, police officers arrived at the scene and took photographs and measurements. From an examination of the gravel roadway, ditches, and the fence rows south of the bridge, it was concluded *289 that there was no evidence that the car was out of control or made any kind of braking or sliding action before going down the embankment.

Subsequent developments caused the police authorities to believe that the death of Sandra Bird had resulted from criminal action. In October of 1984, the body of Sandra Bird was exhumed and a second autopsy was performed by Dr. William G. Eckert, a certified forensic pathologist. In addition to the injuries noted by Dr. Gabriel, the second autopsy revealed fractures of the left shoulder blade and a laceration on the top of her head indicating a considerable amount of impact or blunt trauma which, according to Dr. Eckert, was capable of rendering a person unconscious instantaneously. Dr. Eckert also found three linear type injuries above the left wrist which was fractured, a similar injury on the right arm above the wrist, and one in the elbow joint of the right arm. Dr. Eckert was of the opinion that the injuries on the back of her arms were defensive injuries. Dr. Eckert explained defensive injuries as injuries caused when a person has his arms outstretched in an effort to ward off blows in an attack. In the doctor’s opinion, the linear marks above her wrist could have been caused by an instrument such as a branch of a tree, a baseball bat, a pool cue, or a tire iron. In Dr. Eckert’s opinion, the injuries to Sandra Bird’s kidney could have been caused by her falling from a height in excess of 20 feet. An important part of the opinion of Dr. Eckert was that he found no injuries on Sandra Bird’s body which could have been caused by her ejection from an automobile. The autopsy by Dr. Eckert resulted in further investigation by the county attorney. This prosecution followed.

There were a number of factual issues presented at trial in the case, the most important of which was whether Sandra Bird’s death was caused when her body was ejected from the moving automobile as the result of a tragic accident or whether she was killed as a result of a brutal attack on the bridge and the throwing of her body into the river.

The matter was presented to a grand jury which brought in an indictment charging defendant with first-degree premeditated murder. Thomas Bird was tried on the indictment to a jury in Lyon County and was found guilty as charged. A review of the transcript of the trial and the many exhibits in the case shows clearly that the case was tried by two able Kansas trial attorneys *290 who represented their clients in a highly professional manner. The case was difficult to try, because there were no eyewitnesses to the killing and the case had to be determined by the jury on the basis of circumstantial evidence. The prosecution presented testimony of 72 witnesses and over 100 exhibits for consideration by the jury. The State’s evidence produced factual circumstances which wove a web of guiltaround the defendant. As to the cause of Sandra Bird’s death, the State’s evidence established that there were no skid marks or other evidence at the scene indicating that the deceased’s vehicle had gone out of control after going around the S-curve south of the Rocky Ford Bridge. Police officers at the scene observed blood on the bridge and on a tree located directly below the east edge of the bridge which was located 20 feet from the resting place of the car. The blood on the tree was type A, which was the same type of blood as Sandra Bird’s. There was no credible explanation as to how Sandra Bird’s blood could be located on the west side of the tree, if Sandra Bird’s injury had resulted from being ejected from the vehicle as it traveled east of the tree from the road into the creek.

Sandra Bird’s body was found lying face down in the water in front of her car. Dr. Gabriel concluded that her death was caused by loss of blood or hemorrhage due to internal injuries caused by blunt trauma. In his judgment, her death resulted approximately 30 minutes to one hour after her injuries occurred when she was ejected from her vehicle and thrown into the water. There is no satisfactory explanation as to why there was no water found in Sandra Bird’s lungs as she lay under water. The relative positions of Sandra Bird’s body and her automobile in their final resting places do not support the defense theory that Sandra Bird had been ejected from the moving vehicle when its left-hand door was torn off. A State’s expert witness testified that, given the mechanics of the automobile’s roll, it was his opinion that Sandra Bird’s body would have been deposited on the land between the door and the final resting place of the vehicle and that her body would not have ended up in front of the vehicle in the river. The interior of Sandra’s car contained no blood or hair which would have indicated a person had been banged around inside the car. Simply stated, the physical evidence at the scene and the more complete examination of Sandra Bird’s body performed at the second autopsy furnished substantial evidence that Sandra Bird *291 had not been killed as the result of an automobile accident, but rather that her fatal injuries were suffered as a result of blows struck on the.bridge, following which her body was thrown over the rail into the river.

There was other evidence which indicated that Sandra Bird had been standing on the bridge in the area where blood was found. There was evidence that at 9:30 p.m. on the evening of July 17, Sandra had stopped by their home, talked with the babysitter, and picked up a bottle of wine and a bottle of bourbon. A wristwatch identified as belonging to Sandra Bird was found under the bridge in the vicinity of the tree where blood of her type was discovered. The planks on the bridge above the body had a one-to-three-inch gap between the planks. Two red plastic cups found in the entrance to a field just to the south of the bridge were similar to ones found underneath the bridge.

The State’s evidence established a motive for defendant to kill his wife. Thomas and Sandra Bird were having marital difficulties as the result of an affair which defendant was having with Lorna Anderson.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
729 P.2d 1136, 240 Kan. 288, 1986 Kan. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bird-kan-1986.