State v. Carr

687 S.W.2d 606, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3943
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1985
Docket13594
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 687 S.W.2d 606 (State v. Carr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Carr, 687 S.W.2d 606, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3943 (Mo. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

PREWITT, Chief Judge.

A jury found defendant guilty of three counts of capital murder for killing his stepmother, his stepsister and his brother. For each offense, defendant was sentenced to life imprisonment without eligibility for probation or parole for fifty years. He appeals.

On March 15, 1983, defendant was 16 years of age and lived east of Hartville in Wright County with his father, his brother, his stepmother, and her daughter. Defendant was enrolled in high school and that was a regular school day, but he did not attend. He had stayed with his grandmother the night before and then returned to the house where he lived after the others had left. The record indicates that defendant had not previously been in serious trouble and that he was a good high school student, generally getting “A’s and B’s”.

At approximately 4:15 p.m. defendant’s brother, Andrew Carr, and his stepsister, Emma Downey, got off a school bus near their home. After they entered the house defendant shot Andrew in the left side of the back of his head and in front of his right ear. Gunpowder residue indicated that the shot to the right ear occurred at close range. Emma was shot in the back and in the left eye. After Patricia Carr arrived home from work at approximately 4:35 p.m., defendant shot her above the right eye and in the right temple. The wound to the temple indicated the shot was from close range.

Aaron Carr, defendant’s father, came home at approximately 5:10 p.m. He saw a shovel in the front yard which had not been there when he had left that morning and the front curtains of the house were closed. Normally they were open. After Aaron Carr entered the house, defendant attempted to shoot him with a single shot .22 caliber rifle but it did not fire. As defendant tried to insert a different .shell in it, his father took the rifle from him. The others had been shot with that rifle. After defendant was disarmed he cried and. told his father, “I killed them all”. He said he killed his brother, even though he loved him.

A psychiatrist employed by plaintiff at the State Hospital in Farmington was called as a witness by defendant. He testified that defendant did not suffer from a mental disease or defect excluding criminal responsibility. He said defendant “saw his father as an extremely evil force in his environment” and “as patronizing his stepmother, stepsister and his brother”. The psychiatrist said defendant killed them “to get back at his father”. The psychiatrist testified that defendant thought his father was evil because he placed restrictions on him.

Defendant’s parents were divorced “about 10 or 11 years” before the trial. For some time defendant’s father had a “problem with drinking” and in 1965 was sent to the penitentiary for statutory rape. Ten years before the trial he quit drinking alcoholic beverages and became a devout member of a Jehovah’s Witnesses congregation. Apparently because of his religious beliefs he placed restrictions on defendant about which they conflicted. Defendant, who was six foot seven inches tall, was not allowed to play on the high school basketball team because its schedule conflicted with the family’s “home bible study”. He was prohibited from playing video games or from watching certain television programs.

Defendant was not allowed to date a girl who did not go to the same church. There was evidence that when his father learned of defendant’s fondness for the girl he made him renounce her in church, and that *609 on the night prior to the shooting defendant was “rebuked and ridiculed by his father during church services because of his failure to recite a passage from the Bible”. The evidence indicated that defendant was hostile toward his brother because his conduct received approval from their father.

The first contention of defendant that we discuss is that the trial court erred by refusing his instruction submitting to the jury the defense of mental disease and defect excluding criminal responsibility. He asserts there was substantial evidence to support the instruction.

Defendant is presumed to be free of mental disease or defect excluding responsibility, and whether he had such a mental disease or defect was for the jury to decide if there was substantial evidence of lack of such responsibility. § 552.030.7, RSMo Supp.1982. An instruction submitting mental defect or disease excluding responsibility should be given only where there is substantial evidence to support it. State v. Middlemas, 654 S.W.2d 355, 357 (Mo.App.1983).

The psychiatrist employed by the state was the only expert witness on this issue. He testified that defendant did not suffer from such a disease or defect. The record also indicates that defendant was examined by another psychiatrist at his mother’s expense. Apparently that psychiatrist reached the same conclusion. In this point defendant relies primarily upon the testimony of his mother, Chris Dillingham. That testimony is summarized in the next four paragraphs.

After his parents were divorced, defendant initially lived with his paternal grandmother. He stayed there for approximately a year and a half and then lived with his mother and her then husband. Mrs. Dill-ingham had “legal custody”, but because her husband verbally threatened defendant and physically abused him, he left to live with his father.

Following her second divorce, defendant lived with his mother in Cahokia, Illinois, from the fall of 1982 until the last week of January 1983. Early in January he received a phone call from his father and afterwards quit the basketball team. After the call he became moody and would eat little and would not see his friends. When he came back to live with his mother he had brought “a lot of Jehova Witness books and pamphlets”. At that time he wanted to throw them away but his mother said he should not because of their cost. He stored them in a closet and after the phone call he brought them out and started reading them.

The last week of January of 1983, apparently at defendant’s request, his mother took him back to Wright County to live with his father. About “a week or two” prior to the shooting Mrs. Dillingham received a phone call from defendant. She said defendant was “upset” and she knew something was wrong. “He kept saying he was trying to do the right thing but everything he did it was bad and he said his dad kept telling him he was bad because he wanted to play basketball and he wanted to drive and he wanted to date this one girl that wasn’t Jehovah Witness and that he tried to be good but he was always getting into trouble for something.”

Defendant told her that his problem “had to do with the church because he wanted to do these -things and they kept telling him that he was bad because he wasn’t going by their rules.” She said he asked, “Is there only one religion and one church?” She told him that there was not. Mrs. Dillingham testified that at the time of the phone call defendant suffered from a mental disease or defect and she had no reason to believe that he changed in the seven to ten days after the phone call. She said that at the time she talked to him by phone he did not have “a mental state where he could calmly and coolly reflect on killing someone.”

Defendant’s father testified regarding defendant’s conduct after returning to Wright County.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
687 S.W.2d 606, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carr-moctapp-1985.