State v. Cochran

1998 MT 138, 964 P.2d 707, 290 Mont. 1, 55 State Rptr. 551, 1998 Mont. LEXIS 127
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1998
Docket96-236
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1998 MT 138 (State v. Cochran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cochran, 1998 MT 138, 964 P.2d 707, 290 Mont. 1, 55 State Rptr. 551, 1998 Mont. LEXIS 127 (Mo. 1998).

Opinion

JUSTICE HUNT

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Kathleen Cochran (Cochran) appeals from the judgment entered by the Seventeenth Judicial District Court, Blaine County, on a jury verdict, convicting her of felony assault, and specifically from the District Court’s denial of her motion to suppress evidence, her motion for a directed verdict of acquittal, and her motion for a mistrial. We reverse.

¶2 Although Cochran raises several issues on appeal, we address only one, which is dispositive of this case: did the District Court abuse its discretion when it denied Cochran’s motion for a directed verdict.

BACKGROUND

¶3 Because the issue in this case involves the sufficiency of the evidence presented to support Cochran’s conviction, we review in detail the following facts presented at trial. Police Officer Robert Painter was on patrol duty at approximately 4:30 a.m. on January 10,1995, in Harlem, Montana, when he saw Cycil Jackson walking down the street. Painter approached him in his vehicle and asked him what he was doing at that hour. Jackson responded that he was on his way to a friend’s house. Painter noticed that Jackson was holding his right arm, but assumed it was simply because Jackson was cold. Painter continued his patrol duties.

*3 ¶4 Fifteen to twenty minutes later, Painter saw Jackson again, approximately six city blocks from his first encounter. This time Painter got out of his car and approached Jackson. Jackson told him that his friend was not home, so he was walking to his brother’s house. Painter offered him a ride, but Jackson declined. Painter noticed that Jackson was still holding his arm, but again assumed that Jackson was simply cold.

¶5 A little while later, Painter was dispatched to the home of Victoria Johnson. Painter was aware that Johnson resided with Lloyd Jackson, who was Cycil Jackson’s brother. As Painter was driving to the home, he received another message that Johnson had withdrawn her request for police assistance. Painter went off duty at approximately 5:30 a.m.

¶6 According to Johnson, she was awakened during the early morning hours to the sound of someone knocking on her door. When she realized it was J ackson, she invited him in. Both Lloyd Jackson and she could see he was bleeding from his arm. Johnson asked Jackson if he had been stabbed, but he denied it, and instead stated that he had fallen on glass. Although his brother also repeatedly asked him what had happened, Jackson never gave him an explanation. Johnson telephoned the police, but canceled the call after Jackson told her that he did not want the police involved.

¶7 Johnson and Lloyd Jackson then took Jackson to the Indian Health Services Hospital at Fort Belknap where he was treated by Dr. Ethel Moore. Dr. Moore testified that Jackson had sustained three wounds to his left arm: one across the shoulder joint, one in the mid-upper arm, and one just above the elbow. The two upper wounds were shallow and less than a half-inch in length, while the lower wound was deep and was an inch to an inch and a half in length. She characterized his wounds as stab wounds which could have been inflicted by a knife or a pair of sharp scissors. However, Jackson again denied having been stabbed and refused to tell her how he sustained the wounds.

¶8 In the meantime, Officer Charles Hunger, who is employed by the Fort Belknap BIA Police Department, was told that there was a stabbing victim in the emergency room and was dispatched to the hospital. However, Jackson similarly refused to tell Hunger what had happened, where he received his injuries, or who had been involved. Because Jackson was uncooperative, Hunger feared that there may be another victim somewhere. Hunger thus spoke with Jackson’s *4 brother, Lloyd, who informed him that he did not know how Jackson sustained the wound. Lloyd did tell him that Jackson lived with Kathleen Cochran, and gave him their address in Harlem, Montana. Because Harlem was outside of Hunger’s jurisdiction, Painter, who by now was off Work, was dispatched by the Harlem Police Department to assist Hunger.

¶9 Painter, Hunger, and a criminal investigator named Martin Wilke proceeded to Jackson’s residence. As they approached the trailer house, they observed blood on the second stair leading to the house and blood in front of the windows in the snow. The three officers knocked on the door and on the windows on the north and east sides of the trailer, with no response. As they walked around the trailer, they observed no signs of a struggle or fight in the snow outside the residence. Painter saw blood droplets to the area north of the trailer with one set of footsteps by the blood spots. On the east side of the trailer, Painter and Hunger noticed that curtains in the east side window opened, then closed, but they did not see a person at that time.

¶10 While on the south side of the trailer, the officers heard voices and a banging noise coming from the inside of the trailer. It sounded to them as if a male and a female were fighting or wrestling. Painter testified that he heard a male state that he was going to get a gun, and a female trying to keep him from getting the gun. The officers feared that someone inside was about to be hurt. Painter thus radioed to the dispatch officer and informed him that there was an altercation proceeding in the trailer, and he did not have time to obtain a search warrant. He then forcibly entered, and Hunger and Wilke followed him inside.

¶11 Once inside, the officers discovered that the noise they had heard was actually coming from a television. They also found three individuals smeared with blood to varying degrees. The first individual was a man lying on the couch in the living room. According to Painter, he “was really hard to wake up.” When he finally regained consciousness, he identified himself as Stan Lindemulder.

¶ 12 The officers located a second man in the bathroom, who was later identified as William Azure, also known as Billy Rose. Rose was sitting fully clothed in the bathtub with his legs draped over the edge as though he had been pushed in. He was intoxicated and was kicking and mumbling incoherently. He appeared to be trying to get out of the tub. Painter observed blood on his right coat sleeve.

*5 ¶13 Finally, in a bedroom where the officers had seen the curtains moving from the outside of the trailer, they located Kathleen Cochran. She was on her stomach on the floor, wearing a sweat top and spandex bicycle shorts inside out. They observed blood on her top, shorts, hands, feet, face and hair. Cochran appeared to be asleep, and the officers were unable to awaken her. They also noticed a set of keys clutched tightly in her fist. For their protection they took the keys in the event she did wake up or if she were only pretending to be passed out.

¶14 Painter returned to the Harlem Police Department, which was one block away, to obtain a camera and some sheets of paper to question the individuals and read them their rights, while Hunger and Wilke stayed with the individuals at the house. After taking the pictures, Painter was eventually able to awaken Cochran by standing her on her feet. He then placed Lindemulder, Rose and Cochran under arrest when they refused to cooperate or answer questions about what had happened.

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Bluebook (online)
1998 MT 138, 964 P.2d 707, 290 Mont. 1, 55 State Rptr. 551, 1998 Mont. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cochran-mont-1998.