State v. Daniels

380 N.W.2d 777, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 716
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 31, 1986
DocketCX-85-249
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 380 N.W.2d 777 (State v. Daniels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Daniels, 380 N.W.2d 777, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 716 (Mich. 1986).

Opinion

KELLEY, Justice.

Appellant Leonard Ray Daniels is serving a life sentence for first degree murder imposed by the Ramsey County District Court following a jury verdict finding him guilty not only of that charge, but also of two counts of second degree murder of a seven-month old child and one count of arson. 1 On appeal he contends (1) the evidence was insufficient to sustain the guilty finding, (2) the trial court improperly admitted prejudicial hearsay testimony, and (3) the admission of the testimony violated the confrontation rights afforded an accused by the sixth amendment to the United States Constitution and Minn. Const, art. I, § 6. We affirm.

On August 2, 1984 a fire occurred in an apartment on North Grotto Street in St. Paul. At the time, the appellant was living in this apartment with Michelle Merriman and her three children — Willie (age 4), Benjamin (age 3), and Chinesa (age 7 months). In the fire, Chinesa sustained second and third degree burns over 80 percent of her body, and subsequently died. Her death was caused by carbon monoxide poisoning associated with smoke inhalation. Contending that appellant Daniels had intentionally set the fire, the State presented the facts to the grand jury. The grand jury indicted appellant on one count of first degree murder (Minn.Stat. § 609.185, subd. 3 (1984)); two counts of second degree murder (Minn.Stat. § 609.19(1) and (2) (1984)); and on one count of first degree arson (Minn.Stat. § 609.561, subd. 1 *779 (1984)) 2 . The petit jury returned guilty verdicts on all charges.

Some time after meeting Michelle in a bar, appellant moved into her apartment, which she shared with her three children, her brother David (23), and her sister, Christine (17). David had some hearing problems and some difficulty in testifying at trial. He did not get along well with Daniels. As the apparent result of this conflict between the two, Michelle had evicted David and Christine from the apartment sometime before the August fire. Before being evicted, and while still living in the apartment, David claims to have overheard a conversation between Michelle and Daniels in which Daniels inquired whether the apartment sprinkler system or fire detector were functional. When she responded negatively, Daniels allegedly told her that if anything accidentally happened to one of her kids they could sue the apartment owner for lots of money so Michelle and her boys could move into a luxury condominium in Minneapolis. In this conversation no mention was made of Chinesa. In fact, David contended that with respect to Chinesa, appellant said, “You don’t love that baby anyway because she ain’t nothing but a f — ing trick baby.” 3

Michelle, according to David, asked Daniels to do nothing that would harm her kids. A week later, according to David, appellant again said he was “going to take someone out of this family she didn’t give a f... about.”

David, as well as other witnesses, testified as to arguments and “fights” between Michelle and Daniels. Michelle had a former boyfriend, Leonard “Steve” Miller. Occasionally, Miller would come by the apartment to see the children or David. Miller apparently considered Chinesa his daughter. Those visits on occasion prompted the arguments and fights between Michelle and Daniels — the last occurring three days before the fire.

On the day of the fire, appellant had spent the afternoon playing cards, gambling, talking, and drinking with Michelle and her friends. Sometime during that afternoon, Miller came to the apartment to see Chinesa. He did not visit her, however, because he saw Michelle and Daniels standing in front of the building, and he did not want to be the cause of another fight wherein Michelle might get hurt again.

Notwithstanding Miller’s caution, appellant did in fact see Miller leave the building. Shortly thereafter neighbors heard Daniels and Michelle arguing and heard “a lot of crashing like furniture being tossed around.” The neighbors residing across the hall from Michelle’s apartment, having been evicted by the owner of the apartment building over a rent dispute, were in the process of moving out. They were Virgil Calamese, his wife, Enola Calamese, and their two children, and Gerald Clifton, his girlfriend, Leonora England, and her three children. While Enola sat watching the children, near the doorway of her apartment, the other three adults were moving boxes out of the apartment.

After Clifton had heard the commotion coming from Michelle’s apartment, he observed Michelle leaving to take a walk. Shortly thereafter, appellant Daniels came out of the apartment and asked his neighbors if they had seen his missing television set. Calamese said Daniels, while “ranting and raving,” blamed Michelle for the absence of the television set. Daniels then left the building but returned shortly thereafter. He told these neighbors that if anyone came looking for him, they were to say they did not know him and never saw him. Shortly before the fire began, Daniels had told them he didn’t care if the building burned and the kids along with it.

*780 Leonora England observed Daniels throw some unidentified object into his apartment and shut the door. Enola Calamese likewise saw him open his apartment door and move his arm as though he were throwing something into the apartment, although she did not see any object being thrown. Right after this movement, however, she did hear Daniels say, “If anything happens to those f„_ing kids, I don’t know nothing about it.” Then Daniels again left the building.

Upon hearing some children outside the building yelling “fire,” Clifton ran out to see what apartment was on fire. He saw Daniels come around the corner from Hague and Grotto, lean against the building next to the apartment, and heard him say, “Ha-ha, you all look, it’s burning, it’s burning.” A few seconds later, in an apparent change of heart, Daniels tried to enter the apartment but was turned back by the flames. He and Clifton did run to the rear of the buildings and by climbing on a rub-bage dumpster, Ihey were able to reach the window to the bedroom where Michelle’s two boys were. Daniels severely cut his arm in smashing the window open. He did, however, aid Clifton and Anthony Thorp (Michelle’s cousin), in rescuing the two boys from the room.

Meanwhile inside the building, Calamese, with the aid of another person, was able to enter the burning apartment by using water, towels and sheets. He smelled gas in the apartment and attempted to shut off the gas valve. He did break into the bedroom where the two boys were, but they were being taken out so he crawled back out of the apartment.

Shortly afterwards, firefighters responded to the fire call. After the flames in the apartment had been extinguished, they entered the building and found a badly burned lifeless baby behind a bed tilted against the wall.

At trial, the State’s case against Daniels proceeded on two theories. The first was that in a jealous rage he had intentionally set the fire resulting in the death of seven-month old Chinesa. The second was that appellant and Michelle conspired to set the fire, kill the child, and collect damages from the landlord.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
380 N.W.2d 777, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-daniels-minn-1986.