State v. Douglas, Unpublished Decision (3-16-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 1999
DocketCASE NO. 94 CA 214
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Douglas, Unpublished Decision (3-16-1999) (State v. Douglas, Unpublished Decision (3-16-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Douglas, Unpublished Decision (3-16-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

This appeal arises out of a jury verdict convicting Appellant of murder in violation of R.C. 2903.02(A) with a firearm specification. Appellant argues that the court improperly excluded evidence and engaged in misconduct. He also contends ineffective assistance of defense counsel and prosecutorial misconduct. For the following reasons, this Court affirms the jury verdict.

The grand jury indicted Appellant for murder in violation of R.C. 2903.02 (A) (B) and improperly discharging a firearm into a habitation in violation of R.C. 2923.161(A) (C) with firearm specifications. Appellant admitted at trial that he shot his brother-in-law Lester Stanford but claimed that he shot him in self-defense. (Tr. p. 477).

The State's main witness, Vanessa Stanford, the wife of Lester and sister of Appellant, testified that on the night of July 21, 1994, she, Lester and three of her children went night fishing and returned home to find her eldest son and Appellant at the Stanford home. (Tr. pp. 193-194, 197). Appellant wanted to store his car at their home because the car sustained damage after Appellant's involvement in a serious automobile accident a month earlier. (Tr. p. 197).

Mrs. Stanford testified that after arriving home that night, she and Lester exchanged words in their bedroom with the door closed while Appellant and the children were in the living room. (Tr. p. 203-204). Mrs. Stanford recalled that Lester had taken cocaine that night although she believed that he was not intoxicated. (Tr. pp. 193, 195, 204). Mrs. Stanford explained that Lester did not touch her during the argument and that she and Lester did not scream at each other but argued over a phone number he had found. (Tr. pp. 193, 225). She testified that she left Lester in the bedroom after kissing him and went to lay down in the living room with her children. (Tr. p. 205).

Mrs. Stanford recalled that after Lester came out of the bedroom, he calmly told Appellant that he wanted to speak to him and told Appellant that he did not want guns in their house. (Tr. p. 205). She recalled that Appellant "went off" by becoming argumentative and agitated. (Tr. pp. 205-206, 207). Mrs. Stanford told the jury that she and Appellant began arguing and that Appellant went to the living room to get his shoes and that she, Appellant and Lester all walked outside. (Tr. pp. 207-210). Mrs. Stanford testified that once outside, Appellant began running toward his car parked on the street while she stood on the porch and Lester walked back into the house. (Tr. pp. 207-210). Mrs. Stanford related that Appellant stopped short of his car, turned around, pulled out a gun and began walking back toward the house. (Tr. pp. 210-211). Mrs. Stanford tried to pull Appellant back, but he opened the front screen door and shot into the house, hitting Lester. (Tr. pp. 211-212). Lester later died.

On cross-examination, Mrs. Stanford admitted that Lester had taken cocaine before they went fishing and stated that she and Lester dropped the children off at home after fishing and went to buy cocaine before returning home. (Tr. p. 235-236). She also told the jury that Lester had taken cocaine upon their return home. (Tr. p. 236). Mrs. Stanford admitted that she and Lester exchanged heated words in the bedroom and that Lester kept a gun in the bedroom but she testified that she did not see a gun on his person that night. (Tr. pp. 217, 224-225). She also denied that Lester pushed her when the three were arguing. (Tr. pp. 224, 238-239).

Mrs. Stanford also testified that Lester committed violent acts against her in the past but explained that Lester was changing and that she was committed to her marriage. (Tr. p. 193). She admitted that she had filed a number of domestic violence complaints against Lester and that she had thrown him out of the house on a number of occasions but always let him return. (Tr. pp. 221-222, 226). She also acknowledged that just a month prior she had evicted Lester after he hit her but explained that she had hit him first. (Tr. p. 226). When asked if he was a violent man when under the influence of cocaine and alcohol, Mrs. Stanford replied that Lester had changed. (Tr. p. 227).

The Stanfords' thirteen year old son, Jamal, also testified for the State. Jamal recalled that he went fishing with his family and upon arriving home, he sat in the living room and watched television with Appellant and his two brothers. (Tr. pp. 257-258). He thought that his father was intoxicated, but was not sure. (Tr. pp. 277-278). Jamal told the jury that Appellant and Lester were arguing and that he heard his dad ask Appellant if he had a gun in the house and Appellant replied that the gun was in his car. (Tr. p. 259). Jamal heard Appellant say that he was going to leave and as Appellant put his shoes on, he and Lester began arguing again. (Tr. p. 261). Jamal testified that he got up from the living room and went over to where his mother, father and Appellant were standing. He saw Appellant outside in the yard arguing with his father, who was near the front door. (Tr. p. 263). Jamal explained that he saw Appellant take a gun out of his pants, walk up the porch steps toward his father as his mother was pulling Appellant away and heard Appellant say "I don't have to take this," as he shot his father in the stomach. (Tr. p. 265).

The Stanfords' eleven year old son, Travis, also testified for the State. Travis testified that after returning home from night fishing on July 21, 1994, he watched television in the living room with his siblings and Appellant, who was on the phone, until his parents came home and that he then went upstairs to bed. (Tr. p. 288). Travis recalled that he saw his father drinking a forty ounce bottle of beer while they were fishing. (Tr. p. 317). Travis tried to sleep but heard Appellant arguing with his mother. (Tr. p. 304). Travis did not hear his father yelling. (Tr. p. 304). Travis then heard a gunshot and ran downstairs and asked what happened to which Appellant replied that he had shot Lester. (Tr. p. 307). Travis told the jury that the day after the shooting, he retrieved his father's gun out of the closet in his parents' bedroom and gave it to his grandmother. (Tr. p. 299).

Appellant testified on his own behalf. He stated that on July 21, 1994, he went to the Stanford home and an argument ensued between he and Lester after Lester asked him if he had a gun in his possession. (Tr. p. 471). Appellant told Lester that he had a gun in his car parked on the street and Lester told Appellant that he had to leave because Lester did not want guns in the house. (Tr. p. 471-472). Appellant testified that Lester then went into his bedroom where Appellant knew Lester kept a gun and cocaine. (Tr. pp. 472-473). Appellant explained that Lester then emerged from the bedroom and stood over him, sweating, breathing heavily, and looking at Appellant out of the corner of his eye. (Tr. p. 472-473). Appellant testified that at that point he thought that Lester was "high", that he knew Lester became violent when he was high, and that he was "going to do something," so Appellant decided to leave. (Tr. p. 472-473).

Appellant further told the jury that he began looking for his shoes with Lester following him and that Lester went back into his bedroom a second time and returned with a pair of black shorts on and his left hand in his pocket. (Tr. p. 472-476). Appellant believed that Lester had a gun on him at that time. (Tr. p. 473). Appellant stated that his gun was not in the car but was hidden under the couch and that he loaded his gun while Lester was in the bedroom the second time. (Tr. p. 480).

Appellant related that he feared for his life at that point because he thought Lester had a gun on him.

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State v. Douglas, Unpublished Decision (3-16-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-douglas-unpublished-decision-3-16-1999-ohioctapp-1999.