State v. Ellis

639 S.W.2d 420, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 3636
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 7, 1982
DocketWD 32998
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 639 S.W.2d 420 (State v. Ellis) 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. Ellis, 639 S.W.2d 420, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 3636 (Mo. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

*421 KENNEDY, Presiding Judge.

Defendant Robert Ellis, upon a jury trial in which he and his co-defendant Tunstall were jointly tried, was convicted of first-degree assauit, § 565.050, RSMo 1978. In accordance with the verdict of the jury he was sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment.

He appeals to this court, alleging that the trial court erred in failing to instruct upon second-degree assault, § 565.060, RSMo 1978. We agree with the appellant in this contention and reverse the judgment. He raises a second point which we deny, but which we rule upon for the guidance of court and counsel upon retrial.

Inmate Dennis Binion of the Missouri State Penitentiary at Jefferson City, at about 7:40 o’clock a. m. on May 20, 1980, was seen by witness Pendleton hurrying out of the eating area, blood on the back of his shirt. Witness Pendleton, a cook employed at the prison, went back to the place where Binion had been eating. He found blood on the wall, the floor and the table. In a garbage can in the area where the pots and pans were washed, he found a length of galvanized pipe. The pipe was introduced in evidence at the trial but has not been deposited here. We do not know its dimensions.

Guard McKinney found Binion “hanging on the control center gate”, bleeding from the back of his head. McKinney took Bin-ion to the hospital. He was found to have nine wounds, seven of them puncture wounds and two of them lacerations. The puncture wounds were superficial, as was a half-inch laceration on the elbow. They were treated by cleaning with Physohex solution, a strong soap, and with antibiotic ointment. One of the wounds was a laceration of the scalp. It was one and a half inches in length and was closed by suturing.

Defendant Robert Ellis and one Willie Tunstall, also inmates of the prison, were interrogated and gave statements to officers of the penitentiary. They said that Binion had been “pressing” Tunstall to engage in homosexual activity. The day before the assault Ellis and Tunstall had secured an ice pick type of weapon, 10 or 12 inches long with a taped handle, and a length of pipe, and had secreted them in the kitchen. On the morning of the assault, as Binion was eating breakfast, the two attacked him from behind. Tunstall hit him on the head with the pipe, while defendant Ellis wielded the knife.

On the trial of the ease, defendant Ellis testified that Binion had been making homosexual advances to him as well as to Tunstall. Asked if he was trying to kill Binion, defendant replied: “... I couldn’t say yes to that, and I wouldn’t say no to that. I wouldn’t have been mad if I had killed him. I felt he was wrong- (I)t was more or less to let him know, you know, to quit harassing.... To let him know to back off of us”.

Tunstall’s own testimony on the trial was that Ellis attacked Binion and when Binion began to overpower Ellis, that he, Tunstall, hit him with the pipe. He acknowledged that he had placed the pipe in the kitchen area on the day before. He explained his purpose in doing so as being to “back up” Ellis, and later said it was for the purpose of self-defense. He testified that he had withdrawn from the plan to attack Binion, but he came to Ellis’s aid to prevent Ellis’s being hurt or killed when he began to get the worst of it.

Binion did not testify.

Defendants Ellis and Tunstall were jointly charged and jointly tried.

1. Omission of second-degree assault instruction; “physical injury” (second-degree assault) as opposed to “serious physical injury” (first-degree assault).

The attorney general says that the appellant’s “Point Relied On” is insufficient to comply with Rule 84.04(d), in that it does not state wherein and why the actions or rulings of the trial court are claimed to be erroneous. We find appellant’s point to be sufficiently stated and we review the point upon its merits.

Defendant’s contention that the court erred in submitting first-degree assault only, and in failing to instruct upon second- *422 degree assault, is based upon two arguments. First, he claims that it is a permissible construction of the evidence that the injury caused or attempted was a “physical injury” rather than a “serious physical injury”. If the evidence does permit such construction, the defendant would be entitled to a second-degree assault instruction. Section 565.060, RSMo 1978, which defines second-degree assault, says:

1. A person commits the crime of assault in the second degree if:
(1)He knowingly causes or attempts to cause physical injury to another person by means of a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument....

On the other hand, if the evidence justified only the “serious physical injury” submission, then first-degree assault was the only offense which required submission, § 565.050, RSMo 1978, and the court did not err in omitting the second-degree assault instruction.

The terms “physical injury” and “serious physical injury” are defined by § 556.061, RSMo 1978. Subsection 24 defines “serious physical injury” as one that “creates a substantial risk of death”. A mere “physical injury” means “physical pain, illness, or any impairment of physical condition”, subsection 19. It comes down to the question, then, whether the assault described in our statement of facts, viewed most favorably to the second-degree assault submission, State v. Smith, 518 S.W.2d 665, 669 (Mo.App.1975), necessarily created a substantial risk of death ... or whether the jury might reasonably have regarded it as a mere “physical injury” not creating a “substantial risk of death”.

The term “substantial risk of death” is not defined in the statute. It is one of those terms which has already been reduced to its lowest common denominator. A “substantial risk” is less than a likelihood or a probability. It is only a “risk”. The modifier “substantial” eliminates those injuries which might in some instances cause death, yet the risk thereof is less than substantial.

We cannot say as a matter of law that the evidence in this case showed only a “serious physical injury”, that is, one creating a “substantial risk of death”. If we were fact finders we might so find the facts. But we are not fact finders and we cannot say that reasonable men might not find that the injury caused or attempted was merely a “physical injury”, creating no “substantial risk of death”. The medical evidence, submitted by the state, does not settle the question. Dr. Baker said of the wounds, “I think they possibly could (cause death or serious physical injury), especially the trauma to the head could have.”

Neither do the use of the ice pick weapon and the length of pipe necessarily indicate a purpose to cause serious physical injury. The second-degree assault statute, § 565.060.1, which we have quoted above, includes among the definitions of the crime a knowing causing or a knowing attempt to cause (mere) physical injury “by means of a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument”. It contemplates that one may make a second-degree assault, involving a mere “physical injury” with a lethal weapon. 1

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Bluebook (online)
639 S.W.2d 420, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 3636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ellis-moctapp-1982.