State v. Francis

60 S.W.3d 662, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1646, 2001 WL 1116285
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 25, 2001
DocketWD 58628
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 60 S.W.3d 662 (State v. Francis) 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. Francis, 60 S.W.3d 662, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1646, 2001 WL 1116285 (Mo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

SMART, Judge.

Appellant Reva Francis was convicted by a jury of murder in the second degree, and armed criminal action in connection with the death of her husband, Tony Francis. She was sentenced to consecutive terms of 23 and 5 years’ imprisonment, respectively. Mrs. Francis appeals, alleging seven points of trial error.

Statement of Facts

In August 1998, Reva Francis was living with her husband, Tony, and her 18 year old daughter, Roxanne Cummings, at their home near Raymore in Cass County. On the afternoon of August 18, Shane Ross, Roxanne’s boyfriend, came to the house, planning to take Roxanne on a date. Ross and Roxanne were in Roxanne’s bedroom talking and listening to the radio when Tony Francis came home at around 4 p.m. Roxanne briefly stepped out of the bedroom to greet her stepfather.

A while later, Roxanne and Shane Ross heard “something hit the wall” followed by a short pause and then a noise that “[sjounded like a firecracker.” After the first “pop,” Roxanne said, she heard her stepfather yell and then a very short time later another “pop.” Shane Ross said he heard a shot, screaming, and then another shot.

After hearing the shots, Ross and Roxanne went into the kitchen. They observed Tony Francis slumped over a chair. At that moment the telephone rang. Roxanne answered the phone and found a banker calling for Mr. Francis. Roxanne told the banker Mr. Francis “wasn’t there,” and hung up. Ross testified that because both Mrs. Francis and Roxanne were “freaking out,” he took the cordless telephone outside and dialed 911 to report the matter.

Officer Tony Yates was the first to arrive at the scene of the shooting. After entering the house, Officer Yates saw Mrs. Francis “standing inside the kitchen living room area.” She appeared distraught, was shaking, and was standing about two and half to three feet from the body of Tony Francis, which was slumped over a chair. There was a small pool of blood around the victim’s head. Mrs. Francis did not appear to have any blood on her body or clothing. Mrs. Francis approached Officer Yates and told him “it was an accident [that] she accidentally shot her husband.” The officer inquired where the gun was. Francis pointed to the floor. Yates observed a .32-caliber semi-automatic handgun lying next to her purse.

There was a hole in the side of the purse. Subsequent forensic tests showed that the muzzle of the gun was in contact with the wall of the purse at the time it was fired. Investigators also found a spent shell casing inside the appellant’s purse and a second spent shell casing in a flowerpot near the kitchen sink. A checkbook was also lying near the head of Mr. Francis.

Officer Yates asked where the gun was when it went off, and Mrs. Francis stated it was in her purse. She explained to him that “the gun went off in her purse *666 through a struggle.” Francis stated she fired two shots: “there was one shot, some more arguing, then a second shot.” Yates testified that he believed appellant had indicated that there had been “[a] few seconds maybe” between the two shots, but he “really c[ould]n’t recall” for certain.

Officer Dale Loney arrived at the scene shortly after Yates. He advised Francis of her rights and she agreed to waive her rights and to make a statement. Francis told Loney “that she and her husband had been involved in an argument and that there was a struggle over her purse and there was a gun inside of her purse and that the gun went off.” She further told Loney that she and her husband were sitting at the kitchen table at the time the first shot was fired. “There was a struggle over her purse, that he attempted to get her purse from her and that the weapon was in the purse and it went off accidentally.” Officer Loney asked Francis on two separate occasions whether she had intentionally shot Mr. Francis. Both times she stated she did not.

Francis was taken into custody. She was interrogated that evening for approximately six hours at the Cass County sheriff’s office. After again waiving her rights, Appellant Francis made a written statement, which stated:

I came home around four p.m. Sunday night. We’re s[i]tting ... at the dining room table going over bills and [our] checkbook.... He called the secretary to go over bills and I explained to him that I didn’t like the gun in the house and I was taking it to Anita’s or Lanna’s house. He got mad and tried to get the gun out of my purse and my hand was in there, too. Then, the gun went off. I stand up with the gun in my left hand and with the purse in my right hand. Tony fell over the table and onto the chair. The gun went off one more time in my hand. I dropped the gun and my purse and fell to the ground. I yelled at Shane to call the police.

At one point during the questioning, officers asked Francis to show them how the second shot had been fired. Francis told them, an officer testified, “Tony fell over the chair. She had the gun in this hand, her hand on the right of the purse. She said, leave me the f[_] alone, pointed the gun down and then did this motion [demonstrating] with her hand, indicating the gun went off another time.” Davidson testified that when Francis demonstrated how the gun discharged the second time, it appeared that “when [Francis] extended her arm out, she made a grasping motion with her hand, as if to fire the gun again.”

The autopsy revealed that Mr. Francis suffered gunshot wounds to the back of the head, left shoulder and chest, caused by two bullets. There were gunpowder particles on the victim’s shirt where one bullet hit him in the chest. The bullet hit him above and to the outside of the left nipple, moving in a slightly downward direction from left to right, front to back. The bullet penetrated the left lung, the heart, and then the right lung before lodging under the skin. A separate bullet entered the back of the head, exited, and ended up in Mr. Francis’ right shoulder. The cause of death was listed as “multiple gun shot wounds.”

The ballistics test showed that Francis’ gun had fired the fatal bullets. The gun had a trigger pull of 15 pounds, which is considered a “heavy trigger pull.” The gun had to be “cycled” after inserting the magazine for a round to be fired. There was testimony at trial that a loosely held automatic pistol is unlikely to fire a second time and is likely to jam. The weapon used to shoot Mr. Francis had two safety mechanisms: a magazine safety, which prevented the trigger from being pulled if *667 the magazine was removed; and a button on the left side of the handgun that had to be turned to the “off” position before the gun would fire.

It was later discovered that following the shooting, Roxanne took Tony Francis’ briefcase to Karl Timmerman, the family’s lawyer. She denied removing anything from the briefcase. As a result, the prosecution subpoenaed Mr. Timmerman and listed him as a witness, although he was intending to represent Francis. The prosecutor subpoenaed Shane Ross to testify before the grand jury, and talked to him without the presence of his attorney. Francis filed a motion to disqualify the prosecutor, Christopher Koster, contending that the prosecutor knew that Ross was represented by an attorney, and improperly forced him to talk to the prosecutor without his attorney.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.3d 662, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1646, 2001 WL 1116285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-francis-moctapp-2001.