State v. Ghan

721 S.W.2d 128, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4905
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1986
DocketNo. WD 37541
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 721 S.W.2d 128 (State v. Ghan) 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. Ghan, 721 S.W.2d 128, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4905 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

SHANGLER, Presiding Judge.

The defendant Ghan was convicted of Assault in the Second Degree, a class C felony [§ 565.060, RSMo Supp.1986], Armed Criminal Action, a felony [§ 571.015, RSMo 1978], and of felonious restraint [§ 565.120, RSMo 1978], a class C felony. [The jury returned sentences of three years and five years, and a six-months term in the county jail, respectively. The sentences of three years and five years were imposed to run consecutively, and the jail term was made to run concurrently with the other sentences].

The victim was Teresa Stutte, and the site of the crime was a parking lot in a shopping center in Columbia, Missouri. On November 30, 1984, at about 6:25 p.m., the victim entered the Wal-Mart store there to shop and thereafter returned to her car. She noticed a van parked next to her vehicle occupied by a man [later identified as defendant Ghan]. As she was about to enter her car, Ghan, map in hand, asked her for directions. The victim walked over to the van, and the man told her he was attempting to locate Waltz Street. She undertook to give him directions on the map, but as she turned her back for a moment to point to the route on the map, the voice of the man “became really devious,” and said something to the effect: “I’ve got a better idea,” or “I’ve got a better plan.” She felt his arms from behind, come around her body — her waist and her neck — so she bent down to extricate herself. She broke loose and ran directly to the Wal-Mart store. It was then she felt blood dripping on her hand: “It felt like somebody had taken a thumbnail and just took a chunk of my face out.” The wound bled profusely, so the victim asked the store personnel to call not only the police, but also an ambulance. She was taken to the hospital and treated at the emergency room there by Dr. Templer. The victim described the assailant to the police as well as the van he occupied.

The victim promptly picked out the defendant Ghan as the assailant from an array of photographs. At the trial she was “absolutely positive” Ghan was the culprit. After the offense, and then again at the hospital, the victim rendered a description of the defendant in detail. She also identified his van.

The defendant contends that the evidence was not sufficient to submit Assault in the Second Degree1 because the “serious physical injury” component of § 565.060 was not proven. That section provides:

1. A person commits the crime of assault in the second degree if he:
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(3) Recklessly causes serious physical injury to another person; ....

The offense was submitted to the jury in the terms of the statute under MAI-CR 2d 19.04.2, Assault in the Second Degree. The submission included as a separate direction the definition of serious physical injury in the terms of MAI-CR 2d 33.01 [and § 556.061(26)]:

As used in this instruction, the term “serious physical injury” means physical injury that creates a substantial risk of [130]*130death or that causes serious disfigurement or protracted loss or impairment of the function of any part of the body.

The reckless infliction of serious physical injury rather than physical injury distinguishes an assault in the second degree [§ 565.060] from assault in the third degree [§ 565.070],

The defendant argues that the proof sufficed to submit only as Assault in the Third Degree, because the reckless infliction of physical injury,2 rather than serious physical injury, was the offense proven. He argues that the evidence, taken most favorably to the prosecution, shows that the victim suffered a facial laceration eight centimeters in length and, at most, an inch in depth, was treated as an out patient, and was discharged. There was no evidence that the injury entailed a risk of death, or caused any “serious permanent disfigurement” of the victim. That argument understates the evidence as well as the inferences due the jury verdict. The injury was described by Dr. Templer who treated the victim at the emergency room as a “gaping wound” from which blood issued profusely from an artery, as well as lesser vessels. It was inflicted by a “very sharp” object which, the physician explained, cut some of the facial muscles. The wound was sufficiently deep as to require a two-hour surgery to repair the wound, layer by layer, by a procedure which used “dozens and dozens” of stitches. The victim was given morphine for the pain, but the pain from the injury still recurs. It still pained at the time of trial more than five months later, and the injury throbbed occasionally. A scar on her face was still palpable.

The facial disfigurement, already five months in duration at the time of the trial, proves the serious physical injury component of the Assault in the Second Degree charge against the defendant under § 565.060(3). A serious physical injury under the statute is proven, among other modes, by a serious disfigurement by a physical injury that causes an impairment of bodily function. An accused may be convicted for the infliction of serious physical injury although the assault causes no residual damage. State v. Emory 643 S.W.2d 24, 27[3] (Mo.App.1982). The duration of an injury bears on how serious the injury is, in physical terms. An impairment of the jaw for six weeks was sufficient proof to allow the jury to find that the function of the body was impaired, so that the injury was serious within the statutory definition. State v. Mentola, 691 S.W.2d 420, 422[5] (Mo.App.1985). An injury to the face of a child which required seven stitches was sufficient to convict under the statutory definition of serious physical injury — even without present impairment of a bodily function. State v. Teal, 624 S.W.2d 122, 124[1] (Mo.App.1981). Thus, the gist of a serious physical injury [within the definitions of § 556.061 and the assault statutes] is an aggravated physical injury. See § 556.061, RSMo 1978 and Comment to 1973 Proposed Code. When the usual concomitant of an aggravated injury is the impairment of a bodily function, therefore, the “impairment of the function of any part of the body” component of serious physical injury definition § 556.061(26) is proven. In those terms, the assault on the victim Stutte was an aggravated physical injury, and by the very nature of the wound impaired the function of that part of the body during the period of healing. A facial disfigurement, the residue of the surgical repair of a deep and bloody gouge inflicted by a sharp instrument, and which endures for five months, therefore, proves a serious physical injury both as a serious disfigurement3 and [131]*131as a physical injury which impairs a bodily function under § 565.060(3) and § 556.-061(26).

The defendant contends next that the refusal of the trial court to require the prosecution to give discovery under Rule 25.04 violated both the rationale of this criminal procedure as well as the constitutional principle of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
721 S.W.2d 128, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ghan-moctapp-1986.