State v. Grady

900 P.2d 227, 258 Kan. 72, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 14, 1995
Docket71,169
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 900 P.2d 227 (State v. Grady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Grady, 900 P.2d 227, 258 Kan. 72, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 109 (kan 1995).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

*74 Abbott, J.:

This is an appeal by the State from the sentence imposed foUowing defendant Kelley Grady’s jury conviction for voluntary manslaughter (K.S.A. 1994 Supp. 21-3403). The sentence imposed was a downward dispositional departure from the presumptive guidelines sentence. This appeal was transferred from the Court of Appeals on this court’s order.

This case arises out of a relationship among three people, Kelley Grady (the defendant), Michael Croslin (the victim), and Brenda Croslin (the victim’s wife).

The defendant separated from his wife in late 1991. At that time Michael and Brenda and their two children were living together. Brenda worked two jobs, one as a bartender. The defendant began an affair with Brenda. Brenda left Michael and began renting a home owned by the defendant’s mother and managed by the defendant.

Michael and Brenda had a somewhat violent relationship. On more than one occasion Michael choked and beat Brenda in the presence of their children. Among the incidents were two occasions in July 1993, the month Michael was killed, when Michael choked Brenda and told her he was going to kill her. Another incident occurred when Michael, after a day of drinking, threw Brenda against the car, causing her to strike her head. Brenda had told the defendant about the instances of abuse. Michael also was known to have expressed his anger to others. For example, he once lifted an employee off the floor by her arms and pushed her against the doors of an oven when he was angry with her. On another occasion Michael stated that he would have to kill the defendant “someday” when the defendant admitted to Michael that he (the defendant) was in love with Brenda. The defendant was described as a peaceful, nonaggressive, nonviolent person who sought to avoid conflict.

On March 7, 1993, an incident involving Brenda, Michael, and the defendant occurred. Michael and Brenda argued on the telephone, and Michael then went to Brenda’s rental house, where the defendant and Brenda’s children were also present. Michael began yelling for the defendant to come out of the house and threatened to kill him. The defendant telephoned the police. After the police arrived, Michael left.

*75 The incident giving rise to Michael’s death occurred on July 20, 1993. After working until 9:00 p.m., Brenda went to Michael’s house to pick up their children. When Brenda arrived, Michael began yelling at her, poking her in the chest, slapping her with his hand, and telling her that she was moving back in with him. Brenda told Michael she was not moving back in with him, and Michael became enraged. Michael called the defendant on the telephone and told him Brenda was moving out of the rental house. Michael ordered Brenda to tell the defendant herself; when Brenda would not say anything Michael got mad. The defendant heard Brenda crying in the background. Michael pushed Brenda into the living room and began punching, kicking, and choking her. Michael pushed Brenda through the wall, and her nose started bleeding from a cut. Michael and Brenda’s oldest son (six years old) intervened and tried to pull Michael off Brenda. Brenda heard Michael on the telephone telling a friend to get over there before he killed her. The friend’s wife, listening on an extension telephone, testified Michael asked her husband to come over to his house because “he needed him” and said he had pushed Brenda through a wall and was going to kill both Brenda and the defendant.

After his conversation with Michael, the defendant drove his truck to Brenda’s rental house. Finding nobody there, the defendant drove to Michael’s house, parked in front, and honked the hom. The defendant had a cellular telephone, a knife, and a semiautomatic handgun in his car. Brenda went onto the porch and told the defendant to leave. The defendant began yelling “wifebeater” and for Michael to come out of the house and pick on someone his own size. Brenda saw Michael take a knife from the kitchen. Holding the butcher knife in his right hand, Michael pushed Brenda and the children out of the way and jumped off the porch into the yard. The defendant saw Michael come out of the house with what the defendant thought was a gun. The defendant reached into his vehicle, retrieved his gun, and began shooting at Michael and running. There were three initial gunshots, a pause, and then another series of shots. Michael fell to the ground face first. The defendant threw the gun down, told Brenda to call 911, and went to his truck.

*76 The defendant was arrested when the police arrived. He was cooperative and made a confession admitting to the events described above. The defendant did not testify at trial, but his tape-recorded confession was played for the jury.

The police discovered Michael lying face first on the ground with both hands above his head and with his right hand wrapped around the handle of a butcher knife. Michael was pronounced dead almost immediately after arriving at the hospital. An autopsy revealed 11 separate bullet wounds. One bullet entered the front left upper leg, two bullets entered the right front chest, and the other eight bullets entered the left back. A toxicology report revealed a blood alcohol concentration of .164.

The defendant was charged with one count of first-degree premeditated murder in Michael’s death. The defendant claimed self-defense. The jury found the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter.

Prior to sentencing, the defendant filed a motion for a downward departure sentence. Based on the offense of conviction (severity level 3) and the defendant’s criminal history (category I — no prior convictions), the presumptive sentence was a term of incarceration of 46-51 months. The defendant sought both a dispositional and a durational departure. He reasoned that there were substantial and compelling reasons for departure, including the following:

1. The victim was the aggressor.
2. The defendant poses no threat to public safety, and there is no need to protect the public by incarcerating the defendant.
3. The crime was motivated by and in response to the defendant’s awareness of a pattern of physical abuse of Brenda Croslin by the victim.
4. The victim had previously threatened the life of the defendant, leading to the defencfynt’s perception of fear.
5. The defendant’s use of deadly force, even if excessive, was a reaction similar to that of other individuals confronted with life-threatening situations for the first time.
6. The defendant’s conduct was self-defense.
*77 7. The defendant has expressed remorse.
8. The defendant is able to compensate the victim’s sons, but that ability will be diminished by imprisonment.
9.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
900 P.2d 227, 258 Kan. 72, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-grady-kan-1995.