State v. HANAMAN

2012 ME 40, 38 A.3d 1278, 2012 WL 965098, 2012 Me. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 22, 2012
DocketDocket: Cum-11-155
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2012 ME 40 (State v. HANAMAN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. HANAMAN, 2012 ME 40, 38 A.3d 1278, 2012 WL 965098, 2012 Me. LEXIS 39 (Me. 2012).

Opinion

*1280 ALEXANDER, J.

[¶ 1] William A. Hanaman appeals from a judgment of conviction for intentional or knowing murder, 17-A M.R.S. 201(1)(A) (2011), entered in the Unified Criminal Docket (Cumberland County, Warren, J.) following a jury trial. Hana-man contends on appeal that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the affirmative defense of adequate provocation to reduce the murder charge to manslaughter, pursuant to 17-A M.R.S. 201(3) (2011); 1 see also 17-A M.R.S. 203(1)(B) (2011).

[¶ 2] Hanaman argues that the instruction was generated by the evidence, and that, contrary to the trial court’s determination, an adequate provocation instruction was not subsumed by instructions that were given on self-defense or imperfect self-defense. We conclude that the evidence was not legally sufficient to support a jury instruction on the affirmative defense of adequate provocation and affirm the judgment.

I. CASE HISTORY

[¶ 3] Viewing the facts in a light most favorable to the defendant, as we must when reviewing a trial court’s determination that the evidence presented at trial did not generate an affirmative defense of adequate provocation manslaughter, the record supports the following facts. See State v. Bridges, 2004 ME 102, ¶ 17, 854 A.2d 855; see generally State v. Barretto, 2008 ME 121, ¶ 4, 953 A.2d 1138.

[¶ 4] William Hanaman, then fifty-one, and the victim, then forty-seven, began dating in late 2008. The victim subsequently moved in with Hanaman, but the relationship was a volatile one. Hanaman asserts that the victim was assaultive and verbally abusive toward him and that she began to steal from him, possibly to support her addiction to prescription drugs and her cocaine and marijuana use. In October 2009, Hanaman was arrested for domestic violence assault upon the victim, 17-A M.R.S. 207-A (2011), after she was found crying and limping along the street in the middle of the night with an open, bleeding cut and welt over one eye.

[¶ 5] Hanaman was released on bail, with a bail condition that he have no contact with the victim. Hanaman continued to have contact with the victim, sometimes at her initiation. Hanaman maintained that the victim’s injuries resulted from an accident that occurred when he and the victim were arguing over the victim’s prescription drug abuse. In preparation for his defense on the domestic violence assault charges, Hanaman collected the victim’s empty prescription pill bottles and cut straws and saved them to offer as evidence at trial of the victim’s drug-related combative nature.

[¶ 6] In early November 2009, the day before Hanaman’s arraignment on the domestic violence assault charges, Hanaman picked the victim up and drove her to Portland so that she could talk to the District Attorney about having the assault charges against him dropped. When the victim failed to return, Hanaman believed that she had lied to him about trying to get the charges dropped, and he became upset. He went to a bar, drank, and used cocaine for the first time in over twenty years. Hanaman failed to appear at his arraign *1281 ment the next day, and a warrant was subsequently issued for his arrest. As a result of these events, Hanaman decided that he had to stop seeing the victim.

[¶ 7] On November 10, 2009, Hanaman happened upon the victim and, even though the no-contact bail condition was still in effect, picked her up. They drove to his apartment so that they could talk about ending their relationship and she could move her things out. Neither Hana-man nor the victim used alcohol or, apparently, drugs during this conversation. 2

[¶ 8] According to Hanaman’s testimony, Hanaman left the room and, when he returned, the victim was in the bedroom holding the plastic bag containing the evidence of the victim’s drug use that Hana-man was planning to present in his defense at his domestic violence assault trial. Ha-naman reached to take the bag from the victim’s hand, telling her that he needed it for court, and the bag ripped open as they fought over it. Hanaman testified that he then saw “anger in” the victim’s face and saw her reach back with something “shiny,” but unidentifiable, in her hand that she raised over her head. Hanaman “felt sudden fear” and his “system just ... shut down.” Hanaman stated that he thought the victim was going to stab him. Hanaman testified that he “blacked out” at that point and when he came to, he was sitting in his truck in a parking lot some distance from his home with blood on his clothes. Although he claimed that he did not remember having done it, Hanaman agreed at trial that he must have taken the shiny object, a knife, away from the victim and used it to stab her. The victim was 5'2" and 142 pounds. Hanaman was 5'9" and 175 pounds.

[¶ 9] After coming out of his blackout in his truck, Hanaman returned to his apartment, saw the victim’s body, started drinking alcohol, and took prescription pills. He wrote a suicide note, then unsuccessfully attempted to kill himself. When Hanaman was found the next morning, he was taken to the hospital where he was put on suicide watch and had continuous police and nursing-staff supervision.

[¶ 10] Hanaman told a hospital worker that (1) he had been upset with the victim for stealing money from him and from his niece; (2) “he just couldn’t take it anymore”; (3) the victim knew how to push his buttons; (4) he knew this would happen; (5) he had been using a lot of alcohol and started using drugs within the past two days or so; (6) he did something he was not sure he could live with; and (7) he “should have just walked away a long time ago.” He never told the hospital worker that the victim had threatened him with a knife. Hanaman’s sister later testified, however, that he told her at the hospital that the victim had come after him with a knife, although she did not report this conversation for a month.

[¶ 11] A medical examination revealed that Hanaman stabbed the victim eight times and that the victim had sustained defensive wounds. Hanaman sustained no injuries other than a couple of minor abrasions and small bruises.

[¶ 12] Hanaman was charged with one count of intentional or knowing murder, 17-A M.R.S. 201(1)(A), and a jury trial was held. Hanaman testified at trial that he became angry at the victim and at himself after he had returned to the house after killing her. Hanaman testified repeatedly, *1282 however, that, although he needed the bag of pill bottles that the victim found in his house for his assault trial, he did not hate the victim and was not angry with her at the time he killed her.

[¶ 13] The court instructed the jury as to intentional or knowing murder, reckless manslaughter, 3 self-defense, and imperfect self-defense. 4 Hanaman requested that the court also instruct the jury on the affirmative defense to murder of adequate provocation, which the court refused.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2012 ME 40, 38 A.3d 1278, 2012 WL 965098, 2012 Me. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hanaman-me-2012.