State v. Hedge

772 S.W.2d 683, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 509, 1989 WL 36486
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 18, 1989
DocketNo. WD 41015
StatusPublished

This text of 772 S.W.2d 683 (State v. Hedge) 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. Hedge, 772 S.W.2d 683, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 509, 1989 WL 36486 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

BERREY, Judge.

Appellant, Michael B. Hedge, was convicted by jury trial of murder in the second degree a class A felony. From this conviction and subsequent sentence of life imprisonment the appellant appeals.

The appellant and the deceased victim, Nancy Phillips, were well acquainted. Appellant had known the deceased for about thirteen years and Nancy had been living with appellant for four or five days before her death. Their relationship had been a stormy one.

On October 8,1987, they had been to the Sky Line Inn and engaged in an altercation to which the Riverside Police Department was summoned. Appellant had picked up the victim, thrown her to the floor and then taken her to his room. “She had blood coming from her nose and mouth .;. bruises and contusions on the, on her face and abrasions on the arm. [sic] and brusing on the chest.” Officer Derringer testified he could remember three prior calls wherein the victim alleged appellant had assaulted her. According to Derringer she did not want to make a report, only to be left alone.

Officer Derringer testified that on October 8, 1987, he transported Nancy to the hospital. Officer Lloyd arrested appellant and transported him to the station for booking. As appellant passed Nancy Phillips he told her “he was going to get her.” According to Derringer, “She cowered back and she started crying,” and “[h]e repeatedly told her he was going to get her.” Nancy Phillips told Derringer that the appellant had said he was going to kill her. Both parties were intoxicated at that time.

There were other instances of violence in the couple’s stormy history. Witness Wol-fend testified she was present in July 1987, when appellant pushed Nancy Phillips down and said, “I’ll kill you.” At that time he pulled her by the hair, down the steps and then left.

Gary Crane, a neighbor of appellant, testified he had observed appellant on or about October 30, 1987, and a girl “hollering at each other and going up the street.” She was shouting she wanted to leave and he was asking her to come back. They went up the street and sat down in the middle of the street. Crane then testified, “I heard her screaming again and I looked up and went to the door again and he was dragging her back down towards the house by the head of her hair.” Later she left the house, and according to Mrs. Crane, appellant went after her on his motorcycle.

Several days later at about 10:00 p.m. on November 3, 1987, the police were dispatched to 5606 North Amoret, the address of the home in which appellant and victim had been living.

Officer Rollo, of the Kansas City Police Department, testified that she and Officer Wildman were riding as a two-man team and were dispatched under Code I, red lights and sirens, to 5606 North Amoret, arriving there about 10:00 p.m. They [685]*685found the victim in the bedroom being given CPR by firemen. The appellant and two other men were present in the house. Both appellant and Mr. Schwerger told Rollo that the victim had a head cold and was quite congested. Hedge told Rollo that Nancy Phillips was his girlfriend and that she had vomited and fallen earlier that day. Rollo observed a bruise on her right cheek and a cut on her right foot. According to Rollo, Hedge had told her deceased fell and broke “a pane of glass in the patio door.”

Officer Robert Dodds, a Kansas City Police Department Crime Scene Investigator, testified he arrived at about 10:30 p.m., where he was met by Detective Mike McKee of the Kansas City Police Department Homicide Unit.

Dodds reported a number of findings, i.e., glass in sliding door fractured, stain on the wall of the hallway, numerous stains in bedroom where victim had been; on the walls, and on the mattress. George Bums, a Kansas City Police Department detective, and Detective Matlock went to the Platte County jail to interrogate appellant. Appellant was given his Miranda rights at this time. Appellant then agreed to go to Kansas City Police Department headquarters, 1125 Locust, and the parties repaired there. During appellant’s first interrogation Bums testified that “he related that he probably had killed her, but that he had not meant to do so.” Appellant told Bums that the victim had struck him and he retaliated by striking her three or four times.

Subsequently, during state’s re-direct Bums stated he did not remember the exact words appellant used about victim’s death. Bums said, “it was something to the effect of he must’ve been responsible for this.”

The victim was transported by MAST ambulance to the emergency room at North Kansas City Memorial Hospital and was first seen by Dr. Robert Collier, the emergency room physician. She was admitted at 10:46 p.m. on November 3, 1987. According to Dr. Collier she was in a coma, had no pulse, no respiration and her heart stopped. She was given an I.V. with medication to stimulate the heart and was revi-talked with the heart beat returning. Multiple lab tests were performed, x-rays taken and a C.T. scan of the head was ordered. The C.T. scan “showed some bleeding, which is called subdural hematoma,” and “it showed a lot of swelling.”

Dr. Collier stated this damage is most likely caused by trauma or “you know a blow to the head.” Dr. Collier testified, “There are other causes of it, but, you know, with the, with the picture that we saw it looked like it was from trauma to us.” According to Collier, doctors try and reduce the swelling and cause the patient to breathe rapidly. “Sometimes head injuries are so bad that there really is no treatment because it’s, its really gone beyond the time you can really be effective in doing anything.”

Dr. Collier described subdural hematoma as being both sudden and slow, “They’re both, I guess that’s the way to say it. There are slow bleeds called chronic or low grade subdural hematomas, and then there are acute subdural hematomas.”

The state asked Dr. Collier:

Q. Repeated blows to the head, does that increase the chances of subdural hematoma?
A. Yes, it does.
Q. If a subdural hematoma already existed and there were additional blows to the head, would that aggravate the existing subdural hematoma?
A. Yes, it could.
On cross-examination Dr. Collier testified as follows:
Q. What kind of blows to the head are we talking about?
A. Well, I don’t know, I wasn’t there so I don’t know what kind of blows—
Q. Well, I understand this, but you’ve been asked questions about do the blows to the head do this or do the blows to the head do that.
A. Sure.
Q. What kind of blows to the head are we talking about?
A. Well—
Q. Like so (indicates) or so (indicates) or so (indicates) or what?
[686]*686A. Well, fairly high impact blows to he (sic) head.
Q. High impact, you mean up in the cranium top (indicates)?
A. No, it could be almost anywhere you can acceleration of the head, you know, where you get an acceleration and deceleration of the head, that can cause injury to the brain.
Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
772 S.W.2d 683, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 509, 1989 WL 36486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hedge-moctapp-1989.