State v. Hess

828 P.2d 382, 252 Mont. 205, 49 State Rptr. 217, 1992 Mont. LEXIS 66
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1992
Docket91-005
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 828 P.2d 382 (State v. Hess) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hess, 828 P.2d 382, 252 Mont. 205, 49 State Rptr. 217, 1992 Mont. LEXIS 66 (Mo. 1992).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

*207 Clara Hess (Clara) appeals her conviction for the mitigated deliberate homicide of her husband, William “Bill” Hess, following a jury trial in the Sixth Judicial District, Park County. We affirm. We rephrase the issues presented on appeal as follows:

1. Did the District Court err in requiring the defendant to submit to a psychiatric and psychological evaluation by the States expert witnesses for use by the State in rebuttal?

2. Did the District Court err by giving inappropriate jury instructions?

Clara married William “Bill” Hess (Bill) in 1947. Years later, Bill initiated divorce proceedings; the couple divorced in 1964. After their divorce, the couple continued to live together. In 1972, the couple remarried. Clara testified that in June 1989, the two agreed to part, but neither party initiated legal proceedings.

During the years she lived with Bill, Clara testified that Bill was tempestuous and subjected her to physical, sexual, and verbal abuse. She testified that Bill threatened her with a gun on three occasions. She testified that Bill oftentimes controlled her freedom. She also testified, however, that she frequently traveled without Bill to Washington and stayed with family and friends, sometimes for several weeks at a time. She testified that she also made other trips without Bill, including trips to Canada, Ohio and Disneyland. She further testified that she managed the checkbook and household finances of the couple, and had access to money from her mother’s estate.

Some witness testimony supported Clara’s depiction of Bill as abusive, controlling, and hot-tempered. Other witness testimony depicted Bill as kind-hearted and gentle, and depicted Clara as the dominant and oftentimes absent person in the marriage.

Clara testified that in September 1988, she sought medical attention for a leg injury resulting from Bill’s physical abuse. Medical records indicate that Clara told a treating doctor that her leg injury was a result of a “burning membrane” that started after riding in a car and was aggravated after another car trip.

Both Bill and Clara enjoyed hunting. Clara testified that she engaged in target-shooting. Both owned and were accustomed to shooting various handguns and rifles. Clara kept a Beretta .22 pistol in a downstairs washroom and a .38 pistol in her bedroom. While traveling, she carried a loaded pistol in her purse. Bill kept several guns in his bedroom, including a High Standard .22 pistol.

*208 On the evening of August 19,1989, Clara and Bill were home alone. Clara testified that Bill said if she “didn’t move back into his bedroom and do everything he wanted,” he would tell Clara’s then forty-four-year-old son about his true paternity. Clara testified that she responded to Bill’s threat by sprinkling sleeping pills in Bill’s tapioca pudding. After eating his tapioca pudding, Bill went upstairs to his bedroom and retired.

Clara testified that on the morning of August 20,1989, she entered Bill’s bedroom and Bill threatened to kill her. She testified that she believes Bill moved toward the dresser to retrieve the High Standard .22 pistol. She testified that she recalls grabbing the pistol from the dresser, but does not recall struggling with Bill, firing the pistol, or dropping the pistol. She recalls leaving Bill’s bedroom and going to her bedroom for an undetermined amount of time. A pathologist later testified that Bill died from two gunshot wounds to the left temple of his head. The pathologist could not determine whether Bill was standing or lying down when he received the wounds nor whether Bill was shot from close range. A firearm and toolmark examiner testified that 1) two spent cartridge cases taken from the scene were shot from Bills High Standard .22 pistol, and 2) of the two bullet fragments taken from Bill’s skull, one bullet fragment was from a .22 bullet and the other was probably from a .22 bullet. The Park County Sheriff testified that Bill’s High Standard .22 pistol was later found in Clara’s bedroom under her pillow.

When Clara returned to Bill’s bedroom some time later, she recalls seeing Bill on the floor with “some dark stuff coming out of his mouth.” She placed a pillow under his head and a blanket over him and did not realize he was dead until sometime that afternoon.

That evening, Clara wrapped Bill’s body in the blanket that covered him and tied his body with a rope to a rubber raft. She then dragged Bill’s body downstairs and outside to a deep hole meant for a root cellar. She testified that she first placed straw in this hole, then Bill’s body, then the box spring and mattress from Bill’s bedroom. She later testified that she also placed into this hole a blood-stained piece of carpet that she had removed from Bill’s bedroom. The Park County Sheriff testified that this hole additionally contained a piece of carpet padding from Bill’s bedroom, a spent .22 casing, and another rubber raft. Clara testified that she covered the contents of the hole with dirt.

The next morning on August 21, 1989, Clara telephoned Bill’s sister, Sarah Leyde (Sarah) and told her that Bill was ill and that the Leyde family should not come over to their house that day to help side *209 the garage as earlier planned. Later that day, Sarah telephoned Clara to check on Bill’s health, and Clara told her that Bill was still ill.

On August 22,1989, Clara purchased and had delivered ten yards of garden dirt from a local company. She then asked a neighbor who had access to a backhoe if he could use the backhoe to fill in the remainder of the hole with the garden dirt. Additionally that day, Clara went over to Sarah’s house and told Sarah that Bill had gone fishing, but she did not know where. OnAugust23,1989, the neighbor using his backhoe filled in the hole meant for a root cellar with the garden dirt.

Thereafter, Clara left Montana and traveled to Washington to visit family. On August 24, 1989, she telephoned Sarah from Washington and told her that Bill was fishing in Alaska. OnAugust29,1989, Clara telephoned Sarah from Washington and told her that Bill was at a fishing camp in Williams Lake, British Columbia, and she was going to drive there to pick him up. On August 31, 1989, Clara telephoned Sarah and told her that Bill had died from a heart attack in Williams Lake, British Columbia, and his body had been cremated.

When Clara returned to her home in Montana, Sarah helped Clara pack Bill’s belongings. Sarah became suspicious when Clara refused to allow anyone in Bill’s locked bedroom because Clara claimed that Bill had killed a cat in his bedroom, leaving the floor stained. Sarah became more suspicious when she found Bill’s glasses and fishing tackle in his car. Acting on these suspicions, Sarah telephoned authorities in Williams Lake, British Columbia, to confirm Bill’s death and was told that there were no records of his death or cremation. Sarah then telephoned local police, which resulted in an investigation and the eventual excavation of Bill’s body. Clara was later arrested in Washington.

On October 23, 1989, Clara was charged by information with deliberate homicide under § 45-5-102, MCA.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
828 P.2d 382, 252 Mont. 205, 49 State Rptr. 217, 1992 Mont. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hess-mont-1992.