State v. Idlebird

896 S.W.2d 656, 1995 WL 116838
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 2, 1995
DocketWD 49259
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 896 S.W.2d 656 (State v. Idlebird) 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. Idlebird, 896 S.W.2d 656, 1995 WL 116838 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

LAURA DENVIR STITH, Judge.

Defendant Sandra Idlebird was convicted of first degree assault, § 565.050, RSMo 1986, and armed criminal action, § 571.015, RSMo 1986. 1 The jury found she set fire to the bed in which her husband’s two year old daughter, Brittainy, was sleeping, causing Brittainy serious physical injury. Defendant appeals her conviction on the grounds that: (1) there was insufficient evidence to sustain *659 her conviction; (2) it was plain error to admit evidence of her prior conviction for assault in the Netherlands for impeachment purposes; (3) it was error to convict her of armed criminal action because fire does not constitute a dangerous instrumentality within the meaning of the armed criminal action statute; (4) criticism of her attorney by the trial judge during Kerry Idlebird’s cross-examination was prejudicially improper; and (5) she was denied due process by the cumulative effect of the above errors committed during the trial. We find no reversible error and affirm both convictions.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Defendant dated Kerry Idlebird sporadically from 1982 until early 1986, while the two of them both resided in Texas. They temporarily ended their relationship upon Mr. Idlebird’s relocation to Kansas City in 1986, but recommenced it in 1988, although Defendant still resided in Texas.

In mid-1989, while involved in this long-distance relationship with Defendant, Mr. Id-lebird briefly also became involved with Thressa Allen, a co-worker. Ms. Allen became pregnant and, in August 1989, informed Mr. Idlebird of the pregnancy. Mr. Idlebird initially questioned his paternity of the child and encouraged Ms. Allen to get an abortion. She did not do so. Mr. Idlebird did not continue the relationship with Ms. Allen, but rather, in December 1989, he became engaged to Defendant. They set their wedding for the following November. He did not tell Defendant about Ms. Allen’s pregnancy.

Ms. Allen gave birth to the child, Brittainy, in April of 1990. Mr. Idlebird learned of Brittainy’s birth shortly thereafter but did not tell Defendant about Brittainy until August 1990. Defendant was upset by this news, but agreed to go through with the marriage in November 1990 as planned. Initially, Mr. Idlebird did not seek visitation ■with Brittainy. However, beginning in August or September of 1991, the Idlebirds began seeing the child for 6 to 8 hours approximately once a month.

On November 27,1992, Brittainy, who was then 2 1/2 years old, had her first overnight visit to the Idlebird home. After spending the evening with Mr. Idlebird and Defendant, Brittainy became sleepy at 10:30 or 11:00 p.m. Both Mr. Idlebird and Defendant took Brittainy upstairs and put her to bed. Brittainy woke up while they were putting her to bed and Defendant held and rocked her. Mr. Idlebird left Brittainy’s room and did some other things. About 15 minutes later, at approximately 12:00 or 12:30 a.m., Defendant came to their bedroom and told him Brittainy was asleep. Approximately 10 minutes later, they returned to Brittainy’s room to kiss her good night. They turned her on her back and left the room together, partially closing the door to Brittainy’s room. Mr. Idlebird then went into the bathroom to get a bottle of lotion, with which Defendant could rub his feet.

After Mr. Idlebird returned to their bedroom, Defendant went again into Brittainy’s room and put a towel over the lamp. When she returned and told her husband what she had done, he asked her to remove the towel from the lamp, explaining that it was a fire hazard. Defendant had also closed the door to Brittainy’s room so that the child would not see Mr. Idlebird walking around in his underwear, but Mr. Idlebird asked her to open it so that he could hear Brittainy if she woke up during the night. She agreed to both open the door and remove the towel after she finished massaging his feet.

Defendant massaged Mr. Idlebird’s feet for approximately 30 minutes. He then fell asleep on the middle of the bed. Defendant was lying on the edge of the bed, on the side where her husband normally slept, complaining that her back hurt. She eventually fell asleep in this position.

Shortly before 2 a.m., Mr. Idlebird awoke upon hearing Brittainy cry. Mr. Idlebird ran to his daughter’s room and found it engulfed in flames. He grabbed Brittainy, took her downstairs to the kitchen, handed her to Defendant and asked Defendant to call the fire department. Mr. Idlebird then went back upstairs and put out the fire with an extinguisher.

Brittainy was rushed to the hospital by a Life Flight helicopter. She was treated for *660 extensive burns over 80 to 35 percent of her body. She was hospitalized for three weeks, and required extensive skin grafts to her legs and arms.

Mr. Idlebird eventually returned to the house and checked for signs of a break-in, but found no evidence of a forced entry. He also found no evidence of an electrical fire. Mr. Idlebird testified that he made certain that the smoke detectors in his house were operational and had fresh batteries. However, no alarm sounded and fire investigators later determined that someone had removed the battery from the smoke detector that was located in the hallway outside Brittainy’s room. The investigators also found no evidence of forced entry and ruled out any accidental or natural cause of the fire.

Fire investigators determined that the fire originated around or near a “clip” or “retainer” on the bed frame. The bum patterns indicated that the fire was started by the ignition of bedding materials, either a sheet or a comforter. In order to ignite the bedding materials, a match or lighter had to have been placed under the bedding and held there for a “considerable time”, i.e., “more than a few seconds”. The fire smoldered in the mattress for approximately 45 minutes to one hour before the bed burst into flames.

Investigators did not locate any burnt matches that might have started the fire. The burn pattern and other physical evidence virtually eliminated any possibility that the fire could have been started by Brittainy playing with matches. The fire was labeled as an incendiary-type fire, i.e., “a deliberate act.”

Defendant told police that she did not set the fire and did not believe that Brittainy or Mr. Idlebird did either. She said Brittainy was too young to strike a match or use a lighter. She also stated that her husband was asleep on the water bed when the fire broke out and that he could not have gotten out of the bed without waking her. She told the fire investigator that she had laid down with Brittainy until the child fell asleep around 1 a.m. and then returned to her bedroom. Defendant told Brittainy’s mother that “she was the last one in the room with Brittainy.”

Defendant denied that she was responsible for setting the fire that caused the victim’s injuries. Although she admitted that she may have been the last person to enter the girl’s bedroom, she said she did so only long enough to put a towel over the lamp. She and Mr. Idlebird disagreed as to whether she left Brittainy’s door open or closed. She claimed she had opened it, but he said it was closed when he ran to help Brittainy at the time of the fire.

Although Defendant did not directly accuse Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
896 S.W.2d 656, 1995 WL 116838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-idlebird-moctapp-1995.