State v. Jackson

435 N.W.2d 893, 231 Neb. 207, 1989 Neb. LEXIS 63
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1989
Docket88-168
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 435 N.W.2d 893 (State v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. Jackson, 435 N.W.2d 893, 231 Neb. 207, 1989 Neb. LEXIS 63 (Neb. 1989).

Opinion

Grant, J.

Defendant-appellant, Dorothy M. Jackson, was charged by information in the district court for Douglas County with murder in the second degree and the use of a knife to commit a felony. After a jury trial, defendant was found guilty on both counts. Defendant was sentenced to 35 years in the Nebraska Center for Women at York on the murder charge and to a consecutive term of 6 2/3 to 20 years on the knife charge. Defendant timely appealed to this court and assigns two errors, alleging that the trial court erred (1) in overruling the defendant’s motion for a mistrial and (2) in overruling the defendant’s motion to have the State’s expert witness sequestered. We affirm.

The record, reviewed in the light most favorable to the State, State v. Jones, 230 Neb. 968, 434 N.W.2d 333 (1989), shows the following. At about 4:30 on the afternoon of May 16,1987, an Omaha police officer responded to a radio call concerning a *208 stabbing at 16th and Binney Streets in Omaha. This officer was directed to the rear of 1617 Binney Street, where he observed the victim, John I. Williams, stabbed in the chest, sitting unconscious in a chair in the garage behind the residence. The officer also saw the defendant standing about 40 feet from the victim, holding a knife.

The defendant was placed in custody and taken to Omaha police headquarters. Although the defendant was not questioned by officers during her transportation, she continually mumbled about the stabbing and indicated that “she had did it before she knew what had happened.” Once at police headquarters the defendant was informed of her rights under the Miranda decision. After being so informed, and waiving her rights, the defendant gave an inculpatory statement. The following morning, the victim died from the stab wound.

The victim was 68 years old and had Parkinson’s disease. He had some difficulty walking at all times. After drinking, he would either have to crawl, hang onto things, or receive assistance in order to get around. Defendant was 44 years old. She was not married to the victim, but had lived with him for 4 years before the murder. Defendant and the victim were drinking throughout the day on May 16, 1987, in the garage behind their residence. A 9-year-old neighbor testified that he had heard defendant “cussing” the victim and saw the defendant go into the residence, return with a knife, and stab the victim, who was seated in a chair. A 75-year-old neighbor woman testified that the defendant had gone to her home immediately after the stabbing and that while at her home the defendant said, “Miss Rose ... I did it, I did it, I did it.” Defendant testified that she had stabbed the victim, but claimed she acted in self-defense, in that the “battered wife” syndrome prevented her from correctly assessing the situation she was in.

With regard to defendant’s first assignment of error, insofar as she contends that the court erred in permitting the prosecutor to cross-examine defendant “extensively on a collateral matter, severely prejudicing the Defendant before the jury,” we need only say that error, if any at all, was adequately corrected by the court’s instruction to the jury to ignore such evidence. The *209 question stems from the defendant’s position that she, because of a “battered wife” syndrome, had the perception that, under the Nebraska law of justification or self-defense (NJI 14.33), she could not retreat from the situation before her and that she was in imminent danger. Defendant’s counsel admitted, and later the court instructed the jury, that defendant did not contest the facts that she was not in imminent danger and that she could have retreated.

The issue of the appropriateness of the “battered wife” syndrome evidence is not before this court because the issue was submitted to the jury in the manner desired by the defendant, and no party raises any issue in this court on that issue. What is before the court is the propriety of the way in which certain evidence, brought forward by the State in its cross-examination of defendant, was handled.

Apparently, in order to provide a basis for the application of the “battered wife” syndrome, defendant adduced testimony that she had been victimized by men during a substantial portion of her life.

The defendant testified that she had been sexually abused by her uncle on repeated occasions beginning when she was 8 years old and that when she was 13 years old her father began to sexually penetrate her, resulting in a pregnancy. The father was eventually sentenced to serve a 10-year prison term for incest.

The defendant also testified that she had been married for 10 years to a man with whom she had two children. The defendant testified that this man physically abused her during the entire course of their marriage.

During the last 2 years of the defendant’s relationship with the victim, the defendant testified, the victim began to physically and emotionally abuse her. The couple drank heavily, particularly on weekends, and would have heated arguments. During the course of these arguments the defendant alleged she received bloody noses and black eyes and, on one occasion, on January 28, 1987, was taken to a hospital after she sustained cracked ribs when the victim struck her with a gin bottle.

The defendant testified that, on that occasion, she had told hospital employees and the police that she had been beaten by unknown parties. She further testified that she had not told the *210 police that the victim had struck her, in order to protect the victim. The defendant bases her first assignment on the following testimony elicited from her by the State during cross-examination:

Q. Is that the last time you went to the hospital for any type of injury, before John died?
A. Yes, it is.
Q. You’re positive about that? I want you to think about this.
A. For an injury?
Q. Uh-hum.
A. The cracked ribs. Yes.
Q. On January 28th?
A. As far as I remember, yes. I’ve been back to the hospital but it wasn’t for that.
Q. How about did you go to the hospital for any type of injury within a couple of weeks before John died?
A. No.
Q. You’re absolutely positive about that?
A. No, I’m not positive. I just can’t...
Q. Specifically, I want to call your attention to Sunday, May the 10th, 1987. Do you remember — that’s only six days before John died. Do you recall what you did that day?
A. No, I don’t.
Q. Did you go to the hospital that day?
A. I could have.
Q. You don’t remember?
A. I remember before John died I — before he died, yes, I did go to the hospital.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
435 N.W.2d 893, 231 Neb. 207, 1989 Neb. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jackson-neb-1989.