State v. Kehner

776 S.W.2d 396, 1989 WL 11639
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 10, 1989
Docket53735
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 776 S.W.2d 396 (State v. Kehner) 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. Kehner, 776 S.W.2d 396, 1989 WL 11639 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinions

KAROHL, Judge.

Appellant, Johnny W. Kehner, was charged with first degree murder, § 565.020 RSMo 1986, and armed criminal action, § 571.015 RSMo 1986. A jury convicted Kehner of second degree murder, § 565.021 RSMo 1986, and armed criminal action. The court sentenced Kehner to consecutive life sentences on each conviction. Kehner appeals.

The state’s evidence was sufficient to support the convictions. Defendant shot and killed Bud Timmons with his rifle. The shooting occurred outside Timmon’s home. It followed arguments about some money Timmons may have owed defendant. Defendant testified and claimed self defense. Defendant testified he took his family along when he went to see Timmons. According to defendant, Timmons approached defendant with a pistol in his right hand. Defendant claimed he shot Timmons in self defense to protect his family.

The error which requires a new trial involves allowing defendant’s neighbor, Mike Taylor, to testify as a rebuttal witness “where the prosecutor failed to respond to the timely and proper discovery request of the appellant for evidence that was material to the appellants [sic] guilt.” The state endorsed thirty-six witnesses. Mike Taylor was not endorsed. He did not testify in the first trial in which the jury could not reach a verdict. In the present trial he testified he gave defendant a ride to the St. Charles County Sheriffs Department to turn himself in on the charges. During the trip defendant described the shooting events in terms which amounted to a confession and totally destroyed the defense of self defense.

We reverse the decision of the trial court because the state failed to respond properly and fully to Kehner’s disclosure request, which resulted in Kehner incurring a fundamental unfairness at trial. The basic object of the discovery process in criminal proceedings is to permit the defendant a decent opportunity to prepare in advance of trial and avoid surprise, thus extending to him fundamental fairness which the adversary system aims to provide. State v. Scott, 647 S.W.2d 601, 606 (Mo.App.1983) (relying on State v. Sykes, 628 S.W.2d 653, 656 (Mo.1982)).

The state failed to promptly respond to Kehner’s clear request for discovery information related to witnesses to be called by the state at trial. The two relevant requests articulated in defendant’s motion for discovery read as follows:

1. The names and last known addresses of persons whom the State intends to call as witnesses at any hearing or at the trial, together with their written or recorded statements, and existing memoranda reporting or summarizing part of, or all of, their oral statements. ...
5. Any police reports, statements of Defendant—either oral or written—line up information, reviews, notes and results, and the names of individuals in the line up. (Our emphasis).

The rules of criminal discovery are not mere etiquette nor is compliance discretionary. State v. Scott, 647 S.W.2d at 606. The obligation to make answer is peremptory. State v. Stapleton, 539 S.W.2d 655, 659 (Mo.App.1976). The state failed to respond to the discovery request and state its [398]*398intention of calling Mike Taylor as a witness in the trial. Defendant had no means to know of the unexpected testimony.

While the state characterized Taylor as a rebuttal witness, thereby eradicating the requisite need to endorse, his testimony at trial, permitted over objection of Kehner, was evidence of an admission of guilt. Such evidence was direct evidence available to the state in its own case. Taylor testified that he met Kehner approximately six days after the shooting, at Barnes Hospital. Prom there, Taylor took Kehner, at Kehner’s request, to St. Charles County Sheriff’s Department. They stopped at a restaurant, as Taylor testified, “I wanted to buy him a sandwich ... before he turned himself into jail.” Taylor further testified that during their stop at the restaurant and their ride to the sheriff’s department they had an opportunity to discuss the incidents of June 24, 1986. Taylor’s testimony as to the contents of their conversation was as follows:

He described how he went down to Bud’s [decedent’s] house and called him outside and said he had something for him, and he said Bud came out with a pack of cigarettes, getting ready to light a — take a cigarette out of the pack of cigarettes, getting ready to light it, I guess, thinking they were going to talk, and John said he picked the rifle up off the seat and shot him, and Bud kept coming, he shot him again. Bud, I guess, realized that he was getting shot, and he turned and ran towards the house, and Johnny said he shot him again in the back, and he fell and was rolling around the ground like a stuck pig, he said.

Taylor testified the language he used was that of Kehner and not his own language.

The notion of fundamental unfairness or prejudice is to be measured by whether the evidence requested in discovery would have affected the result of the trial. State v. Estes, 631 S.W.2d 121, 122 (Mo.App.1982). The present appeal follows a verdict and conviction in a second trial. Taylor was not a witness in the first trial. The first jury could not reach a verdict. The second trial, where the court admitted the testimony of Taylor, resulted in a conviction of second degree murder § 565.021 RSMo 1986, and armed criminal action, § 571.015 RSMo 1986. The testimony of Taylor was significant. It followed defendant’s testimony. It destroyed the self defense theory. There can be no serious dispute that the breach of discovery duty of the state together with the failure to endorse Taylor as a state’s witness hid the requested evidence. These combined tactics trapped defendant.

In defendant’s motion for new trial, Keh-ner specifically asserted:

the Court committed prejudicial error in allowing and permitting the prosecuting attorney on behalf of the state to introduce and offer evidence from Mike Taylor. ... [Mike Taylor’s] evidence consisting in part of statements allegedly made by [Kehner] to the witness, Mike Taylor, immediately prior to the crime admitting to the witness, [Kehner’s] implication to the crime that these statements were hightly [sic] prejudicial and did together with other errors result in inflaming the minds of this jury and did result in an erroneous verdict finding [Kehner] guilty of murder in the second degree. The state failed to disclose to [Kehner] at any time prior to trial that the state had statements made by [Kehner] implicating [Kehner] in the shooting. ... [Keh-ner] had filed with the court anchserved a copy upon the state a Motion for Discovery seeking all statements and written memorandums containing the contents of any statements made by the defendant as well as all other discovery material. (Our emphasis).

The trial court erred in admitting the testimony of Mike Taylor over the failure of discovery objection of Kehner. The state failed to respond to the appropriate discovery requests and screened the nature of the available testimony by not disclosing they had a witness who could testify about incriminating oral statements made by defendant and by not endorsing Taylor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
776 S.W.2d 396, 1989 WL 11639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kehner-moctapp-1989.