State v. Landry

5 So. 3d 317, 2009 WL 875045
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 13, 2009
Docket2008 KA 1589
StatusPublished

This text of 5 So. 3d 317 (State v. Landry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Landry, 5 So. 3d 317, 2009 WL 875045 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA
v.
AQUENDIUS D. LANDRY

No. 2008 KA 1589.

Court of Appeals of Louisiana, First Circuit.

February 13, 2009.
NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

Anthony G. Falterman, District Attorney, Thomas Daigle, Assistant District Attorney, Napoleonville, Louisiana, Attorneys for State Appellee.

Donald D. Candell, Assistant District Attorney, Gonzales, Louisiana, Bruce G. Whittaker, New Orleans, Louisiana, Attorney for Defendant/Appellant Aquendius D. Landry.

Before: PETTIGREW, McDONALD, HUGHES, JJ.

McDONALD, J.

The defendant, Aquendius D. Landry, was charged by bill of information with attempted second degree murder, a violation of La. R.S. 14:30.1 and 14:27. He pled not guilty and, following a jury trial, the defendant was found guilty as charged. He was sentenced to fifty (50) years imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence. The defendant now appeals, designating three assignments of error. We affirm the conviction and sentence.

FACTS

Late in the evening on September 27, 2006, the defendant, who had recently gotten out of jail, called Anya Ewell, his girlfriend, at her trailer on Pleasant Lane in Assumption Parish. The defendant was the father of Anya's two children. The defendant stayed with Anya on occasion, but lived with his grandfather, Walter Robinson, on La. Hwy. 1 in Labadieville. The defendant wanted to visit Anya, but she told him he could not come over. Anya had a protective order against the defendant. About twenty minutes after the phone call, the defendant arrived at Anya's trailer. He asked Anya to come outside to speak to him. When she went outside, the defendant brought her to his vehicle, a Ford Taurus. She and the defendant got in the back seat. Lormatina Landry, the defendant's brother, was driving.

Following the defendant's instructions on where to go, Lormatina drove to Hard Time Road in Napoleonville, a predetermined area. During the drive, the defendant told Anya he was going to "show [her] by playing with him." The defendant thought Anya was seeing someone else and, apparently, was going to exact retribution for her infidelity. Hard Time Road is a remote gravel and dirt road, and the nearest house was about two-and-a-half miles away.

The defendant and Lormatina exited the vehicle, and the defendant pulled Anya from the vehicle. The defendant held Anya on the ground and told Lormatina to hand him the gas. Lormatina handed the defendant a red gasoline can. The defendant poured gasoline on the upper body of Anya and, with a lighter, lit her on fire. Anya rolled around on the ground until the fire extinguished. The defendant poured gasoline on Anya again, and set her on fire again. Anya began rolling on the ground again. She rolled to the opposite side of the road into a ditch, which had shallow water in it. Again, the fire extinguished. After searching, the defendant found Anya in the ditch. He picked her up, placed her in his vehicle, and drove her to his grandfather's house. Mr. Robinson then took Anya to Assumption Community Hospital.

Anya's injuries were severe and life-threatening. She suffered second and third degree burns to her upper body. Several hours after being intubated, treated, and stabilized at Assumption Community Hospital, she was airlifted to the Baton Rouge General Burn Center. Dr. Ernest J. Mencer, a general surgeon who treated Anya at the burn center, testified at trial that his initial impression was that Anya had flame and chemical burns to fifty percent of her total body surface.[1] Anya underwent extensive medical care, including skin-grafting surgeries to her face, back, and neck. She also underwent skin grafting on her right foot, which was burned so deep that tendons were exposed.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 1

In his first assignment of error, the defendant argues the trial court erred in permitting Anya's treating nurse to testify as to what Anya told her about the incident. Specifically, the defendant contends the nurse's testimony was inadmissible hearsay and, as such, his conviction should be reversed.

Yvette Boudreaux was the emergency room registered nurse who treated Anya when she entered Assumption Community Hospital. At trial, the State offered into evidence the medical records, which contained Nurse Boudreaux's treatment of Anya, and included statements made by Anya to Nurse Boudreaux about how she got burned. Defense counsel objected to the medical records being introduced because they contained hearsay. The trial court overruled the objection, and the medical records were submitted into evidence. Later at trial on direct examination, Nurse Boudreaux, who had been provided the medical records to refresh her memory, testified that when she first saw Anya, she asked her what had happened. Anya responded that he burned her. Defense counsel reurged his objection to hearsay. The trial court overruled the objection, finding the response to be an excited utterance. The State then asked if Anya voiced anything else. Nurse Boudreaux, reading directly from the medical records, gave the following response:

She voices that my boyfriend took me in the cane field and lit me on fire. And she then said that his brother drove the car and did everything that he told him to do. He took her back of the cane fields in Napoleonville. We stopped on that cross road. He threw me out of the car and told his brother to get the gasoline. He poured all the gas on me and then he told his brother to get the lighter. He lit me on fire. I fell on the ground and put the fire out. He got mad and screamed, I'm going to do it again. He lit me on fire again and then I took off running and jumped in the ditch to try to put it out again. He jumped in the ditch and pulled me out and threw me in the car and took me to his grandfather's house. The elderly gentleman who brought her in was, she stated, his grandfather.

The defendant contends that Anya's statements to Nurse Boudreaux did not fall under the excited utterance exception to hearsay. The defendant states in his brief Anya's "lengthy and detailed recounting of events in narrative form" did not qualify as an excited utterance because significant time had passed since the event, the narrative was in response to an inquiry, and the narrative was a description of past events.

Louisiana Code of Evidence article 803(2) provides that a statement relating to a startling event or condition is not excluded by the hearsay rule if it was made while the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by the event. There are two basic requirements for the excited utterance exception. There must be an occurrence or event sufficiently startling to render normal reflective thought processes of an observer inoperative. Additionally, the statement of the declarant must have been a spontaneous reaction to the occurrence or event and not the result of reflective thought. There are many factors that enter into determining whether in fact the second requirement has been fulfilled and whether a declarant was at the time of an offered statement under the influence of an exciting event. Probably the most important of these is the time factor. In this connection the trial court must determine whether the interval between the event and the statement was long enough to permit a subsidence of emotional upset and a restoration of a reflective thought process. State v. Hilton, 99-1239, p. 11 (La. App. 1st Cir. 3/31/00), 764 So.2d 1027, 1034-35, writ denied, XXXX-XXXX (La. 3/9/01), 786 So.2d 113.

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Bluebook (online)
5 So. 3d 317, 2009 WL 875045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-landry-lactapp-2009.