State v. Lovett

2012 NMSC 36, 2012 NMSC 036, 2 N.M. 562
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2012
DocketDocket 30,470
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 2012 NMSC 36 (State v. Lovett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Lovett, 2012 NMSC 36, 2012 NMSC 036, 2 N.M. 562 (N.M. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

BOSSON, Justice

{1} Defendant Paul Wayne Lovett was charged with murdering two women in two separate, unrelated incidents as well as criminal sexual penetration with respect to one of the victims. Pursuant to Rule 5-203(A) NMRA the two murder charges were joined in one complaint, indictment or information with the intent to try the two murder charges together in one trial. Pursuant to Rule 5-203(C) NMRA Defendant moved to sever the two murder charges into two separate trials. After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion to sever, and Defendant was subsequently convicted of both counts of first-degree murder in one joint trial. We conclude that the trial court committed error when it failed to sever the murder charges into separate trials. Because the error constituted reversible, non-harmless error in relation to one of the murder convictions, we vacate that conviction while upholding the other first-degree murder conviction as well as the conviction for criminal sexual penetration.

BACKGROUND

{2} On January 16, 2002, a young mother named Elizabeth Garcia worked a late shift at a gas station in Hobbs, New Mexico. Under circumstances that are still unknown, Garcia left her workplace sometime before 2:30 in the morning. That afternoon, a local resident found Garcia dead in a vacant field near a dirt road.

{3} Approximately sixteen months later, on May 14, 2003, workers found another young woman, Patty Simon, dead in a caliche pit on the outskirts of Hobbs. On the same day, a delivery man found Defendant, lying on the side of a road outside of Hobbs, shirtless.

{4} The delivery man’s coworker took Defendant into town. Defendant explained to the coworker that he had been talking to a girl named Patty at the bowling alley the night before. According to Defendant, a few guys tried to rough her up and Defendant jumped in. The next thing he remembered was waking up on the side of the road. Defendant said he had a knot on his head, he was scratched, and he seemed shaken, so the coworker asked Defendant if he wanted to seek medical attention, but Defendant refused. After the coworker dropped Defendant off at his apartment, he reported Defendant’s story to the police.

{5} The police had already started investigating Simon’s death. After hearing about Defendant’s story, police officers went to his home, arriving before he had changed clothes or bathed. Defendant was still shirtless and had scratches on his arms and shoulders. He agreed to an interview with the police, and police obtained a search warrant to take certain samples from Defendant, including blood, hair, and a penile swab.

{6} Initially, the police only investigated Defendant in relation to the Simon murder; they did not suspect that he might also be Garcia’s murderer. In fact, when Simon was killed, the police had no suspects in the Garcia murder. Among others, they had investigated Stephen DeMoss, who was Defendant’s brother-in-law at the time Garcia was killed. Police began to investigate Defendant for the Garcia murder only after he began talking about it during an interview concerning the Simon murder.

{7} Eventually, the State charged Defendant with two counts of first-degree murder, one count of kidnaping in relation to the Garcia murder, and one count of criminal sexual penetration in relation to the Simon murder. The indictments were joined under Supreme Court Rule 5-203 NMRA .

{8} Defendant moved to sever, and the trial court held a hearing on the matter. After the hearing, the trial court denied Defendant’s motion to sever in a written order, but without explaining the basis for its ruling. The case proceeded to a joint trial, and a death-eligible jury convicted Defendant of two counts of first-degree murder and one count of first-degree criminal sexual penetration. 1

{9} Because Defendant received life sentences for each murder, he appeals directly to this Court. See N.M. Const, art. VI, § 2 (“Appeals from a judgment of the [trial] court imposing a sentence of death or life imprisonment shall be taken directly to the supreme court.”); accord Rule 12-102(A)(1) NMRA. On appeal, Defendant argues that his motion for severance was improperly rejected and that the trial court’s failure to sever actually prejudiced his case. He also argues that the fact that a death-eligible jury reviewed a non-death eligible murder prejudiced his case. Holding that the trial court’s failure to sever constituted reversible error, we do not reach Defendant’s second argument.

DISCUSSION

{10} We have previously stated that we review a trial court’s denial of a severance motion for an abuse of discretion. State v. Domzngwez, 2007-NMSC-060, ¶ 10, 142 N.M. 811, 171 P.3d 750. Under certain circumstances like this case, however, the decision to sever may become mandatory, not discretionary, as we explain in this opinion. Although the trial court in this case held a hearing on the matter, and apparently reviewed briefing and case law on the issue, it never explained its decision to deny Defendant’s motion, which makes our task all the more challenging.

{11} “[0]ne test for abuse of discretion [in a failure to sever case] is whether prejudicial testimony, inadmissible in a separate trial, is admitted in a joint trial.” Id. (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). In this case, the State was allowed to introduce in one trial all the evidence of each separate murder plus the criminal sexual penetration. That evidence included background testimony by the victims’ family members and friends, numerous photographs of the respective victims’ crime scenes and mutilated bodies, autopsy reports, bloody clothing samples, testimony by forensic scientists, and testimony by other experts. For better understanding, we first review this evidence in greater detail. 2 Then, we consider if the evidence would have been cross-admissible if the State had tried Defendant separately for the two murders. In other words, in a separate trial of the Garcia murder, would the State have been able to present evidence going to the Simon murder, and vice versa? If not, the court committed error in refusing to sever, and we then determine whether the trial court’s error was harmless. See generally State v. Tollardo, 2012-NMSC-008, 275 P.3d 110.

Evidence Presented by the State

The Garcia Murder

{12} In addition to the basic information about where and when Garcia’s body was found mentioned above, the State introduced testimony and photographic evidence that Garcia was brutally murdered. T estimony and photographs documented that Garcia’s killer stabbed her fifty-six times and slit her throat. Her killer stabbed her chest, abdomen, back, and hip, and she had other injuries on her hands and arms. Her killer stabbed her with such force that it broke her bones.

{13} Garcia was clothed when she was stabbed and when she was found. Police found tire tracks and footprints at the scene. Blood and scrapes on the ground indicated that Garcia had been dragged from the passenger side of a car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2012 NMSC 36, 2012 NMSC 036, 2 N.M. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lovett-nm-2012.