State v. Luster

750 S.W.2d 474, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 408, 1988 WL 18457
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 1988
DocketWD 39657
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 750 S.W.2d 474 (State v. Luster) 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. Luster, 750 S.W.2d 474, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 408, 1988 WL 18457 (Mo. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

GAITAN, Presiding Judge.

The defendant/appellant, Eddie L. Luster, was found guilty following a jury trial of murder in the second degree, a class A felony, in violation of § 565.021, RSMo 1986, and armed criminal action, a class A felony, in violation of § 571.015, RSMo 1986. He appeals alleging the trial court erred in the following respects: (1) by admitting over objection statements made by the victim regarding her fear of defendant; (2) by admitting an involuntary statement made by defendant after his arrest; (3) by giving MAI-CR3d 300.02 and 302.04; (4) by allowing the State during voir dire to question the venire panel regarding their religious, moral and philosophical beliefs and the impact of same upon their ability to make a decision; (5) by permitting the State to question the venire panel during voir dire regarding their ability to assess life imprisonment; and (6) by failing to grant defendant’s request of a judgment of acquittal at the close of all the evidence. We affirm.

Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion to suppress statements. In his motion, the defendant alleged in part that his statement was involuntary because he was “suffering from knife wounds to his hands, face, ear and back and was not in physical condition to knowingly, understandingly, and voluntarily waive his constitutional rights.” The defendant also filed a motion in limine seeking to bar introduction of testimony concerning prior violent acts of the defendant against the victim and the victim's complaints about the defendant. Several police officers testified regarding defendant’s arrest and his refusal of medical treatment. Additionally they testified as to defendant’s version of what happened. The defendant took the stand and told his version which was different. These motions were denied. The court found the officers’ testimony to be more credible.

Thereafter, the defendant argued in support of his motion in limine, asserting that the testimony in question would inject evidence of the defendant’s bad character and the victim’s state of mind, a fact which was not in issue. The State argued that it wanted testimony of the victim’s state of mind, namely her fear of the appellant, because it was relevant to the issues in the *476 case. The court overruled the defendant’s motion in limine.

The defendant and his victim, Sherrie Stewart, were married in May of 1984, and during the marriage, had three children. In the summer of 1986, Ms. Stewart and the defendant permanently separated.

On Christmas Eve, Ms. Stewart moved to the home of Joyce Stewart, at 2815 Spruce. The victim left the house at 1:30 p.m. and returned at about 7:30 p.m. Bill Whitfield, Ms. Stewart’s friend, who had come to visit from Texas, arrived at the house at about 7:00 or 7:30. The defendant telephoned, and Joyce Stewart answered the phone; the victim talked with him briefly. Joyce Stewart left the house at 9:30, and the defendant called again. The victim talked with him a moment or two in “a hard voice.”

Ms. Stewart, Mr. Whitfield, and Ms. Stewart’s three children went to bed in the same room, and Tamesa Stewart, the victim’s eleven-year-old niece, was also asleep when she heard a knock on the door. It was the defendant at the door, and she let him in. The defendant asked for Ms. Stewart, and he followed Tamesa into the bedroom and flashed a lighter in Ms. Stewart’s face. The defendant began to push Ms. Stewart’s head against the wall, and he put both hands around her neck, choking her. With Tamesa’s help, the victim was able to break loose, and she ran to the kitchen and obtained a knife. Ms. Stewart told the defendant to go home and leave her alone, but he said “if I can’t have you, nobody else can”, and threw a lamp at her. During a struggle, the defendant was cut three times, on his hand, arm, and below his eye.

The victim ran outside to the house next door, and the defendant followed her, where he took the knife away from her. The defendant said “now I’m going to show you how it feels to get stabbed with a knife”, and stabbed her repeatedly, even though Ms. Stewart twice called for help.

Kansas City police officers arrived on the scene at 11:30 p.m. where they found Ms. Stewart lying on the porch at 2317 Spruce, unconscious and badly injured, with a weak pulse and eyes dilated. Ms. Stewart died at 2:37 a.m. on December 25, 1986. Dr. John Overman, Jackson County Assistant Medical Examiner, testified that she sustained nine stab wounds. Ms. Stewart was stabbed in her right shoulder, in the right side of her chest, twice in the left side of her abdomen, in her left arm, in her right hip, and three times in her back. Dr. Over-man characterized the wound in her back which penetrated her chest wall and her aorta as fatal. She also sustained several crescent-shaped abrasions on the left side of her neck which Dr. Overman testified could have resulted from manual strangulation. The internal examination revealed a laceration of her liver, indicative of blunt trauma.

The defendant challenges in Point I the admission of the statements made by Ms. Stewart to her family and friends expressing her fear of the defendant. In Point II, the defendant alleges trial court error in the admission of evidence concerning Ms. Stewart’s attempt to obtain an order of protection and the denial of that order.

Those statements and the circumstances leading up to them are reflected in the record as follows. Lisa Anderson, Ms. Stewart’s co-worker at Newberry’s Nursing Home, testified that on a night in September, 1986, she and Ms. Stewart were taken to work at 11:00 p.m. by Ms. Stewart’s brother and male cousin. The defendant emerged from the darkness and ran up behind the two women, telling the victim he had seen her get out of a car with other men the night before and wanted to know why she was doing that to him. Ms. Stewart told the defendant to leave her alone, but in response, the defendant pulled Ms. Stewart down the steps and put both hands around her neck, choking her. Ms. Anderson grabbed the defendant and pushed him off of Ms. Stewart, but the defendant continued to pursue her and pushed her head into a window. Ms. Anderson pushed the defendant down the stairs, and she and Ms. Stewart were able to enter the building. That night, Ms. Stewart told Ms. Anderson that “she was scared of Eddie.”

*477 In November, 1986, Patricia Charles, Ms. Stewart’s sister, received a telephone call from the defendant. Ms. Charles asked him to leave Ms. Stewart alone, telling him that they should both “go their separate ways.” The defendant told Ms. Charles that Ms. Stewart was “his wife, and if he couldn’t be with her, nobody else was.”

Also in November, 1986, Joyce Stewart, another sister of the victim, went with the victim to the home she had shared with the defendant to obtain clothing for the children. That night, the defendant kicked and hit Ms. Stewart. Ms. Stewart told her sister that she did not trust the defendant anymore and that “he was sneaky.”

On December 2, 1986, Ms. Stewart approached Karen White, the director of a domestic violence project called Project Assist, operated by Legal Aid of Western Missouri. Ms. Stewart told Ms. White that she was frightened of the defendant, and Ms. White explained to her the procedure for filing for an order of protection. Cater-ina Vittoria, an adult abuse clerk in Jackson County, testified that on December 2, 1986, she provided Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
750 S.W.2d 474, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 408, 1988 WL 18457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-luster-moctapp-1988.