State v. Miller

163 P.3d 267, 284 Kan. 682, 2007 Kan. LEXIS 476
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 27, 2007
Docket95,815
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 163 P.3d 267 (State v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Miller, 163 P.3d 267, 284 Kan. 682, 2007 Kan. LEXIS 476 (kan 2007).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Davis, J.:

Martin Miller appeals from his conviction of first-degree murder for the killing of his wife, claiming that the following errors require reversal of his conviction: (1) the admission of several pieces of evidence whose prejudicial nature outweighed their relevance; (2) the admission of hearsay statements of Laura Cuthbertson regarding her relationship with the defendant; (3) prosecutorial misconduct during closing argument; and (4) cumulative error. We conclude that no reversible error occurred and affirm.

Facts

The defendant placed a 911 call to the police on the morning of July 28, 2004, stating that he had found his wife, Mary, dead in her bed. He explained that she was not breathing and that her body was cold. Police arrived at the house around 6 a.m. and determined that Mary was dead and had been so for some time.

A police officer informed the defendant that Mary was dead and observed as the defendant related the news to his 14-year-old daughter, Melodie. According to the officer, Melodie stated that she had awoken to hear her mother scream during the night and had heard the defendant’s voice calming Mary down. The defendant denied that it was his voice. At this point, the officers treated the case as suspicious and separated the defendant, Melodie, and the defendant’s son, Matthew, so they could be interviewed.

[685]*685The defendant told the police that he went to bed around 11 p.m. the night before and that his wife joined him after he went to sleep. He got out of bed around 2 a.m. with a headache and pain in his hip. He took an aspirin, went to sleep in the living room recliner, and did not wake up until the morning when he heard Mary’s alarm clock going off in the bedroom. He did not attempt to resuscitate her, but instead called the police.

The detective interviewing the defendant asked him about his relationship with Mary, and the defendant told him that they never fought and that their relationship was in good standing. He also gave his consent to the detective’s search of his computers.

There were no signs of a struggle in the Miller house or bedroom and no signs of a forced entry.

Melodie testified at trial that she was up until midnight on that night working on her computer, though both of her parents thought she was in bed. She heard the sounds of someone getting up and hurried to her bedroom; she assumed the person stirring was the defendant, who often slept in the living room. She pretended to be asleep while a person (who she believed was her dad) looked in on her. She heard someone boot up the computer down the hall, and then she fell asleep.

Melodie testified that she next was awakened from her sleep when she heard Mary “screaming but not like the high-pitch scream. It was muffled.” She was going to go check on Mary, but she heard her father’s voice trying to calm her down. Melodie stated that she assumed her mom was having a nightmare and thought things were fine when she heard the defendant’s voice.

Melodie was next awakened to the sounds of police sirens. When she got out of bed, she asked her brother Matthew whether he heard the screams, and he told her that he did. She asked the defendant whether he had heard Mary during the night, and he said he did not, since he was asleep in the living room. Melodie stated that later that day, the defendant took her and her brother aside and explained that there were “ ‘three possibilities for what’s going to happen or how they are going to say your mother died’ ” — that someone broke into the house and killed her, that she died of natural causes, or that the defendant killed her. Melodie said that her father told them that it [686]*686was “most likely the police will say he [the defendant] did it because the police just want to find someone.”

Melodie also testified regarding the defendant’s relationship with a woman named Carrie Parbs. She explained that the defendant would often talk with Parbs on the telephone in his carpentry shop or go visit Parbs in Eudora to swim in the pool in her apartment complex. Melodie was concerned that her father and Parbs’ relationship was “more than a friendship” because “she flirted with him and ... he land of flirted back.” (When asked about Parbs on the day after Mary’s death, the defendant told the interviewing detective that he did have a relationship with her but that it had ended the previous fall.)

Matthew testified at trial that he also heard his mother make “a raspy like — yell, like where she couldn’t get any air in.” He explained that it “sound[ed] like she was having a hard time breathing” and that he had never heard his mother make a sound like that before. Matthew testified that after he heard the noise from his mother, he heard his father’s voice saying, “ ‘Calm down. Calm down. Everything’s going to be alright.’ ”

The defendant elected to testify in his own defense. He stated that he went to bed around 11 p.m. but woke up around midnight in pain. He looked in on Melodie and turned off Melodie’s laptop. He then went to the kitchen for medicine and sat down at his computer while he waited for the medication to take its effect. When it had done so, he went to the recliner in the living room and went to sleep.

The defendant testified that he woke up again sometime around 3 a.m. because he had to use the restroom. He went to the master bathroom and fell asleep on the toilet, when he awoke to Mary making “an outburst of sound.” He went to her and touched her, telling her to calm down and breathe. When her breathing went back to normal, he thought everything was okay and went back to the living room to go to sleep.

The coroner who first examined Mary at her home and later performed the autopsy also testified at trial. He noted that there was no indication of sexual assault and no injury to Mary’s hands. However, he noted that there was petechiae in Mary’s eyes and [687]*687pulmonary edema foam coming from Mary’s nose. During the autopsy’s internal examination, he noticed a flame hemorrhage in the sternohyoid muscle over the thyroid, which indicated an applied injuiy to the neck, and another area of hemorrhage on the superior horn of Maiy’s thyroid cartilage, which could only be caused by pressure applied to the neck. The coroner also explained that he observed bruises to Mary’s scalp, showing that force had been applied in that area within a day or two of death. He found no evidence of other injury, trauma, disease, drugs, or poison. The coroner concluded that Mary died from asphyxiation by strangulation.

An examination of defendant’s computer revealed 6,801 images that the examiner described as “pornographic,” organized into 29 different folders and one folder of unsorted images and labeled according to the type of activity portrayed. The computer also contained a program called “Magic Folders,” which the defendant told the detective that he used to hide pornography. Searching this program revealed another 2,000 to 2,500 pornographic images, as well as 291 videos. It also revealed the defendant’s memberships at several Internet dating websites, with profiles active until the day before Mary’s death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 P.3d 267, 284 Kan. 682, 2007 Kan. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miller-kan-2007.