State v. Miller

427 P.3d 907
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 5, 2018
Docket114373
StatusPublished
Cited by105 cases

This text of 427 P.3d 907 (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, 427 P.3d 907 (kan 2018).

Opinions

Per Curiam:

*918Martin K. Miller appeals his latest conviction by a Douglas County jury for the premeditated first-degree murder of his wife, Mary Miller. He was first convicted of the murder in 2005, and that jury verdict was affirmed by this court. State v. Miller , 284 Kan. 682, 163 P.3d 267 (2007) ( Miller I ). In 2012, the Court of Appeals granted Miller's motion for postconviction relief and ordered a new trial. Miller v. State , No. 103915, 2012 WL 401601, at *9 (Kan. App. 2012) (unpublished opinion). This court affirmed the Court of Appeals' decision to order a new trial. Miller v. State , 298 Kan. 921, 940, 318 P.3d 155 (2014) ( Miller II ). Upon retrial, the new jury also convicted Miller of premeditated first-degree murder, and, again, he directly appeals to this court. K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 22-3601(b)(3) (appeal of life sentence in murder case taken directly to the supreme court).

Miller raises 10 issues in this appeal, albeit we take the liberty of consolidating or separating the issues when we see fit to do so, as well as rearranging the order in which we address them. Ultimately, we affirm Miller's conviction and his hard-25 life sentence.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL OVERVIEW

The morning of July 28, 2004, Miller called police to report that he had found his wife dead in their bedroom. He contended that she died of natural causes, but the State prosecuted Miller on the theory that he had strangled his wife to pursue a "double life" that included an extramarital affair and an obsession with pornography.

In 2005, following a well-publicized trial in Douglas County District Court, a jury convicted Miller of premeditated first-degree murder. Notwithstanding the trial court's erroneous admission of some pornography evidence, this court affirmed the conviction on direct appeal in 2007.

The following year, Miller filed a K.S.A. 60-1507 motion for postconviction relief alleging that both his trial counsel and his appellate counsel had provided unconstitutionally defective representation. The district court denied the motion. But on appeal, the Court of Appeals concluded that Miller's appellate *919counsel performed below constitutional standards by failing to find and assert a structural error in the burden of proof jury instruction. Miller , 2012 WL 401601, at *8. This court affirmed the reversal of Miller's conviction and remanded for a new trial, holding "that appellate counsel's failure to challenge the written instruction was objectively unreasonable and prejudicial," because "[t]he incorrect jury instruction constituted structural error." Miller II , 298 Kan. at 923, 318 P.3d 155.

Miller's retrial began March 30, 2015. The jury heard testimony from the police officers who had responded to Miller's 911 call. The officers found Mary lying in her bed and determined that she was dead. An officer heard the Millers' 14-year-old daughter, Melodie, relate to her father that she had awakened during the night to hear her mother scream and her father's voice. When Miller denied being in Mary's room, the officers separated Miller, Melodie, and the Millers' 11-year-old son, Matthew, for individual interviewing.

The officers related that Miller told them that he had gone to bed around 11 p.m.; that Mary joined him after he was asleep; and that he got out of bed around 2 a.m. with a severe headache and a pain in his hip. After taking aspirin, he fell asleep in the living room recliner, until he was awakened by Mary's alarm clock at 6 a.m. He said that he did not attempt to resuscitate her, but instead called the police.

Melodie testified at trial that she had been on her computer until midnight. She heard someone come out of her parents' bedroom, go into Miller's office, and turn on the computer. She assumed it was her father. Melodie said that, during the night, she awoke to hear her mother screaming, multiple times, "No, please don't. No." She also heard her father saying, "Shh. Calm down. It's gonna be all right." When Melodie was again awakened by sirens, she went to her parents' room to find her mother on the bed and her father crying. He told her that he did not believe Mary was alive.

Matthew testified at trial that he also woke in the middle of the night and heard his mother "screaming." He said her voice sounded "labored, or like she couldn't get enough breath in." Matthew also heard Miller saying, "Calm down. Calm down. Everything's gonna be alright." After the noise stopped, he observed Miller walk down the hall.

Melodie also testified regarding Miller's relationship with Carrie Lester (formerly Parbs), which she deemed to be inappropriate. Lester also testified at trial, relating in detail her four-year sexual affair with Miller. Lester also testified about Laura Miller (formerly Cuthbertson), who subsequently had a romantic relationship with Miller and eventually became Miller's wife.

Unlike his first trial, Miller elected not to testify in his own defense. The State, over Miller's objection, moved on the first day of trial to admit Miller's testimony from the first trial. After giving Miller the opportunity to argue the legal basis upon which his prior testimony was inadmissible at retrial, the trial court permitted a redacted version to be read to the jury.

In his first trial testimony, Miller said that he retired to bed around 11 p.m., but got up around midnight with hip pain. After checking on Melodie and turning off her laptop, he went to the kitchen for his medicine. While waiting for the medication to take effect, he briefly did a search on his computer with the terms, "[s]leep patterns" and "deep sleep patterns." He then fell asleep on the living room recliner until about 3 a.m., when he arose to go to the master bathroom, where he believes he fell asleep on the toilet. Later, he was awakened by Mary making "an outburst of sound." He went to Mary, telling her to calm down and breathe. When her breathing became normal, he returned to the living room to go back to sleep.

Dr. Erik Mitchell, the forensic pathologist who first examined Mary at her home and later performed the autopsy, testified at the retrial. At the home, Dr. Mitchell had observed petechiae in Mary's eyes and white foam, or edema, coming from her nose. He did not observe any other external injuries. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
427 P.3d 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miller-kan-2018.