State v. Nelson

243 P.3d 343
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 19, 2010
Docket101,064
StatusPublished

This text of 243 P.3d 343 (State v. Nelson) 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. Nelson, 243 P.3d 343 (kan 2010).

Opinion

243 P.3d 343 (2010)

STATE of Kansas, Appellee,
v.
Jeffery D. NELSON, Appellant.

No. 101,064.

Supreme Court of Kansas.

November 19, 2010.

*344 Meryl Carver-Allmond, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, argued the cause and was on the brief for appellant.

*345 Ty Kaufman, Special Prosecutor, argued the cause, and Steve Six, Attorney General, was with him on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by BILES, J.:

Jeffery Dale Nelson appeals his convictions of premeditated first-degree murder, burglary, and three counts of forgery. These crimes arose from the death of Nelson's stepfather, Stanley Swartz, who Nelson admitted striking repeatedly in the head with a baseball bat. Nelson claims four errors: (1) The district court failed to give an imperfect self-defense jury instruction; (2) the instructions on first-degree murder were improper because they lessened the State's burden of proof; (3) the district court failed to comply with K.S.A. 60-455 in admitting prior crimes evidence; and (4) the district court used the wrong standard to determine aggravating circumstances when sentencing Nelson to a hard 50 prison term for his first-degree murder conviction. As explained below, we affirm his convictions. We reverse and remand with directions for resentencing on the first-degree murder conviction.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The relevant events occurred over a 3-day time span. On August 24, 2007, Nelson went to the house of his stepfather Swartz, just as Swartz was getting ready to leave for work. Swartz indicated Nelson was not welcome and waited for Nelson to leave before going to work. Nelson returned while Swartz was at work and broke into the garage. Nelson used a ladder to crawl through an attic space connecting the garage to the house because the garage did not have direct access to the house. Once inside the attic space, the ceiling buckled and Nelson fell through, creating a hole. When Swartz returned home after work, Nelson was gone. Swartz reported the break-in to police and said his checkbook was missing.

At 9:38 p.m. that same day, Nelson used an ATM to deposit a $5,000 forged check from Swartz' account. Nelson then picked up his friend, Keith Hewitt. They drove to Wal-Mart, and Nelson bought a baseball bat. As they were leaving the parking lot, Nelson asked Hewitt if he would help him beat up Swartz. Hewitt testified at trial that he talked Nelson out of this. The two then went to a club. Nelson took Hewitt home at 2 a.m., but Nelson returned at 3 a.m. and offered Hewitt $500 to help him "take care of" Swartz. Hewitt refused.

The next day, April 25, 2007, Nelson and Swartz had a chance encounter at Wal-Mart that became heated, but not physical. Sometime later that day Nelson deposited a $100 forged check from Swartz' account into his friend Misty Sauder's account. At around 10 p.m. Nelson asked Amber Moore, a girl he was dating, if she wanted to watch a movie. Moore picked Nelson up at his grandparents' house; he asked her if she would think poorly of him if he beat someone up; and then he asked her to drive him by Swartz' employer to see if his truck was in the parking lot. It was. Nelson then asked Moore to drive him back to his grandparents' house where he retrieved the bat. He told Moore he needed the bat for protection because he was going to beat up Swartz.

Moore and Nelson drove by Swartz' workplace again to make sure Swartz' truck was still there, and then Moore dropped Nelson off at Swartz' house. He told Moore to tell him when Swartz was driving home. Swartz returned home around 11 p.m. Moore believed Nelson was hiding in the bushes. She drove around until 1 a.m., when she told Nelson she was going home. She testified Nelson told her he "could not do it," and they went back to Moore's house. At around 2:30 a.m., Nelson borrowed Moore's car, took the baseball bat, and said he was returning to Swartz' home.

Nelson disputes what happened next. The State contends Nelson entered the home, discovered Swartz sleeping in his bed, and hit him on the back of the head while he slept. The coroner testified Swartz' death was caused by a blunt force trauma to the head, and there were no defensive wounds. A detective testified there was no evidence of a struggle in the home. Nelson's defense theory was that Swartz let him into his house, they fought, Nelson tried to leave, and Swartz pulled him back into a fight. Finally, Nelson grabbed the bat, Swartz reached for *346 it, and Nelson hit him with it. This defense theory is based on varying statements Nelson gave the police. Nelson did not testify at trial.

Initially, Nelson told a detective he got into a fight with Swartz between 11:30 and 11:45 p.m. on April 25. He said they fought over the bat and he hit Swartz with it. He said Swartz was fine when he left. Nelson later added greater and sometimes conflicting details about the physical altercation. This portion of the interview is more difficult to follow, but begins with Nelson saying that he went into a room in Swartz' house and found the bat. Swartz was standing in the room's doorway. Nelson chopped at Swartz with the bat, and Swartz backed into his bedroom. Swartz antagonized Nelson by saying he had better hit him hard, and Nelson told Swartz not to give him an excuse. Nelson then approached Swartz, and Swartz reached for the bat, eventually catching it. Nelson pushed Swartz, and he "finally" hit Swartz several times with the bat. He said Swartz ended up on the bed, lying on his back and side. Nelson told the detective he went to Swartz' house to "fucking end the animosity and all the bullshit and all the shit [Swartz] was doing."

Later in the same interview, after additional prodding from the detective, Nelson said he was going to tell the truth about what happened. Nelson admitted he brought the bat with him and did not find it in a room in Swartz' house. At some point, Nelson told a detective it was kind of hard to walk around the corner, look in the bathroom, and close the door while holding the bat without it being obvious. Then Nelson said Swartz asked if he was hiding something, and Nelson tried to "play it off like I wasn't doing anything." Nelson grabbed the door handle and pulled it. Swartz pushed him twice and slapped him on the head. Then Nelson said he pushed him back, pulled out the bat, and hit him. Nelson continually stated there was no blood when he left.

Moore testified at trial that Nelson returned to her house around 6:30 a.m. that morning, April 26. She said Nelson was pale and told her he thought he killed Swartz. Later that day, Swartz was discovered on his couch by a coworker when Swartz did not show up for work. Swartz was alive but unresponsive. There were pools of blood on Swartz' bed, pillow, and in the master bedroom; blood was found going from the bedroom, down the hallway, and in the bathroom; and there were sheets that trailed blood through the house to the couch.

Also that day, Nelson deposited a $400 forged check from Swartz' account. Nelson then dropped off an apartment rental application and test drove a BMW at a dealership. Nelson told Moore he was going to sell Swartz' vehicles for a down payment. While Nelson was occupied with the car, Moore received a phone call that Swartz had been taken to the hospital, and everyone suspected Nelson beat him. Moore and Nelson left the dealership.

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Bluebook (online)
243 P.3d 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nelson-kan-2010.