State v. Nyhuis

906 S.W.2d 405, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 1605
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 26, 1995
DocketNos. 63601, 66905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 906 S.W.2d 405 (State v. Nyhuis) 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. Nyhuis, 906 S.W.2d 405, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 1605 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

CRANDALL, Judge.

Defendant, Richard Nyhuis, appeals from a judgment of conviction, following a jury trial, for capital murder. He was sentenced to a term of life imprisonment without possibility of probation or parole for fifty years. Defendant also appeals from the denial of his Rule 29.15 motion following an evidentiary hearing. We affirm.

In November of 1988, skeletal human remains were discovered in a remote location at the S Bar F Boy Scout Ranch in St. Francois County. The victim had been buried in a shallow grave and covered by a white powdery substance which had originally been lime.

A forensic anthropologist who specialized in identifying skeletal remains of unknown victims made a facial reconstruction from the skull. The anthropologist provided the Missouri State Highway Patrol with a photograph of the facial reconstruction. He also gave them an estimation of the victim’s age, height and weight, and informed them that the victim was an Asian female. After the Highway Patrol published the photograph, it received a phone call stating that the photograph resembled defendant’s wife, Bunchee Nyhuis.

The Highway Patrol contacted defendant and inquired about his wife. Defendant stated that she had left him in December of 1988. He said he had last seen his wife when he had dropped her off at the airport. Defendant claimed he had no idea where his wife could be found, and that he knew of no surviving relatives in her native Thailand. He provided the Highway Patrol with photographs of his wife.

The photographs provided by defendant and photographs obtained from wife’s immigration file were sent, along with photo[408]*408graphs of two other missing females, to the forensic pathologist for overlay comparison with the skull. The pathologist determined that the skull was compatible only with the photographs of wife.

Defendant was confronted with this information while he was vacationing with his sons at the Boy Scout ranch where the skeleton was discovered. The Highway Patrol questioned defendant extensively about his wife’s disappearance. Defendant related varying accounts of the events surrounding her disappearance. His final videotaped confession revealed that defendant and wife had been fighting about a new house that wife had wanted to build, but that defendant did not think they could afford. They were in the basement of their home. At some point, wife threatened to disappear with their two sons in Thailand. As wife became more angry, defendant got up to leave the room. Wife lunged at defendant, scratching his face and biting him. Defendant pushed her back; she fell and hit her head on the base of a steel support post. After wife fell, she lay on the floor bleeding badly and screaming for a doctor. Instead of summoning help, defendant placed his hand over her mouth and nose until she stopped moving. When defendant failed to find a pulse or heartbeat, he placed a plastic bag over wife’s head to contain the bleeding, wrapped her up in a sheet of plastic, and locked her in their deep freezer. The next morning he called his employer to tell him that his wife had left him and that he needed to make arrangements for child care. Defendant waited until March, when the ground had softened, to bury wife’s body at the ranch.

The state’s expert witness, Dr. Mary Case, pathologist and Chief Medical Examiner for St. Charles County, examined the wife’s skull following the discovery of her remains at the ranch. Dr. Case found a small depressed fracture in the left parietal area of the skull. The inside of the skull revealed a slightly larger area where the external fracture had been pushed inside. Dr. Case determined that the injury occurred prior to wife’s death and that it had been caused by a small blunt instrument striking the skull. She believed that because wife’s injury covered a very small area, it could not have been caused by the fall described by defendant. Dr. Case further stated that if the wound was left untreated it could only have caused wife’s death if medical attention was not properly sought. She opined that wife could have eventually died from suffocation or some other act that was no longer apparent because of the remains’ decomposition. She testified that it would take approximately one minute of oxygen deprivation to render a person unconscious, and an additional three minutes of deprivation to suffocate that person.

Defendant does not deny that he contributed to wife’s death and that he attempted to conceal her death. However, throughout trial and here on appeal, defendant characterized wife’s death as an unfortunate accident, denying any deliberation. Dr. Jay Dix, the Boone and Callaway County Medical Examiner, opined that the fracture could have occurred as defendant described and that death could have been caused by the fracture to the skull alone. However, he could not rule out suffocation or other causes. He disagreed with Case’s conclusion that the fracture had been caused by an object hitting the skull, although he conceded that was possible.

In his first point, defendant claims the trial court committed plain error when it admitted into evidence the skull, jaw and various bones of wife, and erred in failing to declare a mistrial in response to the state’s displays of wife’s skull and skeletal remains.

In his first sub-point, defendant contends the trial court erred in admitting wife’s skeletal remains into evidence because their prejudicial effect outweighed their probative value. Defendant failed to object to the admission of this evidence on the ground now asserted in this appeal. Thus, we review for plain error, granting relief only if the error so substantially affects the defendant’s rights that a manifest injustice or miscarriage of justice occurs if left uncorrected. State v. Watts, 813 S.W.2d 940, 944 (Mo.App.E.D.1991); Rule 30.20.

“The admission of demonstrative evidence lies largely within the trial court’s discretion.” State v. Ford, 867 S.W.2d 681, [409]*409684 (Mo.App.E.D.1993). “Demonstrative evidence is admissible if it establishes a fact at issue, throws light on the issue, or aids the jury in any way in arriving at the correct verdict.” Id. The trial court’s decision may be overturned only if it constitutes an abuse of discretion. State v. McMillin, 783 S.W.2d 82, 101 (Mo. banc 1990).

In State v. Broadnax, 572 S.W.2d 224, 227 (Mo.App.1978), the defendant objected to the admission of a bloodstained iron, a bloodstained baseball bat, a bloodstained wig, blood samples removed from the top and sides of the iron, and two fibers of hair removed from the floor immediately under the iron as unduly inflammatory. The court concluded that the trial court had not abused its discretion in admitting these items because they met one or more of these criteria for admission: tending to connect the accused with the crime, proving the identity of the deceased, showing the nature of any wounds, corroborating the testimony of the state’s witnesses, or throwing any relevant light upon any material matter in issue. Id.

Here, the state offered the skeletal remains to illustrate the wounds and to demonstrate how wife was identified. The cause of death, the nature of the victim’s wound, and the identity of the victim were at issue.

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Bluebook (online)
906 S.W.2d 405, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 1605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nyhuis-moctapp-1995.