State v. Oudin

403 S.W.3d 693, 2013 WL 3795692, 2013 Mo. App. LEXIS 866
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 2013
DocketNo. WD 74885
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 403 S.W.3d 693 (State v. Oudin) 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. Oudin, 403 S.W.3d 693, 2013 WL 3795692, 2013 Mo. App. LEXIS 866 (Mo. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

KAREN KING MITCHELL, Judge.

Alyssa Oudin appeals her convictions for first-degree assault, pursuant to section 565.050.1, and armed criminal action, pursuant to section 571.015,1 imposed following a jury trial, and for which she was sentenced to consecutive terms of twelve and three years’ imprisonment, respectively. Oudin argues that the trial court plainly erred in submitting an outdated version of the MAI-CR defense-of-others instruction. But because Oudin offered the same outdated version during the instruction conference, she may not now complain. We affirm.

Factual Background

On June 28, 2010, teenager Joshua Sexton was hanging out at San Rafael Park with his brother and a friend. When Sexton left to walk back to his home nearby, Robert McGaugh2 approached him from behind, held a knife to his throat, and demanded everything of value Sexton had on him. Pursuant to McGaugh’s direction, Sexton threw his wallet on the ground, and Oudin approached, picked up the wallet, thanked Sexton, and returned his ID.3 McGaugh, Oudin, and Oudin’s sister (Sister) left the park,4 while Sexton ran back to his brother and friend to report what had happened.

Sexton’s brother contacted their parents and friends for help finding McGaugh and Oudin for the purpose of retrieving Sexton’s money. One of Sexton’s friends, Jason Monteer, heard that McGaugh had been at a nearby house, bragging about robbing someone and getting $50.00. After receiving this information from Mon-teer, Sexton and his brother joined their father (Victim), along with Monteer and Michael “Dustin” Vacha, to search the neighborhood for McGaugh.

At some point, after discovering that people were looking for them, Oudin, Sister, and McGaugh tried to leave the neighborhood, and, when they saw Victim’s truck, with Sexton, his brother, Monteer, and Vacha in it, they hid. Sister eventually got tired of hiding, so she began to walk along the street.

Sexton’s group had given up searching for McGaugh, so they dropped off Monteer and Vacha and began heading back to the park to call the police. Right after dropping off Monteer and Vacha, Sexton noticed a girl he thought was Oudin walking along the street; he then alerted Victim, who immediately stopped his vehicle in the middle of the street. At that point, McGaugh jumped out from underneath a nearby vehicle and began to run. Victim chased after McGaugh, while Oudin and [695]*695Sister remained on the street. Sexton and his brother began to follow Victim, but they were stopped by Oudin and Sister. Sister advised Sexton that he “needed to call [his] boy off or she was going to put a bullet in [Sexton’s] head.” At the same time, Sister was holding her purse in such a way as to imply she had a gun inside it. Fearing that the threats were true, Sexton and his brother retreated to Victim’s truck.

Victim eventually gave up chasing McGaugh and headed back toward his vehicle. As he was doing so, he encountered Oudin and Sister. At this point, the evidence was undisputed that Sister threatened to shoot Victim while reaching into her purse, Victim grabbed Sister’s arms between the shoulder and elbow, Oudin stabbed Victim once in the back, and Victim released his hold on Sister.

The events leading up to and surrounding these facts were hotly contested at trial. The State’s evidence demonstrated that Sister and Oudin approached Victim first, while Oudin’s evidence demonstrated that Victim approached them first. The State’s evidence demonstrated that Victim grabbed Sister’s arms merely to prevent her from carrying out her threat to shoot him, while Oudin’s evidence demonstrated that Victim not only grabbed Sister’s arms but also choked her repeatedly, leaving finger marks, and began to drag her away. Oudin testified, “it looked like he was trying to take her out of the area away from me.” Victim testified that he never hit or choked Sister and that his only purpose in grabbing her arms was “to keep her from drawing a gun, as she had intentionally said.” The State’s evidence demonstrated that Oudin approached Victim from behind while he was struggling with Sister, stabbed him in the back, and then swung the knife at him several more times, apparently attempting to stab him, without success. Oudin’s evidence, however, indicated that Oudin threatened and warned Victim to release Sister before she ultimately jumped over Sister (who was between Victim and Oudin) and stabbed him in the back because Victim continued to choke Sister.

As a result of the stab wound, Victim ' spent twenty-two days in the hospital, underwent two surgeries, and recovered only 40% capacity in the lung pierced by the knife.

After the stabbing, Oudin, Sister, and McGaugh devised a plan to tell the police that they had been swimming and had nothing to do with either the robbery or the stabbing. They went so far as to jump into a public pool and then contact the police to turn themselves in. Despite their original plan, both Oudin and Sister eventually admitted their presence and involvement with the robbery and stabbing.5

At trial, Oudin argued that her conduct against Victim was justified because she stabbed Victim in defense of Sister. During the instruction conference, the court indicated that it was accepting the State’s proffered defense-of-others instruction, patterned after MAI-CR 3d 306.08. The court also noted that “a similar instruction had been submitted by defendant.” In fact, Oudin’s proffered instruction was also patterned after MAI-CR 3d 306.08, but her version differed from the State’s in that her version omitted language regarding the effect of the lawfulness of Victim’s conduct.6 The court asked Oudin’s coun[696]*696sel, “with regard to this one in particular, is there any objection to the State’s submission of this 306.08?” Oudin’s counsel responded, “No, Your Honor.”

During closing arguments, the State suggested to the jury that Victim’s act of grabbing Sister by the arms was a lawful act, done in self-defense to prevent Sister from carrying out her threat to shoot Victim. The State argued that, because Sister had been the initial aggressor in the conflict with Victim, Sister could not have invoked a self-defense justification, and, as a result, Oudin did not have a valid defense-of-others justification. Oudin argued that Victim had been the initial aggressor, and that his acts of choking Sister and dragging her away justified Oudin’s act of stabbing him to prevent any harm to Sister.

The jury found Oudin guilty of both first-degree assault and armed criminal action. The jury recommended sentences of twelve and three years’ imprisonment, respectively. The court sentenced Oudin in accordance with the jury’s recommendation and ordered the sentences to run consecutively. Oudin appeals.

Standard of Review

Oudin’s only claim on appeal is that the trial court erred in submitting an outdated version of the MAI-CR defense-of-others instruction to the jury.7 When the court asked Oudin if she had any objection to the instruction given, however, Oudin affirmatively advised the court that she had no objection. And though she raised a claim of instructional error regarding the defense-of-others instruction in her motion for new trial, it was based upon a different theory than the one she advances on appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
403 S.W.3d 693, 2013 WL 3795692, 2013 Mo. App. LEXIS 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-oudin-moctapp-2013.