State v. Ruffner

911 A.2d 680, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 190, 2006 WL 3686815
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 15, 2006
Docket2004-356-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 911 A.2d 680 (State v. Ruffner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ruffner, 911 A.2d 680, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 190, 2006 WL 3686815 (R.I. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice SUTTELL, for the Court.

The defendant, Jack Ruffner, appeals from a Superior Court judgment of conviction entered after a jury found him guilty of murder in the second degree. The trial justice’s refusal to instruct the jury on the lesser-included offense of voluntary manslaughter forms the basis of the defendant’s appeal. The defendant also contends that the trial justice committed reversible error by excluding a 911 dispatch report as evidence for the jury to consider. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

I

Facts and Procedural History

On August 12, 2002, defendant struck Clarkie “Pete” Smith in the head with a *683 wooden table leg, and left him lying face down, unconscious, on the sidewalk. Five days later, on August 17, 2002, Mr. Smith died at Rhode Island Hospital from skull fractures and brain injuries caused by blunt force trauma. The events immediately preceding the fatal encounter between defendant and Smith were recounted by several witnesses at trial, and are largely undisputed.

Mr. Smith lived with his girlfriend, Aly-cia Lawson, at her house on Evergreen Street in the Mount Hope neighborhood of Providence. Mr. Ruffner also lived in the area, and was acquainted with both Smith and Ms. Lawson. Ms. Lawson testified that on the night of August 12, 2002, she and Smith sat on a wall outside an abandoned house on the corner of Camp and Grandview Streets drinking alcohol recently purchased from a nearby liquor store. The defendant, taking advantage of the pleasant summer evening, was walking in the neighborhood. As he walked by the couple, Smith commented loudly to Ms. Lawson, “There is your boyfriend.” Mr. Smith then advanced toward defendant and grabbed him around the neck. The two scuffled, causing Smith to fall to the ground. Mr. Smith continued to kick out at defendant until Ms. Lawson intervened and separated the two combatants, whereupon defendant walked away.

Ms. Lawson testified that after defendant left, Smith began to punch, kick, and swear at her. Ms. Lawson said that she immediately returned to her house, locked the door, and started to pack Smith’s clothing. As she did so, she heard Smith knock on the window demanding entry. Ms. Lawson refused to let him in, so Smith kicked in the front door. According to Ms. Lawson, as the couple continued to yell and scream at each other, Smith went into the kitchen, pulled a knife from the drawer, and threatened to kill her. Shortly thereafter, the police arrived. Ms. Lawson testified that Smith then came out the front door with a bag of his belongings and walked up Camp Street, dropping the knife on her porch as he left.

Later that evening, Mr. Smith and defendant had another confrontation at the same abandoned house on the corner of Camp and Grandview Streets where they had fought earlier that evening. At the time, Rhonda Goode and her friend Ivory Fisher were driving on Camp Street on their way to a nearby bar. Ms. Goode, who drove the car, testified that as she drove by, she noticed Smith and defendant engaged in a struggle. Ms. Goode said that she next saw defendant hit Smith in the head with a long thin object, likely a stick or a pipe, causing Smith to fall to the ground. Ms. Goode also testified that defendant continued to hit Smith in the head with this object a couple of more times while Smith remained on the ground.

Ms. Fisher, the passenger in the car, also testified that she saw Smith and defendant engaged in a fistfight before she saw Smith fall to the ground. Contrary to Goode’s testimony, however, Fisher said that as Smith lay on the ground, defendant walked over to the side of the abandoned house and grabbed a wooden stick from the nearby bushes. The defendant then returned, Fisher said, and hit Smith approximately five times in the head with the wooden stick. Moments after he finished beating Smith, defendant walked away and Fisher got out of the car to check on Smith. When she noticed that he was not moving, she ran down the street and told Roger Lanctot, Smith’s friend, that Smith was injured. Mr. Lanctot then called the paramedics.

Mr. Ruffner’s primary defense at trial was that, fearing for his own life, he struck Smith in self-defense. As his trial counsel explained in his opening statement, “[H]e *684 did the only thing in his mind he could do, the only thing he thought was reasonable at the time.”

Testifying on his own behalf, defendant explained that on August 12, 2002, he spent the early evening hours at a friend’s house, playing pool, drinking alcohol,' and smoking a “couple of joints.” He left his friend’s house at about 9 p.m., intending to return to his house, on the same street as his friend’s house. Because of the pleasant evening, however, defendant decided instead to take a walk around the neighborhood. He walked on his street and turned right on Camp Street. As he turned the corner of Camp Street onto Grandview Street, he noticed Mr. Smith and Ms. Lawson sitting on a wall outside an abandoned house on that corner:

The defendant testified that, as he passed the couple, Smith said to Ms. Lawson, “[Tjhere is your boyfriend right there.” Ms. Lawson then turned toward defendant and responded, “You’re supposed to be my man now, Jack.” Confused, defendant asked the couple what they were talking about. The defendant testified that Smith then approached him “in a rage” and began cursing at him. As defendant tried to walk away, Smith swung at him and then grabbed him around the neck. In an effort to remove Smith’s hands from his neck, defendant said he punched Smith, causing Smith to fall to the ground. Mr. Smith continued to kick and punch from the ground and then reached out and grabbed hold of defendant’s leg. At that time, defendant asked Ms. Lawson for assistance in getting Smith to let go. The defendant said Ms. Lawson finally jumped on top of Smith after Smith pulled a knife from his pocket. 1 As Ms. Lawson wrestled with Smith, defendant freed himself from Smith’s grip and began to walk away.

Mr. Ruffner then testified that he walked on Grandview Street and stopped at a house where he encountered some friends having a party. When someone at the party asked him with whom he had been fighting, defendant told them that he had been involved in a scuffle with Pete Smith. Hearing that, one of the party-goers told defendant that Smith was “crazy” and carried a knife. Pointing to a pile of wood, he suggested that defendant arm himself in case he had another encounter with Smith. Heeding this advice, defendant retrieved a wooden table leg from the pile.

The defendant testified that when he left the party, he hopped the fence behind the house where the party was taking place, intending to take a shortcut through backyards, driveways, and alleyways to his home on Woodbine Street. As he made his way home by way of this shortcut, defendant reached Evergreen Street, where Ms. Lawson’s house was located. There he heard Smith banging on the door and demanding entry into the house. After Smith entered the building, defendant waited a few minutes to cross the street. As he did so, however, Smith exited the house and saw defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
911 A.2d 680, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 190, 2006 WL 3686815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ruffner-ri-2006.