State v. Schultz

817 So. 2d 202, 2002 WL 534136
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 2002
Docket01-KA-995
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 817 So. 2d 202 (State v. Schultz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Schultz, 817 So. 2d 202, 2002 WL 534136 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

817 So.2d 202 (2002)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Wanda SCHULTZ.

No. 01-KA-995.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

April 10, 2002.

Paul D. Connick, Jr., District Attorney, Terry M. Boudreaux, Thomas J. Butler, Kenny Bordelon, Douglas W. Freese, Assistant District Attorneys, Gretna, LA, for State.

Andre Renee Jacques, and William R. Campbell, Jr., New Orleans, LA, for appellant.

Court composed of Judges EDWARD A. DUFRESNE, JR., SUSAN M. CHEHARDY and CLARENCE E. McMANUS.

McMANUS, Judge.

Defendant, Mrs. Wanda Schultz, was charged with three counts of cruelty to a juvenile. After a judge trial, she was convicted of one count. Defendant filed a *203 motion for new trial, or in the alternative for post-verdict judgment of acquittal. The trial judge denied the motion and sentenced her to two years of imprisonment at hard labor, suspended the sentence and placed her on active probation for two years with special conditions of probation. Thereafter, defendant filed a timely motion for appeal, which the trial judge granted. For the following reasons, we reverse her conviction and sentence.

FACTS

This cruelty to a juvenile conviction arose out of an incident that occurred on the night of February 25, 2000 when defendant entered her fifteen-year-old daughter Greta's bedroom to tell her to lower the volume of her music. Thereafter, the version of the events that transpired varied with the witnesses. According to Greta Schultz, her mother left the bedroom and then returned a second time, when she sprayed Greta with pepper spray and also sprayed Greta's younger siblings, Alex and Bridgette. Mrs. Schultz, on the other hand, contended that she acted in self-defense that night. After the incident, Alex Schultz called the police. Mrs. Schultz was arrested. Once the police were called, Mrs. Schultz telephoned her friend, Susan Kurtz, and told her that Greta and Alex attacked her. Ms. Kurtz then went to the Schultz residence. Apparently, none of the children went to the hospital or sought medical treatment other than a superficial examination by their father, Dr. Melvin Schultz, an emergency room and primary care physician. Following this incident, Mrs. Schultz moved in with her father and did not return to the family home, other than to retrieve her personal belongings.

Thereafter, the Jefferson Parish District Attorney's Office filed a bill of information charging the defendant, Wanda Schultz, with three counts of cruelty to a juvenile in violation of La. R.S. 14:93. She pled not guilty at arraignment. On February 16, 2001, the defendant's first trial ended in a mistrial when Judge Melvin C. Zeno recognized the defendant's husband as a neighbor. On May 15, 2001, a bench trial commenced before Judge Fredericka Wicker. After hearing three days of testimony, Judge Wicker took the matter under advisement.

At trial, the State began its case in chief with the testimony of Greta Schultz, then a sixteen-year-old student at Archbishop Chapelle High School. According to Greta, she was writing in a notebook when her mother entered her room at 11:00 p.m. on the night in question and "started yelling" at her to lower the volume of her radio and told Greta to fold her laundry and clean up her room. Greta said that she replied, "Okay," then told her mother to "Get out." Allegedly, her mother said, "No. I want this all done." Greta contended that her mother began picking clothes up from the floor and pushed her aside while Greta "just stood there." Eventually, Dr. Schultz entered the room because he heard the yelling. Mrs. Schultz left the room with Dr. Schultz but returned a second time to spray Greta with pepper spray.

Greta claimed that she turned off her radio and resumed writing, when "all of a sudden" Mrs. Schultz "burst the door open." Greta maintained that her mother asked her for a book that was on the floor. According to Greta, when she looked behind her at the book and then turned around to look at her mother, Mrs. Schultz began spraying her with something that made her eyes burn. Greta stated that Mrs. Schultz then pushed her, causing her to fall over her bed while her mother stood over her and continued to spray her. Greta testified that Alex then entered the room, and when her mother saw Alex, she *204 "aimed" the spray at him. Next, Bridgette entered the room and was also sprayed. The altercation ended when Dr. Schultz returned to Greta's room.

Defendant's son, Alex Schultz, who was thirteen-years-old at the time of the incident, testified that he heard his mother and Greta arguing about the radio being too loud, and that his dad went in Greta's room and "broke it up." Alex also testified that he saw his mother return to Greta's room a second time and then heard Greta scream. According to Alex, Mrs. Schultz sprayed him approximately four times with the spray once he entered Greta's room. He said the spray caused his eyes to burn and his vision to blur. Then, as he was leaving the room to look at his face in the mirror, Bridgette came into the room and his mother sprayed her as well.

Bridgette, who was eleven-years-old at the time of the incident, testified at trial that Greta's music was loud and that Mrs. Schultz entered Greta's room to ask her to turn it down. According to Bridgette, after Mrs. Schultz left the room, she turned the music down and closed her bedroom door. When Mrs. Schultz re-entered the room, Bridgette heard her mother "say something" to Greta. Thereafter, she heard a lot of noise and commotion. Bridgette contended that, when she entered Greta's room, her mother was on top of Greta. Bridgette also testified that she was sprayed in her eye when she attempted to dislodge Greta from underneath her mother.

Mrs. Schultz testified in her own defense and presented the testimony of her friend, Susan Kurtz, her uncle, Charles Augustine, her psychiatrist, Dr. Robert Davis, and Dale Standifer, an expert witness who testified that Mrs. Schultz was a battered woman. Mrs. Schultz stated that she and Dr. Schultz were married for twenty-five years before their recent divorce and that during the marriage that she had twelve pregnancies, seven children, four miscarriages and one stillborn child.[1] At the time of trial, four of the children resided in the home.[2] The others were over eighteen and had left home.

Mrs. Schultz recalled the chilling history of abuse she had endured over the years at the hands of her husband and children, Greta and Alex. She testified that when her husband abused her, Greta and Alex laughed. She also said that she was afraid of Greta and Alex, and had lost control of them. Mrs. Schultz told the court about specific incidents of abuse by the children. In December of 1999, when she asked Alex to turn off the television because it was too loud, Alex approached her with a large knife and told Greta that he was going to kill their mother. Greta laughed, and told Alex not to do it. On another occasion, Alex was playing a violent video game with his younger brother in the room, and Mrs. Schultz asked him to turn off the game. When she tried to retrieve the game, Alex spit on her. Then Alex began choking her, and told his father, who was watching, "Dad, I could kill her; please let me kill *205 her." Dr. Schultz told his son to stop. Mrs. Schultz said that the previous day, her husband had spit on her and called her a "worthless piece of shit." Mrs. Schultz also related that in January of 2000, one month before the instant event, Greta had tried to push her down the stairs. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
817 So. 2d 202, 2002 WL 534136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-schultz-lactapp-2002.