State v. Shawn Kelley

2016 VT 58, 148 A.3d 191, 202 Vt. 174, 2016 WL 2944819, 2016 Vt. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 20, 2016
Docket2014-440
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2016 VT 58 (State v. Shawn Kelley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Shawn Kelley, 2016 VT 58, 148 A.3d 191, 202 Vt. 174, 2016 WL 2944819, 2016 Vt. LEXIS 57 (Vt. 2016).

Opinion

Skoglund, J.

¶ 1. Defendant Shawn Kelley argues that this Court should vacate his domestic assault conviction because numerous reversible errors occurred during his jury trial. Specifically, he claims that the trial court improperly admitted two pieces of hearsay evidence, that the trial court incorrectly denied his motion for judgment of acquittal, and that the State made prejudicial remarks during its closing statement. We affirm.

¶ 2. The following facts are drawn from the testimony of witnesses and the exhibits introduced at trial.

¶ 3. On New Year’s Eve 2013, defendant and his girlfriend, the complainant, welcomed the new year at defendant’s apartment. They spent the early part of the evening drinking. Later in the evening, the dispatcher at the Williston State Police barracks received a 911 call from the complainant. Distraught, the complainant spoke with the dispatcher:

DISPATCHER: Vermont 911, where is your emergency?
COMPLAINANT: Umm, I need an ambulance —
DISPATCHER: Where?
COMPLAINANT: 9 Fuller Place.
DISPATCHER: Ok, I need you to speak up a little bit. Nine what place?
*178 COMPLAINANT: Fuller.
DISPATCHER: In what town?
COMPLAINANT: Essex.
DISPATCHER: Ok. Is this for you or someone else?
COMPLAINANT: Me.
DISPATCHER: Ok. How old are you?
COMPLAINANT: Pm forty-seven.
DISPATCHER: Ok. What’s happening to you?
COMPLAINANT: I was beaten.
DISPATCHER: Ok, who beat you?
COMPLAINANT: [Defendant].
DISPATCHER: Is he still there?
COMPLAINANT: Yes.
DISPATCHER: Ok. Is he hiding or does he —
COMPLAINANT: Pm — No —
DISPATCHER: Are you hiding?
COMPLAINANT: Well, kind of . . . yes.
DISPATCHER: K, what is your name?
COMPLAINANT: [Complainant].
DISPATCHER: Ok [Complainant], how old are you?
COMPLAINANT: Forty-seven.
DISPATCHER: Ok, all right. And what did he beat you with?
COMPLAINANT: Fists.
DISPATCHER: Ok. Does he know that you’re calling for help?
COMPLAINANT: Ahh, I don’t know.
DISPATCHER: Ok, has he been drinking or is he on drugs?
COMPLAINANT: We both are.
DISPATCHER: You’re both on drugs?
COMPLAINANT: Drinking.
DISPATCHER: Ok.

At this point, approximately one minute into the call, the dispatcher reached the Essex Police Department and requested that they respond; the complainant remained on the phone and listened to the dispatcher’s conversation with the police. The dispatcher then asked the complainant several follow-up questions for the remainder of the eight minute call. The dispatcher concluded the call once the responding officers reached the complainant.

*179 ¶ 4. Two police officers responded to the 911 call. Defendant met the officers at the vestibule of his apartment building. After climbing to defendant’s third floor apartment, the first officer remained with defendant in the hallway, while the second officer entered the apartment to investigate.

¶ 5. Inside the apartment, the second officer saw blood in the entryway and followed a narrow trail of blood into the bedroom, where he found the complainant on the phone with significant blood above her left eye. After checking that she could move safely, he asked the complainant to come into the living room to be interviewed. During this interview, the complainant told the officer that defendant struck her.

¶ 6. Meanwhile, in the hallway, defendant told the first officer that the complainant had fallen a couple times and that he had tried to get her to leave the apartment. According to this officer, defendant seemed agitated and intoxicated. After waiting for a few minutes, defendant attempted to enter the apartment.

¶ 7. Defendant’s attempted entry coincided with the second officer’s interview with the complainant, so both officers put defendant in investigative detention. Additional officers then transported defendant back to the police station. Rescue personnel took the complainant to the emergency room.

¶ 8. After both defendant and the complainant left, the officers continued their investigation of the apartment. The first officer observed blood in several locations: on a bloody rag or shirt in the bathroom; in a large puddle on the floor in the center of the bathroom; on the door casing going into the bedroom; and on the side of the mattress in the bedroom. This officer did not see any obvious evidence — such as bloodstains, tissue, or hair fibers — that the complainant struck her head on a countertop or furniture corner in the apartment. Similarly, the second officer did not find any indication that the complainant fell and injured her head. He did observe shoes near the bathroom door.

¶ 9. As a result of the officers’ investigation, the State charged defendant with domestic assault pursuant to 18 V.S.A. § 1042. Defendant’s jury trial was held on August 7, 2014, in the Chittenden County Superior Court, Criminal Division.

¶ 10. The State’s evidence included the 911 recording, the responding officers’ testimony, the complaint’s testimony, and photographs of the complainant and the apartment. Although the complainant testified for the State, she testified that defendant did *180 not cause her injuries. The complainant explained that, rather than being struck by defendant, she tripped over her shoes while entering the bathroom and hit her head on the ceramic tiles. She said that she sometimes blacks out when she drinks; as a result, she did not remember anything leading up to her fall, she did not recall making the 911 call, she did not recollect reporting that she was struck, and she only vaguely remembered the trip to the hospital. She acknowledged that her trial testimony differed from her previous reports, but said that, as the days progress after a blackout, snippets of her memory return, like her memory of tripping.

¶ 11. At the conclusion of the State’s case, defendant made an oral motion pursuant to Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 29(a) on the ground that the State could not establish that defendant caused the complainant’s injury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 VT 58, 148 A.3d 191, 202 Vt. 174, 2016 WL 2944819, 2016 Vt. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shawn-kelley-vt-2016.