State v. Shire

850 S.W.2d 923, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 435, 1993 WL 81804
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1993
Docket16903, 18063
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 850 S.W.2d 923 (State v. Shire) 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. Shire, 850 S.W.2d 923, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 435, 1993 WL 81804 (Mo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

FLANIGAN, Judge.

A jury found defendant guilty of murder in the second degree, § 565.021, 1 and she was sentenced to life imprisonment. Defendant appeals, and that appeal is Case 16903. After the jury trial, defendant filed a motion under Rule 29.15 seeking postcon-viction relief. The motion was denied after evidentiary hearing. Defendant’s appeal from that denial is Case 18063. The appeals have been consolidated and will be dealt with separately in this opinion.

Case No. 16903

Defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. The state’s evidence showed that on August 7, 1988, the defendant caused the death of John Shire, her ex-husband, by shooting him.

Defendant and the victim were divorced in July 1988, and the victim was awarded the farm where the shooting occurred. Prior to the divorce, John Shire began dating Judy Perryman, and they were to be married in the fall of 1988. The offense took place shortly before dawn. At that time, Judy Perryman and John Shire were in bed together in the house located on the farm.

Perryman, a witness for the state, testified that she heard the click of a light switch in the hallway and awoke. Perry-man saw defendant standing in the hallway. Defendant entered the bedroom and walked to the side of the bed. Perryman said to the victim, “Honey, Eve’s here.” Perryman saw defendant place a shotgun under the victim’s nose and shoot him. The gun was within a few inches of the victim’s face when it was fired. Death was instantaneous. Defendant then left the house.

Defendant’s first point is that the trial court erred in overruling her challenge for cause to venireperson Laura Hough, thereby denying defendant her right to a panel of qualified jurors from which to *926 make her peremptory challenges and denying her a fair trial in that “Hough gave answers on voir dire indicating her inability to sit as a fair and impartial juror since she indicated both that she knew defendant and that she knew Judy Perryman ‘pretty well/ believed that [Perryman] was a ‘pretty good woman’ and that she would ‘vouch for’ Perryman.”

In support of her first point, defendant quotes the following portions of the voir dire examination of venireperson Laura Hough:

HOUGH: ... Judy [Perryman] ... worked for me for quite sometime.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Do you feel like Judy Perryman’s a pretty good woman, from your association with her?
HOUGH: When she worked with me, Judy was a good mother. She had this little boy and raised him. She was a good mother and dependable worker.
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[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Actually you knew Judy Perryman pretty well?
HOUGH: Yes, I do.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And there is no question about it? I mean, you believe she’s a pretty good woman?
HOUGH: Yes, I do.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: You’d vouch for her?
HOUGH: Yes.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And if she’s a state’s witness in this case, I mean, you’d tend to feel pretty comfortable when she testifies because you vouched for her?
HOUGH: When Judy worked for me, she was a fine person, and I don’t know, you know, the details of all of this, only what I read in the paper.

Although not mentioned by defendant, the voir dire examination of venireperson Laura Hough also included the following:

[THE PROSECUTOR]: Ms. Hough, we just wanted to talk with you away from the others about what it was that you had heard or read about this case.
Can you tell us what source of information you had about this case?
HOUGH: About the only information that I knew was it came out in the papers and Judy Wilkerson — she worked for me for quite sometime.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Who is Judy Wilkerson, Judy Perryman?
HOUGH: Yes.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: That was her former name, maiden name?
HOUGH: Uh-huh.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: She worked for you?
HOUGH: Uh-huh, at H.D. Lee.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Okay. That fact—
HOUGH: And then Kathy Shire, the daughter of Mrs. Evelyn Shire, worked on our floor.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Okay.
HOUGH: And then I remember when it came out in the paper that she came to this home, and I think it was the home of Mr. Shire, and—
[THE PROSECUTOR]: What else, what other details do you remember?
HOUGH: Judy, I think, maybe tried to call him at the point to awaken him — and really didn’t pay a lot of attention to the news.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Was this everything you’ve told us of that from the newspaper account?
HOUGH: Yes, and conversations at work. Now, we all knew Evelyn. Evelyn worked for us when I was at Lebcut. She didn’t work directly in my line, but she was in quality control there.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Okay. Let me ask you first of all, Ms. Hough, whether or not any of this other extraneous information would cause you some problems?
In other words, have you formed any opinion based on this stuff that you’ve heard?
HOUGH: I don’t think so, but I, you know.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Can you promise or try to be a fair juror and just listen to the evidence that we would present to you?
HOUGH: I would try.
*927 [THE PROSECUTOR]: Let me ask you, just briefly, about the personal knowledge you have or association with Judy Perryman, the defendant, or Kathy Shire, Kathy Mizer.
Is your acquaintanceship with any of these people such that it would cause you some difficulty to be fair and impartial to either side in this case?
HOUGH: I don’t think so. I talked to Judy at the bank, at Commerce Bank, when I would go in there, and I have not been in the presence of Mrs. Shire for, you know, since we were at Lebcut, and that was in the ’70s, I believe.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Okay. Can you be fair and impartial to the best of your ability?
HOUGH: Yes, I would try.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Okay. Thanks.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Ma’am, when you say you’ve talked to Judy Perryman since this event happened—

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Bluebook (online)
850 S.W.2d 923, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 435, 1993 WL 81804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shire-moctapp-1993.