State v. Simmons

815 S.W.2d 426, 1991 Mo. LEXIS 97, 1991 WL 176330
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 10, 1991
Docket71739
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 815 S.W.2d 426 (State v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Simmons, 815 S.W.2d 426, 1991 Mo. LEXIS 97, 1991 WL 176330 (Mo. 1991).

Opinion

ROBERTSON, Chief Justice.

A jury convicted appellant, Willie Simmons, of two counts of capital murder following the deaths of Leonora McClendon and Cheri Johnson and recommended that Simmons be put to death on both counts. The trial court sentenced Simmons to death in accordance with the jury’s recommendation. Our jurisdiction is founded on Article V, section 3, Missouri Constitution, which places exclusive appellate jurisdiction in this Court “in all cases where the punishment imposed is death.”

Simmons scatters twenty-six points of error through his brief to this Court. We consider only his first, which charges that the trial court erred in overruling Simmons’ Motion to Sever the trial of the two murder counts, in violation of Section 565.004.1, RSMo 1986. That statute permits the State to charge and the trial court to try more than one homicide count in a single trial only when the homicides “constitute part of a common scheme or plan.” We agree with Simmons’ contention that these two murder counts should not have been tried in a single trial. The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause is remanded.

I.

Simmons' convictions rest on circumstantial evidence. We will recite only so much of the evidence as is necessary to understand the arguments of Simmons and the State on the dispositive point.

Simmons single indictment contained two counts. Count I charged that Simmons, “after deliberation, knowingly killed Cheri Johnson by strangling her.” Count II charged that Simmons, “after deliberation, knowingly caused the death of Leonora McClendon by strangling her.”

A.

The evidence showed that on November 30, 1987, Ms. Johnson’s neighbor reported the sounds of a violent struggle coming from the Johnson apartment. An apartment complex security guard responded, knocked on Johnson’s door and inquired as to the well-being of the apartment’s occupant. A male voice responded, “Everything’s all right. She’s asleep.” The security guard testified that he continued to knock and inquire for another ten minutes, but received no further response. The guard sought counsel from his dispatcher, who advised that if he, the guard, heard nothing further, he should continue his rounds. The guard took his leave.

The following morning, Johnson’s sister contacted the apartment complex security personnel and sought entry into Johnson’s apartment. She was accompanied to the apartment by the same security guard who had investigated the previous evening’s reported disturbances. Finding both the stereo and television on and no one home, and recalling the events of the past evening, the security guard contacted the apartment manager and suggested that she summon the police. When the police arrived, they found Johnson under a bed, lying on her stomach, a brown necktie pulled tightly around her neck. The medical examiner subsequently determined that Johnson died of a ligature strangulation and suffocation caused by the necktie knotted tightly around her throat.

B.

On October 27, 1987, a maintenance man responding to neighbors’ complaints of foul odors found the body of a black female in an advanced state of decomposition in Leo-nora McClendon’s apartment at the Lindell Towers. The body’s feet were tied at the ankles; its hands were tied behind the back. A white cloth had been placed into the mouth and forced down the throat until it reached the vocal cords. This white cloth was held in place by a black t-shirt tied tightly over the mouth. Another piece of black cloth was tied around the neck. Dental records ultimately assisted the medical examiner in identifying the victim as Leo-nora McClendon. The medical examiner testified that McClendon died of mechanical asphyxiation caused by the blockage of her *428 airway resulting from the placement of the white cloth in her mouth.

C.

Physical evidence found at the scene, which we need not detail here, and the statements of witnesses caused police to suspect Simmons’ involvement in the Johnson murder. Upon learning of the police suspicions, Simmons’ mother brought him into the police station for an interview. He received and waived Miranda warnings. The evidence and inconsistencies in Simmons’ statement led detectives to arrest Simmons and charge him with Johnson’s murder. As officers inventoried Simmons’ personal property following his arrest, they discovered three pawn tickets. The investigation revealed that the property pawned had belonged to both Johnson and McClen-don. Upon further investigation, physical evidence and witness’ testimony provided a sufficient basis for police to charge Simmons with McClendon’s murder.

Both McClendon and Johnson had dated Simmons.

II.

Section 565.004.1 provides in pertinent part: “A count charging any offense of homicide may only be charged and tried together with one or more counts of any other homicide ... when all such offenses ... constitute part of a common scheme or plan.” Simmons argues that the murders of Johnson and McClendon were not part of a common scheme or plan and that the trial court erred in overruling his Motion to Sever. The State claims that Simmons had a common scheme or plan: to murder his former girlfriends and steal their property. The existence of a common scheme or plan, the State argues, negates any error in the trial court’s decision to try the two counts together.

This Court has not previously considered the meaning of the phrase “common scheme or plan” within the context of Section 565.004.1. 1 The procedural rule the statute announces proceeds from concerns for judicial economy; liberal joinder of offenses is favored to achieve that end. State v. McCrary, 621 S.W.2d 266, 271 (Mo. banc 1981). Judicial economy is not the highest good under the statute, however; Section 565.004.1 requires that only those offenses that constitute part of a common scheme or plan may be lawfully joined.

The question whether a series of crimes proceeds from a common scheme or plan has both an evidentiary and a procedural component. The evidentiary consideration focuses on the common law rule excluding the admission of evidence of unrelated crimes to prove a defendant’s guilt of the specific crime for which he stands trial. McCrary, 621 S.W.2d at 271 n. 7. The procedural consideration “deals with the more basic question of what crimes can be charged in a proceeding” and tried together. Id. Both the evidentiary and procedural considerations proceed from a presumption that evidence of other, unrelated crimes improperly offered at a trial or the trial of two, unrelated crimes in the same proceeding have a prejudicial impact on the fundamental fairness of that proceeding. Yet, this Court correctly cautioned that “the two rules deal with different questions, making the wholesale importation of the evidentiary rule into the law dealing with joinder of offenses inappropriate.” Id.

The phrase “all such offenses ... constitute a common scheme or plan” as it applies to the procedural question at issue in this case is difficult to define with clarity.

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Bluebook (online)
815 S.W.2d 426, 1991 Mo. LEXIS 97, 1991 WL 176330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-simmons-mo-1991.