State v. Smith

32 S.W.3d 532, 2000 Mo. LEXIS 74, 2000 WL 1779183
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 5, 2000
DocketSC 82000
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 32 S.W.3d 532 (State v. Smith) 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. Smith, 32 S.W.3d 532, 2000 Mo. LEXIS 74, 2000 WL 1779183 (Mo. 2000).

Opinions

COVINGTON, Judge.

Appellant, John Clayton Smith, was convicted of two counts of murder in the first degree in violation of section 565.020.1, RSMo 1994, and two counts of armed criminal action in violation of section 571.015, RSMo 1994. Appellant was sentenced to death on each count of first degree murder and to consecutive twenty-year terms on the armed criminal action counts. Appellant appeals his convictions and sentences. Affirmed.

Facts

Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, State v. Barton, 998 S.W.2d 19, 21 (Mo. banc 1999), the facts are as follows. Appellant began dating Brandie Kearnes, one of the two victims in this case, in 1995. At that time, Brandie lived near Canton with her mother, Yvonne Kurz, and her step-father, Wayne Hoewing, the other victim. While they were dating, Brandie and appellant made plans to live together. Appellant borrowed $30,000 to buy a house for himself and Brandie. Around June 1, 1997, however, Brandie terminated the relationship with appellant, after which she chose to continue living with Yvonne Kurz and Wayne Hoewing.

Later that month, appellant contacted his former -wife, Mary Smith, about visiting his children. Appellant had not visited his children for a year and a half prior to that time. Appellant visited with his children several times during June, once giving Smith some savings bonds and coin collections that he wanted the children to have.

At about 7:30 a.m. on the morning of July 4, 1997, appellant drove by O.C.’s Tavern in Canton and looked at Kearnes’s car, which had been parked in the lot next to the tavern since the night before. Approximately fifteen minutes later, appellant telephoned Smith and asked what she planned to do with the children that day. Appellant was upset. When Smith asked why, appellant replied, “Everything.” When Smith asked appellant if he was having difficulties with Brandie, he said, “Just everything. I can’t talk about it now. I gotta go,” and hung up. Sometime later during the same morning, appellant telephoned Yvonne Kurz and asked whether Brandie had come home the night before. Kurz responded that Brandie had not come home. Appellant then asked, “She is seeing someone else, isn’t she?”

Later that afternoon, appellant, after seeing Brandie driving on the highway, followed her to Brian Brooks’s house and pulled up behind her in the driveway. Brandie got out of her car and spoke to appellant for about three minutes. Appellant then left.

At 11:05 p.m., appellant purchased a twelve-pack of beer at a convenience store in Canton. The store clerk noticed that appellant was preoccupied and appeared to be in a “weird mood.” Appellant left the convenience store and, sometime after 1:48 a.m. on July 5, 1997, drove to the residence where Brandie Kearnes and Wayne Hoew-ing resided. Appellant parked his truck approximately thirty yards from the residence. Taking some of the beers with him, but not any of the three guns he had [540]*540in the truck, appellant walked around a large pond on the property and approached the residence. Appellant entered the residence through the basement door, took off his shoes, and went upstairs.

Appellant located Kearnes and began to scuffle with her in the living room and kitchen area of the house. Appellant stabbed or cut Brandie eight times during the scuffle. The wounds did not immediately cause Brandie’s death; she had time to write “It was Joh-” “I Tatú-” and “— andi s-v-T-tum” on the kitchen floor with her own blood. The last two messages referred to Tatum, Brandie’s infant daughter, who was found unharmed at the feet of Brandie’s body.

Appellant then entered the Hoewing’s bedroom and attacked Wayne, who had been awakened by the sounds of scuffling coming from the living room. Appellant got on top of Wayne on the bed and began stabbing him, inflicting eleven stab or cut wounds. Yvonne Kurz attempted to push appellant off Wayne, but appellant slashed her arm. She retreated into the bathroom and closed the door. While appellant was at the door of the bedroom, Wayne was able to gain possession of a loaded gun he kept in the house. Appellant, seeing the gun, said, “Shoot me. Go ahead and shoot me.” No shots were fired, however, and appellant left the bedroom. Kurz was eventually able to call for help from the bathroom.

Appellant then went back downstairs and left the house through the basement door after putting on his shoes. Appellant walked from the Hoewing residence to the nearby farm of Bill Lloyd, where he hid his knife under some tin and attempted to steal a tractor. After crashing the tractor into a flatbed trailer on the property, appellant fled on foot. He eventually traveled to another nearby residence, where he stole a truck and drove away. Soon thereafter appellant was apprehended after crashing the truck.

When medical personnel reached the Hoewing residence, Brandie was already dead. She had been partially stripped of her clothing. She was lying face up on the kitchen floor. Eight cut or stab wounds had been inflicted on her neck, chest, abdomen, arm, and thigh. The stab wounds to the chest punctured Brandie’s lung, and the wounds to her abdomen cut her liver and one kidney. The medical personnel treated Wayne Hoewing briefly, but soon pronounced him dead. He received eleven cut or stab wounds to the chest, arms, leg, hand, and hip. He bled to death from those wounds.

Police found several pieces of evidence at the scene of the crime. Police noticed a trail of blood left by appellant as he left the house. One of appellant’s socks was recovered from under the body of Wayne Hoewing. Police found three beer cans outside of the residence and also found the keys used by appellant to break into the house. After being apprised several days after the murders of the messages written with blood on the kitchen floor, police seized the linoleum bearing those messages. The police did not find any weapons. Later in July, however, a worker at the farm where appellant had attempted to steal the tractor found a knife hidden under some tin. The original owner of the knife identified it as the knife she had given to appellant.

At trial, appellant did not contest his identity as the killer, but he offered the testimony of Dr. Michael Stacy, who testified that appellant’s capacity to deliberate before the killings was substantially impaired. The state offered expert testimony to rebut Dr. Stacy’s diagnosis and findings. The jury found appellant guilty on both counts of murder in the first degree and both counts of armed criminal action.

During the penalty phase of the trial, the state introduced evidence of appellant’s prior violent history with women, appellant’s prior convictions for felony stealing and violating an order of protection, and the impact that the murders had on the victims’ families. Appellant presented the [541]*541testimony of Mends and family and the testimony of a mental health professional in mitigation of punishment.

After the close of the penalty phase evidence and after the instructions and arguments of counsel, the jury found the following aggravating circumstances with regard to Brandie Kearnes: that the murder of Brandie Kearnes was committed while appellant was engaged in the commission of another unlawful homicide and that her murder was committed while appellant was engaged in the perpetration of a burglary. With respect to Wayne Hoew-ing, the jury found that the same aggravating circumstances applied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 S.W.3d 532, 2000 Mo. LEXIS 74, 2000 WL 1779183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-mo-2000.