State v. Steele

586 P.2d 1274, 120 Ariz. 462, 1978 Ariz. LEXIS 304
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1978
Docket4141
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 586 P.2d 1274 (State v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Steele, 586 P.2d 1274, 120 Ariz. 462, 1978 Ariz. LEXIS 304 (Ark. 1978).

Opinion

CAMERON, Chief Justice.

Defendant David Ralph Steele was adjudged guilty of second degree murder (A.R.S. §§ 13-451, 452) following trial to a jury in. the Superior Court of Maricopa County. He was sentenced to serve not less than ten nor more than ten and one-half years in the Arizona State Prison. He appeals from the jury verdict and judgment. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to Rule 47(e)(5), Rules of the Supreme Court, 17A A.R.S.

Defendant raises four issues on appeal. Since the matter will have to be reversed as to one of the issues and we do not find error in the other questions, we will consider only two of the issues raised:

1. Whether the display and admission of the decedent’s bloody shirt was so prejudicial as to overcome its probative value.
2. Whether there was reversible error in the instruction given on self-defense.

The charges against defendant Steele arose out of a fatal shooting which took place on 26 May 1976 outside a bar, Kathy’s Cocktails, owned by the defendant and his wife and located in north central Phoenix.

Although the testimony is conflicting, it appears that the decedent, Felix Eugene Helmick, Jr., had been a regular customer of the bar for two or three months and was on friendly terms with the defendant who frequently worked as bartender in the establishment. On 26 May 1976, Helmick first entered the bar in the early afternoon and had one drink, a tequila sunrise, departing from his usual beer. About half an hour later, after playing on a pinball machine and finishing his drink, he left.

*463 Helmick returned to Kathy’s Cocktails shortly after five p. m. that afternoon. This time Helmick was drinking gin and grapefruit juice. He alternated between standing at the bar and playing the pinball machine over the next hour while consuming three drinks. There was discussion with patrons of the bar about Helmick’s new sunglasses which apparently had been expensive and which he claimed to have lost.

Helmick then demanded the sunglasses from the defendant. The defendant showed Helmick a pair of sunglasses which were lying on the counter but Helmick said they weren’t his and renewed his demands. The defendant told Helmick that if he didn’t calm down the police would have to be called. While in the process of dialing the number of the police, Helmick became quiet and the defendant hung up the phone without completing the call. After a brief interval, Helmick resumed his demands. This time he also pounded on the counter. Defendant Steele again said he would call the police and Helmick told him to go ahead. Helmick also threatened to “tear the place apart” if his sunglasses were not returned to him. As Steele was dialing the phone, Helmick threw a glass and an ashtray behind the counter, breaking some glasses and at least one bottle of liquor. When Steele reached the police department, he asked to have someone come out to the bar because there was a drunk there who was “tearing the place up.”

Helmick started out the door about the time Steele finished the call to the police. Steele went into the back room and got a gun. He came back into the bar and followed Helmick out the door with the gun in his right hand. Defendant was heard to say “Hold it right there” as he went out the door.

Steele testified that he had several concerns when he followed Helmick out the door: to obtain payment for drinks and damage to the bar, to keep Helmick there until the police arrived, and to alleviate his concern that Helmick might return with a gun that Steele testified he believed Hel-mick carried in his car. Finally, Steele testified that he was concerned about letting Helmick drive a car in his obviously intoxicated condition. Steele also testified that he did not take the gun with the intention of shooting Helmick and that at no time did he bear any hostility or ill-will toward Hel-mick.

Steele testified that when he got outside, he noticed Helmick getting into Helmick’s car. Steele walked up to the driver’s side and rapped on the window to get Helmick’s attention. Helmick, who was hunched over with his hands at his feet, ignored Steele so Steele rapped on the window with the butt of his gun. Helmick sat up and Steele told him that he couldn’t leave without paying. Helmick responded by opening the door and getting out of the car. Steele testified that his action knocked him to the ground and that an enraged Helmick came after him in a threatening manner. Steele began backing up and told Helmick to stop or he would shoot. When Helmick failed to stop, Steele fired a warning shot at his feet. Helmick continued to come after him, now hunched over. Steele tripped over the carpeting on the sidewalk in front of the bar, fell, caught himself with his left hand and instinctively pointed the gun at Helmick and fired. Steele testified that at the time he fired he feared for his life.

Defendant’s testimony was not supported by two others who witnessed part of the scene outside. Joan Gehon, a waitress at El Mirasol, heard yelling outside and went to the window of the restaurant to see what was happening. She testified that both men were standing still and that Steele was doing all of the talking. At one point, Helmick saw her and made a motion with his hand indicating that Steele had a gun. Called away by her customers she had turned from the window and was walking toward them when she heard the first shot which was followed by another two or three seconds later.

The second witness, Janell Lester, was driving by the bar westbound on Camelback *464 Road when her attention was caught by the sound of a gunshot. When she first looked, she was slightly to the east of the two men. She said that the two men she saw were facing each other. Both men were standing when she first looked but the one she identified as the defendant fell after the second shot was fired. Since she could not see the other man at this point, she at first assumed that the defendant was the one who was injured.

After the shooting, defendant Steele walked back into the bar and called the police again. As he walked toward the phone, someone asked if he had shot Hel-mick and he replied, “Damn right I did.” He told the police that he had shot the man that he had called about earlier. Defendant cooperated with the police investigation of the shooting.

Trial before a jury commenced on 24 November 1976 and a verdict of guilty was returned on 7 December 1976. A judgment of guilty to second degree murder and a sentence of not less than ten nor more than ten and one-half years in the Arizona State Prison were pronounced on 7 January 1977. Defendant appeals.

WHETHER DECEDENT’S BLOODY SHIRT SHOULD HAVE BEEN ADMITTED

Over defendant’s objection, the State offered into evidence the bloodstained shirt worn by the decedent at the time of the shooting. Defendant argues that this was an abuse of discretion and reversible error because the prejudice created by the display of the shirt to the jury overcomes its probative value. We agree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
586 P.2d 1274, 120 Ariz. 462, 1978 Ariz. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-steele-ariz-1978.