State v. Surbaugh

737 S.E.2d 240, 230 W. Va. 212, 2012 WL 5897734, 2012 W. Va. LEXIS 869
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 2012
DocketNo. 11-0561
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 737 S.E.2d 240 (State v. Surbaugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Surbaugh, 737 S.E.2d 240, 230 W. Va. 212, 2012 WL 5897734, 2012 W. Va. LEXIS 869 (W. Va. 2012).

Opinion

BENJAMIN, Justice:

This case involves the appeal of the petitioner Julia Ann Surbaugh (hereinafter “petitioner”) of her sentence of life without mercy, imposed in the Circuit Court of Webster County by order entered on June 4, 2010, as recommended by the jury which found the petitioner guilty of first degree murder. The petitioner assigned four errors committed by the trial court, including the admission of the decedent’s statements, failure to give a Harden1 instruction, failure to give a good character instruction and the failure to suppress the petitioner’s third statement to the police. For the reasons set forth herein, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court and remand this case for a new trial.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The petitioner, Julia Ann Surbaugh, was indicted by the Webster County grand jury in January of 2010, charged with the first degree murder of her husband, Michael Surbaugh. At trial, the State proceeded on a theory that the shootings were the result of Mr. Surbaugh’s intention to leave his wife to start a life with his paramour. The State also introduced evidence of a financial motivation for the killing: receipt of retirement benefits and an insurance policy. The peti[218]*218tioner argued self-defense and evidence of her good character.

On the morning of August 6, 2009, Mr. Surbaugh was shot three times in the face. The petitioner contacted 911 immediately after the shootings. In total, there were four telephone calls between the 911 dispatchers and the petitioner, or persons acting on her behalf and at her direction. In the first brief call to 911, the petitioner advised the authorities that Mr. Surbaugh was trying to shoot himself. She then hung up the telephone. The second call was initiated by the 911 dispatcher. That call was answered by the petitioner, who stated that “Mike shot himself’ before hanging up the telephone. The 911 dispatcher initiated the third call, which was answered by the petitioner. The petitioner stated again that her husband shot himself. This phone call ended when the petitioner again hung up the phone. The fourth call was initiated by the 911 dispatcher, and was answered by the petitioner’s neighbor, Ann Wilson. Ms. Wilson ended up relaying information from the petitioner to the dispatcher, including the statement that Mr. Surbaugh was trying to shoot her, and that the gun accidentally discharged and struck him. Afterward, she reported, he intentionally shot himself in the head.

Immediately after he was shot, Mr. Surbaugh was able to talk and to walk. He walked out of the home where the shooting took place, and was initially helped by the neighbor, Ann Wilson. When emergency medical personnel arrived at the Surbaugh home, the decedent was seated outside of the home, bleeding from the wounds to his face and head.2 Ms. Wilson heard Mr. Surbaugh report to the emergency medical personnel that his wife shot him. Mr. Surbaugh also requested that his two cell phones, his glasses, his wallet, his smokeless tobacco and a plastic bag be brought out of the house.

Corporal E.L. Loughridge of the West Virginia State Police assisted in the investigation of the shooting of Mr. Surbaugh. While at the scene, Cpl. Loughridge overheard Mr. Surbaugh state, to no one in particular, that “the bitch shot me.” Cpl. Loughridge testified that at the time of this statement by the decedent, he was being treated by emergency services personnel. He later heard the decedent ask for his smokeless tobacco. Mr. Surbaugh also told the investigating officer, Deputy D. Vandevender3 of the Webster County Sheriffs Department that “my wife shot me.” At the time of this statement the decedent was sitting in a lawn chair in front of his house, talking on his cell phone.

Mr. Surbaugh was medically stable at the scene, according to the trial testimony of the treating paramedic, Dan Moran. Mr. Moran testified that when he arrived at the petitioner and decedent’s home, he found Mr. Surbaugh sitting in a lawn chair in front of the house, with several penetrating wounds to the head. He was bleeding from injuries on the right and left side of his head, near his ears. Mr. Surbaugh was alert and oriented to who he was, where he was and what day it was. While Mr. Surbaugh appeared worried, he was relatively calm. Because the original dispatch message to Mr. Moran was that this was an attempted suicide, he questioned Mr. Surbaugh about what he tried to shoot himself with. Mr. Surbaugh replied that he didn’t shoot himself, but that “she did,” a phrase Mr. Moran understood to mean his wife. Mr. Moran found Mr. Surbaugh to be hemodynamically stable, with good blood pressure, good pulse rate and an appropriate level of consciousness.4

Mr. Surbaugh was transported to Webster County Memorial Hospital, where he was [219]*219treated by nurse Sara Wolverton. Nurse Wolverton testified that Mr. Surbaugh stated that he was asleep and felt as though someone had hit him in the head with a baseball bat. He spoke to the nurse about wanting to go camping and fishing, and also about his general condition, including asking whether he was going to die. Nurse Wolverton stated that she told Mr. Surbaugh that he was not going to die, because he was walking and talking when he arrived at the ER. He was also treated by physician’s assistant John Blake, who testified at trial that the decedent told him, “I’m not crazy. I didn’t do this. This bitch shot me.” While there, Mr. Surbaugh also spoke to treating physician Jamie Miller, who testified that the decedent stated that he was lying in bed asleep and he felt as though he got hit with a baseball bat.

Deputy Vandevender later went to Webster County Hospital to take a recorded statement from Mr. Surbaugh. At the time of that statement, Mr. Surbaugh was being treated in the emergency room for the gunshot wounds, and was being prepared to be flown by helicopter to a larger hospital more suited for this type of injury.5 Deputy Vandevender testified that Mr. Surbaugh stated to several different people on three to four occasions that his wife (sometimes referred to by Mr. Surbaugh as “that bitch”) shot him. The deputy later took a formal recorded statement from the decedent while he was in the emergency room, in which he repeated that his wife shot him. Mr. Surbaugh told the deputy that he had been asleep in his bed and felt as though he had been hit in the head with a bat twice. In his recorded statement to the deputy, Mr. Surbaugh said he was sound asleep in bed when he “felt like somebody hit me up beside the head with a baseball bat.” He saw the petitioner with the gun, and then took the gun from her. He did not say, however, whether the petitioner shot him. At the time of this formal statement, Mr. Surbaugh appeared to be upset and mad, and physically tired, according to the deputy.

Mr. Surbaugh died four and a half hours after being shot. The evidence adduced at trial was that Mr. Surbaugh suffered three gunshot wounds from a .22 caliber bullet directly to his face. None of the bullets penetrated his skull, but the gunshots did damage his sinus cavity area. The State presented the testimony of the medical examiner that Mr. Surbaugh’s death was a result of an air embolism caused by the gunshot wounds. The petitioner presented the testimony of another pathologist who opined that Mr. Surbaugh’s death was a result of self-inflicted gunshot wounds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
737 S.E.2d 240, 230 W. Va. 212, 2012 WL 5897734, 2012 W. Va. LEXIS 869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-surbaugh-wva-2012.