State v. Taylor

943 S.W.2d 675, 1997 Mo. App. LEXIS 213, 1997 WL 63166
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1997
DocketWD 51906
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 943 S.W.2d 675 (State v. Taylor) 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. Taylor, 943 S.W.2d 675, 1997 Mo. App. LEXIS 213, 1997 WL 63166 (Mo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

SPINDEN, Judge.

A jury convicted William Taylor of first degree murder in his wife’s death on Novem *677 ber 10, 1994. Part of the evidence used to convict him was his admission that he caused his wife’s death by running over her with a combine on the couple’s farm in Nodaway County. On appeal, he charges the circuit court with four errors: (1) not suppressing inadmissible evidence; (2) allowing inadmissible testimony by the county coroner; (3) wrongly limiting defense counsel’s cross-examination; and (4) inadequately responding to a jury question. We do not find reversible error, and we affirm the judgment of conviction.

Taylor does not dispute the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain his conviction. A jury convicted him of killing his wife, Debra Taylor. The evidence supported a theory that Taylor killed his wife by using the family’s cat to lure his wife underneath a combine and causing the combine to roll over her, but the jury also heard evidence suggesting that Taylor killed his wife before he put her body under the combine.

Taylor admitted to his brother that he had killed the eat with a hammer and threw it under the combine to lure his wife under the machine. He told his brother that he used twine to pull a lever on the combine to cause it to roll over his wife when she tried to retrieve the eat. He told his brother that he had moved the combine back from his wife’s body and hid the twine.

Taylor’s brother reported this to the sheriff who interviewed Taylor. Taylor admitted causing his wife’s death because he was depressed and believed that his wife wanted a divorce. He explained that he had intended to use twine to pull back on the combine’s hydrastat lever, but that he panicked when he saw his wife crawl under the combine. He said that he did not attempt to pull the lever to stop the combine, but that he tried to grab his wife before being run over himself. He said that he had killed the eat before putting it under the combine.

The next day, law enforcement officers returned to Taylor’s farm and took photographs and measurements, including measurements of the combine. They found a piece of twine near where Debra Taylor had been lying the previous evening. They seized the cat’s corpse.

The coroner examined the cat and found bruising on its neck. The cat’s skin was unbroken and had no other apparent sign of injury. The coroner concluded that the cat’s death resulted from being hit with a rounded object. He disposed of the corpse after examining it.

A pathologist did an autopsy on Debra Taylor the day after she died. His examination determined that a blunt force had caused lacerations to her forehead and had bruised her left eye. She had contusions on her chest, fractured ribs on the left side and a crushed pelvis. The pathologist concluded that her facial injuries were not consistent with her being run over by a combine. He opined that a blow to her face was inflicted by something other than the combine and that the blow caused her death.

In July 1995, authorities obtained a search warrant and returned to Taylor’s farm to remeasure the combine. They found the combine in a shed on property belonging to Taylor’s father, Charles Taylor, and less than a mile from William Taylor’s house. After seeing the combine in the shed, officers went to Charles Taylor’s home, gave him a copy of the warrant, and asked him to unlock the shed. Charles Taylor complied. Officers moved the combine to a nearby John Deere facility to measure it and to photograph it. They videotaped this procedure.

The state charged William Taylor with first degree murder. He presented evidence at trial but did not testify. His defense was that he suffered a delusional disorder which made him unable to appreciate the nature and wrongfidness of his actions. The jury found him guilty as charged, and the circuit court sentenced him to life in prison without probation or parole.

In his first point on appeal, Taylor complains that the circuit court did not suppress evidence obtained pursuant to the July 1995 search warrant. He does not mention in his point relied on what evidence he believes should have been suppressed. In his argument, he referred to his second motion in which he asked the court to suppress a “John Deere combine, and a videotaped demonstration, experiment, or reenactment conducted *678 with the use of said combine[.]” He attacks the search warrant on the ground that the judge who issued it had previously disqualified himself from the case. He also claims the affidavit supporting the search warrant was defective and that the seized evidence constituted “fruit of the poisonous tree.” The state responds in part that Taylor has no standing to assert that officers conducted an unreasonable search and seizure because officers seized it from the barn on the farm of Taylor’s father, not from a barn on Taylor’s property.

We need not resolve the matter because we do not discern any prejudice to Taylor. Assuming for the sake of our consideration that the warrant was defective, the state may use evidence obtained in violation of a defendant’s constitutionally-protected privacy interest if it proves that the evidence would have inevitably been discovered by lawful means. Nix v. Williams, 467 U.S. 431, 104 S.Ct. 2501, 81 L.Ed.2d 377 (1984); State v. Butler, 676 S.W.2d 809, 812 (Mo. banc 1984). Moreover, an error in the admission of evidence does not necessarily mandate a reversal of a conviction. “Only prejudicial error is reversible error.” State v. Tettamble, 720 S.W.2d 741, 742 (Mo.App.1986). If the state presented other evidence establishing essentially the same facts as the improperly admitted evidence, Taylor has suffered no prejudice and no reversible error. State v. Shaw, 915 S.W.2d 775, 783 (Mo.App.1996); State v. Garrette, 699 S.W.2d 468, 503 (Mo.App.1985).

Taylor first says that he was prejudiced because the evidence constituted “fruit of the poisonous tree” from an earlier war-rantless search declared illegal by the circuit court. The circuit court granted Taylor’s motion to suppress filed on June 2, 1995, and ordered the suppression of any evidence, including photographs, seized from Taylor’s property on November 11 and 12, 1994 (the two days immediately after the mishap), and the officers’ attempt to use twine to activate the combine.

In making his “fruit of the poisonous tree” argument, Taylor claims that the July 1995 search warrant depended on information obtained by officers during their warrantless search in November. We disagree. Before the officers’ investigation on November 11 and 12, they were aware of the combine and its involvement in Debra Taylor’s death because of the original “accident” investigation and because of Taylor’s confession. Taylor’s confession would have led the officers’ to the combine regardless of the information obtained during the warrantless search.

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Bluebook (online)
943 S.W.2d 675, 1997 Mo. App. LEXIS 213, 1997 WL 63166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-taylor-moctapp-1997.