State v. Triplett

421 S.E.2d 511, 187 W. Va. 760, 1992 W. Va. LEXIS 133
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1992
Docket20172
StatusPublished
Cited by123 cases

This text of 421 S.E.2d 511 (State v. Triplett) 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. Triplett, 421 S.E.2d 511, 187 W. Va. 760, 1992 W. Va. LEXIS 133 (W. Va. 1992).

Opinion

WORKMAN, Justice:

This case is before the Court upon the appeal of Donald Wayne Triplett from a March 21, 1990, final order denying post-trial motions and imposing a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. On March 16, 1990, a jury found the appellant guilty of first degree murder without a recommendation of mercy for the November 23, 1989, murder of Jeffrey Dean Houck. The appellant alleges that the following errors were committed by the lower court: 1) the circuit court erred in refusing to grant the defense motions for acquittal and for a new trial for the conviction of first degree murder on the grounds that there was insufficient evidence of premeditation or malice to support a conviction for murder; 2) the circuit court erred in permitting Dr. Sopher, the medical examiner, to testify repeatedly in areas outside his field of expertise and to testify to the “impossibility” of accidental death and to the ultimate issue; 3) the cumulative effect of several errors committed by the circuit court dealing with the taking of notes by jurors, failure to require the State to furnish discovery material, permitting the prosecutor to make improper jury argument, refusal to set aside the jury’s recommendation of no mercy and the giving and refusal of certain instructions, was to deny due process to the defendant; and 4) the defendant was denied his right to effective assistance of counsel in the representation rendered by the assistant public defender. Upon a review of the record, the arguments of the parties and all other matters submitted before this Court, we find no error was committed by the trial court and affirm the conviction.

On November 24, 1989, the defendant was with the nineteen-year-old victim Jeffrey Houck, seventeen-year-old Curtis Goff and Michael Hamrick, an adult. Michael Hamrick testified that the defendant was driving them around to various establishments and obtaining alcohol for Hamrick, Houck and Goff to consume. The evidence indicated that the defendant was neither drinking nor taking drugs. Around 9:00 p.m., the defendant took them to a convenience store, where he went in to buy beer.

Hamrick testified that while the defendant was in the store, the victim, Houck, moved the defendant’s car around to the side of the convenience store. Houck was playing a joke on the defendant when he moved the car. Hamrick’s testimony indicated that when the defendant discovered that Houck had moved his car, he got mad and the defendant and Houck proceeded to argue.

Shortly after 9:00 p.m., the group left the convenience store and, according to Ham-rick, the victim punched the defendant while he was driving and then told the defendant to pull the car over off the road. The victim proceeded to tell the defendant that “he was going to whip his [the defendant’s] butt.” Once the car was off the road, the victim grabbed the car keys and jumped out of the car first. Hamrick indicated that the victim did not have a bottle of beer in his hands when he got out of the car. 1 The significance of the beer bottle was that the defendant claimed in his pretrial statement that the victim could have had a beer bottle when he got out of the car, but that the defendant didn’t know for certain. The defendant got out of the car on the driver’s side and walked around the back of the car and back up to where the victim was standing, outside the front passenger side of the car.

*764 Hamrick testified that although he did. not see the actual infliction of the fatal wound, he did observe that before there was time for any conversation between the victim and the defendant, the defendant went forward and the victim hit the ground. Hamrick’s testimony revealed he got out of the car and observed blood coming from the victim. At this point, Ham-rick indicated that a car with three boys in it stopped to help, and the boys helped put Houck into the defendant’s car. The defendant then drove Houck, along with Ham-rick and Goff, to the emergency room of Appalachian Hospital.

Before a member of the Raleigh County Sheriff’s Department arrived at the hospital, Hamrick testified that the defendant concocted a lie to tell the authorities concerning the circumstances surrounding the victim’s injury. According to Hamrick, they agreed to tell the authorities that they were on the road at the Crossroads Mall when a vehicle pulled up next to them and one of the occupants of the other car “gave the finger and we pulled off and they got out and a dude supposedly stabbed him_” This concocted story was relayed to Detective Bolen by the defendant on November 23, 1989, in the defendant’s statement to the police which was also admitted in evidence.

Curtis Goff, also present at the time of the incident, corroborated the testimony given by Michael Hamrick. Additionally, the three good Samaritans, Robert Hoppe, Scott Williams and James Rhodes, who stopped to offer assistance when they saw the victim lying on the side of the road, testified. Robert Hoppe indicated that as soon as they finished helping place the victim into the car, the driver drove away. The three good Samaritans tried to follow the car but lost it. They eventually located the victim and the other men at Appalachian Hospital, according to Hoppe.

Next, Detective Arthur R. Bolen, a deputy sheriff with the Raleigh County Sheriff’s Department, testified that he interviewed the defendant when he arrived at the hospital and that the defendant did not appear to be intoxicated. The detective testified that he put out a radio broadcast seeking the apprehension of three individuals in a light-colored car based upon the statement given to him by the defendant.

The detective then went to the crime scene described by the defendant, where blood samples, cigarette butts, a purple lighter and a Budweiser beer bottle were collected as physical evidence. Detective Bolen requested that the defendant, Ham-rick and Goff accompany him to the crime scene in order to help identify the area and the evidence seized.

The detective further testified that around noon on November 24, 1989, the defendant, accompanied by his mother, gave a second statement to the police, after being advised of his Miranda 2 rights. In this second statement, the defendant admitted that the first statement was a lie. The defendant stated that he pulled a knife on the victim because he was scared of him, but that the victim somehow accidentally fell on the knife. The defendant was adamant that he never intended to harm the victim. Additionally, the defendant’s mother gave the police a butterfly knife which was determined to be the murder weapon. The knife was admitted in evidence at trial.

Finally, Dr. Irvin M. Sopher, the Chief Medical Examiner for the State of West Virginia, testified that the victim had a blood alcohol level of 0.22%. Further, the cause of death, according to Dr. Sopher, was “a stab wound of the chest which more specifically entered his heart and caused him to bleed externally and internally....” The doctor also testified that “a very forceful thrust” was required to inflict the four to five inch wound into the victim. The doctor’s testimony finally revealed that it was not possible for the victim to have received the fatal wound by falling upon the knife.

The defense was accidental killing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
421 S.E.2d 511, 187 W. Va. 760, 1992 W. Va. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-triplett-wva-1992.