State v. Vassar

910 A.2d 1193, 154 N.H. 370, 2006 N.H. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 21, 2006
Docket2005-567
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 910 A.2d 1193 (State v. Vassar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Vassar, 910 A.2d 1193, 154 N.H. 370, 2006 N.H. LEXIS 171 (N.H. 2006).

Opinion

DALIANIS, J.

The defendant, Ethan Vassar, was convicted by a jury in Superior Court {Lynn, C.J.) of provocation manslaughter for the shooting death of his brother, Nicholas Vassar. See RSA 630:2,1 (1996). He appeals, challenging the trial court’s instruction to the jury not to consider the justification defenses of self-defense and defense of another and its failure to admit evidence of the brother’s prior violent acts. We reverse and remand.

The jury could have found the following facts. The defendant shot his brother on June 20, 2004. The events immediately leading up to the shooting were as follows. Shortly after the defendant left his house that day, his brother, who was living in a room above the garage, “stormed” into the house, “madder than hell” because the truck the defendant had started had filled the garage with fumes. He began “yelling and hollering and raging” at his mother. She soon left the bouse to do errands. Upon her return, the brother again “stormed” into the house and demanded that she give him money. After she gave him money, the mother felt scared because she thought it likely that he would go drinking.

By this time, the defendant had returned to the house. The mother warned the defendant to stay away from his brother as he was “not in a good mood.” She also asked the defendant several times if he knew what his brother was doing and where his brother’s guns were. She was afraid and told the defendant that she was going to hide upstairs.

*372 The defendant went upstairs to use the computer in his mother’s room. While upstairs, he heard a door slam and his brother return to the house. He heard shouting. The brother again started “yelling” and “raging” at the mother, grabbed her by the shoulders and demanded that she give him money. The mother started up the stairs, but the brother “tore pas[t]” her stating: “[Wjhere do you think you’re going, oh you think you are going to bed, well, let me get it ready for you.” The brother then kicked down the door to her room, separating it from its casing. As the defendant testified, the door “blew off its hinges.” The brother then shoved things around in the room and “growled” at the defendant. The mother testified that in addition to the door being “smashed from its casing,” her bed was pulled away from the wall leaving scrape marks on the floor and the brass footboard bent over. The defendant, who watched his brother do these things, testified that his brother looked “[sjcary, worse than I had ever seen him.”

When the mother saw what the brother had done to her room, she retreated downstairs. He followed her. While downstairs, he smashed a chair and began punching a beam. He held onto his mother’s shoulders and forced her to walk backwards around the beam he had been punching, occasionally waving his fist in front of her face. After some time the brother released his mother and she sobbed on the couch while he continued to berate her for approximately a half hour. He shouted about money, wanting her respect, and killing her and the defendant, as well as any “cops [that] showed up.” Finally, he left for the garage and as he was heading to the door she heard him say: “I’m going to kill you and I’m going to kill Ethan. I’m going to kill the cops too.”

The defendant was upstairs listening, while this was occurring. As he listened, he felt “sick.” The defendant heard his mother “begging for her life,” something he had never heard before. He was afraid she was going to be killed.

The defendant did not feel relieved when his brother left for the garage. As he testified:

Q. Did you feel relieved when you heard him leave?
A. No.
Q. Why not?
A. Because I thought that he would be right back.
Q. Why did you think that?
A. To be honest, I thought he was going to get his gun, come right back and kill my mother.
*373 Q. Why did you think that?
A. Because of what he said, that he was going to kill her.

Because he was concerned that “[his] mother was about to die,” the defendant followed his brother to the garage “in order to stop him” from “com[ing] right back ... in the house and potentially killing [the] mother.” The defendant testified that he went to the garage approximately twenty seconds after the brother left for it. The defendant took a gun with him “to protect [his] mother.” He knew that his brother kept a gun in his garage room. When he entered the room, he could not see his brother’s hands and, thus, could not tell if his brother had a weapon in his hands. His brother was “crouching low” behind a table. The defendant fired five to six shots at his brother, causing his death. He testified, “I saw Nick and I was too scared to really think about anything at that point other than trying to protect my mother and I shot him.”

The State charged the defendant with first-degree murder, alleging that he purposefully caused the death of his brother by shooting him multiple times with a handgun. The trial court instructed the jury not to consider the defenses of self-defense and defense of another. In addition the trial court excluded evidence of the brother’s prior violent acts, which the defendant had argued were relevant to his justification defenses.

I. Jury Instructions

The defendant first argues that he should have been permitted to raise the defense of justification at trial because there was sufficient evidence to support a rational finding that he reasonably believed that his brother was about to kill him and his mother. The State argues that the evidence was insufficient to support such a finding.

We review the trial court’s decision not to give a jury instruction for an unsustainable exercise of discretion. State v. Lavoie, 152 N.H. 542, 547 (2005). The trial court must grant a defendant’s requested jury instruction on a specific defense if there is some evidence to support a rational finding in favor of that defense. Id. By “some evidence,” we mean that there must be more than a minutia or scintilla of evidence. Id. In reviewing the trial court’s refusal to give a requested self-defense instruction, we search the record for evidence supporting the defendant’s request, State v. Chen, 148 N.H. 565, 569 (2002), including evidence that the brother was “about to use unlawful, deadly force.” RSA 627:4, II (1996). RSA 627:4, II provides in part:

A person is justified in using deadly force upon another person when he reasonably believes that such other person:
*374 (a) Is about to use unlawful, deadly force against the actor or a third person.

A belief which is unreasonable, even though honest, will not support the defense. State v. Holt, 126 N.H. 394,397 (1985).

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Bluebook (online)
910 A.2d 1193, 154 N.H. 370, 2006 N.H. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vassar-nh-2006.