State v. Westfall

75 S.W.3d 278, 2002 WL 1071925
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 28, 2002
DocketSC 84078
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 75 S.W.3d 278 (State v. Westfall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Westfall, 75 S.W.3d 278, 2002 WL 1071925 (Mo. 2002).

Opinions

RONNIE L. WHITE, Judge.

Reginald Westfall appeals from the trial court’s judgment convicting him of first-degree assault and armed criminal action for which he was sentenced to two concurrent twenty-year terms in prison.1 The judgments as to these convictions are reversed and the case is remanded.2

I.

After completing a job interview on the morning of February 2, 1999, Westfall walked to St. Pius School, which one of his daughters attended. According to West-fall, he saw his car, which appeared to be vacant, parked in the school parking lot. [280]*280He entered the front passenger side of the vehicle intending to wait there until his wife returned. Westfall and his wife were separated but their marriage had not been dissolved.

At trial Westfall would testify that as he entered the car he discovered Robert Jenkins, a man his wife had been seeing at various times during their separation, in the driver’s seat leaning over into the rear seat. An altercation between the two men broke out after Westfall told Jenkins to get out of his car. Westfall claimed that Jenkins ended up kneeling over him in the front passenger seat, which had collapsed into the back seat, while beating him with what felt like a hard object. Westfall testified that in self-defense he pulled a carpet knife out of his overalls and blindly struck out with it cutting Jenkins several times around the head and neck in an attempt to “get him off me.” Jenkins fled.

Jenkins’s version of the event was that Westfall got into the car stating, “I’m going to teach you about messing with my wife,” and that he then started cutting him. Jenkins testified that Westfall was the initial aggressor and it was only after Westfall attacked him with the carpet knife that he fought back.

The jury found Westfall guilty of first-degree assault and armed criminal action in connection with the fight. On appeal Westfall argues that the trial court erred in refusing to tender his proposed self-defense instruction, with respect to the first-degree assault charge, and for failing to conduct a hearing on newly discovered evidence demonstrating perjury in Jenkins and his wife’s testimony. This Court granted transfer. Mo. Const, article V, section 10.

II.

The Court will reverse due to instructional error “if there is error in submitting an instruction and prejudice to the defendant.”3 To ascertain whether or not the omission of language from an instruction is error, the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the defendant and “the theory propounded by the defendant.” 4 If the evidence tends to establish the defendant’s theory, or supports differing conclusions, the defendant is entitled to an instruction on it.5

The general rule is that an instruction must be based upon substantial evidence and the reasonable inferences therefrom.6 Substantial evidence of self-defense requiring instruction may come from the defendant’s testimony alone as long as the testimony contains some evidence tending to show that he acted in self-defense.7 Moreover, an instruction on [281]*281self-defense must be given when substantial evidence is adduced to support it, even when that evidence is inconsistent with the defendant’s testimony.8 Even if no objection is made, the failure to instruct upon a defense supported by the evidence is plain error affecting substantial rights.9 This Court has also recognized that jury instruction, as to all potential convictions and defenses, is so essential to ensure a fair trial that if a reasonable juror could draw inferences from the evidence presented the defendant is not required to put on affirmative evidence to support a given instruction.10

The MAI self-defense instruction provides a selection of four formats with differing language to be used depending upon the evidence in any particular case. The instruction language proposed by Westfall, and refused by the trial court, must be used when “there is an issue as to whether the defendant used deadly force,” and it authorized the jury to find that he used self-defense based on either the use of non-deadly force or deadly force.11 The trial court, however, instructed the jury with the formatted language used only “when the evidence is clear that deadly force was used by the defendant and there is no dispute as to that issue,”12 and the language used in that format predetermines for the jury that deadly force was used. Westfall claims that the evidence supports a factual dispute as to if deadly force was used and that the failure to give his tendered instruction was reversible error.

The heart of the matter is a factual question. Whether Westfall’s use of the carpet knife during the physical altercation with Jenkins was “deadly force,” or if [282]*282Westfall’s actions, several quick strikes with the knife inflicting superficial wounds around the face and neck, could constitute non-deadly force, or “physical force,” for purposes of the alternative self-defense instruction? The distinction is critical because the standard for justifying non-deadly self-defense is much lower.

Section 563.031.1 authorizes the use of physical force when and to the extent a person reasonably believes such force is necessary to defend from what that person reasonably believes to be the use or imminent use of unlawful force by the other person. In contrast, deadly force may only be used in self-defense when necessary to protect oneself against death or serious physical injury.13 The use of deadly force also requires “[sjome affirmative action, gesture, or communication by the person feared, indicating the immediacy of the danger, the ability to avoid it, and the necessity of using deadly force.”14

“Deadly force” includes physical force that a defendant uses either with the purpose of causing or with knowledge it will “create a substantial risk of causing death or serious physical injury.”15 “Serious physical injury” is statutorily defined as “physical injury that creates a substantial risk of death or that causes serious disfigurement or protracted loss or impairment of the function of any part of the body.”16 “[Tjhe question of whether deadly force was used depends not only on the amount of force used but also on the defendant’s purpose to cause, or awareness of the likelihood of causing, death or serious physical injury.”17

While not arguing for a per se rule that use of a knife automatically equates with the use of deadly force, the State urges that Westfall used the carpet knife intentionally to direct the blows to Jenkins’s face and throat knowingly creating a substantial risk of death or serious injury. The State contends that the lacerations produced by Westfall resulted in facial scarring constituting “serious disfigurement” for purposes of the definition of “serious physical injury” and that their location proves the injuries were life-threatening. The State maintains this evidence unequivocally establishes that West-fall used deadly force and that no alternative instruction was required. It seeks support for its theories based upon analogy to prior case precedent, relying particularly on State v.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W.3d 278, 2002 WL 1071925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-westfall-mo-2002.