State v. William Stockwell

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 1, 2010
Docket01C01-9709-CR-00438
StatusPublished

This text of State v. William Stockwell (State v. William Stockwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. William Stockwell, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE FILED AUGUST SESSION, 1998 November 4, 1998

Cecil W. Crowson STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) Appellate Court Clerk C.C.A. NO. 01C01-9709-CR-00438 ) Appellee, ) ) ) WILSON COUNTY VS. ) ) HON. J.O. BOND WILLIAM D. STOCKWELL, ) JUDGE ) Appe llant. ) (Direct Appeal - First Degree M urder)

FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:

B. F. LOWERY JOHN KNOX WALKUP Public Square, Lowery Bldg. Attorney General and Reporter Lebanon, TN.. 37087 TIMOTHY F. BEHAN Assistant Attorney General 425 5th Avenu e North Nashville, TN. 37243

TOM P. THOMPSON, JR. District Attorney General

ROBERT HIBBETT Assistant District Attorney 111 Cherry Street Lebanon, TN. 37087

OPINION FILED ________________________

AFFIRMED

JERRY L. SMITH, JUDGE OPINION

On Decem ber 19, 1 996, a W ilson Co unty jury found Appella nt, William D.

Stock well, guilty of first degree murder in the death of his newborn son. The trial

court immediately imp osed a sen tence of life im prison men t. Appe llant ap peals

from his conviction, raising three issues:

1) whether the evidence was sufficient to support a conviction for first degree m urder; 2) whether the trial court erred in failing to make a conclusive determination of the voluntariness and admiss ibility of Appellan t’s alleged c onfess ion prior to the submission of the statement to the jury; and 3) whether the trial court erred in allowin g the Sta te to introdu ce into evidence the involun tary statem ent of Appellant as well as the testimony of Detective David K enned y at the trial con cerning the taking of the state ment.

After a revie w of the re cord, we affirm the ju dgme nt of the trial co urt.

FACTS

On Thursday, May 11, 1995, Appellant received a call from his girlfriend,

Lisa Murphy, at approximately 6:45 in the morning. Ms. Murphy, who Appellant

knew to be pregnant with his child, called to say that her water had broken.

Appellant went to Ms. Murphy’s house and picked up Ms. Murphy and her

younger sister. T he co uple transported Ms. Murphy’s sister to school. Appellant

then took Ms. Murphy to a farm that his parents owned on Sherrilltown Road. He

left her the re in an old decrepit travel trailer, and returned home so that no one

would notice that Ms. Murphy did not go to school. He returned to the farm,

repor tedly around 9:00 am, to find Ms. Murphy in labor. The couple delivered the

baby in the floor of the trailer.

-2- Accord ing to Ms. Murph y, the baby was born alive, tho ugh A ppella nt told

her the cord was around the infa nt’s neck during delivery. Ms. Mu rphy tied o ff the

child’s cord with thread and cut the cord with scissors she had with her. She

reported that the child cried as it was delivered and w as a purplish-red dish color.

She further testified that Appellant took the child from her, wrap ped it in a jac ket,

and took it to his truck, where there was a heater. He came back to the trailer and

helped her to the truck where she sat and held the infant. She testified that the

infant cried and slept, breathing normally. The couple discussed what to do with

the child; they co nsidere d taking it so mew here an d leaving it, but de cided it would

event ually be traced back to them. Ms. Murphy reported that Appellant several

times mentioned the possibility of burying the child. The two discussed their

dilemma for 15 to 20 minutes, and then Appellant got out of the truck, took a

shove l, and we nt into the barn. When Appellant returned from the barn, he took

the baby fr om M s. Mur phy an d carrie d it into the barn. Ms. Murphy testified that

the baby cried as Appellant carried it. Appellant returned in a few minutes without

the baby, telling Ms. Murphy that the baby had died.

The couple spent the rest of the day together, acting as if nothing out of the

ordinary had occurred. T hey went shopping and then had dinner with Ms.

Murph y’s family.

According to Appellant, the baby was born with the cord around its neck.

In a statement made at the time of his arrest, he stated that he thought that

perhaps the child moved a little. He said that it seeme d that the baby w as alive

when Ms. M urphy cut the cord, b ut it was blue in color. He testified at trial that he

attempted to revive the infant by placing his finger in the baby’s mouth and trying

-3- to clear its throat. He stated that both he and Ms. Murphy determined that the

baby was dead, and that they jointly decided that the baby should be buried.

Appe llant adm itted to digg ing a gra ve and b urying the baby.

When Ms. Mu rphy return ed to sch ool the M onday fo llowing the birth, a

teacher noticed th at she w as no lon ger preg nant. The teacher asked a friend of

Ms. Murphy’s, Judy Williams, if Ms. Murphy had delivered the baby. Ms. Williams

responded that the baby had died after being born with the cord around it’s neck.

The teacher went to the school principal who called law enforcement. The

detective assigned to the case wired Ms. Williams in order to tape a conversation

between her and Ms. Murphy regarding what had occurred. The taped

conversation was o nly par tially aud ible, bu t Ms. W illiams reported that Ms.

Murphy told her that the baby boy wa s buried in a barn in Cherry Valley. O fficers

determined that Appellant’s parents owned the property described and obtained

permis sion to se arch the property. T he officers located th e buried infant.

An autopsy performed by the County Medical Examiner revealed that the

child was full term and properly developed. The child’s esophagus, trachea, and

stomach containe d liquefied brown ish gre y dirt. Th e child ’s lung s floate d very w ell

in water, which the medical examiner testified indicated that the chid had been

born alive. The bronchi of the child’s lungs were blocked with a brown mate rial,

and the alveoli contained “brown amorphous aspirated material,” which was

consistent with the mate rial in the child’s s toma ch. Th e me dical examiner

determined that the ca use of de ath was “mech anical airw ay obstru ction due to

inhalation and ingestion of dirt.” The Federal Bureau of Investigation lab

-4- determined that the soil recovered from the infant was consistent with soil from

the child’s grave.

Detective Kennedy observed the autopsy of the baby, after which he

returned to the Sheriff’s office and re-read the statements by Ms. Murphy and

Appe llant. Upon reading them, he decided to again qu estion A ppellant a s to

whether the baby had been alive. At app roximately 1:00 in the morning, D etective

Kennedy awoke Appellant and led him to an interrogation room for further

questioning. Appella nt signed a rights wa iver. Detec tive Kenn edy testified that

Appellant then told him he wished to change his statement to reflect that the baby

was alive at the time he buried it. Detective Kennedy stated that he wrote out the

statement for Appellant, but Appellant refused to sign the stateme nt. Detective

Kennedy testified that he told Appellant that he, Detective Kenne dy, would testify

as to wh at Appe llant had to ld him ev en if App ellant did n ot sign the statem ent.

Appellan t’s version of that night’s eve nts differed from tha t of Detective

Kennedy significantly. He testified that Detective Kennedy asked him if he wanted

to change any part of his statement and that he responded that he did not. He

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State v. William Stockwell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-william-stockwell-tenncrimapp-2010.