State v. Zelinger

873 S.W.2d 656, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 583, 1994 WL 113995
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1994
Docket18215, 18963
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 873 S.W.2d 656 (State v. Zelinger) 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. Zelinger, 873 S.W.2d 656, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 583, 1994 WL 113995 (Mo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

PARRISH, Chief Judge.

Following a jury trial, Donald Ray Zelinger (defendant) was found guilty of second degree murder. § 565.021.1(1). 1 Defendant was charged as and found to be a persistent offender and sentenced to imprisonment for life without eligibility for parole for thirty years. §§ 558.016.3 and .7 and § 558.019.2, RSMo Supp.1990. Following sentencing defendant filed a Rule 29.15 motion. The motion was denied after an evidentiary hearing.

Defendant appeals the judgment and sentence in his criminal case, No. 18215, and the order denying his Rule 29.15 motion, No. 18963. The appeals were consolidated pursuant to Rule 29.15(1). This court affirms the judgment of conviction and sentence in No. 18215 and the order denying defendant’s Rule 29.15 motion in No. 18963.

The victim of the offense for which defendant was convicted was Joy Smith. Ms. Smith lived at Bois D’Arc, Missouri. She had been paraplegic since July 1990 when she was injured in an automobile accident. In May 1991 Ms. Smith went to the home of Rocky Dean Proctor and Darlene Proctor in Walnut Shade, Missouri, and asked them to come to her home and take care of her. Mr. and Mrs. Proctor agreed. They intended to stay with Ms. Smith until someone else could be found to assist her. They stayed “[probably a couple of weeks, maybe three.” Ms. Smith’s sister and the sister’s husband and children moved in with Ms. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Proctor returned to their home in Walnut Shade.

*658 On May 29,1991, the Proctors returned to Bois D’Arc to pick up their dog that was still at the Smith residence. They arrived early afternoon. Ms. Smith’s sister Debbie, her elderly Aunt Jane and some children were at the Smith residence celebrating the aunt’s birthday.

Rocky Proctor and Darlene Proctor intended to pick up their dog and return to Walnut Shade. However, once at the Smith residence, they visited “all afternoon.” While there, the Proctors, Ms. Smith and her sister drank beer, consuming “[p]robably a case,” 24 cans of beer, among them. While the Proctors were there, defendant and Danny Buehle joined the group.

Rocky Proctor had known defendant for about two years. Defendant stayed with the Proctors in Walnut Shade for two or three months before the Proctors went to Bois D’Arc to assist Joy Smith. Defendant remained in the Proctors’ house after they went to Bois D’Arc. Later, defendant came to Bois D’Arc.

Mr. and Mrs. Proctor were planning to leave when defendant and Danny Buehle arrived at Joy Smith’s residence. Buehle wanted to celebrate his upcoming birthday. He invited the Proctors to join the celebration. They accepted. Joy Smith, Rocky Proctor, Darlene Proctor, Danny Buehle and defendant left the Smith residence to travel to a bar in Springfield. Ms. Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Proctor travelled in Smith’s van. Defendant and Mr. Buehle followed in Mr. Buehle’s truck. The group went to the Pink Cadillac bar arriving in the “[e]arly evening.” They stayed at the bar two or three hours shooting pool and drinking beer. Mr. Proctor explained their departure.

Q. [by the assistant prosecuting attorney] And at the end of that time period you left?
A. Yes, we did.
Q. Do you know why you had to leave?
A. Yeah, we were asked to leave, too much to drink, really.
Q. And you left?
A. Yes, sir.

Joy Smith was loaded into her van in her wheelchair. Rocky Proctor, Darlene Proctor and defendant got into the van and left the bar’s parking lot. Mr. Proctor drove. Defendant and Ms. Smith were in the back of the van. Mr. Proctor testified:

Q. Do you recall anything unusual happening as you were driving off?
A. Yes, I do.
Q. What would that be, sir?
A. I don’t really know what they were talking about, Don and Joy, but we hadn’t gone very far when she made some sort of statement about, “The thing about running around with an SOB like you is the only thing a person has to do is call the law and you’d spend the rest of your life in prison,” something to that effect.
[[Image here]]
Q. Do you remember anything else happening after that statement was made, or hearing anything?
A. Yes, I do. I heard a shuffle, a shuffling like movement around real quick, shuffling. I remember wondering what was going on and pulling over, I don’t remember if I stopped or not, and looking back. And Don Zelinger told me to keep driving, that — he said, “_her,” he said, “I took care of her, you know, she’s nothing but a rat anyway.” ...
Q. Do you recall him telling you what he had done to her?
A. It seems like he said he choked her to death.

Darlene Proctor testified that after she and the others left the Pink Cadillac bar, Joy Smith was in the back of the van with defendant; that Ms. Smith was “cussing”; that she said “something like — something to the effect that she’d see Bear [defendant’s nickname] back in prison for the rest of his life.” Mrs. Proctor did not recall Smith’s exact words but characterized them as “something to do with — that he’d be sent back to prison for the rest of his life.” She heard a “clump” and looked in the back of the van. She saw Joy Smith laying on the floor of the van, not moving. She remembers defendant saying, “I took care of it, brother.”

Rocky Proctor drove back to Bois D’Arc. He and the other passengers returned to Joy *659 Smith’s residence. Proctor left the van in the driveway at the residence. His car was there. He tried to get his wife into his car and get his dog, a six year-old bulldog that was “kind of hard to handle,” and a dog chain that had been used to keep the dog at the Smith residence.

Defendant first pulled Joy Smith’s van to the back of the house then returned it to the front. Rocky Proctor told defendant that he was leaving, that he was going to “get the hell out of there.” Defendant told Proctor that if he was asked about Joy Smith to say she was fine the last time he saw her; that she left a bar with two people she met there. Rocky Proctor left the Smith residence in his car with Mrs. Proctor and his dog. They returned to Walnut Shade.

When the Proctors arrived at their residence in Walnut Shade, Mrs. Proctor went into the house. Mr. Proctor chained up his dog, then went inside. Rocky Proctor’s two step-daughters, Stephanie and Stacey, and Stephanie’s boyfriend, Jimmy Zimmerman, were there. Two grandchildren were also there. Rocky Proctor told Jimmy Zimmerman and Stephanie “more or less what had happened.” He told them to stay in their room.

Later, defendant arrived at the Proctors’ house in Joy Smith’s van. Mr. Proctor did not recall when defendant arrived. Defendant came into the house. He told Rocky Proctor that he needed help. Defendant said he needed to do something with Joy Smith’s body; that he needed time to think.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
873 S.W.2d 656, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 583, 1994 WL 113995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-zelinger-moctapp-1994.