Stone v. State

94 So. 3d 1078, 2012 Miss. LEXIS 325, 2012 WL 2433519
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 2012
DocketNo. 2010-KA-01722-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 94 So. 3d 1078 (Stone v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. State, 94 So. 3d 1078, 2012 Miss. LEXIS 325, 2012 WL 2433519 (Mich. 2012).

Opinions

RANDOLPH, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Ted W. Stone was convicted of the aggravated assault of Carolyn Stone and was sentenced to twenty years’ incarceration and a $4,000 fine. Having carefully considered the record and the briefs filed on behalf of Ted Stone and the State, we discern no error. Accordingly, we affirm Stone’s conviction and sentence.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Ted Stone (“Stone”), Kay Stone Hill, and Carolyn Stone are the children of Seretha Stone. A grand jury indicted Stone for the aggravated assault of Carolyn Stone on July 26, 2010. Stone’s jury trial began on October 5, 2010, in Itawam-ba County Circuit Court. Due to prior threats and assaults, Carolyn previously had obtained a restraining order requiring Stone to stay off her property. However, on June 7, 2010, Stone entered Carolyn’s house.

¶ 3. Carolyn, Kay, and Seretha testified to the following events: Stone pushed his way past Seretha and into the house. Once in the house, he sat in a chair in the living room. Carolyn then entered the room and stood behind a recliner. Seretha left the room to avoid interfering in the conversation between Carolyn and Stone. Without provocation, Stone began beating Carolyn with his walking cane. Upon hearing a noise in the living room, Seretha returned to see Stone beating Carolyn. Seretha grabbed the cane and tried to take it away from Stone. As she was pulling on the cane, the rubber tip came off. Kay attempted to thwart the attack by striking Stone with a cordless telephone. Stone pushed her into a chair. Kay ran outside and called the police. Seretha testified that, after the scuffle, Stone “turned around and left and we called 911[,]” but that the police were already on their way because of Kay’s call.1 Carolyn testified that, when Stone stopped beating her, she ran from the living room into a bedroom and attempted to call the police, but was too dazed to operate the phone. Carolyn testified that Stone then walked into the bedroom and told her: “I will visit my mother in this house any time I want to. Do you understand?” and then left.

¶ 4. Stone offered a different account at trial. He testified that Seretha allowed him to enter the house. He sat in a chair in the living room, and was talking with Kay when Carolyn entered the room and began berating Seretha for allowing Stone to enter the house and arguing with Stone about the ownership of the house. Carolyn initiated the violence when she picked up the cordless phone and began striking Stone with it. He told her to stop, but she continued. He hit a footstool with his cane, at which point he conjectured thát the cane’s rubber tip must have fallen off. He then hit Carolyn “as hard as [he] could” in an attempt to get her away from him. He then agreed to leave, and, as he was limping out with his cane, Carolyn pushed him. As he was falling, he again hit her with the cane, this time causing her head to bleed. He testified that he awoke on the floor some time later and left the house immediately.

¶ 5. Carolyn also testified that, between 2002 and 2005, Stone had slapped her; hit her in the face with a flyswatter; held a baseball bat over her head while she was in bed while threatening to “beat [her] to a pulp” and kill her; and threatened to stalk, kill, and beat her with a hammer. In January 2005, Carolyn obtained a restraining order prohibiting Stone from entering [1081]*1081her property. She testified that she and her mother actively avoided Stone — locking their doors and staying out of the front yard to avoid seeing Stone if he drove by — and, thus, hadn’t seen much of Stone for the five months before the assault. As a result, Carolyn was surprised and scared when she saw him in her living room on June 7.

¶ 6. At trial, the State sought to introduce into evidence Stone’s multiple threats and attacks of Carolyn to prove motive, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, and absence of mistake or accident. The State asserted that evidence of these threats and prior assaults was necessary to reveal the complete story of the crime for which Stone was being tried. The trial court agreed, and, after determining that the evidence was more probative than prejudicial, allowed the State to introduce evidence of Stone’s prior bad acts. After the State had presented its case in chief, Stone’s counsel moved for a directed verdict, arguing only that the State had not proven that Stone had manifested indifference to human life. The trial judge denied the motion for a directed verdict. After receiving proper instruction from the court, the jury returned a guilty verdict of aggravated assault. Stone was sentenced to twenty years, with four years suspended, and a fine of $4,000. The court denied Stone’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

ISSUES

¶ 7. Stone’s appellate counsel raised the following issues:

(1)Whether the trial court erred in denying Stone’s motion for a directed verdict, because the State did not present sufficient evidence for the jury to find Stone guilty of aggravated assault.
(2)Whether the trial court erred in admitting evidence of Stone’s prior bad acts.

¶ 8. Subsequently, Stone filed an inartful pro-se supplemental brief. Stone apologized “to the Court ... for [his] inclusion of facts which may be deemed inadmissible in consequence of their absence from the record.... ” The supplemental brief raised four issues:

(1) “Ineffectual Assistance of Counsel” for trial counsel’s failure to seek a change of venue, failure to challenge an ex-parte order excusing Assistant District Attorney Dennis Farris from testifying, failure to subpoena several witnesses that Stone had requested be called, and failure to subpoena Stone’s medical records.
(2) A claimed Miranda2 violation related to Stone’s apology to Carolyn during his preliminary hearing, a recording of which was admitted at trial and played for the jury.
(3) “There was no use of a ‘deadly weapon’ nor intent to inflict ‘serious bodily injury.’ ”
(4) “Illegal and disparate sentence.”

ANALYSIS

I. Standards of Review

¶ 9. “This Court reviews the denial of a motion for a directed verdict de novo.” Parker v. State, 30 So.3d 1222, 1231 (Miss.2010) (citation omitted). This Court applies an abuse-of-discretion standard when reviewing a trial judge’s decision regarding the admission or exclusion of evidence. Hargett v. State, 62 So.3d 950, 952 (Miss.2011).

¶ 10. First, we direct our attention to the pro-se claims.

[1082]*1082II. Stone’s ineffective-assistance claim contains numerous facts outside the record.

¶ 11. We decline to address Stone’s ineffective-assistance claim, because it contains numerous allegations outside the record. This Court has long held that it cannot consider that which is not in the record. See, e.g., State v. Cummings, 203 Miss. 583, 591, 35 So.2d 636, 639 (Miss.1948) (“[b]eing an appellate court, we take the record as it comes to us, and receive no new evidence here.”) (citations omitted); Pratt v. Sessums, 989 So.2d 308, 309-10 (Miss.2008) (“[w]e cannot consider evidence that is not in the record.”) (citation omitted).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 So. 3d 1078, 2012 Miss. LEXIS 325, 2012 WL 2433519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-state-miss-2012.