Victoria Swanagan v. State of Mississippi

229 So. 3d 698
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 2017
DocketNO. 2016-KA-00289-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 229 So. 3d 698 (Victoria Swanagan v. State of Mississippi) 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
Victoria Swanagan v. State of Mississippi, 229 So. 3d 698 (Mich. 2017).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, PRESIDING JUSTICE,

FOR THE COURT:

¶ 1. Victoria P. Swanagan was convicted by a jury of the depraved-heart murder of Vincent Hill and was sentenced to twenty-five years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC), with ten years suspended, " fifteen years to serve, and five years of supervised probation. 1 Finding no error, we affirm the sentence and conviction of Swanagan.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

¶ 2. At trial, Derrick Sims testified that he and Vincent P. Hill worked together. When Sims arrived at Swanagan’s home to pick up Hill for work, he heard Swanagan and Hill' arguing in her house. Swanagan exited her house and went next door to her mother’s house.- During' that - time, Hill stayed inside Swanagan’s house. When Swanagan returned, Sims heard a “ruckus.” After a while, Hill came rushing out of the house without a shirt. “About the time he made it halfway down the stairs she hit him in the back of the—Victoria hit him in the back of the head.”

When they come outside, when she hit .him in the back of the head, he leaned against her car, and he said, don’t hit me no more. And he told her mama, I love your daughter to death, but look how she treat me. That was his exact words. He didn’t cuss at her. He didn’t call her nothing out of her name. That’s exactly what he said. And after that she said a little something, and he came and got in my truck.-He was, like,, man, let’s go. .He said, I’m tired. That was his exact words.

Swanagan opened the passenger door and got in the truck. Hill told Sims to drive to work. Sims also testified that no one forced Swanagan to get in his truck.

¶ 3. Swanagan and Hill continued arguing in the truck. The arguing escalated, and Swanagan hit Hill. Sims testified that Hill could not strike Swanagan, “[bjecause he was so tall in the truck it’s like how she was over him he couldn’t move.” Then Swanagan bit Hill. -Hill started yelling and screaming, causing Sims to stop the truck. Sims got out of the truck and opened the passenger door. Swanagan and Hill fell out at the same time. As they were falling to the ground, Hill hit Swanagan-on top of her head. Sims testified that Hill hit Swan-agan only that one time, before-he jumped up and ran to the truck, yelling at Sims to “come on.”

¶ 4. Sims was behind the truck, headed toward the- driver’s side door, when he heard the first gun shot and saw Swana-gan. with a: gun, shooting at the truck. Swanagan was on the ground and had her hand securely on a pistol, pointing up at the truck. As Hill started to drive off, Sims heard two more shots. After Swanagan had put the gun down, she told Sims she would buy him a new window.

¶ 5. Sims heard his truck stop running, and he ran off toward it. Sims found the truck in some woods nearby. Sims found Hill “in the center of the dashboard dead.” Sims then jumped in the truck and drove to Swanagan’s residence. “I jumped out of *701 the truck immediately, and I couldn’t say nothing but you killed him.... I just got in the truck and left the scene.” -Sims then drove to a service station because he wanted to be safe.

¶ 6. Sims testified that he neither owned a gun nor had a gun in his possession the day Hill was killed. He said Hill knew that Sims no longer owned a gun. Even when Sims did own a gun, he carried it in his truck only when he went fishing, but never to work. Sims testified that Swanagan had been fishing with Sims and Hill, but she also knew he had gotten rid of his gun.

¶ 7. Felicia Robinson, a forensic scientist with the Mississippi Forensic Laboratory, was accepted as an expert in the field of forensic analysis of firearms and tool marks. Robinson testified that the projectile submitted to the crime lab from Hill was fired from the firearm retrieved from Swanagan’s property.

¶ 8. Lisa Funte, a state forensic pathologist, was accepted as an expert in the field of forensic pathology. Funte testified that she performed the autopsy on Hill, During the autopsy, Funte noted abrasions and contusions on his face, neck, hands, and legs, Funte also found

an entrance defect on the right side of the chest and an exit defect on the left side of the chest. In alignment with that exit defect that was on the left side of the chest there was also defects in the left arm. Th§ bullet went from the right side of the chest through the chest, exiting on the left side and reentered the left arm where the bullet was recovered.

¶ 9. After the State rested and motions were denied, Swanagan offered her defense. Barbara Swanagan, mother of Victoria Swanagan, testified that on the morning Hill was killed, her daughter came over to her home twice. She heard noise in her daughter’s home each' time Swanagan returned home. Barbara went outside and called for her daughter. Both Swanagan and Hill exited the house. Barbara tried to defuse the situation by talking calmly to both Hill and Swanagan, but Hill cursed at Barbara.

¶ 10. After thinking she had calmed everyone down, Barbara turned to go back in her house. As she turned, she heard the truck start. She saw the truck start "and stop several times and was worried that something was not right. She asked her daughter-in-law to .call, 911, and while Barbara was talking to the 911 operator, she heard gunshots. Barbara saw her daughter walking toward -them with a gun in her hand. Barbara was neither in her daughter’s house when Swanagan and Hill were fighting, nor did she see her daughter shoot Hill.

¶ 11. Swanagan testified that, on' the morning Hill was -shot, she asked him about text messages she had received from his family, and he "blew up” at her. Hill accused her of cheating on him and then made sexual advancés towards her. When she refused, he began to shove, hit, and call her names. She said this continued for more than ten minutes,

¶ 12. When Hill refused to leave, Swana-gan walked to her mother’s house to get ready for work but then returned after she heard noises coming from her house. She returned and found that Hill had turned over-stands, knocked things off of furniture,-and punched holes in her walls. Swanagan tried to gather her things for work. Hill refused to leave and continued to knock things over. He then ripped’ Off his shirt.

¶ 13. Swanagan grabbed her purse and went back to her mother’s house. She heard noises again, went home, and found that Hill was still' tearing her house apart. They began to argue again, and at some *702 point, her tooth was knocked out. 2 Swana-gan admitted to hitting and scratching Hill while they were fighting inside her home.

¶ 14. Swanagan then heard her mother calling for her. She and Hill went outside. Hill got in Sims’s truck, while pulling her into the truck. As she was trying to figure out how to get out of the truck since the passenger-side door had no handle, Hill hit her from behind. Hill told Sims to “crank the truck. Let’s go. We’re gonna drop this bitch off on the side of the interstate.” Hill began twisting Swanagan’s arms, pinning her, and then tried to bite her, but she was able to bite him first. When she bit him, he yelled, and Sims stopped the truck.

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Bluebook (online)
229 So. 3d 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victoria-swanagan-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2017.