William Evans-Smith v. John B. Taylor

19 F.3d 899, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 5155, 1994 WL 86442
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1994
Docket92-6347
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 19 F.3d 899 (William Evans-Smith v. John B. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Evans-Smith v. John B. Taylor, 19 F.3d 899, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 5155, 1994 WL 86442 (4th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:

Appellant, William Evans-Smith, is serving a twenty-year sentence at Virginia’s Staunton Correctional Center for the 1985 murder of his wife, Barbara Evans-Smith. He was first convicted after a jury trial and *900 sentenced to five years imprisonment in August 1985. That conviction was overturned on appeal to the Virginia Court of Appeals on the ground that much of the evidence used to obtain the conviction was either improperly admitted hearsay evidence or evidence that was more prejudicial than probative.

A second trial was set and Evans-Smith moved for a change of venue on account of pretrial publicity; his motion was denied after an extensive hearing. During the course of the second trial, which began on April 17, 1989, nearly four years after the first trial, Evans-Smith filed a Motion to Strike, arguing that the solely circumstantial nature of the evidence presented by the Commonwealth was insufficient to establish guilt. His motion was denied. The jury found Evans-Smith guilty of second-degree murder and recommended the maximum twenty-year sentence. Evans-Smith then moved to set aside the verdict, again arguing that the evidence was insufficient, and also arguing, among other grounds, that the court’s prior denial of the motion to change venue deprived him of a fair trial. He also moved for a new trial based upon alleged juror misconduct. Both motions were denied. Bond was denied, and Evans-Smith was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment.

Evans-Smith appealed through the state system. His appeals were denied. He next filed a state habeas petition, raising only the speedy trial issue. The denial of that petition was affirmed by the Virginia Supreme Court.

The present action is a § 2254 habeas appeal. In the district court, both the Commonwealth and Evans-Smith moved for summary judgment. After a hearing, the district court granted the Commonwealth’s motion and denied Evans-Smith’s. Evans-Smith appeals the summary judgment entered by the district court on the grounds that the evidence was insufficient to prove his guilt, that his sentence of twenty years following the second trial violated the rule announced in North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S. 711, 89 S.Ct. 2072, 23 L.Ed.2d 656 (1969), and that the jury that convicted him was tainted by pretrial publicity.

FACTS

In obtaining Evans-Smith’s conviction, the Commonwealth proceeded on the theory that Evans-Smith Mlled or rendered his wife unconscious in the kitchen of their farmhouse, then dragged her body upstairs and staged a rape/robbery scene before leaving for work. Evans-Smith asserted throughout that he is innocent, that the murder was committed by an unidentified third party or parties, and that the Commonwealth failed to investigate properly the possibility that someone other than Evans-Smith was the murderer.

The prosecution agrees that the evidence used to convict Evans-Smith was entirely circumstantial. According to Loudoun County Medical Examiner Dr. Hoeker, Barbara Evans-Smith (hereinafter “the victim”) died sometime between 4:00 and 8:00 a.m. on the morning of April 15, 1985. His calculation was based on the degree of rigor mortis (60%) he observed upon his arrival at the crime scene at approximately 1:00 p.m. that afternoon. Dr. Byer, the medical examiner who performed the autopsy, determined that the victim died by strangulation thirty to sixty minutes after eating. The contents of the victim’s stomach were consistent with the breakfast that Evans-Smith stated he had shared with his wife.

The victim’s body was found in her second-floor bedroom of the couple’s Loudoun County farmhouse with a pair of pantyhose wrapped three times around her neck and knotted. She was clad in a nightshirt and robe which had been ripped open, leaving her bare from the waist down. While the condition of her clothing suggested the possibility of a sexual assault, Dr. Byer found no seminal fluid or genital abrasions on the victim. There was a small amount of unexplained blood in her vaginal cavity. A pair of white underwear had been stuffed into the victim’s mouth. Dr. Byer stated that the underwear was loosely packed, a fact which could lead to the inference that the underwear had been placed in the mouth after death, since the loose packing would not have served as an effective gag. The Commonwealth urged the jury to consider the underwear as evidence that the murder had been staged as a sexual assault.

*901 Dr. Byer identified internal injury and hemorrhaging to the back of the victim’s head which could have been caused by her head hitting the wooden stairs, as she was dragged to the second floor. The doctor testified, however, that “any blunt force trauma” could have caused the injury. He also noted triangular-shaped abrasions on the victim’s neck near her jaw line, which he believed were the victim’s fingernail scratches, created while she was trying to remove the ligature from around her neck. There was no blood on the hands of the victim.

The bedroom in which the victim was found looked as if it had been ransacked, with items from the closets and dresser drawers strewn around the room. Evans-Smith’s bedroom, separated from the victim’s bedroom by a shared bathroom, had a similar appearance, but the rest of the house was in order, with the exception of an overturned, downstairs hall table and slightly skewed furniture in the kitchen. • The Commonwealth argued that since only a few pieces of furniture had been moved, and many valuables were left either untouched or “neatly” laid out on the beds upstairs, the crime scene was consistent with a staged crime and not a real robbery.

Evans-Smith’s daughter, Leslie Cook, noted in testifying for the prosecution that the front door was ajar when she arrived at the scene at approximately 11:00 a.m., that one of the two dogs was closed up in the laundry room, and that the other was outside. Cook also testified that she observed only one set of tire tracks on the newly raked gravel driveway as she came onto the property.

She and another prosecution witness, William Laycock, testified to the presence of another set of tire tracks running across the hayfield toward a second exit on the morning in question. This second set of tracks was not investigated by the police, and the defense argued at trial that their existence implied that someone other than Evans-Smith had been to the house that morning. 1 Special Agent Ritchie of the Virginia State Police, a key participant in the investigation of the crime scene, placed bags over the victim’s hands and feet upon his arrival to preserve any evidence on them during transport, and collected several other items from the crime scene for analysis, including jewelry boxes which had been tampered with and which Ritchie believed could be fingerprinted. 2 No fingerprints were taken from the furniture and the other items that were found out of place on the first floor. Nor was fingerprinting undertaken' along the staircase. Ritchie also observed two parallel scratch marks; which were photographed, on the linoleum floor in the kitchen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F.3d 899, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 5155, 1994 WL 86442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-evans-smith-v-john-b-taylor-ca4-1994.