STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. SAMUEL JERRY WHITAKER ( 2020 )


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  • STATE OF MISSOURI,                                   )
    )
    Plaintiff-Respondent,                        )
    )
    v.                                                   )        No. SD36011
    )
    SAMUEL JERRY WHITAKER,                               )        Filed: October 29, 2020
    )
    Defendant-Appellant.                         )
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF IRON COUNTY
    Honorable Kelly W. Parker
    AFFIRMED
    Samuel Jerry Whitaker (“Defendant”) was tried for first-degree murder, armed
    criminal action, and first-degree burglary. 1 The jury found Defendant not-guilty on the
    burglary charge, guilty of the statutory lesser-included offense of voluntary manslaughter,
    and guilty of armed criminal action. 2
    In two points on appeal, Defendant claims the trial court erred in declining to
    admit into evidence a certified copy of the victim’s 1991 Wisconsin aggravated battery
    1
    See sections 565.020, 571.015, and 569.160. Unless otherwise noted, all statutory citations are to RSMo
    2000.
    2
    A defendant may be convicted of an offense included in an offense charged in the indictment or
    information if “[i]t is specifically denominated by statute as a lesser degree of the offense charged[.]”
    Section 556.046.1(2), RSMo Cum. Supp. 2013. Defendant was charged with first-degree murder. The
    lesser-degree offenses of first-degree murder include “[v]oluntary manslaughter under subdivision (1) of
    subsection 1 of section 565.023[.]” Section 565.025.2(1)(b). Section 565.023.1(1) addresses the offense of
    voluntary manslaughter involving a “death under the influence of sudden passion arising from adequate
    cause[.]”
    1
    conviction and erred in refusing to give one of Defendant’s two requested self-defense
    instructions. Finding no merit in either claim, we affirm.
    The Relevant Evidence
    On or about October 28, 2013, Defendant shot and killed Carl Lee Streeval
    (“Victim”), who was Defendant’s neighbor and the husband of Defendant’s stepdaughter,
    Sierra Streeval (“Stepdaughter”).
    Defendant lived on property in Wayne County that contained three trailer homes.
    From around 2009 to 2013, Defendant lived in one of those trailers with his wife,
    Tabitha, and their children. During that same timeframe, Stepdaughter moved into one of
    the other trailers on the property (“the trailer”) with Victim and their children.
    In March 2012, Victim and Stepdaughter executed a contract with Defendant to
    purchase the trailer and the land around it for $9,600. About a year later, Victim moved
    out of the trailer to live with his girlfriend, and a man named Hayden Swinford
    (“Hayden”) moved in with Stepdaughter. Victim began making threats to Stepdaughter
    and Hayden, and Stepdaughter obtained an order of protection against Victim.
    Stepdaughter eventually left Hayden and moved to Texas.
    On October 26, 2013 -- after Stepdaughter had moved to Texas and two days
    before the charged events -- Victim, who had recently been released from incarceration,
    intended to move back into the trailer, despite the fact that the order of protection
    required him to stay away from the property. When Victim got to the trailer, he was
    upset to find Hayden living in it. Victim and Hayden were arguing when Defendant
    came outside of his trailer and approached them. Victim turned to Defendant and said
    2
    that he was going to “burn [Defendant’s] church[ 3] to the ground with [Defendant] in
    it[.]” Law enforcement had been called, and an officer told Victim that he needed to
    leave the property and was not to return.
    Two days later, on the day of the shooting, Victim went to the sheriff’s office for
    help in getting back into the trailer. Victim was told by someone at the sheriff’s office
    that he would need to prove that he owned it. Victim left, and returned later, producing a
    title certificate for the trailer, along with the purchase contract he had signed with
    Defendant. At that point, Victim went back to the trailer with an officer accompanying
    him. Hayden and his mother were already moving items out of the trailer when Victim
    returned. The officer then left the property when everything appeared to be fine.
    Later that day, Defendant went to the sheriff’s office and claimed that he had
    previously reported the title to the trailer stolen. The deputy that Defendant spoke to
    could find no proof that a report of a stolen title had been made. Defendant also applied
    for an order of protection against Victim based upon their earlier confrontation.
    Defendant next obtained the deed to his property at the recorder of deeds’s office.
    He then took his deed to the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office, where he was unsuccessful
    in trying to get help in removing Victim from the property. Defendant returned to his
    trailer, where he encountered Victim “mouthing off.” Victim threatened to stab
    Defendant with a steak knife that he was holding. Defendant went to the Chief of police
    in Piedmont, as well as the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office, but neither were able to assist
    him. Defendant then returned home.
    At trial, Defendant provided the following testimony. After he returned to his
    trailer, Defendant had dinner and some wine to calm his nerves. He could hear Victim
    3
    Defendant had built a “wilderness temple” on the property.
    3
    shouting throughout his dinner that Defendant had “until dark to get off the property.”
    After he finished his dinner, Defendant went outside to feed his dog. Victim was still
    outside, “mouthing off walking around with a gas jug telling [Defendant] he was going to
    burn the church down with [Defendant] in it.” Defendant had his shotgun with him
    because he was “not going to go outside with [Victim] unarmed[.]”
    Victim approached Defendant and tried to take his gun away from him. In
    response, Defendant shot Victim with a slug that grazed Victim’s head. Victim fell to the
    ground, bleeding profusely from a non-fatal head wound. The two were still screaming
    and yelling when Victim grabbed the gas jug and ran into the trailer. 4 Defendant looked
    to the side and saw his son standing there. Defendant told his son “to get the keys to the
    truck and get out of there” because “[w]e were at war[.]”
    After Defendant’s son left, Defendant followed Victim into the trailer and got up
    against the wall of the hallway. Defendant had seen Victim head straight down the
    hallway into the master bedroom, and he could hear Victim screaming into the phone.
    Defendant testified, “I told him I said [Victim], I’m sorry I said [Victim] I need to come
    down there and get this gas jug and I persisted to go straight towards him.”
    By the time Defendant reached the hall by the master bedroom, Victim had fled
    into the master bathroom and closed the door. The gas jug was sitting on the carpet in the
    hall outside the master bedroom. Defendant picked it up. As Defendant was returning
    down the hallway with the gas jug, he testified that Victim smashed the bathroom door
    4
    No evidence indicated that anyone was inside the trailer at that time or that anyone believed that it was
    occupied.
    4
    against Defendant. 5 Defendant shot Victim (this time, fatally) and threw the door back at
    him. Defendant then exited the trailer with his gun and the gas jug.
    While he was hiding in the trailer’s bathroom, Victim was on the phone with the
    9-1-1 dispatcher (“Dispatcher”). Dispatcher testified that “[Victim] was frantic and he
    stated that someone was trying to break into his home and that he had been shot.” Victim
    told Dispatcher that Defendant had shot him in the head, and he was feeling faint because
    he was bleeding very badly. Victim told her that he had locked himself in the bathroom
    and Defendant had come through the door. The last thing Dispatcher heard Victim say
    was that he had never missed a payment. At that point, the call was dropped.
    Several witnesses testified at trial to Victim’s reputation for violence. Hayden
    testified that Victim had threatened him about his being in the trailer, told him that he
    needed to leave, threatened to stab him, slammed Hayden against the wall, told Hayden
    he should sleep with one eye open, and left Hayden voicemails in which he threatened to
    burn the trailer down. Defendant testified that Victim was a former Navy Seal who
    fought in Iraq and bragged about having 70 confirmed kills. Defendant said he knew that
    Victim had threatened to burn a person’s house down and kill their dog, and Sierra told
    Defendant that Victim had sodomized her. Defendant also testified that Victim boasted
    about having spent 10-15 years in prison for assaulting someone.
    We will recite additional evidence as necessary to address Defendant’s points on
    appeal.
    5
    The master bathroom had two doors – one that opened into the master bedroom, and one that opened into
    the hallway.
    5
    Analysis
    Point 1 – Certified Copy of Victim’s Prior Conviction
    Point 1 claims the trial court abused its discretion (or clearly erred) in refusing to
    receive into evidence Defendant’s Exhibit EE, a certified copy of Victim’s 1991
    Wisconsin conviction for aggravated battery and theft from a person because “the
    evidence was appropriate corroboration of [Defendant]’s testimony about the
    conviction.” Defendant claims that the exclusion of Exhibit EE prejudiced him because
    Defendant’s “credibility about his version of events was critical to his defense of self-
    defense[.]”
    “The standard of review for the admission of evidence is abuse of discretion.”
    State v. Primm, 
    347 S.W.3d 66
    , 70 (Mo. banc 2011). “This standard gives the trial court
    broad leeway in choosing to admit evidence; therefore, an exercise of this discretion will
    not be disturbed unless it is clearly against the logic of the circumstances.”
    Id. (quoting State v.
    Reed, 
    282 S.W.3d 835
    , 837 (Mo. banc 2009)). Our review is for prejudice, not
    error alone, and we “will reverse only if the error was so prejudicial it deprived the
    defendant of a fair trial.” State v. Hein, 
    553 S.W.3d 893
    , 896 (Mo. App. E.D. 2018).
    Where, as here, justification is an issue in a criminal case, a defendant may
    introduce evidence of the victim’s prior, specific acts of violence of which the defendant
    had knowledge, provided that those acts are reasonably related to the crimes with which
    the defendant is charged. State v. Ryan, 
    229 S.W.3d 281
    , 285 (Mo. App. S.D. 2007).
    The defendant will only be allowed to admit evidence of a victim’s prior, specific violent
    acts where:
    (1) other competent evidence has been presented raising the question of
    self-defense; (2) the defendant shows that he was aware of the specific act
    6
    or acts of violence; (3) the incidents are not too remote in time; (4) and the
    incidents are of a quality capable of contributing to the defendant’s fear of
    the victim. [State v. Waller, 
    816 S.W.2d 212
    , 216 (Mo. banc 1991)].
    “Where acts are too remote in time or of a quality substantially different
    from the act that the defendant accuses the victim of committing, the trial
    court may decline to admit the proof into evidence.”
    Id. Id. The trial
    court must exercise caution in admitting evidence under this rule.
    Id. Defendant’s argument at
    trial was that the exhibit “was relevant to corroborate that
    [Defendant] was aware of the conviction.” The State argued that the 30-year-old
    conviction was too remote in time and that the exhibit was a “piece of paper from 1991
    that [Defendant] didn’t know existed[.]” After considering Defendant’s testimony up to
    that point and the arguments of counsel, the trial court denied admission of Exhibit EE.
    Defendant then went on to testify that Victim had bragged about being in prison
    for 10 to 15 years and had threatened to either kill or rape a neighbor’s dog and burn his
    house down. Defendant also testified that, a couple of months before the shooting,
    Defendant’s stepdaughter told him that Victim had sodomized her.
    As argued by the State, the trial court has discretion
    to place limitations on the extent to which prior violent acts may be
    proved. While the defendant should be permitted to substantiate his claim
    of justification because it informs the jury on the state of the defendant’s
    mind at the time of the incident, and thereby enables the jury to decide
    whether defendant acted rationally under the circumstances, the trial court
    should not allow the progress of a criminal trial to become unnecessarily
    slowed by evidentiary conflicts over matters of questionable relevance.
    Id. at 286
    (quoting 
    Waller, 816 S.W.2d at 216
    ).
    Exhibit EE, which contains no facts about the offenses, proved that Victim
    pleaded guilty to aggravated battery and theft from a person in Wisconsin in 1991; it
    proved nothing about Defendant’s knowledge of that conviction or Defendant’s state of
    mind at the time of the charged conduct. The trial court’s decision to exclude it from
    7
    evidence was not clearly against the logic of the circumstances. See 
    Primm, 347 S.W.3d at 70
    . Point 1 is denied.
    Point 2 – Refusal to Submit Additional Self-Defense Instruction
    Defendant’s second point claims the trial court erred in refusing to submit a
    second proposed self-defense instruction that specifically identified arson as a forcible
    felony that justified Defendant killing Victim in self-defense because “the law allows
    deadly force to be used to protect one’s self from the forcible felony of arson.”
    Defendant requested that this instruction be given in addition to the self-defense
    instruction the trial court had already agreed to give, which posited that Defendant had
    acted in justifiable self-defense based upon Victim’s intent to commit the forcible felony
    of burglary. 6
    We review de novo a trial court’s decision on whether to give a requested self-
    defense instruction. State v. Bruner, 
    541 S.W.3d 529
    , 534 (Mo. banc 2018). The trial
    court must submit such a requested instruction if substantial evidence supports it, even if
    the supporting evidence is inconsistent with the defendant’s own testimony.
    Id. In conducting this
    review, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    submission of the requested instruction.
    Id. The self-defense statute
    in effect at the time of the charged conduct provided, in
    pertinent part, that:
    1.       A person may, subject to the provisions of subsection 2 of this
    section, use physical force upon another person when and to the
    extent he or she reasonably believes such force to be necessary to
    defend himself or herself . . . from what he or she reasonably
    believes to be the use or imminent use of unlawful force by such
    other person[.]
    6
    The State did not object to this instruction, and whether it should have been submitted to the jury is not at
    issue in this appeal.
    8
    ....
    2.      A person may not use deadly force upon another person under the
    circumstances specified in subsection 1 of this section unless:
    (1) He or she reasonably believes that such deadly force is
    necessary to protect himself, or herself . . . against [1] death, [2]
    serious physical injury, or [3] any forcible felony[.]
    Section 563.031, RSMo Cum. Supp. 2013 (emphasis added).
    In addressing the somewhat similar question of whether a property owner is
    entitled to a self-defense instruction solely because he has no duty to retreat from his own
    property, the eastern district of our court, in a case of first impression, concluded that:
    (1) the occupier may lawfully use force, including deadly force, to defend
    himself against a person who is attempting to enter unlawfully, does enter
    unlawfully, or remains after an unlawful entry; and (2) the occupier is
    relieved of any duty to retreat before resorting to the use of force; (3) but
    for the occupier to claim the privilege of self-defense, he must reasonably
    believe the use of force is necessary to defend himself from what he
    reasonably believes is an imminent use of force.
    State v. Whipple, 
    501 S.W.3d 507
    , 516 (Mo. App. E.D. 2016). The Eastern District
    reached this conclusion after interpreting section 563.031 as follows.
    [C]onsidering the entirety of section 563.031 and reading it reasonably
    and logically, we find that subsection 3 permits the occupier, owner, or
    lessee to use physical force, including deadly force, in self-defense within
    a dwelling, residence, or vehicle, or on private property without having a
    duty to retreat, but only under the circumstances in which physical force,
    or deadly force, is allowed under subsections 1 and 2. Thus, we cannot
    find that subsection 3 gives the occupier, owner, or lessee authority to
    stand his ground and use deadly force without having a reasonable belief
    that such force is necessary to defend himself or a third person from what
    he reasonably believes to be the use or imminent use of unlawful force.
    Id. at 515.
    We agree.
    More importantly, we do not believe this interpretation to be inconsistent with our
    high court’s holding in State v. Barnett that:
    9
    Pursuant to the self-defense statute, “A person may ... use physical force
    upon another person” if the person (1) was not the initial aggressor; and
    (2) “reasonably believes such force to be necessary to defend himself or
    herself or a third person from what he or she reasonably believes to be the
    use or imminent use of unlawful force by such other person....” [Section]
    563.031.1.[] [RSMo Supp. 2013] A person can only use deadly force
    when he or she “reasonably believes that such deadly force is necessary to
    protect himself or herself ... against death, serious physical injury, or any
    forcible felony.” [Section] 563.031.2(1). Therefore, if there was
    substantial evidence to support each of the following, the circuit court was
    required to give an instruction on self-defense: [the defendant] (1) was not
    the initial aggressor, and (2) reasonably believed the use of deadly force
    was necessary to protect himself from death, serious physical injury, or a
    forcible felony. See [section] 563.031; MAI-CR3d 306.06A; [State v.]
    Smith, 456 S.W.3d [849,] 852 [(Mo. banc 2015)].
    
    577 S.W.3d 124
    , 128 (Mo. banc 2019) (emphasis added). 7
    As previously noted, Defendant offered two self-defense instructions at trial. The
    first asserted that Defendant permissibly used deadly force to defend himself from “the
    imminent use of unlawful force or imminent commission of burglary or arson by
    [Victim.]” The trial court rejected this instruction, 8 but it did submit the self-defense
    instruction requested by Defendant that stated, “[D]efendant reasonably believed that the
    use of deadly force was necessary to protect himself from death or serious physical injury
    from the acts of [Victim], or the commission of burglary by [Victim]” (which did not
    contain the requested inclusion of “or arson”).
    In support of his argument that the refusal was erroneous, Defendant claims that
    he had “ample justification to believe that [Victim] was going to burn down the [trailer]
    7
    While the self-defense statute was modified in 2016 “only in the duty to retreat[,]” Barnett applied the
    same version of the statute in effect 
    here. 577 S.W.3d at 128
    n.3; State v. Bruner, 
    541 S.W.3d 529
    , 536 n.6
    (Mo. banc 2018). Because a direct threat of death or serious physical injury to the defendants was at issue
    in both Bruner and Barnett, our high court did not have to determine whether a forcible felony that did not
    involve a threat to the defendant’s person would have been sufficient to mandate that a self-defense
    instruction be submitted to the jury.
    8
    Although the trial court refused to give that instruction because “the Defendant’s own testimony was that
    he had already obtained the gas can and was leaving the residence when the shots were fired[,]” as noted in
    Bruner, a self-defense instruction must be submitted if any evidence supports it, even if that evidence is
    contrary to testimony provided by the 
    defendant. 541 S.W.3d at 534
    .
    10
    and in the heat of the moment may have genuinely believed that deadly force was
    necessary to stop it.” Defendant claims the jury may have had doubts about whether
    Victim was committing burglary, given the disputed ownership of the trailer. Further,
    Defendant argues that the jury already believed him “to some degree” because it
    convicted him of voluntary manslaughter instead of first- or second-degree murder, and
    voluntary manslaughter requires a finding that Defendant acted out of sudden passion
    arising out of adequate cause – emotions and influences he claims are consistent with
    self-defense. Defendant also cites the fact that Victim had, on multiple occasions,
    threatened to burn things down, and Victim was found to have two lighters -- and no
    cigarettes -- on his body after his death.
    Defendant’s argument fails to recognize that, “[w]hile the law relieves an
    occupier, owner, or lessee of his duty to retreat, it does not provide him a right to stand
    his ground and use deadly force without the use of force being necessary to save his own
    life or protect himself from serious physical harm.” 
    Whipple, 501 S.W.3d at 516
    .
    Further, none of these cases strike us as inconsistent with our high court’s prior
    admonition that “[a] self-defense instruction is not appropriate if the defendant renewed
    or continued the confrontation, because behavior of that sort is inconsistent with the
    requirement that defendant avoid the danger and the need to take a life.” State v.
    Thomas, 
    161 S.W.3d 377
    , 379 (Mo. banc 2005).
    Here, Defendant chose to continue his confrontation with Victim by pursuing him
    into the trailer when he could have easily disengaged by simply leaving the scene – the
    same thing Defendant had told his son to do. Such conduct “precludes a plea of self-
    defense because [Defendant] did not do everything within [his] power, consistent with
    11
    [his] personal safety, to avoid the danger and the need to take a life.”
    Id. at 380.
    Even
    after Victim had barricaded himself in the master bathroom, Defendant continued to
    pursue Victim. “When an accused has an opportunity to decline or abandon the
    altercation and does not, he then becomes an aggressor, whether or not he initiated the
    initial altercation.” State v. Gheen, 
    41 S.W.3d 598
    , 606 (Mo. App. W.D. 2001).
    Because Defendant did not need to pursue and kill Victim to protect himself from
    imminent physical harm, the trial court did not err in refusing Defendant’s self-defense
    instruction based upon the forcible felony of arson. See 
    Smith, 456 S.W.3d at 852
    .
    Point 2 is also denied, and the judgment is affirmed.
    DON E. BURRELL, J. – OPINION AUTHOR
    JEFFREY W. BATES, P.J. – CONCURS
    MARY W. SHEFFIELD, J. – CONCURS
    12