State of Missouri v. Lonny Leroy Mays , 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 718 ( 2016 )


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  •              IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS
    WESTERN DISTRICT
    STATE OF MISSOURI,                                 )
    )
    Respondent,      )
    )    WD78417
    v.                                                 )
    )    OPINION FILED:
    )    July 26, 2016
    LONNY LEROY MAYS,                                  )
    )
    Appellant.     )
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Benton County, Missouri
    The Honorable Mark B. Pilley, Judge
    Before Division IV: Alok Ahuja, Presiding Judge,
    Mark D. Pfeiffer, Chief Judge, and J. Dale Youngs, Special Judge
    Mr. Lonnie Mays (“Mays”) appeals the judgment of the Circuit Court of Benton County,
    Missouri (“trial court”), convicting him, after a jury trial, of one count of first-degree murder and
    one count of armed criminal action. On appeal, Mays claims that the trial court erred in refusing
    to exclude the testimony of a witness due to the clergy-communicant privilege and in refusing to
    suppress evidence found in his vehicle that he claims was obtained in violation of the Fourth
    Amendment. We affirm.
    Factual and Procedural Background1
    Mays and his wife lived in a retirement community called Sky Village, which is located
    near the junction of the Henry and Benton County lines. On the morning of March 26, 2012,
    Carolyn Simmons, who lived across the street from Mays, was putting her trash out when Mays,
    began “holler[ing] some things” at her; he appeared to be “a little irate.” Ms. Simmons ignored
    Mays and went on to the house of another neighbor, Jeannie Fair, for coffee. Ms. Fair lived two
    houses down from Ms. Simmons. Also joining the coffee group was Rudy Romdall, who had
    had numerous run-ins with Mays over the years.
    After coffee, Mr. Romdall followed Ms. Simmons back to her house in his gray pickup
    truck, because Mr. Romdall was going to accompany Ms. Simmons, who was head of the Sky
    Village community association, to meet a man delivering gravel for the community’s streets. As
    they were leaving Ms. Simmons’s house, Mays was in the middle of the street yelling at them, so
    Ms. Simmons told Mr. Romdall to exit the neighborhood in the direction opposite Mays. They
    did, but Mays followed them in his own black pickup truck. Ms. Simmons and Mr. Romdall
    parked just outside of the Sky Village community to wait for the gravel delivery person, and
    Mays stopped his truck in front of them on the road, got out of his truck, and started yelling,
    knocking on Mr. Romdall’s truck window, and gesturing for Mr. Romdall to roll down his
    window. Ms. Simmons asked Mr. Romdall to ignore Mays because she was afraid. They
    ignored Mays, and he got back into his truck and drove away. Several minutes later, Mays again
    drove by Mr. Romdall and Ms. Simmons, gave them a dirty look, and drove away.
    Ms. Simmons did not see Mays again that day. After finishing with the gravel delivery person,
    Ms. Simmons and Mr. Romdall returned to the Sky Village community where one neighbor had
    1
    In an appeal from a jury-tried case, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict.
    State v. Ramirez, 
    447 S.W.3d 792
    , 794 n.1 (Mo. App. W.D. 2014).
    2
    called the police to tell them about Mays’s behavior. The police came out to speak to them, and
    then went to the Mays house to speak to Mays.
    At around 11:20 a.m., video footage from a Wal-Mart store nearby shows Mays
    purchasing “Winchester Super X Power Point .30-30 caliber ammunition.” Mays had recently
    borrowed a .30-30 rifle from his brother, Donald Mays (“Donald”); at the time, Mays told
    Donald that he was borrowing the rifle for target practice.
    At around 12:30 p.m. on March 26, 2012, Jared Lawler, a farmer in Henry County,
    noticed a field off of Highway 7 had an open gate that was always supposed to be closed, so he
    stopped to close it. Mr. Lawler noticed a black Ford Ranger pickup in an adjoining field, so he
    “knew someone was in there.” No one was inside the truck, so Mr. Lawler “walked around the
    truck, wrote the license number down, and kind of hung around there for a little bit to see if [he]
    could see anybody in there hunting.” When Mr. Lawler was about to leave, he “saw a gentleman
    in the tree line along 7 Highway.” The man (later determined by Mr. Lawler to be Mays)
    emerged from the tree line, and they “walked together back to the truck.” Mr. Lawler described
    the man as “an older gentleman, had glasses, had a hat on that said . . . something about being a
    veteran,” and he was wearing “a kind of plaid looking shirt, jeans,” carrying a Winchester Model
    94 .30-30 rifle. Mr. Lawler asked the man what he was doing, and the man said he had
    unsuccessfully been trying to shoot a coyote. Mr. Lawler introduced himself to the man, and
    they shook hands. Mr. Lawler said the man left and turned east toward Highway 7. Mr. Lawler
    did not remember the man’s name, but identified him as Mays at trial. Mr. Lawler said the field
    was located “five to six” miles from County Line Road, which is adjacent to Sky Village.
    At “a little before 1 p.m.,” Jean Bonrud and her friend, Vicki Schmidt, were at
    Ms. Bonrud’s Sky Village house.        Ms. Bonrud, a nurse, knew Mays but did not know
    3
    Mr. Romdall. Ms. Bonrud saw a “black small pickup” truck traveling east on Highway 7 by her
    house and assumed that it was Mays on his way home. Shortly thereafter, the women heard two
    gunshots close in time. Looking out the window, Ms. Schmidt saw two pickup trucks: a gray
    one facing north and a black one facing south. She saw the black pickup leave and go south
    “over a little knoll.” The women then saw the black pickup coming back north “at a high speed.”
    After the black pickup left, another man she did not recognize pulled up behind the gray truck,
    “got out and went up to the pickup and yelled that . . . Rudy’s been shot.”
    Ms. Bonrud walked out to see if she could help. She noticed a bullet hole in the side of
    the truck’s door and saw what proved to be Mr. Romdall “slumped over to the side” in his seat.
    His driver’s side window was rolled down, and a cell phone was open in Mr. Romdall’s hand on
    his leg. The man’s wife called 9-1-1 and handed the phone to Ms. Bonrud. Ms. Bonrud told the
    9-1-1 dispatcher that Mr. Romdall was non-responsive. She took Mr. Romdall’s pulse and
    noticed he was gasping for breath. He had a hole in his left side with blood streaming out.
    The other man on the scene was Ronald Ferguson, a Sky Village neighbor. He had seen
    Mr. Romdall at around 11:45 a.m. earlier in the day when Mr. Romdall stopped by to see
    Mr. Ferguson’s mother. Later, when he and his family were on their way out of town, he saw
    Mr. Romdall’s truck stopped at the intersection near the edge of the neighborhood. He pulled up
    behind Mr. Romdall’s truck, but after waiting for a while, he pulled up to the side of
    Mr. Romdall’s truck. He noticed a bullet hole by the door handle, so he got out of his car and
    went to the driver’s side of the truck. Mr. Ferguson saw Mr. Romdall slumped over with his cell
    phone in his hand and his dog next to him. Mr. Ferguson could not feel Mr. Romdall’s pulse,
    and he saw lots of blood. He put Mr. Romdall’s truck in park and told his wife to call 9-1-1.
    Mr. Ferguson did not see any handguns inside the truck’s interior.
    4
    Mr. Romdall died from his injuries.
    Later that afternoon, Mays pulled up to the home of Joseph Rhodes, a retired Pentacostal
    minister. Mr. Rhodes was mowing his grass, but shut the mower off when Mays drove up and
    exited his truck. Mays, who had never met Rhodes before, asked Rhodes if he was a minister;
    Mr. Rhodes responded that he was, but was retired. Mays then asked Mr. Rhodes if he was a
    veteran, and Mr. Rhodes responded that he was. Mays then told Mr. Rhodes that he thought he
    had killed someone by shooting him with a .30-30 rifle in the chest. Mr. Rhodes agreed that
    such a gun shot with that weapon would have killed the other person. The two walked up to
    Mr. Rhodes’s porch and Mays told Mr. Rhodes that he and the other man had had troubles for
    some time, and that the man had been “bugging the fire out of him.” Mays subsequently asked
    to make a phone call with Mr. Rhodes’s land line telephone and Mr. Rhodes complied. Mays
    made some phone calls, told Mr. Rhodes that someone would be coming to pick him up, then
    went down near the lake behind Mr. Rhodes’s house to wait for his ride.
    Mays turned himself in to police the next morning, March 27, 2012.
    On March 27, 2012, Bryan Bethel, Park Superintendent of the Harry S. Truman State
    Park was on duty. He had been advised to look for a black Ford Ranger pickup truck with a
    specific license plate that was wanted in a criminal investigation. Mr. Bethel and a park ranger
    performed sweeps of the park, looking for the vehicle.           Mr. Bethel found the truck at
    approximately 1:45 p.m., at the park marina, and called the sheriff’s office.
    As Mr. Bethel waited for law enforcement to show up, he saw a young man with dark
    hair talking on a cell phone standing at the back of the pickup truck and looking into it. Then a
    blue car pulled up, and an elderly gentleman with a cowboy hat and a woman got out of the car
    and began to mill around the truck, looking in the windows and the back of the truck. Next, a
    5
    silver car appeared and the elderly gentleman and the woman talked to the people in the silver
    car. The man and the woman looked around the truck once more, and then the elderly gentleman
    reached into the bed of the pickup and pulled out what appeared to be a brown jacket wrapped
    around a stiff object about eighteen to twenty inches long. The elderly gentleman and the
    woman left in the silver car. The younger man on the cell phone went to the houseboat area of
    the marina.
    When Deputy Sheriff Brian Bigler arrived, he met with Mr. Bethel, who took them to the
    pickup truck. Another deputy sheriff was there with a park ranger. Deputy Bigler was told by
    the sheriff to seize the pickup truck and tow it to the impound lot. Deputy Bigler got the keys to
    the truck from Mays’s son. Mays’s wife’s car was also at the marina.
    After the truck was recovered, Sergeant Greg Martin of the Highway Patrol drafted an
    affidavit for a search warrant for the truck. The search warrant was issued and Sgt. Martin
    executed the warrant on March 29, 2012. The search of the truck did not yield a weapon. It
    revealed no evidence that a bullet might have been fired into the truck. A green suitcase was
    found in the truck containing clothing and paperwork.
    Before trial, Mays’s counsel filed a motion in limine to exclude any testimony regarding
    any communication Mays had with Mr. Rhodes. Mays also filed a motion to suppress the
    evidence obtained in the search of the pickup truck since the truck was seized prior to a warrant
    having been obtained. Both motions were ultimately denied, and the evidence was admitted at
    Mays’s trial. The jury found Mays guilty on all counts.
    This appeal follows.
    6
    Clergy-Communicant Privilege
    Mays’s first point on appeal is that the trial court erred in admitting the testimony of
    Mr. Rhodes because he argues that the clergy-communicant privilege in section 491.060(4)
    applies to Mays’s conversation with Mr. Rhodes on the day of Mr. Romdall’s homicide.
    The trial court has broad discretion in ruling on the admissibility of evidence. State v.
    Joyner, 
    458 S.W.3d 875
    , 880 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015). We thus review the trial court’s decisions
    regarding the admission of the evidence for an abuse of that discretion. 
    Id. “The trial
    court
    abuses its discretion if its ruling is clearly against the logic of the circumstances and is so
    arbitrary and unreasonable as to shock the sense of justice and indicate a lack of careful
    consideration.” 
    Id. The “trial
    court’s admission of evidence will be sustained as long as it is
    sustainable under any theory.” State v. Merrill, 
    990 S.W.2d 166
    , 170 (Mo. App. W.D. 1999).
    We view the facts and any reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the trial
    court’s evidentiary ruling, State v. Little, 
    473 S.W.3d 662
    , 666 (Mo. App. E.D. 2015), though the
    trial court’s interpretation of section 491.060 is a question of law that we review de novo, State v.
    Wadas, 
    225 S.W.3d 466
    , 468 (Mo. App. W.D. 2007).
    Even if we conclude that the trial court has erroneously admitted certain evidence, we
    will not consider such evidence reversible error unless its admission was “so prejudicial that it
    deprived the defendant of a fair trial.” State v. Ward, 
    473 S.W.3d 686
    , 696 (Mo. App. W.D.
    2015). This level of prejudice is established when the error in admitting the evidence was
    “outcome determinative.” 
    Joyner, 458 S.W.3d at 880
    . A “finding of outcome-determinative
    prejudice expresses a judicial conclusion that the erroneously admitted evidence so influenced
    the jury that, when considered with and balanced against all of the evidence properly admitted,
    there is a reasonable probability that the jury would have reached a different conclusion but for
    7
    the erroneously admitted evidence.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    omitted).2 Here, even were we to
    find error with the trial court’s evidentiary ruling relating to the admission of Mr. Rhodes’s
    testimony at trial,3 there simply is no outcome-determinative prejudice in this case that could
    warrant reversal.
    First, Mr. Rhodes’s testimony regarding Mays’s admissions to him tends to prove facts
    that were otherwise already in the case. When there is “other evidence before the court which
    establishe[s] the same facts,” no prejudice is shown. 
    Merrill, 990 S.W.2d at 171
    . See also
    Trident Group, LLC v. Miss. Valley Roofing, Inc., 
    279 S.W.3d 192
    , 199 (Mo. App. E.D. 2009)
    (“A complaining party is not entitled to assert prejudice if the challenged evidence is cumulative
    to other related admitted evidence.”). Mr. Rhodes testified that Mays appeared upset and that
    Mays admitted to shooting Mr. Romdall, in the chest, with a .30-30 rifle, and that Mr. Romdall
    had been “bugging the fire out of him.” Mays himself testified that he had been upset the day he
    shot Mr. Romdall, and that he had to go take a walk to calm down. Mays admitted that he shot
    2
    Mays’s brief asserts that the standard for outcome-determinative prejudice is whether “it can be said
    beyond a reasonable doubt that the improperly admitted evidence failed to contribute to the jury’s verdict.” Mays
    cites State v. Barton, 
    936 S.W.2d 781
    , 786-87 (Mo. banc 1996). Barton, which does not involve erroneously
    admitted evidence, but examines a trial court’s erroneous ruling limiting the defendant’s closing argument, does not
    require a finding of no prejudice “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Rather, Barton discusses the standard for prejudice
    at length, and holds expressly that “the proper standard for reversing a case due to an abuse of discretion in closing
    argument should be stated as whether the abuse ‘prejudiced’ the defendant’s case; that is, whether there is a
    reasonable probability that, in the absence of the abuse, the verdict would have been different.” 
    Id. at 786.
    Though
    we have found cases that require a finding of a lack of prejudice beyond all reasonable doubt, those cases involve
    trial court error that affects the defendant’s constitutional rights; see, e.g., State v. Driscoll, 
    55 S.W.3d 350
    , 356
    (Mo. banc 2001). Here, conversely, the error claimed by Mays on appeal involves a privilege granted by statute and
    his point relied on expresses no claim of constitutional violation by the trial court.
    3
    Section 491.060(4) provides that “[a]ny person practicing as a minister of the gospel, priest, rabbi or other
    person serving in a similar capacity for any organized religion, concerning a communication made to him or her in
    his or her professional capacity as a spiritual advisor, confessor, counselor or comforter” is incompetent to testify
    about the privileged communication. Though there are instances where a retired minister could still qualify as a
    “practicing” minister, whether Mr. Rhodes was a “practicing” minister or not does not dispense with the requirement
    that the communication by the “communicant” be within the “clergy’s” professional capacity as a “spiritual advisor,
    confessor, counselor or comforter.” See State v. Gerhart, 
    129 S.W.3d 893
    , 898 (Mo. App. W.D. 2004). Here, Mays
    did not ask for spiritual guidance, prayer, absolution, forgiveness, or anything of the like from Mr. Rhodes—a
    person whom he had never met before; instead, after confirming that Mr. Rhodes was both a retired pastor and a
    veteran, he explained how he had just shot another person, needed a phone to call someone to pick him up, and then
    he left. That said, we need not and do not rule upon the correctness of the trial court’s evidentiary ruling as to
    whether the clergy-communicant privilege was applicable or not.
    8
    Mr. Romdall (in self-defense), and several witnesses saw a truck that looked like Mays’s going
    up and down the street at the time that they heard gunshots and later found Mr. Romdall in his
    own truck dying from a gunshot wound. Mays testified that he borrowed his brother’s gun,
    which his brother testified was a Winchester .30-30 rifle, and the surveillance camera at
    Wal-Mart showed Mays buying ammunition for a .30-30 rifle.            Mays testified about his
    contentious relationship with Mr. Romdall, as did several neighbors. Accordingly, the facts that
    Mr. Rhodes’s testimony tended to prove were also established by other evidence properly
    admitted at trial.
    Next, Mr. Rhodes’s testimony was not inconsistent with Mays’s theory of the case—that
    he shot Mr. Romdall in self-defense. Mr. Rhodes did not testify that Mays had admitted that the
    shooting was premeditated nor of such a nature that he needed forgiveness for his actions. In
    fact, Mays did not ask Mr. Rhodes to pray for him on the day of the shooting and, likewise, did
    not ask Mr. Rhodes for any spiritual comfort whatsoever. Rhodes’s account was that Mays
    simply appeared at his home, asked if he was a minister, asked if he was a veteran, admitted to
    shooting another man with a .30-30 rifle, stated that this other man had been bothering him to an
    extreme level, and then asked him to use the telephone. None of this is inconsistent with Mays’s
    theory of the case, that Mr. Romdall, who had been severely bothering him for some time, and
    by whom he felt physically threatened for his life, appeared to have a gun on March 26, 2012,
    while he was in his truck, that Mr. Romdall shot at Mays, and that Mays shot Mr. Romdall in
    self-defense. “As such, the [testimony] at issue, here, would not seem to lend any greater weight
    to the State’s theory of the case than it would the defense theory.” State v. Tripp, 
    168 S.W.3d 667
    , 679 (Mo. App. W.D. 2005). This weighs against a finding that the testimony in question
    caused prejudice warranting reversal. 
    Id. 9 Finally,
    even if we view the record without Mr. Rhodes’s testimony, the overwhelming
    evidence in this case supported the jury’s finding of guilt. Several witnesses testified that Mays
    and Mr. Romdall had a history of conflict, and some neighbors testified that Mays had threatened
    to kill Mr. Romdall, although they did not take his threats seriously. Ms. Simmons testified that
    on the day of the shooting, Mays was behaving aggressively and followed Mr. Romdall.
    Ms. Simmons, who was with Mr. Romdall, was frightened, and Mays’s behavior caused the
    police to be called by another neighbor. Mays testified that he was so upset after confronting
    Mr. Romdall and Ms. Simmons that he had to go walk around to calm down. Mays testified that
    he later went to borrow his brother’s gun, ostensibly for “target practice.” Wal-Mart surveillance
    footage shows Mays buying ammunition for his brother’s gun. Immediately before the shooting,
    several witnesses testified to seeing a truck matching the description of Mays’s truck driving
    down the road near where the shooting occurred. Several witnesses heard gunshots, and Vicki
    Schmidt and Jean Bonrud saw the black truck, which Ms. Bonrud believed belonged to Mays,
    speed off away from the scene of the shooting. There was no weapon in Romdall’s truck; there
    was only a cell phone in his hand.
    The next day, Mays turned himself in to police, and his truck was found at the marina
    near Truman Lake. No weapon was found in Mays’s truck, despite his admission that he shot
    Mr. Romdall with his brother’s .30-30 rifle. There was also no evidence in Mays’s truck that a
    bullet had been fired at it, although Mays had claimed that Mr. Romdall shot at him.
    Considering Mr. Rhodes’s testimony, when balanced against all of the evidence properly
    admitted at trial, we conclude that there is not a reasonable probability that the jury would have
    reached a different conclusion but for Mr. Rhodes’s testimony, even were we to conclude that it
    had been erroneously admitted. Accordingly, Mays cannot demonstrate that the admission of
    10
    Mr. Rhodes’s testimony at trial was so prejudicial as to deprive him of a fair trial and, hence,
    Mays has failed to point to error warranting reversal.
    Point I is denied.
    Evidence Obtained from Warrantless Seizure of Truck
    Mays’s second point on appeal is that the trial court erred in denying his motion to
    suppress evidence taken from his truck on March 27, 2012, the day following Mr. Romdall’s
    shooting. The truck was seized by police without a warrant, but a warrant was obtained before
    the truck was searched.
    When a motion to suppress is denied, we review both the evidence presented at the
    motion hearing and at the trial, and view the facts and reasonable inferences from those facts in
    the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling. State v. Selvy, 
    462 S.W.3d 756
    , 760 (Mo.
    App. E.D. 2015). “Review is limited to determining whether the decision is supported by
    substantial evidence.” State v. Walker, 
    460 S.W.3d 81
    , 85 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015). However,
    analysis of whether the Fourth Amendment has been violated is a legal issue that this court
    reviews de novo. 
    Id. The Fourth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution and article 1, section 15 of the
    Missouri Constitution both guarantee the right of people to be free from unreasonable searches
    and seizures. State v. Humble, 
    474 S.W.3d 210
    , 215 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015). A warrantless
    search or seizure is presumed to be unreasonable unless one of “a few specifically established
    and well-delineated exceptions” applies. 
    Id. (internal quotation
    omitted). The “automobile
    exception” is one of those established exceptions to the warrant requirement. 
    Id. “Under the
    automobile exception to the warrant requirement, police may search a vehicle
    and seize [evidence] found if there is probable cause to believe that the vehicle contains
    11
    [evidence] and exigent circumstances necessitate the search.”        
    Walker, 460 S.W.3d at 85
    (internal quotation omitted). Here, there was both probable cause to believe that evidence
    relevant to the homicide would be found in the truck and that exigent circumstances required that
    the truck be seized to prevent further removal of evidence from the truck.
    Several witnesses had seen Mays argue with and harass Mr. Romdall on the day of his
    death and had seen a vehicle that looked like the one Mays drove in the area of Mr. Romdall’s
    own vehicle immediately prior to the shooting, a location where witnesses had heard multiple
    gun shots fired. Further, Mays had turned himself in to law enforcement the morning before his
    truck was impounded. Therefore, the black truck that law enforcement believed belonged to
    Mays—substantiated by the fact that the keys to the truck were provided by Mays’s brother—
    was part of the crime scene; thus, the officers had probable cause to believe that evidence of the
    crime would be found within the truck.
    Likewise, exigent circumstances supported law enforcement’s seizure of the pickup truck
    to a secured location while a search warrant was being obtained. The truck was clearly mobile
    and had been moved in the few hours preceding its seizure. And, in mere minutes between Park
    Superintendent Bethel’s discovery of the vehicle and law enforcement’s arrival, Mr. Bethel
    observed several people milling about the truck and conversing amongst each other, coming and
    going, and one of the people removing at least one item from the bed of the truck that appeared
    to be something matching the description of a wrapped up weapon. These exigent circumstances
    justified law enforcement’s preemptive seizure of the truck to a secure location where it could be
    searched later, pursuant to the warrant that law enforcement obtained.
    The trial court did not commit error in admitting the evidence found in the pickup truck.
    Point II is denied.
    12
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    Mark D. Pfeiffer, Chief Judge
    Alok Ahuja, Presiding Judge, and J. Dale Youngs, Special Judge, concur.
    13