State of Missouri v. Vincent L. Jones ( 2020 )


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  •                  In the Missouri Court of Appeals
    Eastern District
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF MISSOURI,                             )      No. ED107425
    )
    Respondent,                             )      Appeal from the Circuit Court
    )      of St. Louis County
    vs.                                            )
    )      Hon. John D. Warner, Jr.
    VINCENT L. JONES,                              )
    )      Filed:
    Appellant.                              )      February 25, 2020
    Vincent Jones (“Defendant”) appeals from the judgment entered on his convictions
    after a jury trial for abuse of a child resulting in death and second-degree felony-murder
    predicated on the child abuse. We affirm.
    The sufficiency of the evidence is not in dispute. Defendant lived with his girlfriend
    (“Mom”) and her four young children. On the morning of July 27, 2017, Mom left for
    work at approximately 7:20 a.m. When she left, her 21-month old son “Buddy” was sitting
    up in the bed where he had slept the night before with her and Defendant. He was whining
    and crying as he commonly did when Mom left. At 8:37 a.m., Defendant called 911 to
    report that Buddy was unresponsive and barely breathing. Buddy was taken to the
    emergency room, but died shortly thereafter at 11:00 a.m. The autopsy showed significant
    bruising over much of Buddy’s 30-pound body: he had eight bruises above his right ear
    and three above his left ear; there were multiple bruises across his forehead; the back of his
    head was bruised, as was the inside and outside of his mouth; there were bruises covering
    both thighs, on his sternum, abdomen and back. Buddy’s abdomen was full of a large
    quantity of blood, much of which came from his torn liver and lacerated intestines. There
    was significant other internal damage as well, including to his pancreas, adrenal glands and
    diaphragm. He had massive bleeding around his testicles, in and around his brain and the
    spinal cord.
    These injuries were caused by multiple instances of blunt force trauma, which was
    determined to be the cause of Buddy’s death. The injuries all happened at the same time
    and could not have been inflicted more than two hours before Buddy died. He would have
    remained conscious for twenty or thirty minutes after being so severely beaten, during
    which time he would have been experiencing pain and crying. These injuries could not
    have been inflicted by Buddy’s young siblings, nor caused by a fall or spanking; they were
    consistent with an adult punching this child with a fist or kicking him. In other words, the
    beating happened at the hands of an adult that morning. The only adult with Buddy after
    Mom left for work was Defendant. Defendant denied doing anything to hurt Buddy and
    claimed he did not know who beat him.
    Buddy’s brother, D.W., was interviewed at the Children’s Advocacy Center the
    afternoon of Buddy’s death. D.W. was five and half years old at the time. During the
    interview, while listing who he lived with, D.W. volunteered that Buddy was in the hospital
    because he was not breathing. When asked what happened to him, D.W. said he did not
    know. D.W. said that after Mom went to work he could hear Buddy crying in the other
    room “and [Defendant] keep on hitting him.” Upon additional questions, D.W. explained
    that he did not see Defendant hitting Buddy, but did hear Defendant “thump” Buddy. D.W.
    said he heard Defendant tell Buddy to be quiet, but Buddy cried and cried “100 times.”
    2
    After a pre-trial hearing pursuant to Section 491.075, the trial court determined that D.W.’s
    statements contained sufficient indicia of reliability such that the videotape of the interview
    could be admitted at trial.
    At the close of evidence, the jury was instructed on abuse of child, second-degree
    felony-murder and involuntary manslaughter. The child abuse verdict-director instructed
    that if the jury found Defendant had knowingly caused injury to Buddy by beating him and
    Buddy died as a result of that injury, then it must find him guilty of child abuse. On the
    second-degree felony-murder count, the jury was instructed that if it found Defendant
    guilty of child abuse and Buddy was killed as a result of that child abuse, then it must find
    him guilty of murder in the second degree. The jury was also instructed that if it did not
    find Defendant guilty of second-degree murder, it must consider involuntary manslaughter.
    The jury found Defendant guilty of child abuse and second-degree murder. The court
    sentenced him as a prior and persistent offender to twenty years in prison on the child abuse
    causing death count and life imprisonment on the second-degree felony-murder count, to
    be served consecutively. This appeal follows.
    In his first point on appeal, Defendant alleges the court erred by admitting the
    videotaped interview of five-year-old D.W., arguing that the statements made therein did
    not contain sufficient indicia of reliability and were not admissible under Section 491.075.
    We review a trial court’s decision to admit a child’s statements under Section 491.075 for
    abuse of discretion. State v. Ragland, 
    494 S.W.3d 613
    , 622–23 (Mo. App. E.D. 2016). We
    find no abuse of discretion here.
    The out-of-court statements of a child are admissible in a criminal trial under
    Section 491.075.1 as substantive evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted if,
    3
    among other things, the court finds after a hearing that “the time, content and circumstances
    of the statement provide sufficient indicia of reliability.” Section 491.075.1(1). The
    reliability of a child’s statement is determined by looking at the totality of the
    circumstances as set out in the evidence presented at the 491 hearing. 
    Id. at 623.
    Several
    non-exclusive factors aid the analysis: (1) whether the statements were made spontaneously
    and consistently repeated; (2) the mental state of the child; (3) whether the child had a
    motive to fabricate; (4) whether the child’s knowledge of the subject matter is unexpected
    at that age; (5) the amount of time between when the acts occurred and when the statements
    are made; and (6) the technique employed by the interviewer. 
    Id. All of
    these factors are
    designed to assess whether the child “was particularly likely to be telling the truth when
    the statement was made.” 
    Id. Defendant argues
    D.W.’s statements were not sufficiently
    reliable based primarily on the first and second factors:        D.W.’s mental state and
    inconsistencies during his interview.
    As to D.W.’s mental state, the interviewer testified at the 491 hearing that D.W.
    seemed to understand her questions and his responses to her indicated his receptive
    language was developmentally normal for his age. She said D.W. was responsive to most
    of her questions, was polite and friendly and “very contained” for a five-year-old. The
    interviewer testified that D.W. stayed in his seat most of the time and kept on task for the
    almost 45-minute interview; when he occasionally deviated to play with the toys in the
    room, she said it was easy to bring him back on topic. Defendant asserts that the videotape
    belies this testimony and shows D.W. was focused more on playing with the toys in the
    interview room than on the questions. But, as the interviewer explained, young children
    need something to engage them during an interview because they are not able to just sit at
    4
    a table and have a conversation like an adult might. The mere fact that D.W. was playing
    with toys while answering questions does not demonstrate a lack of attention or
    understanding. Defendant also cites several examples of supposedly non-responsive
    answers from D.W., but young children do not always speak in the same linear and direct
    way as an adult might when answering questions. The mere fact that D.W. interspersed
    some of his answers with comments that were not directly responsive—either about the
    toys he was playing with or about a related but slightly different matter than the question
    addressed—does not indicate that he did not understand the question or was not paying
    sufficient attention. Even if he misunderstood or missed a few questions, overall D.W. was
    generally attentive and gave appropriately responsive answers.           Defendant has not
    established that D.W.’s mental state shows that he was less likely to be telling the truth
    when he made these statements.
    As to the spontaneity and consistency factor, Defendant concedes that D.W.’s
    statements about Defendant hitting Buddy were made spontaneously and does not claim
    that D.W. was ever inconsistent about this most salient fact. But he asserts that D.W. was
    “very inconsistent” about other matters, which he claims renders the entirety of the
    interview unreliable. Defendant points out that early in the interview when asked where
    Buddy was sleeping and where Buddy was when he was crying, D.W. said in Mom’s room
    and that, at later points in the interview, when asked where Buddy was eating his breakfast
    or where he was sleeping or where he was crying, D.W. said Buddy was in D.W.’s room.
    But, as the interviewer explained at the 491 hearing, these statements are not necessarily
    inconsistent:
    A: I don’t know if he was inconsistent or if I was just unclear. I was—I
    had a little bit of confusion, and I think he clarified it, [D.W.] sharing with
    5
    me about the sleeping arrangement. Because at one point, it sounded like
    he was saying the child was, his brother Buddy was, in Mom’s bed. And
    then later he was saying Buddy was in his bed, in [D.W.’s] and his sister’s
    bed. And as I sought clarification of that, I thought it was an inconsistency,
    but it may, in fact, be that the child was moved.
    Q: So basically the location of Buddy at times changed?
    A: Yes. And so I wasn’t sure if his statement was changing or if this
    [victim’s] actual location changed.
    Q: And would that confusion pair with his inability to describe time at
    certain points?
    A: I think the confusion was mine more than it was his. I think it was my
    confusion. 1
    In fact, D.W. expressly stated at one point in the interview that Buddy left one of the
    bedrooms and went into the other room. It was not inconsistent for D.W. to have stated
    that Buddy was crying and sleeping in both rooms at various points that morning.
    Defendant also points out that D.W. said his sister was asleep and then, shortly after,
    indicated they were all awake and that D.W. said he ate his waffles in his room and then
    immediately changed his answer to say he ate in the kitchen. In both of these instances,
    D.W. appears to be correcting himself, not giving inconsistent versions of the morning’s
    events. 2 Defendant has failed to demonstrate that any of the supposed inconsistencies in
    D.W.’s statements indicate he was less likely to be telling the truth.
    1
    Defendant suggests that the interviewer’s confusion is itself an indication that the statements should not
    have been admitted under Section 491.075. We fail to see how this has anything to do with the ultimate issue
    on this point: whether the child was likely to be telling the truth. To the extent anything in this interview
    was unclear, that goes to the weight the jury was tasked with giving this evidence, not to its admissibility
    under Section 491.075.
    2
    Defendant also argues that D.W.’s supposed inability to keep track of time called the reliability of his
    statements into question. He points to D.W.’s statement in the interview that Mom left for work when it was
    dark, which Defendant states was inconsistent with the evidence at trial showing she had actually left at 7:00
    or 7:30 that summer morning when it was already light out. But when assessing the factors of reliability and
    whether the court abused its discretion in admitting this interview, we can consider only the evidence
    presented at the 491 hearing, not the evidence presented at trial. See Ragland, 
    494 S.W.3d 623
    .
    6
    Defendant’s arguments regarding the other factors are also without merit. He
    acknowledges that the child had no motive to lie, but claims the child was motivated to
    please the interviewer and was suggestible, citing the time the child exclaimed “ta da”
    when he finished a drawing and the moment the child supposedly mimicked the interviewer
    saying “finally” right after she did when the air conditioning turned off. As the interviewer
    pointed out at the 491 hearing, it was not clear whether the child was mimicking her or was
    also just pleased that the air conditioning had “finally” turned off because he was also cold.
    Even if the child had a desire to please this interviewer, Defendant has failed to articulate
    how such a desire made it more likely that he was not telling the truth. In other words,
    there is no reason to believe the child was willing to lie about the events of the morning or
    anything else to please the interviewer. Defendant also points out that the interviewer
    admitted at the 491 hearing that she could have asked one of the questions during the
    interview in a more open-ended way. That a single question could have been phrased more
    artfully does not establish that the interviewer’s techniques were problematic or
    undermined the reliability of D.W.’s statements.
    Defendant has failed to show that the trial court abused its discretion in determining
    that D.W.’s statements were, under the totality of the circumstances, reliable and
    admissible under Section 491.075. Point I is denied.
    In his remaining three points, Defendant argues that felony-murder cannot be
    predicated on child abuse resulting in death because that underlying felony is the act that
    itself caused the death. He contends that prosecution, conviction and sentencing for both
    of these crimes is prohibited by the felony-murder statute, the merger doctrine and his
    7
    constitutional right to be free from double jeopardy. None of these claims were raised in
    the trial court, and Defendant seeks plain error review. We find no error, plain or otherwise.
    The felony-murder rule is traceable to the late 1790s and is premised on the idea
    that proving the defendant intended to commit a felony raises a conclusive presumption
    that he possessed the necessary intent to support a murder conviction for a death resulting
    from perpetration of that underlying felony. See State v. Bouser, 
    17 S.W.3d 130
    , 135 (Mo.
    App. W.D. 1999). At common law, there were no degrees of murder; all homicides were
    either murder or manslaughter. By the late 1800s, the legislature had codified and imposed
    different degrees of homicides and incorporated the felony-murder rule into the statutes.
    Thus, in 1878, the statute for first degree murder criminalized not only deliberate killings
    but also provided that “[e]very murder . . . committed in the perpetration or attempt to
    perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery, burglary or other felony, shall be deemed murder in
    the first degree.” 
    Id. at 135
    (quoting Wagner’s Stat. (1872) c. 42, art. 2, s.1, p. 445). “All
    other kinds of murder at common law” were murder in the second-degree, and there were
    separate provisions for manslaughter and justifiable homicide. 
    Id. at 135
    , n.3 (quoting
    Wagner’s Stat. (1872) c. 42, art. 2, s.2, p. 445). The Supreme Court of Missouri expressed
    concern that this first-degree felony-murder statute would consume all other degrees of
    homicide if there were not limits on the “other” felonies that could be used to predicate
    felony-murder. State v. Shock, 
    1878 WL 9686
    at *4-5 (Mo. 1878). Thus, the Court
    construed “other felony” to mean “some collateral felony” and not to mean “acts of
    personal violence to the deceased” that were “necessary and constituent elements of the
    homicide itself, and are, therefore, merged in it.” 
    Id. at *5.
    This became known as the
    merger doctrine and it was applied sporadically over the years as the criminal statutes
    8
    evolved. See 
    Bouser, 17 S.W.3d at 135-38
    and State v. Williams, 
    24 S.W.3d 101
    , 109-15
    (Mo. App. W.D. 2000) (discussing legislative history and development of merger doctrine
    since Shock). 3
    In 1984, the legislature removed felony-murder from the first-degree murder statute
    and rewrote the second-degree murder statute to its present form:
    1. A person commits the offense of murder in the second degree if he or
    she:
    (1) Knowingly causes the death of another person or, with the purpose of
    causing serious physical injury to another person, causes the death of
    another person; or
    (2) Commits or attempts to commit any felony, and, in the perpetration or
    the attempted perpetration of such felony or in the flight from the
    perpetration or attempted perpetration of such felony, another person is
    killed as a result of the perpetration or attempted perpetration of such
    felony or immediate flight from the perpetration of such felony or
    attempted perpetration of such felony.
    2. The offense of murder in the second degree is a class A felony, and the
    punishment for second degree murder shall be in addition to the
    punishment for commission of a related felony or attempted felony,
    other than murder or manslaughter. 4
    Section 565.021 (emphasis added). 5 It is widely-recognized that the plain and ordinary
    meaning of the phrase “any felony” in Section 575.021.1(2) is expansive and indicates the
    3
    Bouser was handed down in December of 1999, but was not final due to pending motions for rehearing and
    transfer until May of 2000. Meanwhile, Williams was handed down in April of 2000 and, though certainly
    aware of its earlier decision in Bouser, the court does not mention it, presumably because it was not yet final.
    4
    Because this section, Section 565.021.1(2), expressly permits cumulative punishment for all crimes other
    than murder or manslaughter, Defendant’s double jeopardy argument necessarily fails and has been rejected
    by numerous courts as follows: Where, as here, the issue is multiple punishments imposed following a single
    trial, the double jeopardy analysis is “limited to determining whether multiple punishments were intended by
    the legislature.” State v. Barker, 
    410 S.W.3d 225
    , 236 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013). “Inasmuch as our felony-
    murder statute expressly intends multiple punishments for both second degree felony murder and the
    underlying felony, such punishments when imposed in a single trial do not constitute double jeopardy.” Id;
    see also State v. Coody, 
    867 S.W.2d 661
    , 664 (Mo. App. S.D. 1993); State v. Mendoza, 
    115 S.W.3d 873
    , 876
    (Mo. App. W.D. 2003); Johnson v. State, 
    477 S.W.3d 2
    , 8 (Mo. App. E.D. 2015).
    5
    Between its enactment in 1984 and today, there have been only minor changes to this statute and affecting
    the substantive language addressed here.
    9
    legislature’s intent that every felony can serve as an underlying felony for purposes of
    felony-murder. See 
    Bouser, 17 S.W.3d at 138-39
    ; State v. Harding, 
    528 S.W.3d 362
    , 368-
    69 (Mo. App. E.D. 2017); State v. Tuttle, 
    519 S.W.3d 443
    , 447-49 (Mo. App. S.D. 2016).
    If the legislature had wanted to exclude from the otherwise all-encompassing “any felony”
    language in Section 565.021.1(2) specific felonies or types of felonies—as it had done in
    prior iterations of the felony-murder rule in earlier versions of the statutes—it certainly
    could have used less expansive language than “any felony.” The only limitation on what
    felonies can predicate felony-murder—as the Western and Southern Districts have found—
    is set out in Section 565.021.2, which expressly permits the punishment for felony-murder
    to be cumulative to punishment for an underlying felony “other than murder or
    manslaughter.” See 
    Bouser, 17 S.W.3d at 134-40
    ; see also 
    Williams, 24 S.W.3d at 109
    -
    15; State v. Gheen, 
    41 S.W.3d 598
    , 605 (Mo. App. W.D. 2001); State v. Simino, 
    397 S.W.3d 11
    , 25 (Mo. App. S.D. 2013), abrogated on other grounds by State v. Sisco, 
    458 S.W.3d 304
    (Mo. banc 2015). Relying on the statutory interpretation maxim expressio
    unius est exclusio alterius (expression of one thing implies the exclusion of another), those
    courts concluded that the express mention of a limitation on cumulative punishment for
    “murder” and “manslaughter” implied a legislative intent that there be no other limitations
    on which felonies can predicate felony-murder, including by way of applying the merger
    doctrine to exclude felonies that were themselves the very act that caused the death. See
    
    Williams, 24 S.W.3d at 117
    . The Bouser court found there was no longer a need for the
    merger doctrine because this express statutory exclusion of murder and manslaughter
    alleviated the Shock court’s concern that the felony-murder rule might consume those other
    degrees of homicide. 
    Bouser, 17 S.W.3d at 140
    .
    10
    While there is no case in the Eastern District explicitly holding that the merger
    doctrine is no longer viable under the current statute, we have acknowledged that “modern
    precedent” such as Williams “suggests that the merger doctrine has been abrogated.” State
    v. Gray, 
    347 S.W.3d 490
    , 508 (Mo. App. E.D. 2011). We did not have occasion to address
    the viability of the doctrine in Gray because it was a conventional second-degree murder
    case to which the merger doctrine did not apply. 
    Id. The issue
    is squarely before us now.
    We find the Western and Southern Districts’ analyses well-reasoned and persuasive and
    conclude that the merger doctrine is no longer viable under the current felony-murder
    statute. 6 The language of that statute indicates the legislative intent to allow every felony
    except murder or manslaughter to serve as a predicate for felony-murder.
    Defendant argues that “murder or manslaughter” ought to be construed more
    liberally in his favor to include all homicides. He reasons that because murder and
    manslaughter were the only homicides at the time Section 565.021 was enacted in 1984,
    the reference to “murder” and “manslaughter” was intended to refer to all homicides.
    Defendant points out that, although in 1984 the child abuse statute did not contemplate the
    death of the child and therefore did not constitute a homicide, since 1997 the crime of child
    abuse rises to a class A felony when the abuse causes death. See Section 568.060.5(2).
    Defendant argues that child abuse causing death and all other crimes that include death as
    an element should be treated like the homicides of “murder” and “manslaughter” for
    6
    Defendant suggests that we need not follow these other districts’ cases and can instead continue to rely on
    the Supreme Court’s opinion in Shock because it was not overturned by those intermediate appellate courts
    and is still “good law” providing authority for the merger doctrine. He also contends that our Eastern District
    opinion in State v. Hanes, 
    729 S.W.2d 612
    (Mo. App. E.D. 1987), also never overturned, likewise supports
    continued application of the merger doctrine in this district. We disagree. Hanes involved a crime committed
    before the 1984 amendments to the felony-murder statute, and thus like Shock, was decided in a totally
    different legal context under very different criminal statutes. These outdated cases are of little value to our
    discussion here, particularly given that we have available to us a much more instructive analysis of the merger
    doctrine under the current statutory scheme in the Western and Southern District cases.
    11
    purposes of the felony-murder statute. To construe the statute otherwise, Defendant
    contends, renders the prohibition on cumulative punishment in Section 565.021.2
    meaningless because the State can simply premise felony-murder on a crime that is not in
    name “murder” or “manslaughter” but in reality is the type of homicidal crime the
    legislature intended not to be cumulatively punished. Defendant claims that his case
    illustrates the problem: Assuming he is guilty of causing Buddy’s death, then Defendant
    is in reality guilty of some degree or type of either murder or manslaughter because the
    death was either caused knowingly with deliberation (murder in the first degree),
    knowingly without deliberation (conventional murder in the second degree), recklessly
    (involuntary manslaughter in the first degree) or with criminal negligence (involuntary
    manslaughter in the second degree). See generally Sections 565.020 to 565.027. None of
    those crimes can serve as the underlying felony for felony-murder. But the State can side-
    step that limitation by charging the crime as child abuse causing death, which it can use to
    predicate felony-murder, subjecting Defendant to cumulative punishments he would not
    otherwise have faced if the crime was charged as a murder or manslaughter. Defendant
    argues that under this scenario the felony-murder rule swallows the legislature’s gradation
    system for homicides, which is the very harm the merger doctrine sought to address.
    Contrary to Bouser’s conclusion, he asserts, the statute does not alleviate this concern
    unless we construe the language “murder or manslaughter” to mean “all homicides” or
    continue applying the merger doctrine so that the State cannot predicate felony-murder on
    a felony that is itself the very act causing death.
    Whatever merit there may be to the policies underlying Defendant’s argument for
    imposing these limitations on the types of felonies that can predicate felony-murder—lest
    12
    the felon-murder rule be stretched beyond its logical bounds—we are simply not at liberty
    to apply any such limitation on felony-murder that is not already written in the statute. See
    Williams, 
    24 S.W.3d 117
    . “The legislature, not the courts, makes law and it may limit or
    abolish the felony-murder rule as it sees fit. It is not for the courts to assume this legislative
    function.” 
    Bouser, 17 S.W.3d at 140
    . If in 1984 the legislature did, as Defendant contends,
    mean to refer in Section 565.021.2 generally to all homicides, then surely it would have
    used the general term “homicides” and not the terms “murder” and “manslaughter” that
    refer to particular homicides. If the legislature had at any point thereafter wanted to include
    additional homicides, it could have done so. But it has not, even after the child abuse
    statute was amended to include a death element and after the courts held that child abuse
    causing death is a permissible predicate felony under the statutory language. See 
    Bouser, 17 S.W.3d at 139-40
    ; see also 
    Mendoza, 115 S.W.3d at 875
    n.3. We are obligated to follow
    the statute as it is written. The statute as written indicates that the legislature intended
    every felony to qualify as a predicate to felony-murder and did not intend for there to be
    any merger or other limitation except for the specific crimes of murder and manslaughter.
    “[I]t is not within this court’s province to rule contrary to our legislature’s intent.” 
    Bouser, 17 S.W.3d at 140
    .
    In sum, abuse of a child resulting in death is a felony and it is not “murder” or
    “manslaughter.” Therefore, it is a felony on which felony-murder may be predicated under
    Section 565.021, and punishment for felony-murder may be imposed in addition to the
    punishment for child abuse without violating that statute or the double jeopardy clause.
    The court did not err, plainly or otherwise, in instructing the jury to find felony-murder
    based on the predicate crime of child abuse causing death, in entering the conviction for
    13
    felony-murder or in sentencing Defendant for that crime in addition to the child abuse
    sentence. Points II, III and IV are denied.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    ROBERT G. DOWD, JR., Judge
    Robert M. Clayton III, P.J. and
    Roy L. Richter, J., concur.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: ED107425

Judges: Robert G. Dowd, Jr., J.

Filed Date: 2/25/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021