State v. Satterfield ( 2013 )


Menu:
  • [Cite as State v. Satterfield, 
    2013-Ohio-5551
    .]
    STATE OF OHIO, BELMONT COUNTY
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    SEVENTH DISTRICT
    STATE OF OHIO,                                    )
    )   CASE NO. 12 BE 22
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE,                       )
    )
    - VS -                                    )         OPINION
    )
    WILLIAM JAY CEE SATTERFIELD,                      )
    )
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.                      )
    CHARACTER OF PROCEEDINGS:                             Criminal Appeal from Common Pleas
    Court, Case No. 11 CR 284.
    JUDGMENT:                                             Affirmed.
    APPEARANCES:
    For Plaintiff-Appellee:                               Attorney Chris Berhalter
    Prosecuting Attorney
    Attorney Helen Yonak
    Asst. Prosecuting Attorney
    147-A W. Main Street
    St. Clairsville, OH 43950
    For Defendant-Appellant:                              Attorney Samuel H. Shamansky
    Attorney Donald L. Regensburger
    Attorney Colin E. Peters
    Samuel H. Shamansky Co., LPA
    523 South Third Street
    Columbus, OH 43215
    JUDGES:
    Hon. Mary DeGenaro
    Hon. Gene Donofrio
    Hon. Joseph J. Vukovich
    Dated: December 5, 2013
    [Cite as State v. Satterfield, 
    2013-Ohio-5551
    .]
    DeGenaro, P.J.
    {¶1}     Defendant-Appellant, William Jay Cee Satterfield, appeals the May 7,
    2012 judgment of the Belmont County Court of Common Pleas convicting him of one
    count of murder and sentencing him accordingly. On appeal, Satterfield asserts that
    his conviction is against the manifest weight of the evidence.                Upon review,
    Satterfield's assignment of error is meritless. The outcome of this case turned on
    credibility determinations best made by the jury. In convicting Satterfield the jury did
    not lose its way so as to create a manifest miscarriage of justice. Accordingly, the
    judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    Facts and Procedural History
    {¶2}     On October 7, 2011, Satterfield shot and killed his neighbor's boyfriend,
    Kevin Smith, claiming the shooting was accidental. The Belmont County grand jury
    indicted Satterfield on one count of aggravated murder (R.C. 2929.01(A)), and one count
    of murder (R.C. 2903.02(A)), both with firearm specifications (R.C. 2941.145). The matter
    proceeded to a jury trial on April 17, 2012.
    {¶3}     Grace Wineman, Smith's girlfriend of five years testified that she had lived
    at the Abby's Crossing apartments in Bethesda for approximately five weeks. Over the
    course of their relationship, Smith sometimes lived with her.
    {¶4}     On October 6, 2011, Wineman came home from work at approximately
    4:30 p.m. She and Smith went to the home of Smith's mother Denise Wheeler where
    they had a campfire. They brought Wineman's dog Rex along with them, a 35 pound
    "border collie terrier lab mutt." Wineman drank "a beer or two" and Smith was drinking
    beer. Smith had been feeling ill for over a week and vomited after he ate dinner. At
    approximately 11:00pm they departed to go to Smith's cousin Laramie's house. They
    stopped at Wineman's apartment first to retrieve her wallet. When she got out of her
    car at the apartment complex, Rex got loose; she called him and he would not come,
    and she decided to leave him running lose while they were gone. She said that at her
    prior residence, Rex had gotten "loose a million times," and had "never been a
    problem."
    {¶5}     They were at Laramie's house for a short time, just long enough for Smith
    -2-
    to smoke a marijuana joint, which he did in the hopes of settling his stomach.
    Wineman denied smoking marijuana that evening.
    {¶6}   They returned to Wineman's apartment and Smith was feeling much better.
    His appetite had returned and Wineman began to prepare him some food. The dog was
    inside the apartment. While Wineman was in the kitchen she heard a knock on the door.
    Smith went to answer it; at that time he was still wearing his boots. Satterfield was at the
    door wearing army fatigues, with a beer in his hand. He called Smith a "b*tch and a
    p*ssy," and told him he knew that Smith didn't really live there and essentially threatened
    to tell the landlord. Wineman grabbed Smith by the arm and told him to come in the
    house, and that Satterfield was not worth fighting over. She closed the door and locked it.
    Smith came in the house, took off his boots right by the door and sat on the living room
    couch. The couch was located under a window at the front of the apartment. Wineman
    identified a photograph of the room which showed the location of the couch by the open,
    screen-less window, along with Smith's boots.
    {¶7}   Wineman said she then went back in the kitchen. Satterfield was still
    outside screaming, calling Smith a "b*tch." Wineman heard Smith respond "Bill
    Satterfield, you ain't never been nothing but a b*tch your entire life. Oh you got a gun?
    You're going to shoot me?" Wineman left the kitchen. She heard one gunshot. Smith
    was kneeling on the couch, facing the open window. One of his hands was up on the
    window and the other hand was hanging by his side. Then a second gunshot lit up the
    room. Wineman explained: "It was like - - it was like a torch. And it lit up everything
    outside. It lit up Bill [Satterfield] and his face, and his arm pointing the gun up at Kevin's
    head." Wineman could clearly see the gun in Satterfield's hand. He was standing
    straight in front of Smith the gun turned sideways. She said Satterfield appeared angry
    and was standing approximately three feet away from the window when he shot Smith.
    {¶8}   After Satterfield shot him, Smith "crumpled out of the window," head-first,
    landing on the grill outside. Satterfield was standing there and said: "I shot you now."
    Wineman ran outside and straightened Smith to try to prevent him from choking on his
    own blood. She then went to a neighbor's house and asked her to call an ambulance.
    -3-
    She then returned to her apartment, locked the dog in the bathroom and went to tend
    to Smith, who had a sustained a bullet wound to the left side of his forehead. The
    police, ambulance and Smith's mother arrived shortly thereafter. Wineman spoke with
    a detective at the scene and was interviewed more comprehensively on October 14,
    one week after the shooting.
    {¶9}   On cross, Wineman agreed that the shooting was traumatic and startled
    her quite a bit. She maintained she did not smoke marijuana the night of the shooting,
    though she admitted to using the drug in the past. She denied telling a detective that
    she smoked marijuana that evening. She said that if she indicated on the video of her
    interview with the detective that "they" had smoked marijuana, she was referring to
    others present that evening, not herself. When confronted with her October 18, 2011
    written statement: "Then went to Laramie's [a brother], hung out for a few minutes and
    smoked," she again said she was not referring to herself. While questioned on redirect,
    Wineman testified that at the time of the shooting she had quit smoking marijuana due
    to her job as a home health aide; however, on recross, she conceded that she had
    never been drug tested as part of her current job.
    {¶10} Denise Wheeler, the victim's mother, testified that on the evening Smith
    was killed he and Wineman came to her home and made a bonfire in the back yard.
    Wineman's dog Rex was with them. She confirmed that Smith was feeling ill that
    evening and that he drank "a couple" beers. Later after Smith left she heard gunshots in
    the distance, instinctively worried about her son, and went directly to Abbey's Crossing.
    She saw that Smith had been shot in the head and ran to him. Wineman was upset and
    screaming. Smith was lying on the ground with his feet pointing towards the apartment
    window. Wheeler got Wineman to calm down and noticed her son's legs were stiffening
    and she started to rub them. She also noticed that he was in socked feet and thought
    this was odd because he always wore shoes when outside because he had an aversion
    to anything touching his feet. She also specifically noticed that his socks were dry.
    Smith was life-flighted to a Pittsburgh hospital where he died several days later from his
    injuries.
    -4-
    {¶11} David Cassanta, a ranger for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources,
    was the first to respond to the scene; he handcuffed Satterfield. Satterfield told
    Cassanta that he shot Smith. Cassanta stated that when he got to Smith, he was
    positioned on the ground with his feet pointing towards the open apartment window.
    {¶12} Ohio State Highway Patrol Trooper Joseph Weaver testified that when he
    arrived on scene, Smith was lying in the grass with his feet toward the open window by the
    grill. Although it was cold outside, Smith was not wearing a coat or shoes. The trooper
    identified a photograph of the inside of the apartment showing a pair of boots lying beside
    the couch. He inquired about the boots and learned they belonged to the victim. He
    rendered first aid to Smith and said he did not smell anything unusual or any alcoholic
    beverages on his person.
    {¶13} After the scene was secured and Smith was taken away by ambulance,
    Trooper Weaver tried to comfort Wineman, who was very upset and crying. Over
    objections, Trooper Weaver testified that Wineman told her that Smith had been outside
    arguing with Satterfield about her dog barking, and that Satterfield was drunk and
    Wineman told Smith it was not worth it to argue with him. She told him that Smith came
    inside but Satterfield was still outside yelling at him. She said Smith then went to the
    window, opened it and continued to argue with Satterfield. From the kitchen Wineman
    said she heard a gunshot, looked to see what happened, heard a second gunshot and
    then saw Smith fall out of the window.
    {¶14} Robert Mills, an EMT and Assistant Chief of the Belmont Fire Department
    testified that when he responded to the scene, Smith was lying on the ground with his
    feet facing the building. Jeff Doty, a paramedic confirmed this was Smith's position on
    the ground when he arrived.
    {¶15} The State then played Satterfield's two 911 calls for the jury. On the first
    call, Satterfield sounds very agitated and spends 27 minutes complaining to operators
    and then a sheriff's deputy about his neighbors' dog running loose while the neighbors
    were not home. He complained that it was impossible for him to go outside or to take
    his own dog outside without the neighbor's dog running at him. He threatened to kill the
    -5-
    dog if the sheriff's department did not send an officer out. He stated that he was an
    airborne infantryman in the Army. He stated that earlier in the evening he went outside
    with his crossbow but the dog did not attack him. He was advised to call animal control
    in the morning and not to go outside with his weapon at night.
    {¶16} On the second call, which is just under 6 minutes long, Satterfield tells the
    911 operator: "Yeah, I just had to shoot a man." He stated he went outside to talk to
    Smith about the dog, and then came back over to Smith with his Taurus Judge pistol, for
    which he has a concealed carry license. He said Smith smacked him a couple times and
    then Smith came out of his window and said "what the f*ck, what's going on, you want
    some beef?" Satterfield said he then walked up to the window and told Smith he did not
    want trouble. Smith hit him again so he pulled out his gun. After Smith hit him again and
    the gun went off, Smith rebounded with another hit and the gun went off a second time, a
    bullet hitting Smith in the head. Satterfield later exclaimed to the operator: "The thing is I
    just killed a f*cking man over a dog that I called the deputy sheriff over earlier. * * * I
    didn't even mean to shoot the f*cking guy - he hit my f*cking hand that had the pistol in
    it and it went off and shot him in the f*cking head!"
    {¶17} Dr. Abdulrezak Shakir, the forensic pathologist for the Allegheny County
    Medical Examiner's Office testified that Smith died as a result of the gunshot wound to the
    head. He opined that the end of the gun that fired the bullet was in front of Smith's face.
    Based upon the lack of soot or stippling (small abrasions on the skin) near the entrance
    wound, Dr. Shakir opined that the end of the gun was more than two feet away from
    Smith's head when it was fired. Further, he found no evidence of stippling or powder
    burns on Smith's hands. He said that if Smith's hands had been in the way of the
    travelling bullet and had been within two feet of the gun, he would have expected to see
    stippling on the hands. Photographs from the autopsy were admitted as evidence. On
    cross, he conceded that his examination was done over 7 days after the shooting and that
    he would have expected any soot to have been removed at the hospital. However, he
    would not have expected the stippling, which are abrasions, to heal in that time.
    {¶18} Edward Lulla, a crime scene agent with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
    -6-
    Investigation and Identification testified that he arrived on the scene at 4:00 a.m. on
    October 8, 2007. He identified a number of photographs he took, which were admitted
    as exhibits. Because he was informed that two shots were fired, only one of which hit
    the victim, he proceeded to look for the second bullet, but ultimately never found it.
    Based on the location of the collapsed grill just outside the window, the blood
    saturation stains on the grass, and the blow flow pattern on the grill, Agent Lulla
    opined that Smith was behind the grill when he was shot, ultimately falling onto it. He
    also stated that "unless [Smith] was very thin and could fit between the grill and the
    wall, [he] assume[ed] [Smith] was inside" the apartment when he was shot. On cross,
    Agent Lulla conceded that because he did not see the position of the grill before the
    shooting, he did not know of its exact position before it collapsed.
    {¶19} Joshua Bar, a forensic scientist assigned to the firearms section at BCI
    testified about Satterfield's gun and markings on the bullets. He determined that
    Satterfield's gun, a double-action revolver, was the weapon used to kill Smith and that
    the gun worked properly. He also checked the trigger pull and determined that if the
    hammer was cocked and ready to fire it would take three pounds of pressure to fire
    the gun; if the hammer was not cocked it would take 12 pounds of pressure to fire it.
    {¶20} Chief Warrant Officer Kenneth Tater of the Ohio Army National Guard
    testified generally about the weapons training that soldiers receive in boot camp. He
    agreed that they are taught never to point a weapon at someone they did not intend to
    engage and agreed if they do not intend to fire the weapon there is no need to put a finger
    on the trigger.
    {¶21} Detective-Sergeant Ryan Allar of the Belmont County Sheriff's Office
    interviewed Satterfield after the shooting and testified about his investigation of the crime.
    Among other things, Det. Allar said he got a chance to meet Wineman's dog in person
    and found it to be a playful, medium-sized, younger dog. He also looked at the victim's
    socks, which were ultimately admitted into evidence, and noted the socks did not appear
    to be worn by someone walking around outside without shoes; they were fairly clean.
    {¶22} The video of Det. Allar's three-hour long interview with Satterfield was
    -7-
    played for the jury. Satterfield spent considerable time discussing his familiarity with
    firearms. His version of events as related to Det. Allar was similar to what he told the
    911 operator, except he told Det. Allar that Smith smacked the gun itself (as opposed to
    Satterfield's hand), causing the gun to fire. Satterfield explained that it was necessary
    for him to bring a weapon to confront Smith because Smith was under the influence of
    drugs. Satterfield maintained that the shooting was accidental. Nonetheless, he
    admitted that just before shooting Smith, he threatened to kill him if he laid a hand on
    him again, and then cocked the hammer and aimed the gun at Smith's head.
    {¶23} A portion of Det. Allar's interview with Wineman was played for the jury
    during cross-examination. Although it was apparently somewhat difficult to hear,
    Wineman seemed to state "we smoked a joint," when discussing what she and Smith
    did earlier in the evening before the shooting.
    {¶24} After the State rested its case, the defense requested a jury view, which
    was granted. The defense presented no witnesses and rested its case.
    {¶25} After considering all the evidence the jury found Satterfield not guilty of
    aggravated murder, but guilty of murder, with the accompanying firearm specification.
    After a hearing, the trial court sentenced Satterfield to a term of 18 years to life: a three
    year mandatory term on the firearm specification to run consecutively to the 15 years to
    life term for the murder conviction.
    Manifest Weight
    {¶26} In his sole assignment of error, Satterfield asserts:
    {¶27} "Appellant's conviction was against the manifest weight of the evidence,
    in violation of his right of due process as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment
    to the United States Constitution."
    {¶28} "Weight of the evidence concerns the inclination of the greater amount
    of credible evidence, offered in a trial, to support one side of the issue rather than the
    other." (Emphasis sic.) State v. Thompkins, 
    78 Ohio St.3d 380
    , 387, 
    678 N.E.2d 541
    (1997). A conviction will only be reversed as against the manifest weight of the
    evidence in exceptional circumstances. 
    Id.
     This is so because the triers of fact are in
    -8-
    a better position to determine credibility issues, since they personally viewed the
    demeanor, voice inflections and gestures of the witnesses. State v. Hill, 
    75 Ohio St.3d 195
    , 204, 
    661 N.E.2d 1068
     (1996); State v. DeHass, 
    10 Ohio St.2d 230
    , 231,
    
    227 N.E.2d 212
     (1967).
    {¶29} To determine whether a verdict is against the weight of the evidence, an
    appellate court must review the entire record, weigh the evidence and all reasonable
    inferences and determine whether, in resolving conflicts in the evidence, the jury clearly
    lost its way and created such a manifest miscarriage of justice that the conviction must
    be reversed and a new trial ordered. Thompkins at 387.
    {¶30} Ultimately, "the reviewing court must determine whether the appellant or
    the appellee provided the more believable evidence, but must not completely
    substitute its judgment for that of the original trier of fact 'unless it is patently apparent
    that the factfinder lost its way.' " State v. Pallai, 7th Dist. No. 07 MA 198, 2008-Ohio-
    6635, 
    2008 WL 5245576
    , ¶31, quoting State v. Woullard, 
    158 Ohio App.3d 31
    , 2004-
    Ohio3395, 
    813 N.E.2d 964
    , 1181 (2d Dist.). In other words, "[w]hen there exist two
    fairly reasonable views of the evidence or two conflicting versions of events, neither of
    which is unbelievable, it is not our province to choose which one we believe." State v.
    Dyke, 7th Dist. No. 99 CA 149, 
    2002-Ohio-1152
    , ¶13, citing State v. Gore, 
    131 Ohio App.3d 197
    , 201, 
    722 N.E.2d 125
     (7th Dist.1999).
    {¶31} Satterfield was convicted of one count of murder, pursuant to R.C.
    2903.02(A) which proscribes purposefully causing the death of another, with a firearm
    specification pursuant to R.C. 2941.145. "A person acts purposely when it is his
    specific intention to cause a certain result, or, when the gist of the offense is a
    prohibition against conduct of a certain nature, regardless of what the offender intends
    to accomplish thereby, it is his specific intention to engage in conduct of that nature."
    R.C. 2901.22(A)
    {¶32} Satterfield does not dispute that he caused Smith's death; rather he
    contends that the jury's finding that he acted purposely is against the manifest weight
    of the evidence. He contends his actions were accidental, not purposeful.
    -9-
    {¶33} Satterfield's chief argument on appeal is that the eyewitness testimony of
    Wineman, the victim's girlfriend, is not at all credible. Wineman testified that while she
    was in the kitchen, Smith went to answer the door, still wearing his boots, to find
    Satterfield at the door wearing army fatigues, with a beer in his hand, calling Smith
    derogatory names. Wineman said she grabbed Smith by the arm, told him to come in
    the house, and that Satterfield was not worth fighting over, closed the door and locked it.
    Smith then came in the house, took off his boots right by the door and sat on the living
    room couch, which was located under a window at the front of the apartment. Wineman
    said she then went back in the kitchen. Satterfield was still outside screaming, calling
    Smith a "b*tch." Wineman heard Smith respond "Bill Satterfield, you ain't never been
    nothing but a b*tch your entire life. Oh you got a gun? You're going to shoot me?"
    Wineman left the kitchen. She heard one gunshot. Smith was kneeling on the couch,
    facing the open window. One of his hands was up on the window and the other hand
    was hanging by his side. Then a second gunshot lit up the room. Wineman explained:
    "It was like - - it was like a torch. And it lit up everything outside. It lit up Bill [Satterfield]
    and his face, and his arm pointing the gun up at Kevin's head." Wineman could clearly
    see the gun in Satterfield's hand; he was standing straight in front of Smith the gun
    turned sideways.         She said Satterfield appeared angry and was standing
    approximately three feet away from the window when he shot Smith. Finally Wineman
    testified that after Satterfield shot him, Smith "crumpled out of the window," head-first,
    landing on the grill outside. Thereafter she heard Satterfield say: "I shot you now."
    {¶34} Satterfield asserts that Wineman completely lacked credibility for several
    reasons; first, because she made inconsistent statements about her marijuana use on the
    day of the shooting; and second, because the events of the evening were so startling for
    her it would have been impossible for her to clearly recall what happened.
    {¶35} The latter contention is easily dispelled by the fact that Wineman was able to
    relate what happened to Trooper Weaver when he responded to the scene shortly after
    the shooting, and what she told him mirrored her testimony at trial. With regard to
    Wineman's marijuana use, while the record does reveal that Wineman's statements
    - 10 -
    concerning her drug use were inconsistent, the jury was aware of those
    inconsistencies and able to judge her credibility accordingly. Even assuming Wineman
    was smoking marijuana prior to the shooting, and assuming arguendo she was still
    under the influence of the drug when the shooting occurred, that fact alone would not
    necessarily destroy the credibility of her testimony. See, e.g., State v. Hudson, 7th Dist.
    No. 09 MA 89, 
    2011-Ohio-1343
     (conviction not against manifest weight of the evidence
    where eyewitness admitted she was high on crack cocaine and had not slept for five
    days when she observed the murder.)
    {¶36} Most importantly, Wineman's testimony was supported by additional
    evidence at trial. Wheeler's testimony supported Wineman's that Smith was inside the
    apartment when he was shot. Wheeler testified about the placement of Smith's body,
    specifically that Smith was lying on the ground with his feet towards the building. The
    testimony of the responding officers and EMTs all confirmed the position of Smith's
    body at the scene. Significantly, Wheeler also noted that Smith's socks were dry and
    that he never went outside without socks on due to an aversion he had about things
    touching his feet. The socks themselves were also admitted into evidence.
    {¶37} The above was further corroborated by the testimony of Agent Lulla, who
    opined that based upon the location of the collapsed grill just outside the window, the
    blood saturation stains on the grass, and the blow flow pattern on the grill, that Smith
    was behind the grill when he was shot, ultimately falling onto it. Agent Lulla felt that
    the most likely scenario was that Smith was inside the apartment when he was shot
    since the space between the wall and the grill would have been very narrow. Finally,
    Wineman's version of events is corroborated by the medical examiner's testimony that
    there was no stippling on Smith's hands or near the wound, indicating Smith was at least
    two feet away from the gun when it was fired and that his hands were not in the way of
    the gun as it was fired.
    {¶38} Satterfield maintained to Det. Allar that after threatening to kill Smith if he
    slapped at him again, and then, after he leveled the gun at Smith's head with the hammer
    cocked, the gun accidently went off when Smith slapped again. The fact that Satterfield
    - 11 -
    was angry at Smith and Wineman over the dog, as shown by the first 911 call, shows that
    Satterfield acted purposely, not accidentally. Also Satterfield spoke at length with Det.
    Allar about his familiarity with guns, and the fact that he cocked the hammer and aimed
    the gun at Smith's head is indicative of purpose. There is little to support Satterfield's
    version of events aside from his own testimony, which has its own inconsistencies. For
    instance, he told the 911 operator that Smith hit his hand, causing the gun to discharge,
    while he told Det. Allar that Smith hit the gun itself.
    {¶39} The jury had to decide whether Satterfield's version of events was true, or
    Wineman's was true.       Where neither side's version of the events is completely
    unbelievable, it is not up to this court to make its own determination as to which side it
    believes. Dyke, supra at ¶13.
    {¶40} In sum, Satterfield's assignment of error is meritless. The outcome of
    this case turned on credibility determinations best made by the jury. In convicting
    Satterfield the jury did not lose its way so as to create a manifest miscarriage of
    justice. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    Donofrio, J., concurs.
    Vukovich, J., concurs.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12 BE 22

Judges: DeGenaro

Filed Date: 12/5/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014