Smith v. State, 4D12–3636.

Decision Date06 January 2016
Docket NumberNo. 4D12–3636.,4D12–3636.
Citation186 So.3d 1056
Parties Ronald SMITH, Appellant, v. STATE of Florida, Appellee.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals

Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Peggy Natale, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Nancy Jack, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.

MAY, J.

The defendant appeals his conviction and sentence for first degree murder with a deadly weapon. He raises four issues. We find no merit in any of them and affirm. We write only to address the hearsay issue raised.

The grand jury indicted the defendant for first degree murder with a deadly weapon. The first trial resulted in a mistrial. The second trial resulted in the defendant's conviction.

The evidence established that the defendant and victim lived together from 2002 until her death in December 2007. In November 2007, the defendant fired a gun at the victim. The victim's neighbor confirmed the shooting and that she also heard the defendant say he was going to kill the victim. The defendant was arrested for domestic violence for this incident, but the victim waived prosecution.

The next month, and two days before the murder, the victim called her daughter and told her that she and the defendant had been in an argument. The defendant had moved the victim's car and kept her car keys so she could not leave. The police arrived, but no one was arrested for this incident.

The next day, the daughter learned about a knife incident where the neighbor overheard the victim tell the defendant to take a knife away from her throat. The daughter took the victim to get a restraining order. As far as she knew, the victim filled out the paperwork.

The victim stayed with the daughter that night, but spent most of the evening on the phone with the defendant, who called her fifty-six times from 10:00 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. The defendant was angry and accused the daughter and her boyfriend of lying about the victim being at their house. He believed the victim was with another man.

The next morning, the victim left the daughter's house for work at 6:00 a.m. The victim's boss called the daughter around 8:00 or 9:00 a.m., and told her that the victim did not arrive at work. The daughter drove by the victim's house, saw the defendant's truck parked on the lawn, but did not see the victim's car. She assumed the victim and the defendant were together somewhere and kept driving.

The daughter then received a call from the neighbor. As a result, she called her aunt, who agreed to look for the victim's car. The daughter returned to the victim's house with her boyfriend. When she got to the front door, she saw speckles of blood around the door handle and a sheet hung over the front door. She called 911.

She tried gaining entry into the home, but could not. The neighbor came out and the aunt arrived. The aunt told the daughter that she had just gotten off the phone with the defendant, who told her that he hurt the victim. He told her "it's serious this time," and he had to turn himself in.

The daughter called 911 a second time and told the operator exactly what the defendant had said to the aunt. Then, the aunt called 911 and requested help. The daughter's second 911 call is the subject of the hearsay issue raised by the defendant. When the police arrived, the daughter told them she thought the victim was dead inside the house.

The neighbor testified that prior to the daughter's arrival that morning, the victim came home in her work uniform. The victim and the defendant went inside their home. About fifteen minutes later, the defendant left the house and drove away in the victim's car. The neighbor knocked on their front door and every window of the house, but the victim did not answer. She felt something was not right. She never saw the victim alive again.

The defendant called the neighbor and said he had done something bad. When the neighbor asked if he killed his wife, he hung up the phone. He called her back and said he was going to wait at Church's Chicken on Broward Boulevard. The neighbor told the daughter about the call. Thirty minutes later, the defendant called the neighbor back and admitted he killed the victim by stabbing her.

A sergeant directed the SWAT team to enter the house around noon. He found the victim dead in the kitchen; she had been stabbed to death. The police found two cut phone lines. The defendant called another detective to turn himself in. The detective met the defendant at Church's Chicken and arrested him. The defendant told the detective he had been up for four days. The defendant stated, "Man, my baby dead." The defendant admitted his involvement in the victim's death.

The victim had black and blue eyes and five other injuries from a knife—four wounds in the front and one in the back. The victim had no defensive wounds. The medical examiner concluded the cause of death was multiple stab wounds and the manner of death was a homicide.

The defendant testified that he and the victim had been in a relationship since 1978. According to him, the victim sometimes acted aggressively and would "go off in space," not acting like herself. Other times she was suicidal. The victim had psychotic episodes and her family or the police would take her away for treatment. She would get better and then return home.

He admitted to using crack cocaine from October through December 2007. He did not know if the victim used crack cocaine and he never used it with her. They had previously used powder cocaine together in the beginning of their relationship. Drug use affected their relationship and he was trying to seek help through drug rehab.

The defendant admitted to the domestic violence incident and his arrest the month before the victim's death. He told the police that the victim had approached him aggressively and he pushed her back, but denied having discharged a gun. He also denied putting a knife to the victim's throat, contrary to the neighbor's testimony.

He recalled the incident where he moved the victim's car. He testified that the victim had just returned from being Baker Acted and he took her car keys because he and the daughter agreed the victim should not drive. On one occasion, after the victim had slept at the daughter's house, the victim slashed his truck's tires and came at him with a knife. He shut the door and locked her out.

On the morning of the victim's death, the victim came by their house before work to talk to him about drug treatment. They went into the house and the defendant went to use the restroom. On his way to the kitchen, he noticed the keys to the house were not in the door.

The victim was worried that if she went to treatment she might lose her job. The defendant told her that if she did not get treatment, he would not come back to her. According to the defendant, the victim "lost it" and came at him with a knife. He tried to disarm her, and they tussled with the knife. He grabbed the handle of the knife and jabbed it back on her head trying to get her to drop it; the handle hit the victim.

He retrieved the knife from her and asked for the keys. The victim lunged at him and out of instinct he stabbed her in the back in self-defense. When he found the victim unresponsive, he walked around the house, then left. He did not call the police or the paramedics because he was afraid the police would not believe him because he was a four-time ex-felon. He admitted to serving prison time for two counts of attempted murder. He did not find out that the victim tried to get a restraining order against him until about one month after the incident.

The jury found the defendant guilty of first degree murder with a deadly weapon. The court sentenced the defendant to life imprisonment without parole. From his conviction and sentence, the defendant now appeals.

The issue we address is the admissibility of two statements. The first is the daughter's statement, made during her second call to 911, on the morning of the murder. On that 911 tape, the daughter told the dispatcher that the defendant had told the aunt "it was serious this time" and he's going to "turn himself in." The second is the aunt's statement to the daughter about what the defendant had told the aunt.

The daughter's statement on the 911 tape was the subject of a pre-trial hearing where defense counsel sought to have the recording excluded as double hearsay. At that same hearing, the State played a tape of the aunt calling 911 immediately after the daughter called 911 for the second time. During the aunt's 911 call, she identified herself as the victim's sister-in-law. She...

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2 cases
  • Philip Morris USA, Inc. v. Pollari
    • United States
    • Florida District Court of Appeals
    • August 30, 2017
    ...definition of hearsay," or "is admissible in evidence under an exception to the hearsay rule" are reviewed de novo. Smith v. State, 186 So.3d 1056, 1060 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016) (quoting Browne v. State, 132 So.3d 312, 316 (Fla. 4th DCA 2014) ).A. THE SURGEON GENERAL REPORTS WERE HEARSAY In her ......
  • Smith v. Fla. Dep't of Corr.
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Southern District of Florida
    • February 14, 2023
    ...Fourth District concluded that the trial court properly admitted the aunt's statement because it was admissible as an excited utterance. See id. Petitioner filed a motion for postconviction relief under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. See ECF No. [18-2] at 203-39. In the motion, P......
1 books & journal articles
  • Evidence
    • United States
    • James Publishing Practical Law Books The Florida Criminal Cases Notebook. Volume 1-2 Volume 2
    • April 30, 2021
    ...the defendant called the aunt admitting involvement with the victim’s death, and was made close to the startling event. Smith v. State, 186 So. 3d 1056 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016) Defendant was convicted of second degree murder and attempted second degree murder. The witness’s testimony that the de......

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