ON DIRECT APPEAL
Appellant was found guilty in the Clark County Cireuit Court of Voluntary Manslaughter 1 and Murder 2 in a jury trial. The trial court sentenced appellant to thirty years on the Voluntary Manslaughter conviction and sixty years on the Murder conviction. The sentences are to be served consecutively for a total of ninety years. This is a direct appeal. Ind. Appellate Rule 4(A)(7).
A jury found appellant guilty of murder for killing Pam Agee and guilty of voluntary manslaughter for killing Leta Dains. Appellant claims that his convictions should be reversed and a new trial granted because the trial court erred in:
*633 (1) failing to sustain defense counsel's objections to the introduction of photographs of the slain victims and a videotape of the crime scene;
(2) allowing a testifying detective to characterize Dains' wounds as "defensive wounds"; and
(3) accepting the jury's verdicts of Murder for killing Agee and Voluntary Manslaughter for killing Dains.
Facts
Appellant and Leta Dains had been involved for about eight years. In the course оf breaking up with Dains, appellant suspected that Dains was seeing one Pamela Agee. On the evening of November 7, 1992, Dains and Agee were at a bar in Louisville together. Appellant was alone at the same bar and spoke with Dains. In the early morning hours of November 8, 1992, he arrived at Dains' house. He noticed Pamela Agee's car parked in front of the house. Appellant looked inside the ear, spied a letter addressed to Dains, and entered the car. There he discovered other romantic notes addressed to Dains, at least one of which was signed by Agee. Carrying a box containing two pastry knives, he then enterеd Dains' home. After hearing noises from Dainsg' bedroom, he entered it, turned the light on, and found Agee lying with Dains. Agee sat up in bed and began to argue with appellant. He stabbed both of them with one of his knives. Meanwhile, Dains' daughter overheard the struggle and vainly tried to open the bedroom door. When the door finally opened, Agеe slumped into the hallway, bleeding from her wounds. The daughter ran to her room where, in a short while, appellant appeared and told her that he would not hurt her and that she should go to her mother who was lying in the yard across the street.
Allen Fowler, Dains' neighbor, found Dains collapsed and bleeding at his doorstep. As Mr. Fowler attempted to resuscitate her, appellant stood only a few feet away. Appellant then picked up the knife and walked to his car. By the time the police arrived, Dains had died of her wounds. Agee died on the way to the hospital. The autopsy reports showed that Agee had been stabbed fifteеn times and Dains had been stabbed eleven times.
Appellant was arrested on the day of the deaths, and at the time said to police: "Wouldn't you do what I did if you found your girlfriend ... with another woman in bed?" At his home, the police found a number of blood soaked garments and a large kitchen knife.
Admissibility of Photographs and Videotape
Appellant claims that the trial сourt's admission of photographs of the cadavers of Dains and Agee and a videotape of the crime scene where the two were found was error. During the case in chief, the court admitted four photographs of the body of Dains as found in the Fowler yard. The court also admitted seven photograрhs of the body of Dains lying face up and face down on a stainless steel table at the morgue before autopsy. The photos showed separate stab wounds to the upper torso in the front and the back as well as wounds to the arm and hand and one in the pubic area. The court admitted four photographs of the body of Agee lying face up and face down on a stainless steel table at the morgue before autopsy. The photos showed separate stab wounds to the upper torso in the front and back. The trial court also admitted a videotape of the crime seene, which was played for the jury. The trial court admitted the photographs and the videotape over defense counsel's objections. On appeal, appellant argues that because the cause of death of neither victim was at issue, the only other possible purpose in introducing the photographs was to inflame the emotions of the jurors; thus, the photographs should not have been admitted. Restated in terms of the Indiana Rules of Evidence which became effective after the trial of this case, the arguments are that (1) the exhibits were irrelevant, hence inadmissible under Ind. Evidence Rules 401 and 402, and (2) the exhibits' relevance was substantially outweighed by the danger of prejudice, hence inadmissible under Ind. Evidence Rule 408.
This trial proceeded upon a plea of not guilty to the several charges. At trial, defense counsel made an offer to stipulate
*634
that appellant had killed the two victims with a knife and said in opening statement that the two womеn had died as a result of appellant's using a knife on them. At trial, there is no rule limiting the facts in issue when one party unilaterally concedes or offers to stipulate that a fact be taken as proved. Stipulations by the both parties may have that effect when approved by the court conducting the trial. Absent such stipulations, evidence of facts in issue by reason of the charge and the plea of not guilty remains admissible. Hawkins v. State (1941),
The exhibits themselves have сonsiderable relevance and probative value. Evidence is relevant if it has a tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of guilt more probable or less probable. Evid.R. 401. In a homicide case, the identity of the alleged victim and the assailаnt, the injury to the alleged victim and its source, the death of the alleged victim and its cause, and the physical surroundings in which the injury and death occurred, would all be facts of consequence in the determination of guilt of the accused. The photographs and videotape challenged by appellant were relevant cireumstantial evidence of such facts as these.
Standing alone, however, relevance does not dictate admissibility. When relevant evidence carries with it an unwarranted prejudicial effect, and its probative value is substantially outweighed by such prejudicial effect, the evidence is inadmissible, despite its relevance. Bruce v. State (1978),
To support this claim of error, appellant cites various Indiana cases in which gruesome photographic evidence was admitted to prove the victim's cause of death. See, e.g., Wagner v. State (1985), Ind.,
were not in any way necessary to establish the corpus delicti. They did not show the position of the parties to the erime nor correctly show the wounds of the victim or the cause of her death. They did not "shed light on any issue" or enlighten the jury on any fact in issue, but served only to arouse passion and prejudice.
Id. at 117, 158 N.E.2d. at 905. Thus, as the court in Loy v. State (1982), Ind.,
potential for displaying more than the state of the victim's body at the time it was discovered. Such a display may impute the handiwоrk of the physician to the accused assailant and thereby render the defendant responsible in the minds of the jurors for the cuts, incisions, and indignity of an autopsy.
Loy,
Testifying Officer's Characterization of "Defensive Wounds"
Appellant claims that the trial court erred in allowing Detective Maynard Marsh to refer to several of Daings' wounds to her forearm depicted in a photograph as "typical of a defense wound...." Defense counsel immediately оbjected and the court sustained the objection. Marsh almost immediately repeated the same characterization. Defense counsel again objected and was sustained. In objecting to the photographs, counsel referred to these several statements by Marsh and moved for a mistrial The motiоn was denied.
The trial court judge did sustain defense objections to these statements of Marsh when made, however, and instructed the jurors before trial to disregard any stricken testimony. Following Marsh's testimony, Dr. Frances Masser, the pathologist who performed the autopsies on both victims and a qualified expert, characterized the same wounds as "defensive wounds" later in the trial. Recalling the decision in Hopkins v. State (1991), Ind.,
Consistency of the Verdicts
Appellant claims that because the jury found him guilty of murder for killing Ages, but only guilty of voluntary manslaughter for killing Dains when he was charged with two counts of first degree murder for both killings, the verdicts are fatally inconsistent and require reversal. More spеcifically, appellant contends that because he admitted to killing both victims at the same time and in the same manner and believes that the evidence was insufficient to support murder convictions for both killings, the jury should have found him guilty of two counts of voluntary manslaughter. We do not, however, believe that the jury's verdicts аre so inconsistent as to require the strong medicine of reversal.
*636
As we have stated in the past, this court will "review findings and verdicts to determine whether they are consistent; however, perfect logical consistency is not demanded and only extremely contradictory and irreconcilable verdicts warrant corrective action by this Court." Hoskins v. State (1990), Ind.,
In the present case, the trial court gave the jury the instructions for both murder and voluntary manslaughter. The jury was therefore called upon to decide appellant's state of mind during each killing. As appellant's brief correctly notes, we were confronted with a similar set of facts in Wilson v. State (1989), Ind.,
Similarly, the jury in the present case could have reasonably inferred from the evidence at trial that appellant's state of mind when stabbing Dains shоuld be mitigated by heat of passion, but not so his state of mind when stabbing Agee. There was conflicting testimony concerning his knowledge of Agee and Dains' relationship before the killings. One witness, Donna McConnell, testified that she saw appellant silently watching Dains and Agee at a bar earlier that night, while appellant testified thаt he was at a different bar. Appellant also testified that he and Dains were trying to improve their strained relationship. Therefore, the jury could have believed both MeConnell's testimony concerning appellant's whereabouts on the night of killing and appellant's testimony concerning his feelings toward Dains and concluded that he planned to kill Agee, and in carrying out this plan, confronted with the reality and immediacy of his rejection by Dains, killed Dains under sudden heat.
While the jury's conclusions may not be inescapable, they are hardly illogical or irree-oncilable given the evidence presented at trial. That the jury may have bеlieved part of appellant's testimony does not entail that the jury must believe all of it. Thus, we find that the verdicts are not fatally inconsistent and find no error in the trial court's acceptance of the jury's verdicts.
Conclusion
Accordingly, the convictions and sentences are affirmed.
Notes
. Inp.Copm Axx. § 35-42-1-3 (West Supp.1994).
. Inp.Cope Ann § 35-42-1-1 (West Supp.1994). Sec. 1. A person who: (1) knowingly or intentionally kills another human being....
. As Dеtective Marsh noted in his testimony, a tube was inserted through an incision on the left side of Agee's body by the staff of Clark County Memorial Hospital. The incision itself is not visible in any of the photographs. Moreover, one viewing the photographs for the first time would likely assume that the tube was merely part of the background, if one noticed it at all.
