Defendant, Steve A. Davidson, appeals after sentencing on jury verdicts convicting him of: (1) murder in the first degree of Essie Marshall and Milton Hutton; (2) murder in the second degree of Marvin Marshall; and (3) three counts of armed criminal action. He also appeals denial, after an evidentiary hearing, of his Rule 29.15 motion alleging ineffective assistance of counsel. We consider both appeals.
Marvin Marshall lived with his grandmother, Issie Lee Townsend, his mother, Essie Marshall, and her boyfriend, Milton Hutton. On and off between 1987 and 1993, Marvin’s girlfriend, Mary Hossenlopp, also lived with them. Defendant, Marvin’s cousin, lived a couple of blocks away.
Marvin and Mary had two children. Mary had a third child by defendant in 1990. This fact caused conflict between the two men. Defendant and Marvin threatened each other verbally. Defendant testified Marvin threatened to kill him many times and during one altercation sucker-punched him in the eye. There was evidence defendant drove by Marvin’s house shouting threats and later taunt *734 ed him in person while armed with an automatic weapon.
On October 7, 1992, defendant and Marvin had a confrontation. Defendant left and went home to watch television. Marvin went home and awoke Mary from a nap. He asked her for his baseball bat. Essie came into the bedroom with a hammer. Marvin and Essie left for defendant’s house. According to Mary, Milton followed.
Defendant testified. He told the jury he heard Marvin and Essie yelling at him to come outside. He looked out the window but returned to his back room where he was watching television. Defendant’s brother, Marcus, his cousin, Kevin, and his friend, Terrón Woodson, were with him in the house. The yelling continued. Marcus and Kevin went outside and told Marvin and Essie to leave. However, instead of leaving, Marvin banged on the door and yelled for defendant to come out and fight.
The yelling and shouting lasted about a half an hour. Marcus, Kevin and Terrón again went outside to tell them to leave. Defendant went outside and told them to get off his property. Marvin was closest to defendant, Essie was standing in the front yard and Milton was across the street. They were armed with a bat, hammer and pipe. Some witnesses testified they were unarmed.
Marvin, Essie and Milton refused defendant’s request to leave. Defendant went back into his home. He did not call the police. He armed himself with a rifle. He went back onto the porch and shot and killed Marvin, Essie and Milton. He said Marvin was coming at him with the bat when he shot him. He shot Essie because she picked up the bat and swung it at him. He shot Milton while he was running. He testified he was not trying to hit Marvin, Essie or Milton when he shot at them. He stated he was just trying to protect himself.
Officer Mike Brady arrived on the scene. He found Marvin, Essie and Milton dead. Marvin’s body was in the street in front of defendant’s house. Milton’s body was next to a house across the street from defendant’s house. Essie’s body was found in the street in front of the home next door. Officer Brady testified defendant admitted to shooting the victims. In subsequent statements made to the police, defendant said he shot Essie and Milton as they were trying to run. He shot them all because he was tired of dealing with them in the ongoing feud over who was the father of Mary’s third child. He said they were unarmed.
A jury found defendant guilty of murder in the first degree of Essie and Milton, murder in the second degree of Marvin, and three counts of armed criminal action. The court sentenced defendant as a prior offender to serve two terms of life without the possibility of parole and four concurrent terms of life imprisonment. After an evidentiary hearing, the motion court denied defendant’s Rule 29.15 motion. Defendant appeals.
Defendant raises five points on appeal. First, he argues the trial court erred in sustaining the state’s objection to the testimony of psychologist Dr. Daniel Cuneo. Dr. Cuneo would have testified defendant suffered from narcissistic personality disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder. He concluded that these disorders affected defendant’s ability to perceive and recount events following the shootings. Defendant argues this expert testimony on his capacity to perceive and recount is admissible even if it does not strictly fall under § 552.015.2(8) RSMo 1986. Defendant intended to rebut or “soften” the effect of his statement to Officer Brady.
Questions regarding the relevancy and admission of proffered expert testimony in a criminal proceeding are left to the discretion of the trial court and will not be overturned absent an abuse of discretion.
State v. Hensley,
There is no similar precedent in the present case to support a holding Dr. Cuneo’s testimony was admissible for the reasons defendant argues. Evidence of a defendant’s mental disease or defect is admissible in a criminal proceeding under eight specific circumstances. Section 552.015.2. Therefore, except as provided in § 552.015.2, expert testimony of defendant’s state of mind affecting criminal responsibility is not authorized and may be excluded.
State v. Copeland,
If the evidence was not being offered as expert testimony diagnosing defendant to have a mental disease or defect excluding responsibility for committing one or more elements of the crime, including absence of the appropriate mental state, it is inadmissible under § 552.015.
Copeland,
In Point II, defendant argues the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the special negative defense of self-defense as to his shooting of Milton Hutton. In determining whether a self-defense instruction must be submitted, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to defendant.
State v. Bowman,
There was no evidence to support a self-defense jury instruction as to Milton. Mary Hossenlopp testified Milton was running away from defendant’s house when she heard a shot and saw him fall down. The location of Milton’s body indicates that he was across the street from defendant’s home when he was shot. Further, defendant in his statements to police after the shooting and at trial admitted he shot Milton as he was “running.” The self-defense instruction is not available when the victim is no longer threatening the defendant, but rather retreating from the confrontation. Point II denied.
In Point III, defendant argues the trial court erred in refusing to give the jury his proposed defense of premises instructions D, E and F. One instruction was directed at each victim. There is no evidence to support these instructions. When the shootings occurred, the victims were not entering or attempting to enter defendant’s property, for any purpose. Failure of a trial court to give an incorrect instruction is not error.
State v. Parkhurst,
In Point IV, defendant argues the trial court erred in submitting an instruction on murder in the second degree modeled after MAI-CR 3d 313.04. He claims that instruction violated his constitutional due process and fair trial rights because it failed to include language to require a finding defendant did not shoot Marvin Marshall under “influence of sudden passion arising from adequate cause” as required under the notes on use. At trial, he made no objection to what became Instruction 21. In his motion for new trial, he alleged, generally, the “trial court committed prejudicial error in giving Instruction 1 through 32 in that the instructions encompassed erroneous theories of law and evidence ... and prevented Defendant’s right to a fair trial under the circumstances of the case.”
Rule 28.03 allows a party, during trial, to object specifically or generally on the record to instructions given by the other party. But specific objections to instructions are required in motions for a new trial unless made on the record at the time of trial. Rule 28.03;
State v. Root,
Here, defendant failed to object at trial. He also failed to specifically state the reason why he objected to Instruction 21 in his motion for new trial. Accordingly, he failed to preserve anything for appellate review. As a result, any relief left must be on the basis of plain error review.
State v. Dunagan,
An instructional error is seldom plain error.
State v. Walton,
The submission of the voluntary manslaughter instruction, even if not required by the evidence, was not prejudicial to defendant. The jury never reached the voluntary manslaughter instruction because it found defendant guilty of the greater offense of murder second degree as to Marvin Marshall without considering a theory that was not tried or argued. For this additional reason, the absence of sudden passion language in the murder in the second degree instruction does not constitute plain error. There was no prejudicial error, plain or otherwise. Point IV denied.
In his final point, defendant argues the Rule 29.15 motion court erred in determining that trial counsel was not ineffective in failing to call Terrón Woodson to testify. It denied relief after an evidentiary hearing. Review of a motion court’s decision is limited to a determination of whether the findings, conclusions, and judgment are clearly erroneous.
State v. Stepter,
At the evidentiary hearing, Terrón Woodson testified that if called at trial, he would have said: (1) defendant received many threats from the victims; (2) the victims were all armed with bats when they arrived at defendant’s home on October 7, 1992; and (3) that he plead guilty to tampering with evidence because he had grabbed the gun from defendant after he shot the victims and threw it in some bushes.
Defense counsel testified at the hearing that his decision not to call Woodson was based on his belief, after speaking to him, that he would “not in fact bolster the self-defense defense” and that his “version of the facts of the day of the incident did not comport with the other information which we had received.” The motion court found this was an exercise of reasonable trial strategy in denying defendant’s Rule 29.15 motion. It also found defendant failed to show how he was prejudiced by the decision. We agree and find no error. Point V denied.
We affirm.
