Defendant was convicted of the second degree murder of Mark Walker which arose out of a shooting incident in which defendant also injured his wife, Brenda. On appeal, this court reversed and remanded the murder conviction for a new trial because defendant’s wife testified over his objection in violation of Section 546.260 RSMo 1978.
State v. Manning,
The evidence as presented in the first trial by the state was nearly identical to the evidence presented in the second trial and thus Judge Crist’s recitation of the facts in the first appeal serves us well:
Defendant and his wife were married in 1975, had one child and separated in March 1981. At the time of the shooting, in May 1981, defendant’s wife and child were living in a flat owned by defendant and wife. Shortly before that time, Julia Peckhorn and her young child had moved into the flat with wife and child.
After enjoying a movie on May 16, 1981, with their boyfriends, wife, Julia and the two boyfriends returned to the flat. Wife and her boyfriend (the victim) eventually retired to the master bedroom. Julia and her boyfriend visited in the living room. At about 2:00 a.m. on May 17, 1981, defendant appeared and asked to see wife. Julia went to the bedroom door and gave wife defendant’s message.
Wife met with defendant in the kitchen. Defendant was interested in a reconciliation. Wife was not. In fact, the two were scheduled to meet with an attorney later that day to discuss a divorce.
Defendant pulled a gun from his waistband. Wife fled from the kitchen in an attempt to warn the others in the apartment about the gun. Defendant shot her in the knee as she ran. He then stood at the entrance of the master bedroom and fired several shots into the room killing wife’s boyfriend. The police arrived shortly thereafter. Defendant told them he fired the gun “because she’s my wife.”
In the second trial, defendant testified in his own defense. He testified he had not carried a weapon onto the premises but rather picked up a weapon laying on the kitchen table which had been placed there by his wife and shot the victim, Mark Walker, in self defense.
Brenda testified in the second trial over defendant’s objection to the events surrounding the shooting as well as the reasons for her separation from defendant. Defendant’s first two points on appeal allege error in allowing her to testify at the second trial. He contends allowing her to testify placed him in double jeopardy; violated the “law of the case” as well as the doctrine of collateral estoppel. We find no merit to these contentions.
The judgment of conviction in the first trial was reversed because Brenda was allowed “to testify against defendant as the two were still married at the time of trial.”
The admissibility of a spouse’s testimony is determined according to the marital status at the time the testimony is offered, not at the time the offense was committed.
State v. Dunbar,
[A] different question is presented where, as here, there has been a divorce between the time of the occurrence for which the defendant is on trial and the time the spouse is called upon to testify. In such instance, there is no longer any marital relationship or family peace which might be protected by excluding the former spouse from appearing as a witness for the prosecution. Most of the *130 statutes which have been enacted regarding the competency of a spouse to testify appear to refer to the status of the parties, vis-a-vis each other — husband, wife — as of the time of the trial. Hence, where the marriage is dissolved at the time of the trial, and they no longer occupy that status, no reason appears why one should not be allowed to testify against the other. There is no longer any marriage that could be affected.
Section 546.260 did not prohibit Brenda’s testimony at the second trial.
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Neither did the prohibition against double jeopardy bar her testimony. The Double Jeopardy Clause forbids a second trial for the purpose of affording the prosecution another opportunity to supply evidence which it failed to enter in the first proceeding. If a conviction is reversed solely due to evidentiary insufficiency the double jeopardy clause requires a judgment of acquittal. If a conviction is reversed solely due to trial error, then retrial is constitutionally permissible.
State v. Wood,
Defendant also cites several civil cases for the proposition that the decision of an appellate court on all points presented in an appeal becomes the “law of the case” on those issues in subsequent proceedings.
Barkley v. Mitchell,
In defendant’s next point, he alleges the trial court erred in failing to submit MAI-CR2d 2.50 on defendant’s character 3 to the jury. Defendant called four witnesses who testified that defendant had a good reputation within the community for “truthfulness, for honesty and for general good conduct.”
No instruction on character was requested. The Notes on Use provide that this instruction must be given whether requested or not, whenever necessary. See § 546.070 RSMo 1978. “Whenever necessary” means such an instruction is necessary only where there is substantial evidence of a defendant’s good reputation with respect to those traits of character which would ordinarily be involved in the commission of an offense such as that with which defendant is charged.
State v. Quinn,
Defendant asserts that in a trial for murder any facet of his character is involved. However, the Supreme Court in
State v. Hayes,
Defendant’s reputation for truthfulness does not put his character in issue, only his credibility as a witness and does not require the giving of the character instruction.
State v. Harlow,
That leaves only the testimony that defendant had a reputation for “good conduct” as evidence to support giving the character instruction.
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Our research has disclosed that no Missouri murder or assault conviction has ever been reversed for failure to give a character instruction unless there was evidence of defendant’s reputation for the specific traits of character as a peaceable, quiet or law-abiding citizen.
State v. Antwine,
In
State v. Martin,
Defendant next complains about hearsay testimony of a police officer. The officer testified that when he arrived at the scene, he spoke with Larry Latham outside the apartment and was told there had been a shooting. The officer further stated he asked Latham who the individuals were and who had the guns. He then testified he went to the doorway and called the name of “Gregory Manning” up the stairwell. At that point, the defendant appeared. The state citing
State v. Harris,
*132
Finally, defendant complains that the trial court erred in sustaining objections of the prosecutor during his cross-examination of Brenda. We have examined the record and find that one of the objections was overruled and one was sustained on the basis of the form of the question. In the remaining instances, the information was elicited from the witness at other points during cross-examination. We find no merit to defendant’s point.
State v. Hacker,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Defendant was also separately convicted of the second degree assault on his wife which conviction was affirmed by this court in
State v. Manning,
. Defendant did not invoke the confidential communication portion of the privilege which is not dependent on the marital status of the parties at the time of trial.
State v. Euell,
. MAI-CR2d 2.50 in part provides:
Evidence has been introduced concerning the reputation of defendant as to those traits of character which ordinarily would be involved in the commission of an offense such as that charged in this case. This evidence was received because a jury may reason that a person of good character as to such traits would not be likely to commit the offense charged against the defendant. Therefore, you should consider such evidence along with all of the other evidence in the case in determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant.
. In
State v. Turner,
