David Wayne Smart v. State of Tennessee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 4, 2008
DocketM2007-00504-CCA-R3-PC
StatusPublished

This text of David Wayne Smart v. State of Tennessee (David Wayne Smart v. State of Tennessee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Wayne Smart v. State of Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs January 23, 2008

DAVID WAYNE SMART v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2001-A-162 J. Randall Wyatt, Jr., Judge

No. M2007-00504-CCA-R3-PC - Filed February 4, 2008

The Petitioner, David Wayne Smart, was convicted in 2001 of first degree premeditated murder and sentenced to life in prison. We affirmed that judgment on direct appeal, and the Tennessee Supreme Court denied permission to appeal. The Petitioner subsequently filed a petition for post-conviction relief alleging he was denied the effective assistance of counsel. The post-conviction court denied the petition after a hearing. Upon a thorough review of the applicable record and law, we affirm the judgment of the post-conviction court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed

ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID H. WELLES and THOMAS T. WOODALL, JJ., joined.

David M. Hopkins (on appeal) and Michael Colavecchio (at post-conviction hearing), Nashville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, David Wayne Smart.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Michael E. Moore, Solicitor General; J. Ross Dyer, Assistant Attorney General; Victor S. Johnson, III, District Attorney General; Lisa Naylor, Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION I. Facts

This Court described the facts underlying the Petitioner’s conviction for first-degree murder on direct appeal as follows:

State’s Proof

The State’s first witness was Lanell Merchant, who was working as a cashier at the Phillips 66 store at the time the shooting occurred. She testified the defendant pulled into the gasoline station between 5:15 and 5:30 p.m. on September 27, 2000, to purchase gasoline for his taxicab. As he was paying for his purchase inside the store, the victim entered and the two men made eye contact but did not speak. The victim then walked across the store to the water fountain. Although the defendant continued his transaction at the cash register, he kept looking over at the victim and appeared to be upset, prompting Merchant to ask him what was wrong. She described the scene and the explanation the defendant provided for his behavior:

When [the victim] was getting a drink of water, [the defendant] seemed a little tense. And I had asked him if he was okay. And he just kept looking. And he said, “That boy robbed me,” and I guess I kind of glanced over. And I said, “Just now?” And he said, “No. It was a while back.”

....

And I said, “Well, did he go to jail for it?” And he said, “No, but I am.” He said, “I’ll be right back.”

Merchant testified the defendant completed his purchase, exited the store, and drove off in his taxicab. After he left, the victim asked what the defendant had just said to her, and she and the victim engaged in a short conversation until her attention was claimed by other customers. Merchant revealed the substance of that conversation on cross-examination, testifying that she told the victim that the defendant had said something about the victim’s having robbed him, to which the victim replied, “[Y]eah, I robbed him, but he robbed me first.”

A short while later, Merchant looked up and saw the defendant enter the store again and confront the victim, saying, “Give me all of your money. I want everything on you.” Merchant testified the victim responded by walking over to the defendant and saying, “No, you’re not getting anything.” At that point, the defendant reached into his back pocket. The victim said, “Don’t pull that gun out of your pocket,” but the defendant pulled out a small silver gun that “looked like a fake gun,” pointed it at the victim, and shot him. Merchant was aware of the defendant’s having fired a total of four shots at the victim before leaving the store and driving off in his pickup truck, which was parked outside. She said the first shot caused the victim to fall to the floor on the front side of the counter, where the defendant was standing. The victim attempted to escape by first “trying to scoot away from [the defendant]” and then by jumping over the counter to the other side. The defendant continued to shoot at him during this time, firing his second shot as the victim was lying on the floor in front of the counter and his fourth shot after the victim had tumbled to the floor behind the counter. Merchant said she did not see the third shot, but was within three

2 or four feet of the victim when the fourth and final shot was fired. After the defendant left, she locked the door and gathered towels to hold against the victim’s wounds, while her coworker and a store customer telephoned for an ambulance and police.

A videotape of the incident, which Merchant identified as having been recorded by the store’s surveillance camera, was played at various speeds before the jury and introduced as an exhibit in the case. Merchant agreed the videotape reflected that, contrary to what she had reported in her initial statements to police, only two minutes elapsed from the time the defendant left the store until he returned to shoot the victim, and he did not appear to have changed clothes during the interim. She testified she did not hear the victim threaten the defendant or see the victim with a gun or make any movement as if to reach for a gun.

On cross-examination, Merchant acknowledged she had been so severely traumatized by the incident that she had never returned to work at the store. She conceded she had been mistaken in several of the details she had provided in her initial statement to police and in her testimony at the preliminary hearing, but maintained her memory of what the defendant said to her before leaving the store the first time, as well as the words the defendant and victim exchanged just prior to the shooting, was accurate. She acknowledged the defendant did not have a gun in his hand when he returned to the store to confront the victim, but her testimony at the preliminary hearing had been that, as the defendant was demanding the victim’s money, the victim “stepped up to him, as in bowing up, as if he was angry.” She explained that by “bowing up” she meant that the victim got close to the defendant. Merchant acknowledged having told the police that the defendant’s hand was shaking as he reached for his gun and that he almost dropped the weapon. She testified the defendant was angry and explained that she shook when she was angry, too. However, she conceded she had not said anything about the defendant’s having been angry in her statement to the police, and agreed that fear and nervousness could also cause a person to shake. The victim, according to Merchant, was “definitely heavier and stronger” than the defendant.

Richard Taylor testified he had been working at the Phillips 66 store for approximately three months and was on duty inside the store at the time the shooting occurred. He said he was familiar with both the defendant and the victim as regular customers of the store. On the day of the shooting, he saw the defendant arrive in a green, checkered taxicab van. The victim entered the store after the defendant was inside, and the two exchanged a “definite stare for a few moments.” Nothing happened at that point, and the defendant left the store.

Taylor testified that when the defendant returned, he first looked in the door of the store “to see if [the victim] was still in there” and then went back to his pickup

3 truck, where he retrieved what Taylor assumed was his gun, before coming back inside the store. Taylor described exactly what he witnessed: “I seen [sic] [the defendant] go to his truck, open the driver’s door, pull out something silver, and put it in his back pocket.

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David Wayne Smart v. State of Tennessee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-wayne-smart-v-state-of-tennessee-tenncrimapp-2008.