Dontayell Balfour v. State of Tennessee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 27, 2020
DocketW2019-01468-CCA-R3-PC
StatusPublished

This text of Dontayell Balfour v. State of Tennessee (Dontayell Balfour 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
Dontayell Balfour v. State of Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

07/27/2020 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs May 5, 2020

DONTAYELL BALFOUR v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 15-01047 Paula L. Skahan, Judge ___________________________________

No. W2019-01468-CCA-R3-PC ___________________________________

Petitioner, Dontayelle Balfour, appeals the denial of his post-conviction petition. Petitioner argues that he was denied effective assistance of counsel when his trial counsel failed to adequately consult with him and failed to fully investigate witnesses that Petitioner requested prior to Petitioner’s guilty plea to second degree murder. Following a review of the briefs of the parties and the record, we affirm the judgment of the post- conviction court.

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

THOMAS T. WOODALL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. GLENN and D. KELLY THOMAS, JR., JJ., joined.

Shae Atkinson, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Dontayell Balfour.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Ronald L. Coleman, Assistant Attorney General; Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Melissa Harris, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Background

Petitioner was indicted by a Shelby County Grand Jury for one count of first- degree murder. Subsequently, he entered an Alford plea to second-degree murder and received a forty-year sentence to be served in confinement. Post-conviction Hearing

Trial counsel testified that he was appointed to represent Petitioner in February 2016. He received discovery from Petitioner’s former counsel, and he received email discovery from the State. Trial counsel testified that it was his understanding that Petitioner had already been provided with discovery. Based on his letters to Petitioner, trial counsel believed that he again provided Petitioner with discovery when he first began representing him. He said that Petitioner later asked about discovery, and trial counsel provided it to him for the second time. When asked if he reviewed discovery with Petitioner, trial counsel testified:

I know with [Petitioner] we had several meetings either in court, in the back in lock-up or in the jail. I specifically remember going through the photo lineups, the witness statements, going over basically what the evidence against [Petitioner] would be.

The reason I did it is to allow him to make an informed decision. I remember telling him I thought the evidence in the case against him was very strong and I don’t - - I couldn’t tell you what day we flipped through it and went through it page by page but it’s my recollections that that’s what we did on multiple occasions.

Trial counsel specifically remembered showing Petitioner that his picture was circled in some of the photographic lineups, and he showed Petitioner statements from other witnesses. He noted that Petitioner provided him with an affidavit from one of the witnesses who recanted his or her statement. However, trial counsel advised Petitioner that there were five or six other individuals who made a statement concerning Petitioner’s involvement in the murder. Trial counsel recalled the “crime scene diagram and going through that with [Petitioner] as well and just looking through whatever he would have questions about.” Trial counsel testified that he represented Petitioner for approximately two years, and he estimated that he met with Petitioner approximately once a month or every other month. He noted that some of the meetings could have occurred on court dates. Trial counsel estimated that he met with Petitioner at the jail between fifteen to twenty times.

Trial counsel testified that he explained and reviewed the trial strategy with Petitioner. He noted that Petitioner’s case was going to be very tough to defend because there were so many witnesses. The witnesses either saw Petitioner with a gun both before and after the shooting, or they said that Petitioner “came up to them and said that the victim was dead and if they told anybody harm would come to them too.” Trial counsel testified that one possible trial strategy was that someone was trying to frame Petitioner, that is, Petitioner went into the house after something had already happened. A second possible defense trial counsel considered was a defense that another person

-2- who had been robbed by the victim recently before the victim’s murder had killed the victim. Trial counsel said that another possible trial strategy was to challenge the credibility of the witnesses against Petitioner because “several of them had been charged, felonies and had them pending over convicted so I was going to impeach those and then incorporate this other stuff.” The last strategy was what trial counsel said was the culmination of his analysis. Trial counsel testified that he and Petitioner also discussed lesser-included offenses and the likelihood of Petitioner being convicted of a lesser- included offense. He told Petitioner that the likelihood of succeeding at trial was slim and that the likelihood of conviction on first-degree murder was high. When asked if he reviewed the pros and cons of a settlement versus trial, trial counsel testified:

But the pros and cons I told him if he went to trial and lost, you know, you’re facing a first degree murder so you’re a young man, you have to do fifty-one years before you get out. So a con of going to trial losing would be, you know, fifty-one years, and if the judge stacked or added consecutive time, because there was multiple charges on this indictment, that would be another con.

So flip that to a pro of pleading you know exactly to a day how much time you’re going to do. You know that for sure what your sentence is going to be. You don’t have to worry about appeals, you don’t have to worry about any of that.

You don’t know, a pro and a con you never know what a jury’s going to do because I told him he could go in there and walk out free with acquittal or he could get convicted as charged.

Trial counsel testified that he advised Petitioner that he should seek a settlement. However, it was Petitioner’s decision. He said that throughout his representation, Petitioner did not want to go to trial “but he could never get a number that he could satisfy himself with that the State was willing to accept.” Petitioner eventually signed the plea agreement to serve forty years for a conviction of second-degree murder.

Trial counsel testified that he had an investigator who attempted to locate potential witnesses provided by Petitioner. He said that the investigator had a very difficult time trying to locate the witnesses and spent months trying to track down the individuals. Trial counsel testified that the witnesses the investigator did locate were not beneficial to Petitioner’s defense. Trial counsel thought that Dontavious Curtis was the witnesses who recanted his statement and identified Petitioner as being the person who committed the murder. They attempted to speak with Mr. Curtis through his attorney but were unable to do so.

-3- On cross-examination, trial counsel agreed that his billing records showed that he visited Petitioner at the jail approximately nineteen times. On one of the occasions, he attempted to visit Petitioner but Petitioner was not brought out to meet with him. Trial counsel’s records also showed that he printed discovery for Petitioner, consisting of approximately 228 pages, on February 17, 2016. He provided Petitioner with discovery a second time in November 2017. Trial counsel testified that Petitioner also communicated with him by letter.

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Bluebook (online)
Dontayell Balfour v. State of Tennessee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dontayell-balfour-v-state-of-tennessee-tenncrimapp-2020.