Heck Van Tran v. State of Tennessee - Concurring/Dissenting

CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 2001
DocketW2000-00739-SC-R11-PD
StatusPublished

This text of Heck Van Tran v. State of Tennessee - Concurring/Dissenting (Heck Van Tran v. State of Tennessee - Concurring/Dissenting) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heck Van Tran v. State of Tennessee - Concurring/Dissenting, (Tenn. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON April 4, 2001 Session

HECK VAN TRAN v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

Appeal by Permission from the Court of Criminal Appeals Criminal Court for Shelby County No. P-14409 Hon. John P. Colton, Judge

No. W2000-00739-SC-R11-PD - Filed December 4, 2001

WILLIAM M. BARKER, J., with whom JANICE M. HOLDER, J., joins, concurring in part, dissenting in part.

With its decision today, a majority of this Court has effectively permitted a defendant, who was sentenced to death in 1989 for the brutal execution of a 74-year-old grandmother, an opportunity to escape the ultimate punishment for his actions solely because he has managed to obtain a lower score on a revised I.Q. test than he was previously able to do. Before today, the Constitution of this State has never been held to provide blanket capital immunity to a class of persons based only on the fact of low intellectual ability and deficits in adaptive behavior. Instead, the Constitution has barred such executions only when the defendant’s mental condition displaces the following capacities: (1) the cognitive capacity to appreciate that certain action will lead to the death of others; (2) the moral capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of murder; or (3) the volitional capacity to behave in a lawful manner.

By permitting Heck Van Tran the opportunity to escape his capital sentence because of his new score on an I.Q. test, the majority ignores that Heck Van Tran has not argued that his alleged condition ever affected his abilities to appreciate that certain actions would lead to the death of others. The majority ignores that Heck Van Tran has not argued that his alleged condition ever affected his ability to appreciate the wrongfulness of murder. The majority also ignores that Heck Van Tran has not argued that his alleged condition ever affected his ability to behave in a lawful manner. Instead, the majority holds that Heck Van Tran should escape his capital sentence because his new score on an updated I.Q. test removes his moral blameworthiness for the senseless and intentional execution of an elderly victim, Kai Yin Chuey. I simply cannot agree.

Moreover, the majority has completely disregarded the petitioner’s claims alleging “new scientific evidence establishing that [he] is actually innocent of the offense or offenses for which [he] was convicted” under Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-30-217(a)(2). Instead, the majority has determined that the motion to reopen is “more appropriately” based on the provisions of Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-30-217(a)(1), which provides in pertinent part that the “claim in the motion is based upon a final ruling of an appellate court establishing a constitutional right that was not recognized as existing at the time of trial.” Although the majority has extended this very narrow basis to reopen to apply in this case, the constitutional issue now raised for the first time in this motion to reopen has clearly been waived by the petitioner’s failure to raise it in his original post- conviction petition. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-206(g). In accordance with our holding in State v. West, 19 S.W.3d 753 (Tenn. 2000), this Court lacks the authority to consider this constitutional issue, and it should therefore be dismissed. Accordingly, because subsection (a)(1) is not an applicable avenue for relief in this case, the petitioner must seek relief on other grounds.

Indeed, the petitioner filed his motion to reopen pursuant to subsection (a)(2), alleging that an updated version of the I.Q. test has established his mental retardation thereby rendering him “actually innocent” of capital punishment. This Court has not previously considered the proper standards governing the admissibility of “new scientific evidence” under Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-30-217(a)(2). Consequently, it is inappropriate for the petitioner to assume that the WAIS-III qualifies as such without further inquiry. I also disagree that the language “actual innocence of the offenses for which he was convicted” in this subsection includes innocence of, or ineligibility for, the death penalty. Accordingly, I am unable to join the majority’s decision permitting the petitioner to reopen his post-conviction petition under either subsection (a)(1) or, per the petitioner’s request, subsection (a)(2), and for the reasons given below, I respectfully dissent.

A review of the factual history of this case will provide a better understanding of the procedural and substantive issues before the Court:

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

In 1987, during the course of robbing a family-owned restaurant, the petitioner and three other defendants shot and killed three innocent victims, all family members. A fourth family member was brutally beaten but eventually recovered. The evidence at the petitioner’s trial revealed that he shot two of the victims, including seventy-four year-old Kai Yin Chuey, multiple times including once in the throat and once in the back of the head. State v. Van Tran, 864 S.W.2d 465, 469 (Tenn. 1993). The petitioner then entered the restaurant office where he knew valuables were kept, and he stole gold and jewelry having an estimated wholesale value of $25,000.

Following the robbery, three of the criminals took most of the stolen jewelry and fled to Houston, Texas. There, the defendant managed to sell some of the stolen gold for $4,000, which the trio divided amongst themselves. For almost six months after the robbery, the petitioner remained in hiding until he was arrested in Houston. At the time of his arrest, the petitioner initially gave the police a fictitious name upon inquiry. After he was advised of his Miranda rights, he was asked if he knew why he was being arrested, to which he replied, “For a shooting in Memphis.” Later, the petitioner gave a written statement in which he admitted his involvement in the crimes.

-2- The jury found him guilty of three counts of first degree murder and one count of robbery by use of a deadly weapon and sentenced him to death for each of the murder convictions. The court also sentenced the petitioner to thirty years imprisonment for the robbery to be served concurrently with the death sentences. On appeal, his convictions and one death sentence were affirmed by this Court.

On March 7, 1995, the petitioner filed a petition for post-conviction relief alleging, among other things, that he was mentally retarded and thus ineligible for the death penalty under Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-13-203. The trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing in October 1997. At the hearing, the petitioner presented the testimony of Dr. Andrew J. Adler, the psychologist who tested the petitioner using the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale and the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale–Revised (WAIS-R). Dr. Adler testified that the petitioner had deficits in adaptive behavior that had manifested during the petitioner’s developmental period and that the petitioner had a full-scale I.Q. of sixty-seven. He concluded that Van Tran was therefore mentally retarded as defined by section 39-13-203(a).1 However, the State’s expert, psychologist Dr. Lynn Zager, testified that Dr. Adler’s calculations of the WAIS-R test scores were erroneous and that the petitioner’s I.Q. was actually seventy-two. Following the hearing, the post-conviction court found Dr. Adler’s calculation to be in error and dismissed the petition. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the trial court’s dismissal and further held that a proceeding for post-conviction relief is inappropriate for addressing the issue of present incompetency to be executed.

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Heck Van Tran v. State of Tennessee - Concurring/Dissenting, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heck-van-tran-v-state-of-tennessee-concurringdisse-tenn-2001.