In re Thomas S. Sharrow

2017 VT 69, 175 A.3d 1236
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 25, 2017
Docket2017-020
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2017 VT 69 (In re Thomas S. Sharrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Thomas S. Sharrow, 2017 VT 69, 175 A.3d 1236 (Vt. 2017).

Opinion

ROBINSON, J.

¶ 1. At issue in this post-conviction relief (PCR) appeal is whether petitioner was prejudiced as a result of counsel's ineffective assistance in his underlying trial. The PCR court vacated petitioner's conviction of attempted second-degree murder on the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel. In particular, the PCR court concluded that petitioner's trial counsel fell below the standard of accepted practice in Vermont by failing to object to jury instructions that did not require that the State prove the absence of passion or provocation in order to convict for attempted second-degree murder and did not include attempted voluntary manslaughter as a lesser offense. On appeal, the State does not challenge the PCR court's conclusion that counsel was ineffective in petitioner's underlying criminal trial, but argues that petitioner was not prejudiced by the ineffective assistance. We affirm.

¶ 2. After an evidentiary hearing, the PCR court found the following facts. In the underlying criminal trial, complainant and petitioner presented different accounts of the incident that led to petitioner's conviction. According to complainant, she and petitioner began living together in January 2003. After a couple of months, petitioner started to abuse her. There were several abusive instances between March and September 2003. The police were called on several occasions and petitioner was told to leave multiple times; however the two always got back together. Complainant testified that on October 4, 2003, petitioner visited her at her home while she was sick. When she said something that angered him, petitioner began assaulting complainant. Complainant started screaming, and the neighbors came to her aid. Complainant left with the neighbors to call the police and petitioner left the premises. Later that night, sometime after midnight, petitioner reentered complainant's house through the window. He threatened to kill her for calling the police earlier in the day, punched her, and began to strangle her. He then went to the kitchen and retrieved one or more knives and continued the assault. Upon hearing complainant screaming, the neighbors again called the police, who arrived and arrested petitioner at the house. Complainant had multiple knife wounds to her head, neck, arm, and back, most of which were superficial but at least one of which was potentially life threatening.

¶ 3. Petitioner's retelling was starkly different. Petitioner testified that complainant drank often and was frequently abusive while drunk. For example, on prior occasions she had sprayed him with mace, and a couple of weeks before the October 4 *1238 incident complainant hit petitioner over the head with a cutting board. Petitioner admitted entering through the window on October 4 but claimed he did not intend to kill complainant. According to petitioner, he found complainant shaking, upset, and holding a knife with the blade up. Because she had tried to "take [his] head off with a cutting board" the week before, and because he "didn't want to get stuck with the knife," he grabbed hold of complainant's wrist. The two struggled violently as he tried to get her to drop the knife. Petitioner claimed that the knife remained in complainant's hand throughout the struggle, and that he did not realize she had been cut by the knife during the struggle. He explained that, after he succeeded in getting complainant to drop the knife, he went into the kitchen, grabbed his keys to leave, and saw a butterfly knife on the counter. He explained that he grabbed the knife "out of instinct" because he wasn't in his "right mind" and because he did not want complainant to use the knife on him as he left. He testified that he never touched her with that knife. Police arrested petitioner on the porch as he left the apartment. He had the butterfly knife hidden in his sleeve and a small cut between the fingers of his right hand.

¶ 4. In closing argument in the underlying criminal trial, the State argued that petitioner, angry that complainant had called the police the evening before, broke into her apartment and repeatedly stabbed her in a deliberate and premeditated attempt to kill her. The State asked the jury to return a verdict of attempted first-degree murder. Defense counsel argued that petitioner acted in self-defense and that the stab wounds complainant sustained were the unintended result of a violent struggle that took place after she came at him with a knife.

¶ 5. The sentencing court instructed the jury on attempted first-degree murder, attempted second-degree murder, and aggravated assault, as well as self-defense. Earlier drafts of the trial court's proposed jury charge included instructions on attempted voluntary manslaughter, but the court's final instructions did not include this lesser offense, and the court's instruction on attempted second-degree murder did not inform the jury that the State had the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that petitioner had not acted out of passion or provocation. The sentencing court explained that the evidence did not support such instructions. Defense counsel did not object to the instructions. The jury acquitted petitioner of attempted first-degree murder and convicted him of attempted second-degree murder. He is currently serving a sentence of twenty years to life.

¶ 6. On the basis of these and other findings, the PCR court concluded that petitioner's counsel did not meet the professional standard in Vermont. 1 The PCR court concluded that there was sufficient evidence presented at trial to warrant an instruction on attempted voluntary manslaughter and the absence of provocation. 2 "Where passion or provocation is implicated, the court must instruct the jury that to establish murder the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused did not kill under the *1239 influence of passion or provocation." State v. Hatcher , 167 Vt. 338 , 345-46, 706 A.2d 429 , 433 (1997). The PCR court concluded that petitioner's testimony that complainant had been drunkenly abusive toward him in the past, that she had recently hit him over the head with a cutting board, and that she had been upset and holding a knife on the night of the incident could support a finding that petitioner acted out of provocation, warranting the instructions for both the absence of provocation and attempted voluntary manslaughter. The PCR court acknowledged that the main defense strategy at trial was self-defense, but concluded that in this case there was no strategic or tactical reason not to insist that the jury instructions include the absence-of-provocation element of second-degree murder and the lesser offense of voluntary manslaughter in order to minimize an adverse verdict in the event that the jury rejected petitioner's claim of self-defense.

¶ 7.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Ray
Vermont Superior Court, 2026
In Re Noyes
Vermont Superior Court, 2025
In re Rein Kolts
2024 VT 1 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2024)
Lumumba v. State of Vermont
Vermont Superior Court, 2022
In re Gregory S. FitzGerald
2020 VT 14 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2020)
In re Edwin A. Towne, Jr.
2018 VT 5 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 VT 69, 175 A.3d 1236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-thomas-s-sharrow-vt-2017.