Jermaine Hughey v. State of Tennessee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 21, 2010
DocketW2009-01072-CCA-R3-PC
StatusPublished

This text of Jermaine Hughey v. State of Tennessee (Jermaine Hughey 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
Jermaine Hughey v. State of Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs April 13, 2010

JERMAINE HUGHEY v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 03-00283 John T. Fowlkes, Jr., Judge

No. W2009-01072-CCA-R3-PC - Filed April 21, 2010

The petitioner, Jermaine Hughey, appeals the denial of his petition for post-conviction relief, arguing that he was denied the effective assistance of trial and appellate counsel. Following our review, we affirm the denial of the petition.

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

A LAN E. G LENN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which JOHN E VERETT W ILLIAMS and N ORMA M CG EE O GLE, JJ., joined.

Patrick E. Stegall, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jermaine Hughey.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Benjamin A. Ball, Assistant Attorney General; William L. Gibbons, District Attorney General; and Rachel Newton, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

In 2003, the petitioner was convicted by a Shelby County Criminal Court jury of four counts of aggravated robbery, a Class B felony, and four counts of attempted aggravated robbery, a Class C felony, and was sentenced by the trial court as a Range I, standard offender to an effective sentence of twenty-seven years in the Department of Correction. We affirmed his convictions and sentences on direct appeal, and our supreme court denied his application for permission to appeal. State v. Jermaine Hughey, No. W2004-01074-CCA- R3-CD, 2006 WL 2000734, at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App. July 18, 2006), perm. to appeal denied (Tenn. Nov. 13, 2006). Our direct appeal opinion reveals that the petitioner’s convictions stemmed from two armed robbery episodes: an August 9, 2002, home invasion robbery involving four Hispanic victims in which the petitioner acted alone; and an August 30, 2002, episode at the parking lot of the same apartment complex involving three of the August 9 victims and one of their neighbors in which the petitioner acted with an accomplice. Id. at *1-7.

On November 14, 2007, the petitioner filed a pro se petition for post-conviction relief in which he raised a number of claims, including ineffective assistance of counsel. Following the appointment of post-conviction counsel, the petitioner filed amended and supplemental petitions in which he alleged that counsel was ineffective for failing to include the petitioner’s presentence report at the sentencing hearing or in the record of the direct appeal and for failing to provide to the petitioner or use at trial potentially exculpatory evidence, which consisted of a police incident report in which the description of the perpetrator was different from the petitioner’s appearance.

An evidentiary hearing was held on December 17, 2008, and March 30, 2009. At the December 17 hearing, the petitioner testified that he was represented by one lawyer at trial and a different lawyer at the motion for new trial, sentencing hearing, and on appeal because his first lawyer was allowed to withdraw his representation. He said that he and appellate counsel1 got along and that he had no concerns about how counsel handled the sentencing hearing, except that he later wished counsel had called some of his family members to testify on his behalf.

On cross-examination, the petitioner acknowledged that appellate counsel forcefully argued at the sentencing hearing that he should receive a shorter sentence based on the fact that no shots were fired and his criminal history was minimal. He further acknowledged that the trial court stated at the hearing that the most important enhancement factor on which it was basing the sentences was that the petitioner had intentionally selected the victims because of their race.

Appellate counsel testified that he had been a criminal defense attorney since August 1994 and had handled “a great many” trials, as well as appeals, during his career. He said that the petitioner’s family hired him approximately two or three weeks before the sentencing hearing because trial counsel was relieved from representation due to a conflict of interest that developed after trial. Prior to the sentencing hearing, appellate counsel reviewed the presentence report and talked to the petitioner’s family, a number of whom wanted to testify on the petitioner’s behalf at the hearing. However, because he was of the opinion that none

1 For simplicity’s sake, we have elected to refer to the lawyer who represented the petitioner at trial as “trial counsel” and to the lawyer who began his representation with the motion for new trial as “appellate counsel.”

-2- of the family members had anything to say that would not “have come across as angry and bitter about the verdict in the trial,” appellate counsel advised them to write letters of support instead.

Appellate counsel testified that he argued the petitioner’s minimal criminal history at the sentencing hearing, but the trial court, in sentencing, placed great weight on the fact that the petitioner had allegedly targeted the victims because of their race. Appellate counsel explained that he did not have the presentence report admitted as an exhibit to the hearing or included in the record on appeal because he had never done so in the forty-plus appeals he had handled prior to the petitioner’s case, never seen it done in any other cases he had reviewed or observed, and had always assumed that the presentence report, which was routinely ordered by the trial court prior to sentencing and placed in the jacket, was automatically included in the technical record on appeal. Consequently, he was “quite shocked” when the direct appeal opinion was released stating that he had failed to include the presentence report in the record. In his opinion, the appellate court was “sort of sidestepping the issue” because the trial court referred exclusively to the report in its ruling and “all of the pertinent parts of the Presentence Report were all there in front of the [Court of Criminal Appeals] in the transcript form.”

At the March 30, 2009, evidentiary hearing, trial counsel testified that he had been practicing criminal defense law in Shelby County since 1977 and had participated in many trials during his thirty-year career. He said that his key defense strategy consisted of attacking the identification of the petitioner as the perpetrator of the crimes. When shown an incident report from the Memphis Police Department containing a description of the suspect as a man with a thin build with diamond earrings and a dark complexion, trial counsel testified that he had no independent recollection of the document but that if it was included in his discovery packet, he would have reviewed and shared it with the petitioner, as was his protocol. Finally, he explained the measures he took to challenge witness identifications of the petitioner:

My recollection of the case is that the case turned on identification. There were multiple individuals that identified [the petitioner] as the perpetrator. I used what tools I knew to use [in] making trial tactical decisions on how to attack their credibility in identifying, and accuracy, in addition to credibility, of identifying [the petitioner] as the perpetrator.

The petitioner testified that he became unhappy with trial counsel’s representation shortly before trial because counsel never came to see him in jail before he made bond, sending an associate and a partner in his place. In addition, trial counsel met with him only once before trial and perhaps a couple of times during the trial. He further testified, however, that trial counsel replied to his letters, provided him with copies of discovery, and discussed

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Related

Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
Wiley v. State
183 S.W.3d 317 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2006)
Fields v. State
40 S.W.3d 450 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2001)
Ruff v. State
978 S.W.2d 95 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1998)
Goad v. State
938 S.W.2d 363 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1996)
State v. Taylor
968 S.W.2d 900 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1997)
Baxter v. Rose
523 S.W.2d 930 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1975)
State v. Burns
6 S.W.3d 453 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1999)
Hellard v. State
629 S.W.2d 4 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
Jermaine Hughey v. State of Tennessee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jermaine-hughey-v-state-of-tennessee-tenncrimapp-2010.