Jerry v. Smith

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 10, 1996
Docket01C01-9411-CC-00390
StatusPublished

This text of Jerry v. Smith (Jerry v. Smith) 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
Jerry v. Smith, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE

OCTOBER 1995 SESSION

STATE OF TENNESSEE ) NO. 01C01-9411-CC-00390 ) Appellee, ) DICKSON COUNTY ) vs. ) HONORABLE ALLEN W. WALLACE ) CIRCUIT COURT JUDGE CALVIN WAYNE SUGGS, ) ) (SECOND-DEGREE MURDER AND) Appellant. ) RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT)

FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:

Shipp R. Weems Charles W. Burson District Public Defender Attorney General and Reporter 450 James Robertson Parkway Steve Stack Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0493 Assistant Public Defender 23rd Judicial District Darian B. Taylor P.O. Box 160 Assistant Attorney General Charlotte, TN 37036 Criminal Justice Division (on appeal) 450 James Robertson Parkway Nashville, TN 37243-0493 Jerry V. Smith Littleton, Smith & Roberts Robert S. Wilson 300 N. Main Street and Dickson, TN 37055 Christopher L. Young (at trial) FILED Asst. District Attorneys General P.O. Box 160 Charlotte, TN 37036 October 10, 1996

Cecil W. Crowson OPINION FILED: Appellate Court Clerk AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED

ROBERT E. CORLEW, III, SPECIAL JUDGE

CONCUR:

GARY R. WADE, JUDGE DAVID H. WELLES, JUDGE 2 OPINION

From the decision of the Trial Court finding the Defendant guilty of second-degree

murder and reckless endangerment, and sentencing him to serve twenty (20) years as a Range

I Standard Offender for the conviction for murder, and two (2) years, concurrently, for reckless

endangerment, the Defendant appeals.

The Appellant presents three issues for review. First he asserts that he was denied a fair

trial because the State failed to provide information to the defense concerning a potential witness

until immediately before trial, and the Court denied the Appellant's motion for continuance.

Second, the Appellant asserts that the evidence presented was insufficient to support a finding

that the Appellant was guilty of the charges. Third, the Appellant asserts that the Court failed

properly to follow the sentencing guidelines, failing properly to state enhancing factors on which

the Court relied, and in failing to consider mitigating factors advanced by the Appellant.

The facts show that the deceased, Timothy Hartley was a laborer who had worked for the

Appellant's father, Vernie Suggs on the farm operated by the Appellant's father. On September

4, 1993, the Appellant felt as though Hartley should have come to work for the Appellant and

the Appellant's father, but instead Hartley went with his brother-in-law, Bryce Swift and a third

individual, Shawn Lenn, to cut tobacco on the farm of a Mr. Smith. The Appellant called the

Hartley residence, by telephone, during the day on September 4, leaving a message for Hartley.

On the evening of September 4, when Hartley, Swift and Lenn returned to the Hartley residence,

Hartley's wife told Hartley about the telephone call she had received from the Appellant, which

upset the Appellant. When Hartley and Swift were unable to reach the Appellant or his father

by telephone, Swift and Hartley went to the Appellant's father's residence to talk with the

Appellant and his father to resolve the misunderstanding. Lenn left the Hartley residence, but

did not go with Swift and Hartley to the Appellant's father's residence.

A number of persons, including family members were gathered at the Suggs' residence,

enjoying a barbecue. The Appellant asserted that Hartley appeared to be very angry upon his

arrival at the Suggs' residence, and expressed anger to the Appellant regarding the telephone call

3 which Appellant had made earlier to Hartley's wife. Further words were exchanged, and the

Appellant went into his father's residence, picked up a shotgun, and took the gun outside, where

the Appellant's father, Swift, and Hartley were talking. The Appellant asserted that he took the

gun to the discussion for his protection, but upon his arrival outside the residence, the Appellant's

father told the Appellant to put the gun down. The Appellant testified that he put the gun down,

but the evidence shows that he retrieved the weapon, and shot Hartley through the heart, killing

him instantly. The Appellant's father, Vernon Suggs was also injured by the gun blast. The

Appellant relied upon defenses of accident and self-defense, alleging that he did not intend to

shoot the gun, nor did he remember having fired it, and also asserting that the deceased lunged

at him immediately before he fired.

The only information that the Appellant asserts that Shawn Lenn would have been able

to provide surrounded Lenn's work with Swift and the deceased during the day of September 4.

Questions arose as to whether the deceased had been drinking as he worked, and as to whether

the deceased and his wife quarreled prior to the time when Swift and the deceased went to the

Suggs' residence. At the time of the hearing, Lenn was serving in the Army, stationed in Korea.

The Appellant asserts that more than six months prior to trial the State had possession of an

investigative memorandum mentioning Lenn, although not by name and indicating that the

testimony of Lenn would contradict the testimonies of Swift and the wife of the deceased in two

particulars. Swift testified Hartley had little to drink during the afternoon before going to the

Suggs' residence while the memorandum suggested Lenn would testify that Hartley had

consumed several beers. Mrs. Hartley denied the occurrence of any arguments she had with her

deceased husband. The memorandum suggests, the Appellant asserts, that Lenn would testify

that he left the Hartley residence because he did not wish to be present while Mr. and Mrs.

Hartley continued their arguments. The Appellant made discovery requests in November of

1993, but the State did not provide information concerning the witness to the Appellant until

approximately one week prior to trial. The Appellant moved for a continuance shortly before

the trial, asserting that Lenn was an indispensable witness, seeking time to secure his presence.

4 The Court denied the motion for continuance.

At the time of the commission of the offense herein, the Appellant was under a suspended

sentence from the order of the Dickson County General Sessions Court. He had also sustained

an injury earlier to his knee, as a result of an incident in which the Appellant and the deceased

were engaged in horseplay. The Appellant had suffered the tearing of ligaments in his knee, and

subsequently required two surgeries. At the trial, the testimony of the assistant medical

examiner who performed the autopsy showed that the deceased died from a gunshot blast fired

from as close as two and a half feet away, or as far as nine feet away. She further testified that

the blood alcohol level of the deceased indicated that he had consumed approximately five and

one-half beers shortly before being killed. The testimony of the doctor contradicts the testimony

of the Appellant's father, who stated that "the gun went off" during a struggle between the

Appellant and the deceased, and contradicts the testimony of Swift that the deceased had

consumed only a small amount of alcohol immediately prior to his death.

Evidence was presented from which the jury could have found that the Appellant acted

under provocation. Evidence was presented that the deceased appeared angry when he arrived

at the Appellant's father's home, and interrupted a family barbecue.

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