Kendricks v. Phillips

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 30, 2019
Docket1:16-cv-00350
StatusUnknown

This text of Kendricks v. Phillips (Kendricks v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kendricks v. Phillips, (E.D. Tenn. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE AT CHATTANOOGA

EDWARD THOMAS KENDRICKS, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) No. 1:16-CV-00350-JRG-SKL ) SHAWN PHILLIPS, ) ) Respondent. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before the court is a pro se prisoner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 [Doc. 1]. Respondent has filed a response in opposition [Doc. 15], as well as the state court record [Doc. 14]. Petitioner filed a reply [Doc. 30]. After reviewing all of the relevant filings, the Court has determined that Petitioner is not entitled to relief under §2254 and no evidentiary hearing is warranted. See Rules Governing § 2254 Cases, Rule 8(a) and Schirro v. Landrigan, 550 U.S. 465, 474 (2007). For the reasons set forth below, the §2254 Petition is DENIED and this matter will be DISMISSED. I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY In 1994, a Hamilton County jury convicted Petitioner of first-degree murder for shooting and killing his wife [Doc. 14 Attachment 1 at 24]. Petitioner appealed on several grounds including that the evidence was insufficient to support the finding of guilt by the jury, that the trial court erred in allowing and disallowing various pieces of evidence, and that the State had violated Brady v. Maryland by failing to disclose exculpatory information [Doc. 14 Attachment 9]. The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals (“TCCA”) affirmed his conviction [Doc. 14 Attachment 11]. Petitioner then applied for permission to appeal to the Tennessee Supreme Court, but his application was denied [Doc. 14 Attachments 12, 15]. Next, Petitioner filed a motion for post-conviction relief alleging various grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel and various instances of prosecutorial misconduct [Doc. 14 Attachment 15 at 3 – 12]. His petition was summarily dismissed [Doc. 14 Attachment 16 at 63 – 64]. Thereafter, Petitioner amended his petition for post-conviction relief which was dismissed as

untimely filed [Doc. 14 Attachment 16 at 65 – 81; 84]. Petitioner immediately appealed and the TCCA reversed in part and remanded for further proceedings on Petitioner’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims, with specific instructions for the post-conviction court to allow Petitioner to amend his petition [Doc.14 Attachment 20]. Petitioner filed an amended petition in 2000, and over the next several years filed various amendments, with and without the assistance of counsel [Doc. 14 Attachments 21 at 5 – 114; 21 at 115 – 131; 21, at 140 – 141; 22 at 127 – 23 at 87; 23 at 88 – 123; 28 at 71 – 106; 28 at 107 – 29 at 51]. In 2011, after hearings spanning various days in February and March, the post-conviction court dismissed the petition [Doc. 14 Attachment 29 at 6 – 72]. Petitioner then appealed to the TCCA again, which resulted in the TCCA reversing the judgment of the post-conviction court,

vacating Petitioner’s conviction, and remanding for further proceedings, based on two of Petitioner’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims: (1) failure to adduce expert proof about a defective trigger mechanism design in Petitioner’s rifle, and (2) failure to use the excited utterance exception to hearsay to admit the prior statements of an officer in the case [Doc. 14 Attachment 48]. The State appealed to the Tennessee Supreme Court (“TSC”), which found no ineffective assistance of counsel on either claim, reversed the TCCA’s judgment, and remanded the case to the TCCA to address Petitioner’s pretermitted claims [Doc. 14 Attachments 49, 60]. Petitioner

1 For the sake of brevity this includes only Petitioner’s amended petitions and not his vast Memoranda of Law, spanning hundreds of pages, which accompanied them and are separately labeled in the record. then moved for a rehearing in the TSC which was denied [Doc.14 Attachments 61, 62]. He also filed a writ of certiorari with the United States Supreme Court which was also denied [Doc. 14 Attachments 63, 64]. Later, the TCCA evaluated Petitioner’s remaining claims as directed by the TSC and affirmed the judgment denying petitioner post-conviction relief [Doc. 14 Attachment 72].

Petitioner filed an application for permission to appeal with the TSC, which was denied [Doc. 14 Attachments 73, 75]. Finally, in 2016 Petitioner filed for a writ of habeas corpus with this Court [Doc.1]. II. BACKGROUND A. Trial

On Direct Appeal, the TCCA summarized the facts of this case as follows: On March 6, 1994, at approximately 10:00 p.m., the defendant drove to the gas station at which Lisa Kendrick, his wife and the victim, worked. With him in the car were their four-year-old daughter and three-year-old son. These children were sitting in car seats in the back seat of the station wagon the defendant was driving. Also in the car, on the front passenger floorboard, was the defendant’s loaded 30.06 hunting rifle.

The defendant pulled into the station, parked, and went into the market portion of the station where his wife worked as a cashier. He asked her to come outside, which she did. She and the defendant went to the car where she spoke briefly to the children. The defendant retrieved the rifle from the front passenger floorboard and carried it to the back of the car. At that point, the weapon fired once, the bullet striking the victim in her chest and killing her almost instantly.

After the victim fell to the parking lot, the defendant briefly bent over her body, put the gun back in the car, and drove toward the airport a short distance away. On the way, he threw the rifle out of the car. Once he arrived at the airport, he called 911 and reported that he had shot his wife. Before the defendant left the gas station, he took no action to assist the victim in any way. Timothy Shurd Benton, a customer, was in the market when the defendant entered. He testified that the defendant had asked the cashier “to step outside, he had something to show her.” Benton left the market, got in his car and started to leave the parking lot. He testified that, as he had begun to leave, he heard an “explosion.” He looked over his shoulder out the window of his car and saw the defendant holding a rifle “pointed straight up in the air.” He also saw the victim lying on her back on the parking lot. After deciding that another person in the market was aware of the situation and would call for help, Benton followed the defendant to the airport, where he contacted an airport police officer.

Lennell Shepheard was also in the market at the time the defendant entered. He testified that he had seen the defendant and his wife leave the store, that the defendant had not appeared angry or hostile, and that the victim had shown no signs of fear when she went outside at the defendant’s request. Shepheard remained in the store until he heard the rifle shot. At that point, he opened the market door and looked outside to see what had happened. He testified that he had seen the defendant shut the back passenger door and then lean over the victim’s body and state, “I told you so” approximately six times.

Endia Kendrick, the defendant’s four-year-old daughter, testified on direct examination that she had seen her father shoot her mother and that her mother had had her arms up at the time. However, on cross-examination, Endia admitted that she hadn’t actually seen the shooting.

Dr. Frank King, the Hamilton County Medical Examiner, testified that the victim had died of a single gunshot wound to the chest that entered her body in the left chest at forty-nine inches above the heel and exited her body at the left back at forty-nine and one-half inches above the heel.

The defendant testified that he had been moving the rifle from the front of the car to the back at the request of the victim and that it had discharged accidentally.

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Kendricks v. Phillips, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendricks-v-phillips-tned-2019.