Leighton v. Neil

317 F. Supp. 959, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10621
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedAugust 10, 1970
DocketCiv. No. 5604
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 317 F. Supp. 959 (Leighton v. Neil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leighton v. Neil, 317 F. Supp. 959, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10621 (M.D. Tenn. 1970).

Opinion

ORDER

WILLIAM E. MILLER, Circuit Judge

(sitting by designation).

In this action petitioner’s application for habeas corpus seeking to void a 99-year sentence imposed upon him after a conviction in the state court for first degree murder was heard before the Court on April 14, 1970.

The petition presents the Court with the difficult and anomalous situation in which both the trial judge who presided at petitioner’s criminal trial and the special prosecuting attorney have now stated that petitioner did not receive a fair trial.

The facts are these. Petitioner was arrested on January 12, 1943, in Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, and charged with assault and battery. At the time petitioner was between seventeen and nineteen years of age. He was arrested by the Sheriff of Lawrence County, Clive Weathers, and a Tennessee Highway Patrolman, Gregg O’Rear. He was taken to the Lawrence County jail where a county squire orally committed petitioner to jail. There is some evidence that there had been enmity between petitioner and Sheriff Weathers arising out of several previous encounters. At the jail petitioner was lodged in a large cell with George Newell, the individual with whom petitioner had earlier been involved in an altercation resulting in his arrest. After the two men resumed their fight, petitioner was removed to another cell.

Shortly thereafter, Sheriff Weathers entered petitioner’s cell. All witnesses at the criminal trial agreed that petitioner asked the sheriff not to come into the cell. Petitioner has testified in an earlier hearing, the record of which is before this Court, that the sheriff was carrying a blackjack when he entered the cell. Other witnesses have stated that they did not see whether the sheriff was carrying a blackjack. Petitioner has always contended that the sheriff began to beat him with the blackjack and that he thereupon defended himself by striking at the sheriff with a small knife he had secreted on his person. At the criminal trial the State sought to prove that petitioner struck at the sheriff and that the sheriff defended himself with the blackjack. The sheriff died almost immediately from the knife wounds inflicted by petitioner. Testimony is uncontroverted that when the sheriff died he held a blackjack in his hand.

Following the incident, petitioner was taken to the Davidson County jail, Nashville, Tennessee, for his safety. After being returned to Lawrenceburg, defendant was indicted for murder in the first degree on January 14, 1943. There being no attorney in Lawrence County willing to undertake the petitioner’s defense at that time, counsel was appointed from another county. One week after the killing, a motion for change of venue was heard and overruled on January 19, 1943. Trial commenced in Lawrenceburg on February 1, 1943, and, after a lengthy voir dire in which nearly three panels of veniremen were called, the presentation of the case culminated in a conviction and a sentence of 99 years in the state penitentiary. Mr. Noble L. Freeman, an experienced member of the Lawrence County bar, served as special prosecutor for the State at the request of the family of Sheriff Weathers.

Petitioner won his release in 1966 after applying for post-conviction relief in the Circuit Court of Lawrence County before Judge Joe M. Ingram, the judge who had presided at the 1943 trial. This decision was reversed by the Tennessee [961]*961Supreme Court on the ground that Judge Ingram should have recused himself. A rehearing was ordered before a different judge. Leighton v. Henderson, 220 Tenn. 91, 414 S.W.2d 419 (1969). On rehearing, the petition for a writ of habeas corpus was denied, and this denial was later affirmed by the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals. State ex rel. Leighton v. Henderson, 448 S.W.2d 82 (Crim.App.1969). A writ of certiorari to the state Supreme Court was denied on December 1, 1969. Having exhausted his state remedies, petitioner now seeks the writ of habeas corpus in this Court.

Petitioner has presented the Court with several allegations of denial of due process of law in his criminal trial going to the problems of the speed with which he was brought to trial, the alleged prejudicial climate of the community, and the right to have competent counsel. In view of the entire record, including all the state post-conviction proceedings, the original trial, and the hearing here, the Court feels that the disposition of this case turns primarily on the question whether conditions in Lawrence County at the time of trial were so prejudicial to petitioner’s rights that he was as a matter of law denied a fair trial when his motion for a change of venue was denied. It is the opinion of the Court that petitioner has failed to sustain the burden of proof on this issue.

The denial of a motion for change of venue in face of substantial antagonism toward a defendant approaching the proportions of mob violence was considered in Bard v. Chilton, 20 F.2d 906 (6th Cir. 1927). That case held that where issues as to the right to a change of venue had been decided adversely to petitioner on appeal to the state’s highest court, those issues were not open to the federal court in a habeas corpus case unless the district court could find upon the facts presented as a matter of law, that the conditions in the community were so prejudicial that petitioner did not receive a fair trial. Bard v. Chilton, supra, has been cited by later courts in support of the proposition that a federal court should regard habeas corpus as an extraordinary writ not to be used to reverse the highest court of a state on questions of trial error in the absence of narrowly viewed constitutional defects. A case noting Bard v. Chilton, supra to this effect is Jones v. Commonwealth, 97 F.2d 335 (6th Cir. 1938). In Jones, appellant had been convicted of murder and sentenced to death in Kentucky. The state attorney general later expressed the strong opinion that the defendant had been convicted on perjured testimony, yet the Court of Appeals of Kentucky declined relief and relegated defendant to an appeal for executive clemency. The district judge deciding the habeas corpus petition limited himself to issuance of a letter of probable cause, doubting the “power and the propriety of a single district judge to reverse the decision of the highest court of the state.” 97 F.2d at 336. On appeal the Sixth Circuit noted the extraordinary nature of the writ and the caution with which it should be granted, but found that more than commission of error of law was involved. Rather a wrong of constitutional proportions so as to render the trial and conviction void required the court to reverse the district court. In is notable that evidence given by the state’s attorney general was afforded great weight by both the district judge and the Sixth Circuit.

Another case demonstrates the same pattern. In Fleenor v. Hammond, 28 F.Supp. 625 (W.D.Ky.1939) the district judge had declined to issue a writ, citing Bard v. Chilton, supra, and Jones v. Commonwealth, supra, and entered a letter of probable cause. As in Jones, the Sixth Circuit, upon review of the facts, found a fundamental violation of due process exceeding the commission of an error of law and reversed the district court, ordering a remand so that petitioner could amend.

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Bluebook (online)
317 F. Supp. 959, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leighton-v-neil-tnmd-1970.