State of Tennessee v. Dennis Burnett

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 14, 2009
DocketE2007-02258-CCA-MR3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Dennis Burnett (State of Tennessee v. Dennis Burnett) 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
State of Tennessee v. Dennis Burnett, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE January 27, 2009 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. DENNIS BURNETT Appeal from the Criminal Court for Monroe County No. 04-098 Carroll L. Ross, Judge

No. E2007-02258-CCA-MR3-CD - Filed August 14, 2009

A Monroe County jury convicted the defendant, Dennis Burnett, of second degree murder, and the trial court sentenced him to eighteen years in the Department of Correction. On appeal, the defendant argues that the trial court erred by: (1) refusing to grant a continuance based upon the defendant’s medical issues; (2) refusing to grant a mistrial after a State’s witness testified regarding information that had not been contained in his pretrial statements; (3) improperly informing the jury that a certain witness would testify when the trial court was aware that the witness was unavailable; and (4) refusing to grant a mistrial or call rebuttal witnesses after a co-defendant’s witness offered perjured testimony. After reviewing the record, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

D. KELLY THOMAS, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which NORMA MCGEE OGLE , J., joined. JAMES CURWOOD WITT , JR., J., filed a separate concurring opinion.

Charles G. Currier, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Dennis Burnett.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Renee W. Turner, Senior Counsel; Jerry N. Estes, District Attorney General; and Chalmers Thompson (at trial) and James Stutts (at motion for new trial hearing), Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Procedural History

The record reflects that in June 2004, the defendant was indicted, along with co-defendant Spencer Coon, on one count of second degree murder following the death of victim Thomas Ratti, also known as “Yankee.” Following a jury trial, defendant Burnett was found guilty as charged, and Coon was found not guilty. The defendant subsequently filed a timely motion for new trial, which the trial court denied. The defendant thereafter filed an untimely notice of appeal and a motion asking this court to waive the timeliness requirement of the notice of appeal in the interest of justice. This court granted the defendant’s motion.

Factual Background

Although the defendant is not challenging the sufficiency of the convicting evidence on appeal, we will summarize the trial testimony to provide context. Detective Jeff Vittatoe with the Monroe County Sheriff’s Department testified that he and other officers from his department found the victim’s body in a Monroe County cistern. Detective Vittatoe testified that Coon initially led officers to a location where the victim’s body was not found; after additional interviews, which he did not conduct, the officers searched for the victim’s body at the location at which the body was ultimately found.

Dwight Bright testified that one morning he and Coon were working on Coon’s truck at Bright’s Monroe County garage when they heard a car pull up outside the garage some time between 9:00 and 10:00. He then heard two men arguing. Bright went outside, where he saw defendant Burnett and the victim fighting in the driveway. Bright heard Burnett accuse the victim of being a “snitch” and taking “either a ring or a diamond” from Coon. Burnett also told the victim that he “was going to take care of it.” Bright told the two men that “they needed to take it on down the road,” and the two men got into Burnett’s truck. Bright and Coon returned to the garage, but they returned outside when they “heard some more racket.” The two men saw Burnett and the victim fighting inside Burnett’s truck, with Burnett pinning the victim down and hitting him in the head with a pistol. Bright saw that the victim was “cut pretty good” and bleeding from his forehead. Burnett drove off with the victim still inside the truck. Bright did not see the victim again, but that night he saw Burnett speaking with a woman named Leah Galyon. Bright heard Burnett tell Galyon that “she didn’t have to worry about him being back to get any of his stuff or to bother her anymore,” and that “he’d [taken] care of it.”

Scott Stewart testified that early one morning between August 26 and 29, 2003—the time frame alleged in the indictment—he awoke to continuous knocking on the front door of his house. Upon opening the door, Stewart saw Burnett, who said, “‘We took care of Yankee,’ he took care of Yankee . . . they got in a fight and he was took care of.” Not wanting to hear anything more, Stewart “cut off the conversation,” at which point Burnett gave him a necklace which Stewart recognized as belonging to the victim. Burnett told Stewart that he “took it from [the victim] whenever he took care of him.” Burnett also showed Stewart a .25 millimeter automatic pistol which Burnett claimed he used to “split [the victim’s] head open” during the altercation.

Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) Agent Barry Brakebill testified that he took written statements from both defendants after the victim’s body was recovered. In Coon’s statement, he described an argument among the defendants and the victim outside a garage owned by Clifton

-2- Bright, Dwight Bright’s father. Burnett asked the victim if he had stolen Burnett’s “dope,” and Coon asked if the victim had stolen a diamond ring. According to Coon, he and Burnett hit the victim before Burnett searched the victim’s pockets. Burnett pulled a ring out of the victim’s pockets and said, “See, I told you he was lying.” Burnett also “took a gun off of [the victim] right after the first punch. [The victim] acted like he was going to pull the gun and shoot us so Dennis took it away from him.” After a fight that lasted approximately twenty minutes, Burnett hit the victim “right between the eyes with a pistol.” Coon added that this blow was “a pretty good blow. [The victim’s] head busted open and started bleeding,” and the victim fell onto the ground.

After a while, Clifton Bright told the men to leave, so Burnett “threw” the victim into the back of his truck, Coon got into his car, and they drove away together. After a while, the two men pulled over, and Coon “told [Burnett] he could travel down [a particular] road, cross a creek, and dump the body on the right where [Coon] had planted [his] marijuana patch.” The two men then drove away in different directions; Coon insisted that the victim was still alive at that time. According to Coon, he and Burnett did not talk about the victim after the incident.

In his statement, Burnett said that he had first met the victim two weeks before the “red truck incident,” described above. He said that he knew that the victim and Rick Summey maintained a meth lab at Summey’s house. A few days after this initial meeting, Coon and the victim came to Burnett’s house so that Burnett and Coon could talk about Burnett selling his 1977 Ford pickup truck to Coon. Burnett claims that at that time, the victim stole a pocket watch and four knives. A few days after this incident, Burnett saw the victim at a Walmart. Burnett asked the victim to return the watch and the knives, but the victim drove away. Burnett claimed that he never saw the victim after the Walmart incident.

Agent Brakebill testified that he was present when the victim’s body was recovered. The agent said that the victim’s head appeared to have indentations around his skull, “but the [victim’s] body was in a state of decomp[osition] and it was hard to really determine any type of injuries.” He said that the victim’s hands were bound with blue duct tape and positioned behind his back. On cross-examination, the agent admitted that a roll of blue duct tape was found in Burnett’s truck but that the tape did not match the tape used to bind the victim’s mouth and hands.

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State of Tennessee v. Dennis Burnett, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-dennis-burnett-tenncrimapp-2009.