State of Tennessee v. Eric Ricardo Middleton

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 14, 2011
DocketW2010-01427-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Eric Ricardo Middleton (State of Tennessee v. Eric Ricardo Middleton) 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. Eric Ricardo Middleton, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs September 7, 2011

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ERIC RICARDO MIDDLETON

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Madison County No. 08-442 Donald H. Allen, Judge

No. W2010-01427-CCA-R3-CD - Filed November 14, 2011

The defendant, Eric Ricardo Middleton, was convicted by a Madison County Circuit Court jury of first degree premeditated murder; second degree murder, a Class A felony; and tampering with the evidence, a Class C felony. He was sentenced to an effective term of life imprisonment plus twenty-five years. On appeal, the defendant argues that: (1) the trial court erred in allowing the doctor who performed the autopsies on the victims to testify as an expert; (2) the trial court erred in denying his request for a jury instruction that Mary Thompson, the co-defendant, was an accomplice as a matter of law; (3) the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions; and (4) the trial court erred in imposing partial consecutive sentences. After review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Circuit Court Affirmed

A LAN E. G LENN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which T HOMAS T. W OODALL and J EFFREY S. B IVINS, JJ., joined.

George Morton Googe, District Public Defender; and Gregory D. Gookin, Assistant Public Defender, Tennessee, for the appellant, Eric Ricardo Middleton.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Clark B. Thornton, Assistant Attorney General; James G. (Jerry) Woodall, District Attorney General; and Shaun A. Brown, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

As a result of their involvement in the homicides of Bobby Perry and Andreca Manning and subsequent attempt to conceal the homicides, the defendant and co-defendant, Mary Cormill Thompson, were indicted on two charges of first degree premeditated murder and tampering with the evidence. The defendant was additionally charged with aggravated arson.1 The defendant’s and co-defendant’s trials were severed.

State’s Proof

At the defendant’s trial, Thomas Jackson testified that he owned a single-family residence at 10 Webb Street in Jackson, Tennessee. In March 2008, Jackson rented the house to Mary Thompson, and Thompson’s sister also lived there with her. A fire at the house on March 17, 2008, caused extensive damage, “total[ing] the house.” He had last been at the house about a week prior to the fire at which time Mary Thompson was there with “a young man. A friend[] of hers.” On cross-examination, Jackson stated that he talked to Thompson around the time of the fire, and she informed him that she was getting ready to move back to Mississippi because she could no longer afford the rent on the house.

Mary2 Thompson testified that, in March 2008, she was living in a rental house at 10 Webb Street with the defendant; her sister, Thelmisha Thompson; and her two-year-old niece, Ricarla. The defendant was her boyfriend at the time, and they had dated since July 1999. Mary admitted that she had been charged with first degree murder, along with the defendant, but denied that she had been promised a deal in exchange for her testimony.

Mary testified that, on March 14, 2008, the defendant had been living with her for about three weeks, having recently moved from Mississippi where they both were from. The night of the 14th, she was home with the defendant and her niece. She and the defendant had both been drinking Paul Masson brandy, and the defendant had drunk “a couple” of beers as well. Around 10:00 p.m., Bobby Perry stopped by the house. Mary had known Perry for about five months and had rented cars from him in the past. Perry had told her that he was going to stop by that evening to take her and her niece to get something to eat and ride around until her sister got off work at 11:30 p.m. Perry came into the house and helped Mary get her niece’s car seat and took it out to his car – a tan, late-model Cadillac.

Mary testified that, as they were walking to Perry’s car, a “young lady,” later determined to be Manning, who was with Perry, asked to use the bathroom. Mary took Manning inside and showed her to the bathroom. The defendant was in the house

1 The defendant was ultimately acquitted on this charge. 2 Mary Thompson and her sister, Thelmisha Thompson, are both lengthy witnesses. Therefore, for clarity, we will refer to these women by their first names at times. We mean no disrespect to either of these witnesses.

-2- somewhere. Mary waited by the bathroom door until she heard the toilet flush, and then she went back out to the car to join Perry, thinking that Manning “was on her way out.” However, Mary never saw Manning exit the bathroom. Mary sat in Perry’s car talking to him for a few minutes before she started to wonder what was taking Manning so long. She told Perry she was going to check on Manning, and Perry said, “‘No. I’ve got it.’ Like that was his close friend and he would check on her.”

“Almost immediately” after Perry walked into the house, Mary heard a loud thumping sound and saw the blinds moving in the living room in the front of the house. Mary left her niece in the car and ran inside to see what was happening. Mary saw the defendant “tussling” with Perry. She explained that Perry was lying on his back on the floor, and the defendant had his knee in Perry’s neck. Mary saw blood “all over the area where [Perry] was lying” and on Perry’s body.

Mary testified that she asked the defendant what was going on and what he was doing, and the defendant said “[t]hat it was done there. ‘We got to get this mess up.’” Perry told Mary, “‘Help me baby,’” and the defendant said, “No. No[]” and asked Mary to pass him the kitchen knife that was on the floor out of his reach. Mary kicked the knife close to Perry’s foot and prepared to run out of the house. However, the defendant stopped her and told her to bring her niece inside. Mary said that she did not see what happened after she kicked the knife, but she assumed that Perry had gotten it because the defendant told her later that “Perry had got the knife and cut his index finger to the bone.”

Mary testified that she brought her niece into the house in the back bedroom. Perry was lying on the kitchen floor and “still kind of gasping a little bit.” The defendant told her that he needed her to help him. She told him that she could not, but the defendant kept “insisting [and] threatening . . . like, you know, the police fixing to come get me because it’s in my house.” The defendant took Mary into the kitchen where Perry lay unmoving and gasping “[v]ery faintly.” The defendant tried to get her to help him pull Perry out the door, but she refused because she did not want to touch the body.

Mary testified that the defendant then told her to wait with her niece in the bedroom. Before going to the bedroom, however, Mary stopped to wash her hands in the bathroom where she saw Manning lying on the bathroom floor, bloody, and with what “looked like holes in her.” Mary ran out of the bathroom and asked the defendant “‘What did [you] do? Why you do that?’” The defendant would not answer, but she thought “he said that he did it for us.” She “had no idea” what the defendant meant by that statement.

Mary testified that the defendant had met Perry prior to the incident when they had gone out to eat, but, to her knowledge, he had not met Manning. She had never discussed

-3- killing Perry or Manning with the defendant. Mary said that the reason Perry came by to pick her up with Manning was because Perry wanted Mary to watch him and Manning have sex “to see how it was done.” She said that she and Perry were not dating but had oral sex once.

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State v. Lane
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State v. Bland
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McDaniel v. CSX Transportation, Inc.
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State v. Taylor
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State v. Smith
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State v. Bonestel
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State v. Wilkerson
905 S.W.2d 933 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1995)
State v. Tuggle
639 S.W.2d 913 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1982)
Carroll v. State
370 S.W.2d 523 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1963)
State v. Reid
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State v. Anderson
835 S.W.2d 600 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1992)

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State of Tennessee v. Eric Ricardo Middleton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-eric-ricardo-middleton-tenncrimapp-2011.