State of Tennessee v. Jeffery McClennon Morris

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 14, 2007
DocketE2006-00524-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Jeffery McClennon Morris (State of Tennessee v. Jeffery McClennon Morris) 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. Jeffery McClennon Morris, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs February 20, 2007

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JEFFERY McCLENNON MORRIS

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sevier County Nos. 9125, 9129, 9156 Rex Henry Ogle, Judge

No. E2006-00524-CCA-R3-CD - Filed March 14, 2007

The defendant, Jeffery McClennon Morris, was convicted of aggravated sexual battery, a Class B felony, as well as domestic assault and contributing to the delinquency of a minor, Class A misdemeanors. He was sentenced as a violent offender to fifteen years in the Department of Correction for the felony and concurrent sentences of eleven months and twenty-nine days for each misdemeanor. He raises three issues on appeal: (1) the sufficiency of the convicting evidence; (2) whether certain of his statements were admitted at trial in violation of Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 16(a)(1)(A); and (3) the validity of his indictment for domestic assault. Following our review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

ALAN E. GLENN , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID H. WELLES and THOMAS T. WOODALL, JJ., joined.

Steve McEwen, Mountain City, Tennessee (on appeal), and James W. Greenlee, Sevierville, Tennessee (at trial), for the appellant, Jeffery McClennon Morris.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Jennifer L. Bledsoe, Assistant Attorney General; Al Schmutzer, Jr., District Attorney General; and Nichole Bass, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

The indictment in this matter alleged that the defendant committed the domestic assault offense on April 1, 2002, and the remaining offenses on May 29, 2002.

State’s Proof At trial, the victim, C.K.,1 testified that her birthday was August 1, 1989, making her twelve years old when the offenses took place. She said she had known the defendant, her mother’s boyfriend, since she was “about four [years old]” and that he had lived with them until February 2002, when her mother told him “he had to leave” because he had just “got[ten] out of jail” and “was drinking again.”

The victim stated that on April 1, 2002, the defendant came to her house to get some paint and supplies he kept in an outside storage building. She said that he asked her if she wanted to rent a movie and that she went with him “to the movie store,” where they stayed “maybe five minutes, at the most.” She said that he yelled at her on the way home and that when they arrived home, she went to her room and closed the door. Shortly thereafter, the defendant, who was drunk, “slammed the door open,” told her he was “going to kick [her] ass,” lifted up the footboard of her bed, and then slammed it up and down while she was sitting on it. Her mother entered the room and told the defendant to leave, and, while they were talking, the victim went into the bathroom. The victim said that the defendant then “kicked [the bathroom door] or whatever. But somehow he, like, hit the door. And I was leaning up against the back of it. And he, like, hit it. And it flew open and I fell against the bathtub and hit my – my side and, like, a part of my back.” She said that the police then arrived and the defendant was arrested.

Regarding the events of May 29, 2002, the victim testified that she had been staying with a neighbor, Tina Tinker, while her mother and the defendant were visiting the defendant’s sick sister. When her mother and the defendant arrived home that day, he came to Tinker’s house and told the victim that her mother wanted her to come home. When she arrived home, the victim went to her room because the defendant told her that her mother was sleeping. He brought her a marijuana cigarette, which she smoked, and then asked her to go to the living room so he could braid her hair, and she complied. He told her to change her shirt so he could apply acne medication to her back, and the victim described the following sequence of events:

So I went and I put a halter top on which ties around my neck and is open in the back. And he started putting [the medicine] on. And he started – he rubbed my back, he put it on my shoulders, and he put it, like, right here on my chest. And then he started rubbing lower and lower, and then he put his hand, like under – in my shirt.

And he was, like, “It’s okay, I changed your diaper. I’ve known you since you was little. It’s okay.”

So I was, like, “Whatever.” And then . . . he just started rubbing back up here and on my neck or whatever. And then he was in front of me and he was rubbing it on my chest right here. And then he just kind of pulled my shirt down, and then he put his lips, like, on my breast. And then he just kind of, like, put it on there and then, like, pulled it off.

1 It is the policy of this court to refer to minor victims of sexual abuse by their initials only.

-2- And then I kind of pushed him. I was, like, “What are you doing?”

And he just kind of looked at me, he was, like, “Don’t tell nobody [sic]. And he went back in through the house.

She said that the defendant brought her another “joint” and said, “Here, smoke this for me.” She started smoking it but refused to do so the way the defendant wanted, so he left. She said that she woke up her mother, told her what had happened, and they went to Tinker’s house and called the police.

The victim confirmed that she had a “grudge against” the defendant as a result of the sexual assault and admitted that she wrote letters to another inmate in the same jail as the defendant, asking if he would “kick [the defendant’s] ass.” She also testified that the defendant had first introduced her to marijuana and that her mother did not approve of her smoking it. On cross-examination, the victim denied that the defendant “continuously got after [her] for smoking dope” and acknowledged that, after the defendant’s arrest, she told a neighbor that she was glad he was gone. She also denied that the April 1 incident was the result of a fight that ensued when the defendant caught her smoking marijuana in her room.

The victim’s mother, Regina King, testified that the defendant was her boyfriend and they had “lived together for a long time.” She said that their relationship was “good sometimes and bad a lot” and that the defendant “liked to drink, and when he drank he was violent and . . . there was nothing you could do. You couldn’t get away from him and he wouldn’t quit doing it and it just kept getting worse instead of better.” She said that the victim considered the defendant to be “her dad.”

King testified that on April 1, 2002, the defendant, no longer living at her house, came to get his painting supplies out of a storage building. He took the victim to a video store and was “irate” when they returned thirty minutes later. He went into the victim’s room, yelled at the victim, picked up her bed, and slammed it into a wall. King said that as she and the defendant struggled, the victim went into the bathroom, but the defendant kicked the bathroom door “apart,” causing the victim to “fl[y] across the bathroom and against the bathtub.” She said that the victim “was crying and . . . started throwing up” and that she “called 9-1-1 and laid the phone down.” When the police arrived, the defendant argued with the officer and was eventually handcuffed outside. King said that the victim “just kept throwing up” and “had red marks on her side and her back, [and] on her arm where he had grabbed at her.” The victim later received medical treatment at the emergency room.

As to the May 29, 2002, incident, King testified that at 4:30 a.m. she and the defendant left Cherokee, where they had been visiting his terminally ill sister, so that she could be at work at 6:00 a.m.

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State of Tennessee v. Jeffery McClennon Morris, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-jeffery-mcclennon-morris-tenncrimapp-2007.