State of Tennessee v. Joseph Wert

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 28, 2025
DocketW2024-01192-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Joseph Wert (State of Tennessee v. Joseph Wert) 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. Joseph Wert, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

10/28/2025

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs August 5, 2025

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JOSEPH WERT

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Carroll County No. 21CR80 Bruce Irwin Griffey, Judge

No. W2024-01192-CCA-R3-CD

The Defendant, Joseph Wert, appeals from his conviction for voluntary manslaughter, for which he received a six-year sentence. On appeal, the Defendant contends that (1) the trial court erred by excluding a text message exchange between two non-testifying individuals discussing the victim’s statement on the day of the shooting; (2) the trial court erred by allowing the State to read in front of the jury several unauthenticated text messages on the victim’s ex-wife’s cell phone between the victim, his ex-wife, and their minor daughter; (3) the State committed prosecutorial misconduct during its closing argument when it referenced the text messages between the victim, his ex-wife, and their minor daughter, and the trial court erred by overruling his contemporaneous objection thereto; (4) the trial court erred by refusing to provide a jury instruction regarding the presumed reasonableness of his use of deadly force against the victim pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-11-611(c), commonly known as “castle doctrine.”; and (5) the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction because the State failed to disprove his self-defense claim beyond a reasonable doubt. Finally, he contends that cumulative error entitles him to a new trial. After review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

KYLE A. HIXSON, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN and STEVEN W. SWORD, JJ., joined.

William D. Massey and Seth M. Segraves, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Joseph Wert.

Jonathan Skrmetti, Attorney General and Reporter; Johnny Cerisano, Assistant Attorney General; Neil Thompson, District Attorney General; and W. Michael Thorne and Deven Wilson Whitfield, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case arises from the January 14, 2020 shooting death of Larry Gene Watkins, Jr. at the Defendant’s residence in Carroll County, Tennessee. Following this incident, a Carroll County grand jury indicted the Defendant on April 20, 2021, charging him with first degree premeditated murder of the victim. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-202(a)(1). The Defendant proceeded to a jury trial where he advanced the theory that he shot the victim in self-defense.

At a three-day jury trial beginning on March 23, 2023, the State presented evidence that the victim was the Defendant’s employer, and he lived a few houses away from the Defendant on the same street. The victim was also the ex-husband of Brittany Watkins, whom the Defendant was dating at the time of this incident.

Testimony from various witnesses at trial established that, on January 14, 2020, the Defendant and the victim rode together in the victim’s truck to Jackson, Tennessee, where they purchased lumber, food, and liquor before returning to the Defendant’s residence. Once there, the two men began listening to music outdoors at a nearby lake and drinking liquor to celebrate the Defendant’s birthday. At some point, an altercation occurred, and the victim punched the Defendant in the face, leaving him with a swollen, bruised, and bloody lower lip. Following this altercation, the Defendant went inside the residence, retrieved his father’s handgun, returned outside, and shot the victim twice, killing him.

The Defendant’s mother called 911 sometime after the shooting and asserted that the victim had threatened the Defendant with a gun outside their residence, but she had not been home at the time. In the background of this call, the recording of which was played for the jury, the Defendant made loud exclamations and asserted that he shot the victim “right through the chest and right through the mouth” after the victim “ran up with [his own] gun.” The Defendant claimed that he “told [the victim] four times, ‘Please go. I have to shoot you if you pull a gun on me.’” The Defendant also repeatedly stated that, although he “didn’t want to,” he nevertheless “had to” kill the victim.

Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (“TBI”) Special Agent Joseph Hudgins, Jr., was the lead investigator in this case, and he interacted with other law enforcement personnel as well as the Defendant once he arrived on the scene. Agent Hudgins described the

-2- Defendant’s demeanor that evening as “kind of like fake crying, kind of manic” and as exhibiting “obvious signs that he was intoxicated.”

Law enforcement found the victim’s body approximately ninety-five feet away from the residence with two fatal gunshot wounds, one through the chest and one through the neck. They observed the victim’s truck stuck in the mud some distance away from the Defendant’s residence and the victim’s shirt lying on the ground between his truck and his body. The victim’s truck was situated with its passenger side facing the Defendant’s residence, and the windows on that side of the vehicle were fully closed. Mud was visible surrounding the truck. The victim’s shirtless body was between the truck and the Defendant’s residence, with blood smeared across the torso, hands, neck, and face. A photograph taken of the Defendant at the scene depicted him with injuries on his lower lip and on the bridge of his nose.

Although the Defendant had initially stated that the victim threatened him with a gun, officers did not see a gun in the area surrounding the victim’s body. The Defendant then told officers that the victim’s gun must be either on his person or in his truck: “He has to have it. It has to be in his truck, or he has to have it.” During further processing of the crime scene, officers located a loaded nine-millimeter handgun with the safety turned off inside the victim’s front left pants pocket. The victim’s gun was not visible until it was removed from his pants pocket and subsequently photographed. Officers utilized metal detectors and flashlights to attempt to locate shell casings around the victim’s body, but none were discovered at that time. Agent Hudgins recalled looking in the bed of the victim’s truck with a flashlight, upon which he observed it to be “full of stuff,” but the single spent nine-millimeter casing, which was later discovered at the TBI Crime Lab, was not visible on the scene. Once the victim’s body was rolled over, a bullet was found beneath it on top of the fallen leaves that covered the ground.

Agent Hudgins initially noted that the Defendant’s statements on the 911 call were inconsistent with those he had made to officers at the scene. In one such account, the Defendant told officers that the victim left the property but then returned and began firing his gun at the Defendant. The Defendant also claimed at one point that the victim had been firing the gun at him from inside his truck. Based on the absence of shell casings from the victim’s gun, and the gun’s being discovered “fully sitting inside [the deceased victim’s] pocket,” Agent Hudgins determined that the evidence was not consistent with the victim’s “drawing [his gun] or shooting at [the Defendant],” and all of the Defendant’s statements “were in direct conflict with what the evidence at the scene showed.”

-3- Notwithstanding the perceived inconsistencies between the evidence at the scene and the Defendant’s statements, Agent Hudgins was aware that the victim had a criminal history and a history of violence.

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State of Tennessee v. Joseph Wert, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-joseph-wert-tenncrimapp-2025.