State of Tennessee v. Josh Andrew Danoff

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 6, 2018
DocketM2017-00506-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Josh Andrew Danoff (State of Tennessee v. Josh Andrew Danoff) 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. Josh Andrew Danoff, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

07/06/2018 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs January 17, 2018

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JOSH ANDREW DANOFF

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Montgomery County No. CC14-CR-1146 Jill Bartee Ayers, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2017-00506-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

Defendant, Josh A. Danoff, was indicted by the Montgomery County Grand Jury for contributing to the delinquency of a minor, aggravated statutory rape, and three counts of rape based upon alternative theories of the same offense. Upon motion of the State, the trial court dismissed one count of rape prior to trial. Defendant was convicted by a jury of the remaining counts as charged. The trial court sentenced Defendant to serve three years for his aggravated statutory rape conviction, eight years for each rape conviction, and 11 months and 29 days for his contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The trial court merged the rape convictions and aggravated statutory rape conviction into one conviction of rape and ordered Defendant’s sentences to be served concurrently, for a total effective sentence of eight years. In this appeal as of right, Defendant contends that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions; that the trial court committed plain error by allowing hearsay testimony; and that the trial court erred by failing to grant probation or split confinement. Having reviewed the entire record and the briefs of the parties, we find no error and affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

THOMAS T. WOODALL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., and TIMOTHY L. EASTER, JJ., joined.

Roger E. Nell, District Public Defender (on appeal); Jeffry S. Grimes, Clarksville, Tennessee (at trial) for the appellant, Josh Andrew Danoff.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Jonathan H. Wardle, Assistant Attorney General; John Wesley Carney, Jr., District Attorney General; and Kimberly Lund, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION

Facts

The victim will be identified by her initials, V.H. She testified that Defendant was her mother’s ex-boyfriend, but Defendant resided with V.H., her mother, and her siblings. On May 26, 2012, V.H. and Defendant were home alone. V.H. was 14 years old at the time. She testified that they watched a movie, and she folded laundry. Defendant offered V.H. a mixed drink of “Jack and [C]oke.” V.H. accepted it, and Defendant made another drink for himself. V.H. testified that it tasted “gross,” but she continued to drink it because she “felt cool.” V.H. finished the drink, and Defendant offered her another one. She was hesitant to accept, “because I already drank you know, one already and then at this point, I am going to get in trouble with my [m]om if she finds out and it was really nasty, so I don’t want another one.” Defendant told V.H. that he would “put more [C]oke so [she] didn’t taste [the alcohol] as much” in the second drink. V.H. testified that she consumed two mixed drinks that Defendant made for her. She testified, “I felt a little bit woozy, but I wasn’t like drunk.” V.H. testified that Defendant offered her a shot of liquor, and she accepted. Defendant persuaded V.H. to drink another shot. She testified, “I was like no, I am not doing another one. That was terrible, but he was like oh, come on, you can do it, and then he just kept egging me on and so I took another one.”

V.H. began to feel ill. She crawled to the bathroom and vomited. Defendant stood over her and rubbed her back while she vomited. Defendant then walked her to the kitchen and offered her another shot of alcohol. Defendant told her that she needed “to catch up” to him because he had taken more shots than she had. V.H. took another shot. She testified that she felt sick and leaned over the kitchen counter. Defendant stood behind her and rubbed her back. V.H. told him that she wanted to go to sleep, and she began to walk away. Defendant then turned her around and sat her on the counter in front of him. V.H. hit her head on the cabinet. She got down and crawled to her bedroom. Defendant followed her. When she got to the top of the stairs, she laid on her back, and Defendant “got in between [her] legs and then he took off [her] pants and [her] bra.” V.H. crawled to her bedroom and laid in her bed. She testified that she “could not walk” because she was intoxicated. Defendant again followed her, and he forcefully turned her onto her back and straddled her body. V.H. testified that she was scared. Defendant removed her underwear and touched her vagina. Defendant sexual penetrated V.H.’s vagina with his penis. Defendant then ejaculated on V.H.’s side. V.H. testified that she resisted Defendant by “trying to keep [her]self on [her] side” and that she told him “no.” She described the way Defendant rolled her onto her back as “harsh and aggressive.” She testified, “[t]here is no way that I said anything to make [Defendant] think that I wanted to do that.”

-2- The following morning, V.H. woke up with a “horrible headache” and body aches. She took a shower and noticed blood while “cleaning [her] girl area.” V.H. told Defendant that she did not remember anything from the night before, although she remembered having been raped by Defendant. V.H. put the clothes she was wearing the previous night in a drawer in the bathroom “so [she] would have it for later.” She went to an emergency room that night.

V.H. told the nurse who examined her, Denise Lyons, that she had been given shots of alcohol by her mother’s ex-boyfriend and that he raped her. She indicated that the sex was not consensual. A medical examination revealed injuries to V.H.’s genitals, including tenderness and a laceration. Ms. Lyons testified, “you can have injury after consensual sex and those kinds of things, but normally women do not seek emergency care for those kinds of injuries.” She testified that V.H.’s injuries were consistent with her description of what happened.

Detective Howard Gillespie, of the Clarksville Police Department, investigated the case. He collected the sexual assault kit at the hospital and submitted it to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (“TBI”) for DNA analysis, which revealed the presence of Defendant’s semen on V.H.’s underwear.

Defendant testified at trial. Defendant acknowledged that he gave V.H. mixed drinks and shots of liquor on the night of May 26, 2012. He testified that after V.H. took her “fourth or fifth shot,” she ran to the bathroom and got sick. Defendant rubbed her back in the bathroom and again in the kitchen. Defendant denied that he touched V.H. in a sexual manner or that he had sex with her in her bed. He testified that he walked with V.H. upstairs to her bedroom. She did not fall, and he did not remove her clothes. He testified that he “[l]aid her down on the bed” and sat on the edge of her bed “for just a second, a minute or two . . . kind of just B.S.-ing.” Defendant testified that V.H. said that she wanted another shot and got up to run downstairs. Defendant grabbed her, and V.H. fell at the top landing of the stairs. Defendant told her that she could not have any more alcohol. Defendant carried V.H. “like a sack of potatoes” to her bed. He testified that V.H. hit her head on the nightstand. Defendant then went downstairs and slept on the couch. He testified that he “woke up to the sensation of somebody on top of [him].” Initially, he thought it was V.H.’s mother, “because she had done it before; come home drunk, initiated some sex with [him], not a big deal.” He then realized that it was V.H., and he “freaked out.” He “tossed [her] off to the side,” and began to scream at her.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Josh Andrew Danoff, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-josh-andrew-danoff-tenncrimapp-2018.