State of Tennessee v. Joshua Lynn Parker - Dissenting/Concurring

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 22, 2010
DocketE2008-02541-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Joshua Lynn Parker - Dissenting/Concurring (State of Tennessee v. Joshua Lynn Parker - Dissenting/Concurring) 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. Joshua Lynn Parker - Dissenting/Concurring, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

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

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JOSHUA LYNN PARKER

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Cocke County No. 0177 Ben W. Hooper, III, Judge

No. E2008-02541-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 22, 2010

J AMES C URWOOD W ITT, J R., J., dissenting and concurring.

I respectfully dissent from the majority’s conclusion that the defendant’s conviction of second degree murder should be upheld despite the absence of any proof that the defendant knowingly inflicted the lethal wound. The majority agrees that the evidence did not establish a knowing killing, the elemental and factual foundation for second degree murder. Indeed, the majority agrees that the trial court should not have instructed the jury on second degree murder as a lesser included offense of first degree felony murder. Despite these conclusions, the majority relies upon the mens rea regime for felony murder to impart culpability to the defendant for second degree murder.

I agree with our supreme court’s holding in State v. Ely, 48 S.W.3d 710 (Tenn. 2001), that second degree murder is a lesser included offense of felony murder. In Ely, the supreme court said,

After comparing the respective elements of felony murder, second degree murder, reckless homicide, and criminally negligent homicide, it appears that the elements of the lesser offenses are a subset of the elements of the greater and otherwise differ only in the mental state required. We hold that because the mental states required for the lesser offenses differ only in the level of culpability attached to each in terms of seriousness and punishment, the offenses of second degree murder, reckless homicide, and criminally negligent homicide are lesser-included offenses of felony murder under part (b) of the Burns test. State v. Ely, 48 S.W.3d 710, 721-22 (Tenn. 2001). Determining that a lesser offense is at law a lesser included offense of a greater offense in and of itself does not, however, equate to determining that the unique elements of the lesser offense can be ignored. In other words, Ely’s determination that second degree murder is at law a lesser included offense of felony murder has very little to do with whether the State must support a conviction of the lesser offense of second degree murder with proof that the homicide was knowing.

In the present case, Ely’s application of the Burns justification analysis is actually more instructive than its legal determination that second degree murder is a Burns “(b)” lesser included offense of felony murder. The court was mindful that an instruction on a lesser included offense is not justified unless “there was . . . sufficient evidence from which reasonable jurors could have convicted Ely of second degree murder.” Id. at 724. When determining whether the evidence justified a jury instruction on second degree murder as a lesser included offense of first degree felony murder, the supreme court in Ely actively scrutinized the record to determine that evidence was presented that showed that the defendants knowingly committed the respective homicides. Id. at 723-25. If “sufficient evidence from which reasonable jurors could have convicted” of a lesser included offense is required simply to justify a jury instruction on the lesser offense, why would it not follow that sufficient evidence of the lesser included offense is required to convict the defendant of said offense?

Ely aside, the current state of our law does not mandate the result reached by the majority. The use of the notion that evidence is sufficient to support a conviction on a lesser homicide offense when it supports a conviction on a greater offense has been limited, by and large, to convictions of voluntary manslaughter as lesser included offenses of higher grades of homicides. The potential problem with a jury’s diminishing a charge of second degree murder, for instance, to voluntary manslaughter when the evidence showed a knowing killing was – and perhaps still is – the statutory definition of voluntary manslaughter as an “intentional or knowing killing of another in a state of passion produced by adequate provocation sufficient to lead a reasonable person to act in an irrational manner.” See T.C.A. § 39-13-211(a) (emphasis added). Generally, we have ruled that when the evidence supported a finding of a knowing or intentional killing and thus would have undergirded a verdict of first or second degree murder, the evidence was sufficient to support a voluntary manslaughter conviction despite that no evidence showed a state of passion produced by provocation sufficient to lead a reasonable person to act in an irrational manner. See, e.g., State v. Donald Knight, No. M2008-01023-CCA-R3-CD, slip op. at 7 (Tenn. Crim. App., Nashville, Aug. 17, 2009) (holding that sufficient evidence of felony murder supported voluntary manslaughter conviction); State v. Thomas David Collins, No. E2004-01133-CCA- R3-CD, slip op. at 5 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, July 29, 2005) (holding that sufficient evidence of second degree murder supported voluntary manslaughter conviction); State v.

-2- Lewis Christian, No. W2004-01688-CCA-R3-CD, slip op. at 3 (Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, June 1, 2005) (holding that sufficient evidence of second degree murder supported voluntary manslaughter conviction). In such cases, whether we admitted it or not, we treated the passion/provocation formulation not as a true element of the proscribed offense to be established by the State but rather as a dispensation to a defendant who committed an otherwise intentional or knowing killing. This rule has been reasonably – even prudently – employed by the courts to uphold voluntary manslaughter convictions against defendants’ sufficiency challenges because we recognized the fatuity of requiring the State to prove the application of dispensations granted to those defendants. The rule does not transfer to reductions of felony murder to second degree murder; the “knowing” element of second degree murder is a true element which the State is obliged to establish by evidence.

As an aside, a couple of cases do not escape my attention. The first is McDonald v. State, 512 S.W.2d 636 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1974), cited by the State for the proposition that when “the evidence was sufficient to support conviction for the greater offense charged, the defendant cannot complain of the jury[’s] finding him guilty of the lesser offense.” Defendant McDonald faced an indictment charging carnal knowledge of a female under 12 years of age (an offense currently considered as rape of a child). Id. at 636. The jury convicted McDonald of the lesser included offense of “assault with intent to commit a felony.” Id. On appeal, McDonald “insist[ed] he was either guilty as charged or not guilty of any offense.” Id. at 639. This court determined that the evidence was sufficient to support either conviction because “the offense of having carnal knowledge of a female under 12 years of age is initiated by an assault with intent to commit a felony – that felony, and the latter offense is necessarily included in the former.” Id. at 640. Then, we said, “Thus, if there are facts to substantiate any of the lesser degrees of the offense, and the jury so finds and this is approved by the trial judge, then it is not error for the jury to convict of the lesser included offense even though the final act constituting the higher offense was committed.” Id. (emphasis added).

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Related

State v. Jones
151 S.W.3d 494 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2004)
State v. Cook
816 S.W.2d 322 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1991)
State v. Mellons
557 S.W.2d 497 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1977)
State v. Ely
48 S.W.3d 710 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2001)
Reagan v. State
293 S.W. 755 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1927)
McDonald v. State
512 S.W.2d 636 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1974)

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