State of Tennessee v. Justin Bradley Haynie

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 7, 2007
DocketW2006-01840-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Justin Bradley Haynie (State of Tennessee v. Justin Bradley Haynie) 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. Justin Bradley Haynie, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON September 11, 2007 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JUSTIN BRADLEY HAYNIE, JONATHAN ANTHONY MORRIS, and JUDSON F. OUZTS

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Lauderdale County No. 7941 Joseph H. Walker, III, Judge

No. W2006-01840-CCA-R3-CD - Filed December 7, 2007

A jury convicted the Defendants, Justin Bradley Haynie, Jonathan Anthony Morris, and Judson F. Ouzts, of one count of possession of over .5 grams of cocaine with the intent to deliver, a Class B felony, and one count of possession of alprazolam with the intent to deliver, a Class D felony. Defendants Haynie and Morris were both sentenced to eight years and ten months for the cocaine conviction and to a concurrent, two-year sentence for the alprazolam conviction. Defendant Ouzts was sentenced to eight years for the cocaine conviction; in all other regards, his sentence was the same. Each Defendant was ordered to complete his sentence through the Community Corrections Program after serving part of the sentence in the county jail. In this appeal, the Defendants collectively raise three issues: (1) whether the trial court erred by denying the Defendants’ pretrial motions to suppress the evidence recovered from a search of Defendant Ouzts’s vehicle; (2) whether the evidence was sufficient to support their convictions; and (3) whether the State’s closing argument was improperly prejudicial. Defendant Ouzts raises two additional issues: (1) whether the trial court erred in allowing testimony amounting to a legal conclusion; and (2) whether a juror’s bias required a new trial. Following our review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court on the cocaine convictions, but we reverse the judgments entered on the alprazolam convictions and remand for resentencing and proceedings consistent with this opinion.

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

DAVID H. WELLES, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS and ALAN E. GLENN , JJ., joined.

Scott Lovelace, Ripley, Tennessee, for the appellant, Justin Bradley Hanie; Kari Weber, Assistant Public Defender, Somerville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jonathan Anthony Morris; and Rebecca S. Mills, Ripley, Tennessee, for the appellant, Judson F. Ouzts. Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Sophia S. Lee, Assistant Attorney General; Michael Dunavant, District Attorney General; and Tracey Brewer-Walker, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Factual Background On December 2, 2005, the Defendants, who were all traveling in the same vehicle, were stopped by an officer with the Ripley Police Department. The vehicle was searched, and illegal drugs were discovered inside. Subsequently, a Lauderdale County Grand Jury indicted each Defendant with one count of possession with the intent to deliver .5 grams or more of cocaine, and one count of possession of a Schedule IV drug (alprazolam) with the intent to deliver. The Defendants filed pretrial motions to suppress the evidence obtained during the search, and the trial court held an evidentiary hearing.

Suppression Hearing At the hearing, Chris Shoemake, a Trooper with the Tennessee Highway Patrol, testified that his father owns Lynnwood’s Market in Lauderdale County, where he works part time. On December 2, 2005, Trooper Shoemake and his sister, Angie Phillips, were working at the store. At approximately 10:30 a.m., Ms. Phillips alerted him to what she thought was “suspicious” activity taking place in the store’s parking lot. Trooper Shoemake immediately instructed her to call the police. While she was making the call, he monitored the activity in the parking lot by looking through the store’s front window. At the pretrial suppression hearing, he described his observations:

I saw two white males exit a white Ford vehicle that was parked in front of the store and get into the backseat of a burgundy vehicle driven by one black male. When they got in the back seat area, I saw hands exchanged back and forth but did not see anything in their hands because it was too far out in the parking lot to see any particular item. They exited the vehicle. The driver of the white Ford vehicle, when he stepped out of the vehicle, was holding his hand over his right pocket, shirt pocket—his left shirt pocket with his right hand, and they got back into the vehicle. The burgundy vehicle left the parking lot, and a few minutes later they also left.

Trooper Shoemake said that there was a third person in the backseat of the white Ford Expedition who did not exit the vehicle, but he did not recognize any of the white males or the person driving the burgundy car. The driver of the white Ford Expedition was wearing a “blue- checkered shirt” and the passenger was wearing “a brown-colored coat.” When he saw the “hand-to- hand exchange” that occurred in the burgundy car, the white male wearing the blue-checkered shirt was the individual whose “hands exchange[d] back and forth.” It was a clear day, and nothing impeded Trooper Shoemake’s sightline.

-2- “[J]ust a few seconds” after the white Ford Expedition left the parking lot, a local police officer, Investigator Gregg Land, arrived at the store in response to Ms. Phillips’s call. Trooper Shoemake knew Investigator Land and other members of the Ripley Police Department personally. Trooper Shoemake gave “him the vehicle descriptions in question, and [Investigator Land] left the premises there just immediately.” Specifically, the State and Trooper Shoemake had the following exchange at the hearing about the information Trooper Shoemake conveyed to Investigator Land:

Q. And did you advise him of what you saw?

A. Not at that point I did not. I advised him of the vehicles in question.

Q. Okay. Can you be specific of what you told Investigator Land?

A. Investigator Land asked me which vehicle it was, and I told him it was the white Ford Expedition that just left the parking lot, and he immediately left the scene.

Trooper Shoemake did not identify any of the suspects that day. On cross-examination, Trooper Shoemake confirmed that the store’s parking lot was a public area and that it was not a criminal action to park there and “visit” with another person. He also stated that the white males were in the burgundy car for only “[t]en or fifteen seconds” and that Investigator Land was in the store’s parking lot for “probably three or four seconds, just long enough for me to give him a description of the vehicle.” According to Trooper Shoemake, when Investigator Land “took off after the truck,” he was “operating on a description of the vehicle only and the direction it was headed.”

Investigator Gregg Land of the Ripley Police Department testified that he had worked as a “drug investigator” for approximately eight years. He said that on December 2, 2005, his dispatcher alerted him to a “complaint from Lynnwood’s Market about two white males and a black male subject involved in a hand-to-hand drug transaction.” Investigator Land was in the police station at the time, and he “actually answered the phone and spoke to Ms. Phillips for just a brief second or two, exited the police department and headed to Lynnwood’s Market.”

After Investigator Land traveled the two miles from the police station to Lynnwood’s Market, he saw Trooper Shoemake, whom he knew personally, standing outside. As Trooper Shoemake was “attempting to give [him] a better vehicle description,” the white Ford Expedition “went back by” the store, and Trooper Shoemake said, “[t]here goes the vehicle right there.” At that time, it was the only vehicle on the road.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Justin Bradley Haynie, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-justin-bradley-haynie-tenncrimapp-2007.