State of Tennessee v. Michael Lynn Horn

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 17, 2003
DocketM2002-00903-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Michael Lynn Horn (State of Tennessee v. Michael Lynn Horn) 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. Michael Lynn Horn, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs January 15, 2003

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. MICHAEL LYNN HORN

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Putnam County No. 00-0492 Leon C. Burns, Jr., Judge

No. M2002-00903-CCA-R3-CD - Filed July 17, 2003

The Putnam County Grand Jury indicted the Defendant for theft and possession of a weapon by a convicted felon. The trial court severed the counts, and a jury convicted the Defendant on the weapon charge. The trial court sentenced the Defendant to four years incarceration, to be served consecutively to an unrelated sentence. The Defendant now appeals, arguing the following: (1) that insufficient evidence was presented at trial to support his conviction, (2) that the trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury on the lesser-included offense of attempted possession of a weapon by a convicted felon, and (3) that the trial court improperly sentenced the Defendant, both in length and by requiring the sentence to be served consecutively to the unrelated sentence. Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID H. WELLES and THOMAS T. WOODA LL, JJ., joined.

H. Marshall Judd, Assistant Public Defender, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Michael Lynn Horn.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Kathy D. Aslinger, Assistant Attorney General; William E. Gibson, District Attorney General; Terry D. Dycus and Anthony Craighead, Assistant Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

I. FACTS

Deputy Steve Flowers testified that on February 17, 2000, at approximately 11:00 a.m., he and several other deputies went to the home of the Defendant’s mother looking for the Defendant. Flowers stated that when they knocked on the door, they heard someone running toward the back of the trailer. He testified that when the Defendant’s brother, Alex Horn, answered the door, the officers asked where they could find the Defendant. When Horn replied that the Defendant was “[b]ack that way,” Flowers and four other officers proceeded to the back bedroom of the trailer.

Flowers testified that they found the Defendant kneeled down beside the bed in the back bedroom of the trailer. According to Flowers’s testimony and a diagram entered into evidence at trial, the officers entered the room facing the foot of the bed. Flowers reported that the officers found the Defendant in a space three to four feet wide between the bed and the back wall. At that point, Flowers “picked [the defendant] up, put him on the bed and handcuffed him.” Flowers further stated that when he picked up the Defendant, he found a gun underneath him between his knees. Flowers testified that the gun had a brown handle, that it had a clip in it, and that it was in a black holster. Flowers noted that the holster’s snap was fastened, securing the gun in place in the holster. He conceded that at no time did he see the Defendant with the gun in his hand. Flowers testified that after handcuffing the Defendant, he picked up the gun and handed it to Deputy Fields, who then took it outside and gave it to Detective Gary Roach. Flowers reported that the total time from the officers knocking on the trailer door to finding the Defendant in the bedroom was less than a minute. He did not make an arrest report at the time of the arrest, nor did he personally make a determination of who owned the gun or who had purchased it.

On cross-examination, Flowers stated that he did not see anyone remove the mattress from the bed near where the Defendant was found, and he repeated that he found the gun under the Defendant and not under the bed. When asked by the State to mark on a diagram of the bedroom where he found the Defendant, Flowers marked the area between the bed and the wall. When asked where on the diagram he found the gun, he stated that he would put that mark in the same place as the previous one, as the gun was underneath the Defendant.

Bob Krofssik, a special agent with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, interviewed the Defendant in jail after the Defendant’s arrest. Krofssik testified that he read the Defendant his Miranda rights prior to questioning him, and the Defendant signed a form waiving these rights. Krofssik testified that the Defendant “seemed to be able to understand what [his] questions were, where he was at, and he seemed to understand what his rights were.” The Defendant then gave a written statement regarding the events of the prior evening and early morning leading up to his arrest. Within this, he stated, “When the police picked me up this morning I wanted them to kill me. I let them know I had a gun. I didn’t want to shoot myself. I’m tired of all the drugs. If I had to do it over again, they would have had to shoot me. The gun I had was my brother’s.”

The day after the Defendant’s arrest, Agent Krofssik questioned him a second time regarding the gun, again reading the Defendant his Miranda rights and getting a waiver first. That conversation was audio tape recorded, and the tape was entered into evidence at trial. During the taped conversation, in response to a question regarding whether he had a gun when he was arrested, the Defendant responded, “Oh, yeah, yeah, I had a gun. What’s the big deal? That ain’t nothing.” Agent Krofssik replied, “Well, it could be a big deal, couldn’t it?” The Defendant responded, “Well, no, I don’t see that it was. The only reason I had that gun was for the Sheriff’s Department to do

-2- their job.” Although during this second interview the Defendant complained of a stomach ache, Krofssik testified that it did not impair his ability to communicate about the gun.

On cross-examination, Krofssik testified that at the time of his first interview with the Defendant, he did not know if the Defendant was intoxicated other than what the Defendant told him. However, he acknowledged that the Defendant “was in rough shape” and indicated that he wrote on the Miranda form that the Defendant claimed to have used drugs between 1:00 and 1:30 a.m. on the morning of his arrest.

Prior to concluding the presentation of the State’s evidence, counsel for the State presented to the court a stipulation by the Defendant and his attorney that the Defendant had a “prior felony conviction involving the use or attempted use of force or violence that would qualify under the statute of being a convicted felon unable to possess a weapon.”

Alex Horn, the Defendant’s brother, testified that on the day of the Defendant’s arrest, he was watching television, and the Defendant was asleep in a recliner in their mother’s trailer when the police knocked on the door looking for the Defendant. Horn reported that he told his brother that “the law was there and [the Defendant] jumped up and run to the back bedroom.” Horn stated that he then complied with the officers’ request for him to step outside. Horn observed the officers bring out the Defendant along with the gun. He stated that the gun was not in a holster at that time, and that when he asked “what they was doing with a gun,” the officers told him that they found it with the Defendant. Horn testified that the gun belonged to him. He stated that he had owned the gun for a little over a week, but he had not seen it in three or four days. At trial, Horn identified the gun recovered during the Defendant’s arrest as being the same gun he had purchased the week before. He claimed that he put the gun in a sock drawer in the bedroom, and that it had not been loaded at that time.

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State of Tennessee v. Michael Lynn Horn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-michael-lynn-horn-tenncrimapp-2003.