State of Tennessee v. Quanya Revell Prewitt

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 26, 2013
DocketM2012-01627-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Quanya Revell Prewitt (State of Tennessee v. Quanya Revell Prewitt) 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. Quanya Revell Prewitt, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs April 17, 2013

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. QUANYA REVELL PREWITT

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2012-A-48 Cheryl Blackburn, Judge

No. M2012-01627-CCA-R3-CD - Filed June 26, 2013

The defendant, Quanya Revell Prewitt, appeals her Davidson County Criminal Court jury conviction of possession with intent to sell or deliver dihydrocodeinone, a Schedule III substance, in a school zone, claiming that the trial court erred by limiting the scope of cross- examination of two of the State’s witnesses and that the evidence was insufficient to support her convictions. Discerning no error, we affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed

J AMES C URWOOD W ITT, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which T HOMAS T. W OODALL and R OBERT W. W EDEMEYER, JJ., joined.

Sean McKinney and Carrie Searcy, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Quanya Revell Prewitt.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Benjamin A. Ball, Assistant Attorney General; Victor S. Johnson III, District Attorney General; and Bret Gunn, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

On July 12, 2011, Metropolitan Nashville Police Department (“Metro”) Officer Charles Large was on patrol when an employee of the Z-Mart gas station approached him in the parking lot of the station and made a complaint. Based upon the information he received, Officer Large asked the defendant and another individual, Tory Crawley, to come to his car. Mr. Crawley showed Officer Large “a bunch of pills,” and Officer Large confiscated the 12 pills. During this time, the defendant, who had not complied with the officer’s request to come to the car, walked to “the side of the building next to a dumpster and a light pole.” After standing there for 20 or 30 seconds, she then walked to where Officer Large stood with Mr. Crawley. After the defendant denied any knowledge of the pills confiscated from Mr. Crawley, Officer Large walked to the area where the defendant had gone after exiting the store and “found a prescription pill bottle sitting on a light post base with her name on them.” The bottle was labeled with the defendant’s name and the prescription name “hydrocholorothiazide,” and it contained 17 hydrocodone pills identical to those taken from Mr. Crawley.

Officer Large placed both individuals under arrest, and as they drove to the police station, the defendant “said that she just wanted to trade the pills for beer because she had been drinking and wanted more to drink.”

Officer Large utilized a map prepared by Metropolitan Planning Department cadastral analyst Thomas Corcoran and which highlighted a 1,000 foot “buffer” around Cameron Middle School to demonstrate that the Z-Mart parking lot was located inside the buffer.

Mohammed Ayesh was working at the Z-Mart on July 12, 2011, when the defendant came to the counter, placed some pills on the counter, and asked if she could trade the pills for beer. The cashier asked the defendant to leave, and then either Mr. Ayesh or the cashier reported the incident to Officer Large.

Chemical testing by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (“TBI”) established that the pills confiscated from the defendant and Mr. Crawley were hydrocodone, the same chemical compound also known as dihydrocodeinone and sold under the brand name Vicodin. Hydrocholorothiazide, the medication for which the bottle was labeled, does not contain dihydrocodeinone but is instead a diuretic.

The defendant testified that she was prescribed hydrocodone on July 1, 2011, for pain associated with an injury. She said that she went to the Z-Mart on July 12, 2011, to purchase cigarettes and that when she got inside, she saw Mr. Crawley “in it seemed like an altercation with the clerk,” so she left the store. She claimed that she did not see Officer Large and did not hear him call to her the first time. She said that she stopped when the Officer called a second time and that she placed the pill bottle next to the light post because she was aware that she had hydrocodone in the wrong prescription bottle. She claimed that the hydrocodone pills got into the hydrochlorothiazide bottle when all her pills spilled into her purse.

-2- The defendant denied drinking on the night of the offense and maintained that she did not attempt to trade her pills for beer. She claimed that she was simply walking to a friend’s house and not trying to evade Officer Large.

During cross-examination, the defendant said that when her friend telephoned and asked the defendant to come to her house, she “picked up a pill bottle and put it in [her] purse” and headed to the friend’s house despite the late hour. She insisted that she grabbed the pills because she thought they were either for her hypertension or hyperthryoid and that she intended to take them the following morning. She said that, inexplicably, two bottles of medication had emptied into her purse at the same time and became mixed together. Despite having said during direct-examination that she combined the pills into a single bottle, she claimed that she randomly returned the pills to two bottles. She could not explain how the bottle for hydrochlorothiazide came to contain only hydrocodone pills.

The defendant said that she used her cellular telephone to call her friend from the parking lot of the Z-Mart just after she exited the store ahead of Mr. Crawley. She denied that she and Mr. Crawley exited the store together and insisted that Officer Large was lying when he said that they did. Despite having claimed on direct examination that she put the pill bottle on the ground because she knew that the pills were in the wrong bottle, she denied knowing that hydrocodone pills were in the bottle. The defendant also confusingly claimed that she “didn’t have nothing but one bottle” and that her other pills must have been “in the other bottle.” She claimed that the officer lied when he testified that she told him that she had tried to trade the pills for beer.

Based upon this proof, the jury convicted the defendant as charged, and, following a sentencing hearing, the trial court imposed a sentence of four years’ incarceration. Following the denial of her timely motion for new trial, the defendant filed a timely appeal, challenging her conviction on grounds that the trial court erred by limiting cross-examination of Officer Large and that the evidence was insufficient to support her conviction. We consider each claim in turn.

I. Cross-Examination of Officer Large

The defendant contends that the trial court erred by prohibiting her from questioning Officer Large about Mr. Crawley’s previous legal troubles and the offense with which the defendant and Mr. Crawley were originally charged. The State asserts that the trial court committed no error. We agree with the State.

In Tennessee, “the propriety, scope, manner and control of the examination of witnesses is a matter within the discretion of the trial judge, subject to appellate review for

-3- abuse of discretion.” State v. Caughron, 855 S.W.2d 526, 540 (Tenn. 1993); see State v. Hutchison, 898 S.W.2d 161, 172 (Tenn. 1994); State v. Dishman, 915 S.W.2d 458, 463 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995); State v. Barnard, 899 S.W.2d 617, 624 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994); see also Tenn. R. Evid.

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
State v. Dorantes
331 S.W.3d 370 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2011)
State v. Winters
137 S.W.3d 641 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 2003)
State v. Barnard
899 S.W.2d 617 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1994)
State v. Caughron
855 S.W.2d 526 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1993)
State v. Johnson
670 S.W.2d 634 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1984)
State v. Hutchison
898 S.W.2d 161 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1994)
State v. Cabbage
571 S.W.2d 832 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1978)
State v. Dishman
915 S.W.2d 458 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1995)

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State of Tennessee v. Quanya Revell Prewitt, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-quanya-revell-prewitt-tenncrimapp-2013.