State of Tennessee v. Vernon Motley

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 29, 2012
DocketW2010-01989-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Vernon Motley (State of Tennessee v. Vernon Motley) 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. Vernon Motley, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON November 1, 2011 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. VERNON MOTLEY

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 09-06801 Lee V. Coffee, Judge

No. W2010-01989-CCA-R3-CD - Filed March 29, 2012

The defendant, Vernon Motley, was convicted by a Shelby County Criminal Court jury of first degree premeditated murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. On appeal, he argues that: (1) the trial court gave an improper jury instruction on premeditation; (2) the trial court erred when it did not grant the defendant’s motion for a mistrial based on a Brady violation; (3) the trial court erred when it allowed testimony of the victim’s dying declaration to include information concerning the motive for the killing; and (4) the State’s argument during closing was improper and amounted to plain error. After review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

A LAN E. G LENN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J OSEPH M. T IPTON, P.J., and J ERRY L. S MITH, J., joined.

Claiborne H. Ferguson and Samuel Rodriguez, III, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Vernon Motley.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Rachel E. Willis, Senior Counsel; Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Jennifer Nichols, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

The defendant was charged with first degree premeditated murder after the mother of his child’s new boyfriend and father-to-be of her baby, Eric Deon Brown, the victim, was shot and killed outside a home at 2164 Hubert Circle in Memphis. At trial, Tyrone Jackson, the victim’s brother, identified photographs of the victim for the record.

Kendrick Buckley testified that he visited his cousin, Shaka Jones, on February 22, 2008 at the home of Jones’s grandmother on Hubert Circle. The two went to get pizza and then sat across the street from Jones’s grandmother’s house in Buckley’s truck, talking. While they were sitting in the truck, the defendant pulled up in front of the house, and “about that time [Jones] was telling [him] to pull off” or leave. As he was leaving, Buckley saw the defendant get out of his car and walk up to the porch of Jones’s grandmother’s house. Buckley drove to his house approximately thirty minutes away. As he was driving, Jones received calls on her cell phone, which made her “upset, real excited, real upset. Constantly hollering and screaming.” He recalled that Jones was exclaiming that the victim had been shot. The next day, the police had Buckley view a photographic array from which he identified the defendant as the man he saw “walk up to the porch [at Hubert Circle].”

Shaka Jones testified that she and the defendant were involved in an “off and on” relationship for fourteen years and had a child together. Their relationship ended and, in the latter part of 2007, Jones began dating the victim. She was pregnant with the victim’s baby on February 22, 2008. The defendant was not happy about Jones’s pregnancy and had threatened “to kill [her], [her] baby, [the victim] and [Jones’s] other kids.” Jones had not told the defendant that the victim was the father of her unborn baby, but she “guess[ed] he took it upon himself to assume that’s who the baby’s daddy was” because of his having observed the two together and conducting his own investigation.

Jones testified that, on January 19, 2008, her and the defendant’s almost twelve-year- old son, “Lil Vernon,” called from his visit with the defendant and “told [her] that [she] needed to bring him all of his belongings . . . because [the defendant] was taking him and [she] wasn’t going to get him back[.]” “Lil Vernon” also relayed that the defendant threatened to kill him, Jones, and Jones’s other son if Jones did not comply. Jones eventually sought help from the defendant’s mother who was able to get “Lil Vernon” back. After that, Jones stayed away from the defendant and even moved without letting anyone know where she was living because of the defendant’s threats. Jones also stayed away from the victim “because [she] took heed into what [the defendant] had said.”

Jones testified that, on February 22, 2008, she was sitting with her cousin, Kendrick Buckley, in Buckley’s truck outside her grandmother’s house on Hubert Circle waiting for her children to come home from a Mardi Gras celebration at school. She saw the defendant pull up in his mother’s Chrysler Pacifica, get out of the car, and walk up to her grandmother’s porch at “[a] fast pace.” Alarmed because of the threats the defendant had

-2- made, Jones told Buckley to drive away. Jones called her grandmother to see if the defendant was in her house, and her grandmother informed her that he was not. A few minutes later, Stephanie Blanton, Jones’s grandmother’s next-door neighbor, called and told Jones that the victim had been shot and was bleeding to death on her front porch. Jones acknowledged that neither the victim, Torre Smith, nor anyone else was around when the defendant arrived at Hubert Circle. Later, Jones gave a statement to the police and identified the defendant in a photographic array as the person she saw at her grandmother’s house the night of the murder.

Torre Smith, the victim’s cousin, testified that he accompanied the victim to Hubert Circle on February 22, 2008. The victim drove the two of them in Smith’s car. The victim stopped in front of a white house, got out, and walked up to the front porch. He knocked on the front door, looked in the window, and then walked to the house next door, all the while talking on his cell phone. As the victim was walking to the house next door, “a car c[a]me speeding up behind [Smith’s] car and a gentleman jumped out, running with a pistol and saying, ‘I’ve been waiting to catch you,’ and he shot right when he got by [Smith’s] window, but he was running and [the victim] took out running.” The victim ran behind the houses, and the gunman chased him. Smith moved into the driver’s seat and drove down the street to see if he could intercept the victim. However, he heard more gunshots and did not see the victim, so he drove back to the original location in time to see the gunman getting into a Chrysler Pacifica. Smith followed the gunman and got a partial license plate number, which he relayed to 911. Smith drove back to Hubert Circle where he saw the victim lying on the front porch “convulsing.” Later, Smith told the police what he had seen, including a description of the gunman, but he was unable to identify the gunman in a photographic array.

Akil Payne testified that he lived on Hubert Circle next door to Jones’s grandmother. Payne knew the victim because the victim had dated both Payne’s sister, Kimberly Blanton, and Shaka Jones. Payne knew the defendant as well, who was usually referred to as “V” or a few times as “Lil V.” On the evening of February 22, 2008, Payne was in his house with his stepfather, Rickey Dunlap, when he heard gunshots outside. Payne looked out the window and saw a blue Chrysler Pacifica, which he recognized as the defendant’s mother’s car, parked in front of Jones’s grandmother’s house. When the shooting stopped, Payne’s sister knocked on the door and said that the victim had been shot. Payne opened the door and saw the victim lying on the front porch. Payne knelt down, held the victim in his arms, and asked him what had happened. The victim told him, “V shot me.” Payne asked if he meant “Shaka’s baby daddy,” and the victim confirmed that it was. The victim told him that the defendant shot him “[o]ver Shaka.” The victim said, “I don’t think I’m going to make this one” and began praying.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Vernon Motley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-vernon-motley-tenncrimapp-2012.