State of Tennessee v. Zachary Michael Johnson

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 3, 2017
DocketM2016-01479-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Zachary Michael Johnson (State of Tennessee v. Zachary Michael Johnson) 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. Zachary Michael Johnson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

11/03/2017 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 9, 2017 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ZACHARY MICHAEL JOHNSON

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2014-C-2213 Cheryl A. Blackburn, Judge

No. M2016-01479-CCA-R3-CD

The Defendant, Zachary Michael Johnson, was indicted for five counts of rape by force or coercion, a Class B felony, all involving the same victim and occurring over a short period of time. The jury convicted him of the lesser offense of sexual battery, a Class E felony, in two counts of the indictment and acquitted him of the remaining three counts of the indictment. The trial court subsequently sentenced him as Range I, standard offender to concurrent terms of two years for each conviction, suspended to three years of supervised probation. On appeal, the Defendant challenges the sufficiency of the convicting evidence and argues that the trial court committed plain error by not instructing the jury on the lesser-included offense of assault by extremely offensive or provocative physical contact. Following our review, we conclude that the evidence is sufficient to sustain the convictions but that the trial court erred in not instructing the jury as to the lesser-included offense. Accordingly, we reverse the judgments of conviction and remand for a new trial.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Criminal Court Reversed and Remanded for a New Trial

ALAN E. GLENN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which NORMA MCGEE OGLE and ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., JJ., joined.

Richard Lewis Tennent and Jodie A. Bell (on appeal); and Bernard F. McEvoy and Jessica Van Dyke (at trial), Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Zachary Michael Johnson.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; John H. Bledsoe, Deputy Attorney General; Glenn R. Funk, District Attorney General; and Megan M. King and Leandra J. Varney, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION

FACTS

This case stems from sexual activity that occurred between the Defendant and the victim, S. K.,1 who had met online, on the evening of May 27-28, 2014, during their first and only in-person date. After drinking together at a bar, the Defendant and the victim went to the Defendant’s condominium, where they drank more alcohol together before engaging in sexual contact that began with consensual kissing but escalated, according to the victim, into non-consensual acts involving the Defendant’s forceful and violent digital and penile penetration of the victim’s vagina and digital penetration of the victim’s anus. The victim reported the Defendant’s actions to the police that same night/early morning after she arrived home, and the Davidson County Grand Jury subsequently indicted him for five counts of rape involving force or coercion, with count one based on the Defendant’s first instance of digital penetration of the victim’s vagina, count two based on his first instance of digital penetration of the victim’s anus, count three based on his penile penetration of the victim’s vagina, count four based on his second instance of digital penetration of the victim’s vagina, and count five based on his second instance of digital penetration of the victim’s anus.

At the Defendant’s trial, the victim testified that she met the Defendant through the online dating site, “Tinder,” approximately a week to a week and a half before their May 27, 2014 in-person date. They first exchanged Facebook messages through the dating site, but after she became comfortable with him, she gave him her cell phone number, and they began texting and talking. She recalled that they had at least one long phone conversation before May 27, during which the Defendant tried to convince her to visit in his home. The victim testified that she refused because she could tell that he was intoxicated.

The victim estimated that she and the Defendant exchanged approximately twenty text messages before they met in person. She was “almost positive” that none of their conversations were “sexual in nature.” She acknowledged, however, that she sent him a topless photograph of herself as well as a video in which she was masturbating while topless. The Defendant also sent her a video, shot from the waist down, of himself masturbating. When asked why she had sent a topless video of herself to the Defendant if she did not intend to have sex with him, the victim explained that her long, unhappy marriage had just ended, and she was feeling “liberated” and “good about [herself]”:

1 It is the policy of this court to refer to victims of sexual assault by their initials only. -2- That’s a hard question to answer, but I know that I had just gotten out of a really long like unhappy loveless marriage. And I think that the way that the technology of that like has changed so much, so I wasn’t used to being able to do something like that. And I felt a little liberated in some weird way of being able to do that, and I felt good about myself. There was no pressure from his part to do it. I did it of my own accord. And I know that it alludes to sex, but that was not my intention. It was mainly just almost like for me.

The victim testified that she and the Defendant arranged to meet on the night of May 27, 2014, after she completed her work shift at the Green Hills Mall. Their plan was to go out for drinks; she had no intention of going to his home, much less having sex with him. The victim said that she did not shave her legs or otherwise “groom” herself as she would have if she had any intention of being intimate with anyone.

The victim testified that the Defendant, who was obviously drunk, showed up at her workplace twenty to thirty minutes before the 9:00 p.m. closing time. She sent him outside at 9:00 p.m. to wait for her while the store completed its closing process, and she joined him there at 9:15 or 9:20 p.m. The Defendant had not brought his car, which annoyed her because she did not want to be responsible for taking him home. The victim explained that, while she was bothered that the Defendant showed up drunk and did not bring his car, she had been looking forward to going out after work and therefore ignored her concerns.

The victim testified that she and the Defendant walked to a bar across the street from the mall, where the Defendant had a beer and she had a beer and a shot of whiskey as they engaged in small talk in the upper level portion of the bar. After approximately thirty to forty-five minutes, the Defendant, who had been “acting weird towards the bartender,” rudely threw a credit card at the bartender to pay their bill. They then went downstairs, where the victim wanted to get another drink from the downstairs bar. However, the bartender with whom the Defendant had had the upstairs altercation pointed the Defendant out to the manager, and the manager asked them to leave.

The victim recalled that, as they were walking toward her car, she was very upset with the Defendant and questioned why he had been so rude to the bartender, telling him that she frequently went to that bar after work. According to the victim, the Defendant “was kind of laughing it off in a very cocky way.” She said the Defendant kept trying to convince her to go to his apartment, but she kept resisting because what she really wanted to do was to “go out somewhere else . . . to let loose and have some fun.”

-3- The victim testified that the Defendant was very persuasive, and she finally relented and agreed to go with him to his Hillsboro Road condominium, where the Defendant said he had something for them to drink.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Zachary Michael Johnson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-zachary-michael-johnson-tenncrimapp-2017.