State v. Bondurant

4 S.W.3d 662, 1999 Tenn. LEXIS 420, 1999 WL 803967
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 7, 1999
Docket01S01-9804-CC-00064
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 4 S.W.3d 662 (State v. Bondurant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bondurant, 4 S.W.3d 662, 1999 Tenn. LEXIS 420, 1999 WL 803967 (Tenn. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DROWOTA, J.

In this appeal, the defendant, Pat Bon-durant, was convicted of premeditated first degree murder and arson. Upon finding that the State had proven two statutory aggravating circumstances 1 be *664 yond a reasonable doubt and that there were no mitigating circumstances sufficiently substantial to outweigh the aggravating circumstances, the jury sentenced the defendant to death by electrocution on the conviction for first degree murder. On the arson conviction, the trial court sentenced the defendant to ten years consecutive to the death penalty. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment. Thereafter, the case was docketed in this Court 2 and set for oral argument with respect to eight of the issues raised by the defendant. See Tenn. S.Ct. R. 12.

After carefully considering the briefs and arguments of counsel, relevant legal authority, and the entire record on appeal, we conclude that the defendant’s convictions of first degree murder and arson must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial. The defendant offered clear proof to establish that the statutory procedures governing selection of a special jury venire were totally disregarded and that the jury, which was required by law to remain sequestered, was allowed to separate twice daily to drive between their lodgings and the courthouse. No evidence was offered by the prosecution to refute the defendant’s claim regarding the selection of the special venire or to rebut the defendant’s prima facie showing of jury separation. Under clear and longstanding Tennessee precedent a new trial is required if the State does not offer proof to negate prejudice once the fact of jury separation has been established by the defense.

Furthermore, in a highly publicized capital murder case it is particularly important that trial courts scrupulously enforce the statutory directives governing selection of a special venire and the law requiring jury sequestration. Otherwise, the risk is great that a jury will base its decision on extraneous information. Here, the trial court failed to utilize the selection procedures prescribed by the statute and also allowed the jury to separate twice daily during the course of the trial. In the absence of countervailing proof from the State to show that the jury’s decision was not influenced by extraneous information, we are unable to conclude that these serious errors were harmless. Accordingly, the defendant’s convictions are reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial.

As a result of the remand, many of the errors assigned by the defendant in this appeal have been rendered moot and are pretermitted. However, because this issue will be relevant upon remand, we have also considered the defendant’s claim that the indictment should be quashed because of racial discrimination in the selection of the grand jury foreperson and now conclude that the claim is without merit.

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FACTUAL BACKGROUND

While the dispositive issues in this appeal relate to the selection of a special venire and the sequestration of the jury, the following brief summary of the State’s trial proof is offered to place the issues in context. 3

The defendant, Pat Bondurant, and the victim, William Ronnie “Hippy” Gaines, were friends and co-workers at the Pulaski Rubber Company in Giles County. Gaines left work on Friday, October 17, 1986, and *665 has never been seen alive since. Five days later, on Wednesday, October 22, 1986, Gaines’ house was damaged by a fire that arson investigators determined had been set in the front left bedroom. A missing person investigation to locate Gaines began on the evening after the fire but was unsuccessful.

More than three years later, in May of 1990, law enforcement officers interviewed Denise Bondurant, the defendant’s estranged wife. According to Denise Bondu-rant, who testified at trial, the defendant had confessed to her both the killing of Gaines and the burning of the victim’s house. 4 Denise testified that the defendant had been angry at Gaines for some time because the defendant suspected that Gaines had stolen his wallet containing money from the monthly social security disability check belonging to the Bondu-rants’ disabled son, Matthew. 5 During this time, the defendant had made veiled threats against anyone who stole “from him or little Matthew.” The defendant told Denise that on the evening of October 17, while at Gaines’ house, he caught Gaines cheating while playing cards. At this point, the defendant “just went off,” and beat Gaines to death with a small rocking chair because he “could not allow anyone to take anything from little Matthew.” The beating, which continued for thirty minutes after Gaines had died, was of such force as to leave only a small piece of the rocking chair intact. The defendant and his brother, Pete Bondurant, dismembered the victim’s body, cleaned the house so that no trace of blood or hair remained, and transported the body to their parents’ home in Westpoint, Tennessee, where they burned the corpse. 6

In May of 1990, relying upon information provided by Denise Bondurant, law enforcement officials obtained a search warrant and returned to the Westpoint house where, with the help of a team of forensic anthropologists, they located seven burned human cranial fragments. 7 Dr. William Bass, the leader of the forensic anthropologists, testified that he was 100 percent certain that the bones were human, 75 percent certain that they came from a male, over 50 percent certain that blunt trauma had been applied to the skull before it had been burned, and 90 percent certain that the bones had been in the ground no less than one nor more than fifteen to twenty years.

Other proof also supported Denise’s testimony and the forensic evidence. For example, a child’s rocking chair that had been in the front left bedroom of Gaines’ house was missing after the fire. The defendant had also made several strange or incriminating statements around the time of Gaines’ disappearance. These statements ranged from the defendant’s remark that Gaines had joined the Foreign Legion to the defendant’s outright admission to one co-worker that he had “killed the son-of-a-bitch.”

Based on this evidence, the jury found the defendant guilty of first-degree premeditated murder and arson.

*666 At the sentencing hearing, the State introduced proof of the defendant’s conviction of second degree murder in Giles County in March of 1991. The defense presented the testimony of the defendant’s mother, who recounted the circumstances of the defendant’s childhood and described him as an exemplary son, who had helped his parents, maintained a close and loving relationship with his family, and worked steadily for seventeen years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.3d 662, 1999 Tenn. LEXIS 420, 1999 WL 803967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bondurant-tenn-1999.