State v. Charles R. Marshall, Jr.

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 29, 2000
DocketM1999-01311-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Charles R. Marshall, Jr. (State v. Charles R. Marshall, Jr.) 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 v. Charles R. Marshall, Jr., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE

JANUARY 2000 SESSION FILED February 29, 2000 Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate Court Clerk STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) ) M1999-01311-CCA-R3-CD Appellee, ) ) Davidson County v. ) ) Honorable Walter Kurtz, Judge CHARLES R. MARSHALL, JR., ) ) (Robbery, Attempted) Appellant. )

FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:

JEFFREY A. DEVASHER PAUL G. SUMMERS C. DAWN DEANER Attorney General & Reporter 1202 Stahlman Building Nashville, Tennessee 37201 MARK E. DAVIDSON Assistant Attorney General 425 Fifth Avenue North Nashville, Tennessee 37243

AFFIRMED

L. T. LAFFERTY, SENIOR JUDGE OPINION The appellant, Charles R. Marshall, Jr., referred to herein as “the defendant,” was

convicted of attempted aggravated robbery by a Davidson County Jury. The trial court imposed a four (4) year sentence and placed the defendant on probation for four (4) years. On appeal as of right, the defendant presents the single issue that the evidence is

insufficient to support his conviction. After a review of the record, briefs of the parties and applicable law, we AFFIRM the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND Around 2:30 p.m. on the afternoon of February 26, 1998, Wayne Branch and his wife, Mary, and James Flynn, an employee, were in the back room of Friendly Flower

Shop, Inc., 99 Bridgeway Avenue, Old Hickory, Tennessee, in Davidson County. The Branches own the flower shop. Wayne Branch testified that a man ran into the flower shop wearing a Halloween mask and then ran up to James Flynn and asked him for some

money. Mr. Flynn responded that he did not have any money. Mr. Branch stated that the man then ran to his wife, Mary, pulled a gun on her, and asked her for some money. She also told the man she did not have any money. Then the man ran over to Mr. Branch,

cocked the gun, pointed it at him, and said, “[G]ive me your money.” Mr. Branch testified that he thought the guy was “pranking with him.” On several occasions, other people had

come into the store and pulled pranks on Mr. Branch. He told the man, “[W]hy don’t you just pull that mask off and I’ll sell you some flowers, … [a]nd … by the way, what are you

doing here to start with?” The man ran out the door, followed by Mr. Branch. Mr. Branch

saw the man run to the left and around behind the building. Mr. Branch got into his van

and saw the man come from behind his shop and run toward some railroad tracks. Mr.

Branch saw a lady driving a little red car down the street, who stopped and picked up the

defendant. Mr. Branch was able to obtain the license plate number from the car and

followed it to the Rio Vista Apartments. He stated that he was about twenty (20) to thirty

(30) feet from where the car had stopped. He was able to see the man get out of the car

without the mask. Mr. Branch recognized the man as C.J., an employee at the Lakewood Liquor Store in Old Hickory and Swifty Gas Station. In fact, Mr. Branch identified the defendant as the man in question. The defendant had waited on Mr. Branch on several occasions in these two stores. At the time of the offense, Mr. Branch testified that the

defendant was wearing a green shirt or sweater. Mr. Branch returned to the flower shop and told the police what he had seen, including the license plate number. He testified that he and the police returned to the Rio Vista Apartments where the defendant was arrested.

2 Later, Mr. Branch stated that the Metro Police Department showed him a mask, which he

identified as being worn by the defendant. He also identified a weapon that appeared to

be a .9mm weapon, but turned out to be a pellet gun. Officer Kenneth Elkin, Metro Police Department, testified that around 2:30 p.m. on

February 26, 1998, he arrived at the Friendly Flower Shop. Elkin stated that he talked to

Wayne Branch. Elkin put out a broadcast for a red Chevrolet, license plate number 397- ZNS. Elkin then followed Wayne Branch to the Rio Vista Apartments, where he arrested

the defendant after he was identified by Mr. Branch.

Officer David Hedge, Metro Police Department, testified that on February 26, 1998, he was working the Hermitage area. He received a broadcast to go to the Mapco at Old

Hickory Boulevard and Central Pike. Officer Hedge observed a maroon Chevrolet Corsica

with car tags matching the police broadcast parked by a pay phone. A female, identified as Kimberly Roberts, was using the phone. Officer Hedge arrested Ms. Roberts. He

stated that he searched the trunk of the car and found a black Daisy BB pistol.

Malcolm Crosslin, maintenance supervisor for the Rio Vista Apartments, testified that he received a phone call from a tenant. In response, Mr. Crosslin went between

buildings T and U and saw a bag near some bushes. The bag contained a mask and an

empty Coke can. Mr. Crosslin called the police about the bag. He identified the defendant

as a tenant in the apartments.

Detective Norris Tarkington, an investigator for the Metro Police Department, testified that he went to the Rio Vista Apartments, where the defendant was in custody.

Detective Tarkington had also been advised that Kimberly Roberts was in custody.

Tarkington stated that the defendant was wearing a white long sleeved T-shirt with a logo on it and blue jeans, and Ms. Roberts was wearing a green shirt and blue jeans. Four (4)

days later, Detective Tarkington returned to the Rio Vista Apartments, where he received

the Halloween mask and Coke can from Mr. Crosslin. Detective Tarkington took the mask to the flower shop, where Wayne Branch, Mary Branch, and James Flynn identified the

mask. In cross-examination, Detective Tarkington testified that the defendant gave

consent for a search of his apartment. The detective did not request that the Coke can or

BB pistol be examined for fingerprints. James Flynn, delivery driver for the Friendly Flower Shop, testified that a man came

into the store wearing a mask and tried to rob them. The man had on a Halloween mask

which covered his whole head. He also carried a pistol, which looked like a black .45 or .9mm. The man pointed the pistol at Mr. Flynn and asked him for some money. When Mr.

Flynn replied he did not have any money, the man again demanded , “Give me all your [G–

3 D–] money.” Mr. Flynn again told him that he had no money, believing it was a joke. The

man then told Mary Branch that he wanted her money. She did not give him any money

either, so the man turned to Wayne Branch and told Branch to give him all the money. When Mr. Branch refused, the man waited a second and left through the front door. Mr.

Flynn stated that he followed the man outside and saw the man go left around the

building’s corner. Mr. Branch got into his van. Mr. Flynn went around the side of the building and saw the man running down the street, which was on the other side of the

building. The man’s mask was off. Once the man got past the railroad tracks, Mr. Flynn

did not see the man again. Mary Branch testified that she saw a man running through the front door of the

flower shop wearing a mask over his face. He was wearing a long-sleeved green sweat

shirt and blue jeans. The man had a gun in his hand. Mrs. Branch stated that the man pointed the gun at James Flynn, then at her, and demanded money. She told the man that

she did not have any money and asked him, “[W]hat in the hell are you doing in here.”

Then the man turned to her husband, Wayne Branch, and demanded money, but her husband did not give him any money either. The man ran from the shop, followed by her

husband and James Flynn. Mrs. Branch called the police.

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