State v. Farmer

927 S.W.2d 582, 1996 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 5, 1996 WL 4321
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 5, 1996
Docket01C01-9409-CC-00328
StatusPublished
Cited by101 cases

This text of 927 S.W.2d 582 (State v. Farmer) 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. Farmer, 927 S.W.2d 582, 1996 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 5, 1996 WL 4321 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

BARKER, Judge.

The appellant, Darryl Gene Farmer, appeals as of right pursuant to Rule 3(b) of the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure from his conviction of murder in the first degree following a jury trial in the Circuit Court for Warren County. The appellant was sentenced to life in prison. In this appeal he presents five (5) issues for our review.

(1) Whether the evidence was sufficient for a rational trier of fact to find the appellant guilty of first degree murder beyond a reasonable doubt;
(2) Whether the indictment against the appellant was invalid because of irregularities in the selection of the venire and/or the presence of an unauthorized individual during grand jury proceedings;
(3) Whether certain statements made by the prosecuting attorneys during closing argument constituted prosecutorial misconduct;
(4) Whether the trial court erroneously admitted into evidence statements made by the appellant on the night of his arrest;
(5) Whether the trial court erroneously admitted into evidence statements made by the decedent.

After a thorough review of the record in this case, the applicable law, and arguments of counsel, we conclude that with regard to issues one (1) through three (3) no reversible error appear? in this case. However, be *586 cause the record is inadequate with regard to whether the appellant’s right to counsel was violated during police questioning, we remand the case for further factual findings on issue number four (4). We conclude that error exists with regard to issue number five (5).

Since the appellant has challenged the sufficiency of the convicting evidence, a summary of the facts established by the evidence is necessary.

On February 20,1992, the body of Christopher Boyd was discovered on an isolated, dead-end dirt road in rural Warren County. It was apparent to the members of the Warren County Sheriffs Department who initially responded following the discovery of the body that Christopher Boyd had met a very violent death. The victim had been shot at least once in the head, and there was also a large hole in the back of the victim’s jacket. Initially, Sheriffs deputies were not sure if the hole in the back of the jacket had been caused by a gunshot wound or not. After viewing the secured crime scene, the district attorney notified the T.B.I. Crime Lab, and personnel from that office arrived later that evening.

Special Agent Steve Scott, a forensic scientist with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation Crime Laboratory, and three other members of the forensic team arrived at the murder scene at around 10:40 p.m. on the evening of February 20, 1992. There were many shoe tracks and tire tracks leading up to the area where the body was discovered. After the body and other evidence surrounding the scene had been photographed, the victim was removed to a hospital in McMinn-ville. Thereafter, Scott and his team recovered some small bone fragments believed to have come from the victim’s head. One such bone fragment was found nine feet three inches from the victim’s body. Another was found thirteen feet from the body, and still another was found eleven feet ten inches from the body.

After being qualified as an expert in firearms, Scott testified that he found and recovered a slug and wadding from underneath the area of the head of the victim. It was Agent Scott’s opinion that the wound to the back was caused by a twelve-gauge shotgun fired from a distance of somewhere between five and seven feet from the victim. He testified that the presence of lead residue on the jacket of the victim could indicate that the weapon was fired closer that five feet. He could not tell the specific gauge of the gun which was used to shoot the victim in the head, as the waddings removed from the wound were too mutilated. It was his opinion, however, that based on the damage to the skull of the victim and the location of the slug and waddings underneath the skull, that the victim was lying with his head against the ground when he was shot in the head. It was also his opinion that the head wound had been inflicted by a gun which had been fired shortly before it was used to shoot the victim in the head because the wound to the face was consistent with an injury inflicted from a gun in which gas pressure had built up subsequent to a recent discharge.

Dr. Gretel Harlan performed an autopsy on February 21, 1992. Dr. Harlan testified that the shotgun wound to the victim’s back was in the near-wound category but that she could only estimate that the shot was fired from three to eighteen feet from the victim. She further concluded that the wound to the skull had been caused by a shotgun slug. She also categorized the head wound as a near-wound. Dr. Harlan was of the opinion that the shotgun wound to the back would have been fatal within a matter of minutes because of extensive injury to the victim’s right lung. Dr. Harlan concluded that Mr. Boyd was first shot in the back and then in the head.

Doug Martin, an acquaintance of both the appellant and the victim, testified that approximately one week prior to the victim’s death, the appellant told Mr. Martin that the victim was informing the police of the appellant’s drug-selling activities and that Mr. Boyd needed to be killed. The appellant asked Mr. Martin to assist him in killing the victim. Mr. Martin refused. Martin thereafter told the victim what the appellant had said about him. The victim, according to Mr. Martin, did not believe that the appellant would harm him, and, in fact, Christopher Boyd told Martin that he and the appellant *587 had plans to steal twenty-five pounds of marijuana.

Steve Pleasant, likewise an acquaintance of both the victim and the appellant, testified that he saw the victim on the afternoon of February 19,1992, when the victim gave Mr. Pleasant a ride home from work. On that occasion, Pleasant saw the victim and the appellant engage in a conversation on the street, and thereafter the appellant followed the victim’s truck to Mr. Pleasant’s house where Mr. Pleasant was dropped off. The victim told Mr. Pleasant that he was going to buy the appellant’s car, and that he wanted to drive it before he bought it. Lastly, Mr. Pleasant testified that the victim told him that he and the appellant were going to a barn to get some marijuana.

Jessie Michael Eldridge, Jr., a friend of the appellant, testified that on February 19, 1992, the appellant called him and said he needed to speak with him. Eldridge testified that the appellant seemed jumpy and nervous when he arrived. Farmer told Eldridge that he had killed the victim because of his belief that the victim was informing on him. He told Eldridge that he shot the victim once in the back and once in the face. The appellant further said that he and the victim were on the way to steal marijuana when they pulled up to the side of the road and started walking to where the marijuana was located. As they were walking up the dirt road the victim said, “You ain’t going to shoot me, are you?” The appellant told Mr. Eldridge that he assured the victim that he was not going to shoot him because they were “good buddies.” However, when the victim turned away he shot him in the back and then shot him in the face with a twelve-gauge shotgun.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
927 S.W.2d 582, 1996 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 5, 1996 WL 4321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-farmer-tenncrimapp-1996.