State v. Garrison

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 27, 1998
Docket03C01-9702-CC-00047
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Garrison (State v. Garrison) 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. Garrison, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT KNOXVILLE FILED AUGUST 1997 SESSION February 27, 1998

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk STATE OF TENNESSEE, * C.C.A. No. 03C01-9702-CC-00047 * Appellee, * BLEDSOE COUNTY * VS. * Hon. Thomas W . Graham, Judge * JOHN C. GARRISON, * (Solicitation to Commit First Degree * Murder) Appellant. *

For Appellant: For Appellee:

Gregory P. Isaacs John Knox Walkup 280 One Centre Square Attorney General and Reporter P.O. Box 2448 Knoxville, TN 37901-2448 Michael J. Fahey, II (on appeal) Assistant Attorney General 425 Fifth Avenue North Thomas N. DePersio 2d Floor, Cordell Hull Building 136 S. Illinois Avenue Nashville, TN 37243-0493 Suite 104 Oak Ridge, TN 37830 James W. Pope (at trial) Assistant District Attorney General First American Bank Building Dayton, TN 37321

OPINION FILED:__________________

REVERSED AND REMANDED

GARY R. WADE, JUDGE OPINION

The defendant, John C. Garrison, was convicted of solicitation to

commit first degree murder, a Class B felony. The trial court imposed a Range II

sentence of sixteen years to be served consecutively to a sentence in Knox County

for two counts of theft over ten thousand dollars. The defendant was fined twenty-

five thousand dollars.

In this appeal of right, the defendant presents the following issues for

our review:

(I) whether the evidence was sufficient to sustain a conviction for solicitation to commit first degree murder;

(II) whether the defendant was denied the effective assistance of counsel under the state and federal constitutions;

(III) whether the defendant was denied the effective assistance of counsel because of the failure to communicate a plea offer;

(IV) whether the solicitation statute, on its face and as applied by the trial court, is unconstitutionally vague and overbroad; and

(V) whether the trial court improperly charged the jury that the defendant was eligible to receive a sentence of 12 to 20 years as a multiple, Range II offender.

Because we have determined there to be prejudicial error, we must

reverse the judgment and remand this cause to the trial court for further proceedings

in accordance with this opinion.

The state charged that the defendant, while in prison on prior theft

convictions, had attempted to arrange the death of Charles Coward, a victim of his

prior crimes. On the morning of trial, May 15, 1995, original defense counsel,

Thomas N. DePersio, asked for a continuance because he had just four days earlier

2 obtained evidence of taped conversations between the defendant and two state

witnesses. According to DePersio, the transcripts were critical in determining

whether the defendant should testify. DePersio argued that he could not

competently represent the defendant because the evidence was so belatedly

provided. In response, the state insisted that DePersio had been notified of the

existence of the evidence as early as December of 1994. The trial court denied the

continuance request.

At trial, Jeff Blevins, an Assistant District Attorney for Knox County,

testified that prior to this trial, in August of 1992, he had prosecuted the defendant

on two charges of theft. In one of the theft cases, the victims were Charles Coward

and Loy Smith, partners of Holston View Farms. The defendant had pled guilty to

the charge. As part of the plea agreement, the defendant was to pay fifteen

thousand dollars in restitution on the day of the plea. At a subsequent hearing, the

defendant was supposed to submit a plan for restitution and receive probation.

Blevins recalled that no plan was ever provided; therefore, the defendant received

an eight-year prison sentence and was ordered to pay forty-one thousand dollars in

restitution. According to Blevins, Coward would have been the state's most

essential witness had the case gone to trial.

On cross-examination, Blevins conceded the defendant had provided

a proposed plan to pay the balance of the restitution, but the state had nonetheless

opposed a sentence of probation. The state rejected offers of two-hundred fifty

dollars and five hundred dollars per month and then sought the maximum sentence

without probation on the premise that the defendant had failed to provide a plan of

3 restitution.1 The trial court denied probation and the defendant was sentenced to

prison.

Coward, the sixty-four-year-old victim of the solicitation, testified that

he and Loy Smith were partners in a several businesses. They co-own and operate

Vend-A-Wash, a coin laundry business in Knoxville; their general business office is

located in a two-story building on Holston Drive and the main laundry site is next

door. In the early 1990's, the office safe was protected by a local rather than a

monitored alarm system. Coward recalled that his custom was to go to nearby

Ruby's Coffee Shop every morning just after 5:00 a.m.; he then traveled by car to

his office, arriving there between 5:44 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. Coward testified that he

carried the business proceeds in the trunk of his car and armed himself with a

loaded .38 Chief Special. Generally, no one else arrived at the office until well after

7:00 a.m.

In the summer of 1990, Coward and Smith formed Holston View

Farms, Inc., for the purpose of acquiring land options. The defendant was hired to

acquire those options. The relationship ended about nine months later when

Coward learned that the defendant had stolen a large sum of money. Coward and

Smith hired attorney Herb Moncier to prosecute the defendant for theft, attended

each of the hearings, planned to testify had the case gone to trial, and were

adamantly opposed to the defendant receiving probation. Coward recalled that

defense attorney DePersio had offered a restitution in the sum of fifteen thousand

dollars, paid upon entry of the defendant's guilty plea plus five hundred dollars per

month. Coward and Smith received twelve thousand dollars from the initial

1 The Court of Criminal Appeals subsequently held that the state had reneged on the plea agreement and remanded for sentencing. On remand, the defendant received two consecutive nine- year sentences as a Ra nge II multiple offender.

4 payment. Three thousand dollars was divided by two victims of a different theft

committed by the defendant. Coward remembered that both of those victims were

also prepared to testify against the defendant had there not been a guilty plea to the

theft charges.

John Rollyson, a prison inmate serving a seventeen-year sentence for

conspiracy to commit first degree murder, testified that in 1993 he informed Charlie

Scott of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation that the defendant had asked him to

have an unnamed person killed. Another TBI agent contacted Rollyson with a plan

to audiotape a discussion with the defendant.

In their taped discussion, the defendant provided Rollyson with details

about the victim but did not reveal his motive for the killing; without naming the

victim, he described him as a heavy man who went to work at a coin laundry

business in Knoxville at a certain time every morning and stopped along the way to

eat breakfast at the same restaurant. The defendant said that the victim drove a

large older model car, carried a lot of money in his trunk, and kept a gun under the

front seat. He suggested that the victim would be alone in the office during the early

morning hours.

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