State v. Harry David Johnson

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 17, 1999
Docket03C01-9712-CR-00526
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Harry David Johnson (State v. Harry David 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 v. Harry David Johnson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT KNOXVILLE FILED DECEMBER 1998 SESSION May 17, 1999

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk

STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) ) Appellee, ) C.C.A. No. 03C01-9712-CR-00526 ) vs. ) Sullivan County ) HARRY DAVID JOHNSON, ) Honorable R. Jerry Beck ) Appellant. ) (First Degree Murder) )

FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:

ROBERT C. NEWTON JOHN KNOX WALKUP 900 Anderson Street Attorney General & Reporter Bristol, TN 37620 ELIZABETH B. MARNEY PAUL R. WOHLFORD Assistant Attorney General 900 Anderson Street 425 Fifth Avenue North Bristol, TN 37620 2d Floor, Cordell Hull Bldg. Nashville, TN 37243-0493 GARY E. BREWER P.O. Box 2046 TERESA M. SMITH Morristown, TN 37816-2046 JOSEPH EUGENE PERRIN Asst. Dist. Attorney General P.O. Box 526 Blountville, TN 37617

OPINION FILED: _____________

AFFIRMED

JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE OPINION

The defendant, Harry David Johnson, appeals his conviction in the

Sullivan County Criminal Court where a jury1 found him guilty of the first degree

murder of his wife, Katherine Trotter Johnson. The trial court sentenced him to

incarceration for life. In this appeal, the defendant raises the following issues:

1. the evidence of premeditation and deliberation is insufficient

to support the verdict of first degree murder;

2. the trial court erred in allowing the state to cross-examine

defense witnesses about the defendant’s prior violent acts against the

victim;

3. the trial court erred in instructing the jury about the range of

punishment for the various degrees of homicide; and

4. the trial court failed to give the jury a special instruction

concerning the meaning of “passion.”

Upon oral argument and our review of the briefs, the record, and the law, we affirm

the judgment of the trial court.

The defendant and the victim lived in an A-frame residence in a lake

community on Friendship Road in Sullivan County. The defendant is a pharmacist.

The couple had two daughters, Whitney Johnson and Arin Bence Johnson, ages

20 and 22, respectively, at the time of trial. By all accounts in the proof, the victim

suffered from chronic alcoholism and was given to bouts of intoxication despite

several efforts to control her disease through rehabilitation. She was extremely

intoxicated at the time of her death.

Arin Johnson testified for the defense that on June 21, 1995, the

defendant came home and had some words with the victim in the kitchen, which is

1 The jury was composed of Hamblen County residents although the trial was conducted in Sullivan County. The trial court ordered the Hamblen County jury selection in response to the defendant’s motion for change of venue.

2 located on the middle floor of the three-level home. The defendant then went to the

lower level and began folding blankets where he had been sleeping since “assault

charges” were filed. Arin Johnson testified the defendant did not look like himself.

His eyes looked “black,” and he seemed sad, cold, distant, and depressed. His chin

quivered. She had never seen him in that condition before. However, when she left

to return to afternoon classes, the household was calm and there was no reason for

alarm.

Later in the afternoon of June 21, Whitney Johnson went to the

residence of her boyfriend, Bradley Jason Fields, and called home to tell her father

that she was going to a meeting. She became upset when the defendant hung up

on her. Because she was worried, she asked Fields’s mother and sister to drive her

home. When she arrived at the Johnson residence a half hour later, she found a

note affixed to the door of the house, although she did not read it at that time. She

was concerned about the welfare of the defendant, went to look for him, and found

him at the rear of the house seated in a swing with a shotgun propped up against

a tree nearby. She testified the defendant “wasn’t the person that I knew.” The

defendant told her that had she not called earlier, she would have found him dead.

They sat in the swing and talked for about 30 minutes. Bradley Jason Fields arrived

and entered the Johnson home. Whitney Johnson joined him in the kitchen, and

they began to make some tea. When they discovered they were out of sugar, the

defendant drove to a store to buy sugar. When he returned, Whitney Johnson

made tea, and she and Fields went to her bedroom to watch television. The

defendant was in the lower level of the house.

Sometime later the defendant went from the lower level to the third

floor where the victim’s bedroom was located. Whitney Johnson heard “a thunk”

and went upstairs to see what happened. The victim was sitting on the bedroom

floor, and the defendant was sitting on the edge of the bed. The victim was

“snarling” at the defendant who had the “look of a black hole type person.” The

3 defendant became enraged. He “smacked” the victim and said he was going to

shoot her. He left the room very quickly and went downstairs. As he came back

very quickly from the lower level with the shotgun, Whitney Johnson met him and

tried to get the gun away from him. She testified the defendant was “screaming, out

of control.” He loaded the gun and ran upstairs to the third-floor bedroom where the

victim had remained. Whitney Johnson testified that only seconds elapsed between

the defendant running upstairs and the firing of a shot.

Bradley Jason Fields, who testified for the state, gave a somewhat

different account of the June 21 events. He stated that the victim was intoxicated

and, in his opinion, could not walk. He testified that after the defendant returned

from his errand in his car, the defendant played with the family dogs for several

minutes and seemed calm. However, later the defendant went upstairs and

threatened to kill the victim. The defendant come down the stairs, passed Fields

in the kitchen area, and proceeded to the lower level to the gun cabinet. Fields

followed him down the stairs, and the defendant said, “I was going to kill that bitch.”

The defendant obtained the shotgun and the box of shells and rambled about the

victim not getting his money and that he was going to kill her. Fields tried to stop

him, and the defendant ordered Fields out of the way. Frightened, Fields stepped

back, allowing the defendant to go upstairs. Fields went to the second floor and

watched and heard the confrontation from the kitchen-great room area. The

bedroom opened onto a balcony which was visible through an atrium from the

second-floor kitchen-great room area. Fields testified that the defendant pulled the

victim off the bed onto the floor, pointed the gun at her, and told her he was going

to kill her. The defendant told the victim she was not going to get his money and

that he was tired of living the way he had been. Fields pleaded with him not to kill

the victim. He described the defendant looking at him and saying that he had to do

what he had to do. During this time, the victim was hollering Fields’s name. This

situation continued for about five minutes before the defendant fired the fatal shot

and came running downstairs. When the defendant reached the kitchen level, he

4 began looking for the shells which Fields had hidden under a pillow. The defendant

stated “I killed her,” laid the gun on a couch on the lower level, and left the house.

Fields went upstairs and discovered the victim had been shot in the

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