State v. Hurley

876 S.W.2d 57, 1994 Tenn. LEXIS 108
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by105 cases

This text of 876 S.W.2d 57 (State v. Hurley) 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. Hurley, 876 S.W.2d 57, 1994 Tenn. LEXIS 108 (Tenn. 1994).

Opinions

OPINION

O’BRIEN, Justice.

Defendant, Randy Dwayne Hurley, appeals from his conviction for first degree murder of Daniel R. “Sarge” West. He was found guilty of premeditated first degree murder, and of felony murder. He was also convicted of armed robbery. He was sentenced to death on each of the murder charges and to a consecutive sentence of 12 years for armed robbery.

On the morning of Friday, 15 April, 1988, the defendant and West left defendant’s trailer on 9th Street in Newport, Tennessee, to work on a well at defendant’s house in Keener Hollow, off Middle Creek Road, in Cocke County. Sarah Proctor, at that time defendant’s girlfriend, arrived at the Keener Hollow location around 4:50 p.m. West and the defendant were still there. Thirty or forty minutes later Proctor left at defendant’s request. He asked her to pick him up on Rocky Top, a remote mountain area a short distance away, near the home of defendant’s uncle and grandfather. About dusk Proctor picked defendant up at the intersection of Rocky Top and Pond Roads and took him to his trailer on 9th Street in Newport.

Regina (Northern) Hayes, another of defendant’s girlfriends, who lived in the 9th Street trailer, testified that defendant arrived at the trailer around dusk on 15 April 1988. He asked her to wash his army jacket for him. She added the jacket to a load of jeans already in the washer. Turning from the washer she noticed he was smiling and inquired about the reason. Defendant replied, “ ‘Sarge’ is dead.” He told her that, while he and West were at the Keener Hollow house, he told West “to go for his gun” and “to say his last prayer.” When West went for his gun [West customarily carried a .375 Magnum pistol in his truck] defendant “blowed his head off’ with a “punkin ball.”' He also told Hayes that he had gotten “60 something dollars” off West. Defendant instructed Hayes to tell the sheriffs officers that he had given West $600 and that West had written him a receipt for that amount. Hayes also testified that defendant told her he and Sarah drove West to Rocky Top after he was shot and burned him up in his truck.

On Sunday, 17 April 1988, West’s badly charred remains were discovered in his completely burned Toyota truck on a logging road in a desolate area on Rocky Top Mountain. The hands on West’s watch had stopped at 8:07 p.m. Dr. Clellan Blake, a State forensic pathologist, testified that he found a single rifle slug called a “punkin ball” with wadding from a shotgun shell in the center of West’s brain. The doctor opined that the cause of death was a shotgun wound to the front or front side of the head.

On 19 April 1988 law enforcement officers stopped and questioned Proctor and the defendant in the driveway of the house in Keener Hollow. At this time defendant gave officers a receipt dated 15 April 1988 for $251 received by West from him, and bearing West’s signature. On this occasion the officers also found a live .20 gauge shotgun shell in Proctor’s purse. The wadding and slug from the shell were similar to that found in the victim’s brain. Proctor testified at trial she “assumed” the unfired round was defendant’s property. She had earlier claimed it was her father’s and had tried to get a friend to say it belonged to him. During a search of defendant’s house on 19 April the officers discovered a freshly oiled .20 gauge shotgun.

Defendant argues two (2) issues collectively saying first the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction under the Winship1 standard on the felony murder count and secondly, that the weight of the evidence was insufficient to support the jury verdict. Defendant’s argument is founded on the credibility of the testimony of witness Regina (Northern) Hayes, which he says was severely impaired by evidence of her ill will and threats against him. He points out, correctly, that Hayes testimony is the only evidence of a robbery of the victim. He argues that he was convicted upon circumstantial evidence while conceding that such [61]*61evidence can be the sole basis for a conviction. His argument on the weak nature of the testimony of Regina Hayes does not survive the rule on the sufficiency of evidence test which applies in this State. The jury heard the testimony of Ms. Hayes as well as that of the defense witnesses who were presented in an effort to impeach her testimony. The weight and credibility of testimony of witnesses, and reconciliation of conflicts in the testimony, are matters entrusted exclusively to the jury as the triers of fact. State v. Sheffield, 676 S.W.2d 542, 547 (Tenn.1984). The jury resolved the issue of Ms. Hayes credibility as to the robbery of the victim as well as the commission of the homicide by their verdict. The issue is without merit.

There was other evidence introduced, in addition to that related heretofore, which led unerringly to defendant as the person responsible for the homicide of Dan West. Notwithstanding defendant’s insistence to the contrary, the weight of the evidence adduced at trial, was sufficient to support the jury verdict and any reasonable trier of fact could have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt based upon the evidence in the record. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979); T.R.A.P. 13(e).

In conjunction with the foregoing complaint, in reference to the sufficiency of the evidence, defendant submits that the trial court erred in admitting letters from him to his wife which were protected by the marital privilege. He cites several authorities, including Tennessee Rules of Evidence; and T.C.A. §§ 24-1-201, 14-25-106.

Tennessee Rule of Evidence 501, in effect at the time of defendant’s trial in May, 1990, states that: Privileges are to be recognized only as provided. The rule sets out that except as otherwise provided by constitution, statute, common law, by these or other rules promulgated by the Tennessee Supreme Court, no person has a privilege to:

(1) Refuse to be a witness;
(2) Refuse to disclose any matter;
(3) Refuse to produce any object or writing; or
(4) Prevent another from being a witness or disclosing any matter or producing any object or writing.

Rule 501 left in place T.C.A. § 24-1-201 which speaks of spousal competency to testify in civil actions. Therefore that statute is excluded from our consideration except, so far as the language it contains may assist us in determining the extent of spousal or competency privilege in criminal cases. In pertinent part, the statute provides that a husband and wife shall be competent witnesses, regardless of the disabilities of coverture, though neither husband nor wife shall testify as to any matter that occurred between them by virtue of or in consequence of the marital relation.

T.C.A. § 14-25-106, referred to in defendant’s brief, relates to public welfare programs and services for abused persons and is now found at T.C.A. § 71-6-106. It provides for compelled testimony in such cases and has nothing to do with criminal trials.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
876 S.W.2d 57, 1994 Tenn. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hurley-tenn-1994.