State v. James Mabry

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 12, 1998
Docket02C01-9702-CR-00059
StatusPublished

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

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT JACKSON

JANUARY 1998 SESSION FILED ) March 12, 1998 STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) ) C.C.A. No. 02C01-9702-CR-00059 Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellee, ) Appe llate Court C lerk ) Shelby County V. ) ) Hon. James C. Beasley, Sr., Special Judge JAMES H. MABRY, ) ) (First Degree Murder) Appellant. ) )

FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:

Seymour S. Rosenberg John Knox Walkup Attorney at Law Attorney General & Reporter 371 Carroll Avenue Memphis, TN 38105 Deborah A. Tullis Assistant Attorney General Cordell Hull Building, 2d Floor 425 Fifth Avenue North Nashville, TN 37243

William L. Gibbons District Attorney General

Charles W. Bell, Jr. Assistant District Attorney General 201 Poplar Avenue, Suite 301 Memphis, TN 38103

OPINION FILED: _______________________

MODIFIED AND REMANDED

PAUL G. SUMMERS, Judge OPINION

The appellant, James H. Mabry, was convicted by a jury of first degree

murder and sentenced to life in prison for the shooting death of his girlfriend,

Aretha Howard. The appellant’s sole issue for our review is whether the

evidence is sufficient regarding premeditation to support his conviction for first

degree murder. We reverse the judgment of first degree murder, modify it to

second degree murder, and remand the case to the trial court for the appellant’s

sentencing for second degree murder.

On the morning of July 29, 1995, Ms. Howard drove the appellant’s white

Cadillac to a neighbor’s home because the victim thought it was too hot to walk.

According to the appellant’s statement to the police, he had told Ms. Howard not

to drive the car because the engine light was coming on; and he feared the

engine would be damaged. A mechanic had told him that the car would not get

good gas mileage, and the appellant also thought that something else might be

wrong with the car. Ms. Howard stayed at the neighbor’s home for a couple of

hours and then returned to her house.

When the appellant returned to Ms. Howard’s house from Tunica,

Mississippi, he noticed that she had driven his Cadillac. According to the

appellant’s statement, he and Ms. Howard began arguing in the bedroom, and

the argument continued into the kitchen. The appellant’s statement indicates

that he went into the living room, and Ms. Howard then came into the living room.

The appellant stated that the two were shouting at each other when Ms. Howard

spit in his face and hit him with an ashtray. He indicated that he told her, “Stop, I

don’t want to hurt you!” He then indicated that the two shoved each other, and

then Ms. Howard went down the stairs and out the backdoor.

-2- The appellant’s statement further indicates that Ms. Howard got a

fireplace log on the outside of the house and started hitting the appellant’s

Cadillac. The appellant indicated that he went to the door and told her to stop

hitting his car, but she continued. The appellant then went outside. As Ms.

Howard continued to hit the appellant’s car, the appellant told her to stop

repeatedly. At trial, the appellant’s ex-wife, Maime Murphy, testified that there

were dents in the roof of the Cadillac, which she took possession of in early

August 1995. When Ms. Howard would not stop, the appellant stated that he

pulled a .38 revolver from his right front pants pocket. In his statement to the

police, the appellant stated that Ms. Howard “came toward me with the log in her

hand saying, ‘Well, shoot me then!’” The appellant shot her three times in rapid

succession. The appellant indicated that he was scared and did not know what

to do, so he left in his Cadillac and drove around for a while before returning to

Tunica. He was arrested several hours later by the Tunica County Sheriff’s

Department.

Ms. Khari Gray, a neighbor who lived across the street, heard shots and

looked out her bedroom window. She testified that she saw the victim lying on

her driveway. Although she did not see anyone else, she did see a yellow

Lincoln and a white Cadillac in the driveway. Ms. Gray called 911, and when she

looked out the window again, she saw the white Cadillac moving down the street.

According to testimony at trial, the appellant and Ms. Howard, who had

lived together intermittently for three to five years, had a turbulent relationship.

The appellant apparently telephoned the victim’s mother, Irma Foster, on the

morning of the shooting, July 29, 1995, and told her that she “was going to have

a dead daughter.” Also, he had threatened the victim during a telephone

conversation with Ms. Foster about a week before the shooting. According to

testimony at trial, Ms. Howard had wanted the appellant to move out of her

house.

-3- When the paramedics arrived, they found the victim lying on her driveway.

They placed a tarp over her body, but the wind kept blowing the tarp away. The

testimony at trial indicates that someone in a blue uniform, either a paramedic or

a police officer, got the logs from the side of the victim’s house and placed them

on the tarp. The appellant contends that none of the state’s witnesses recalled

seeing a log near Ms. Howard’s body, which he insists was there.

Dr. Wendy Gunther, an assistant medical examiner for Shelby County,

performed the autopsy on the victim. She testified that Ms. Howard was shot

three times: once in the pelvis, once in the shoulder, and once in the back of the

head, which was the fatal wound. She further testified that it was possible that

the wound to the back of the head could have occurred if Ms. Howard had fallen

forward from one of the other two shots in such a way that the bullet could have

entered the back of the head. Dr. Gunther also testified that the three shots

were fired from a distance of more than three feet, although she could not tell the

exact distance. She also testified that the autopsy revealed that Ms. Howard

had a blood alcohol level of .21 and that she had ingested cocaine as well. The

autopsy revealed that the level of alcohol in Ms. Howard’s brain was more than

half of her blood alcohol level, thus indicating that she had been drinking heavily

thirty minutes before her death. Dr. Gunther also testified that the combined

effects of cocaine and alcohol would produce decreased inhibition and an

increased adrenaline-like release.

The appellant argues that the evidence is insufficient regarding

premeditation to sustain the appellant’s conviction for first degree murder. The

appellant argues that the state “failed to show that Mr. Mabry’s mental state at

the time of the shooting was ‘sufficiently free from excitement and passion.’” The

appellant contends that he “was embroiled in a heated altercation with Ms.

Howard that began in her house and progressed out into the front driveway.” He

-4- further asserts that Ms. Howard, who was under the influence of alcohol and

cocaine at the time, spit in his face, threw an ashtray at him, hit his car with a log,

and threatened him with a log.

First, the appellant maintains that there is no evidence that he planned the

killing because before the shooting, he had been gambling at a casino. Second,

he contends that there is no evidence that he had any motive for the shooting.

Third, he argues that there is no evidence that he acted according to any

“preconceived design.” He theorizes that had he had a design he would not

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State v. James Mabry, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-james-mabry-tenncrimapp-1998.