State v. Jimmy Davis

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 1, 2010
Docket03C01-9708-CC-00371
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Jimmy Davis (State v. Jimmy Davis) 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. Jimmy Davis, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT KNOXVILLE FILED SEPTEMBER 1998 SESSION May 5, 1999

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) ) Appellee, ) No. 03C01-9708-CC-00371 ) ) Blount County v. ) ) Honorable D. Kelly Thomas, Jr., Judge ) JIMMY DAVIS, ) (Delivery of more than one-half gram of ) cocaine -- two counts) ) Appellant. )

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

Mack Garner John Knox Walkup District Public Defender Attorney General of Tennessee 421 High Street and Maryville, TN 37804 Todd R. Kelley (AT TRIAL AND ON APPEAL) Assistant Attorney General of Tennessee 425 Fifth Avenue North Gerald L. Gulley, Jr. Nashville, TN 37243-0493 P.O. Box 1708 Knoxville, TN 37901-1708 Michael L. Flynn (ON APPEAL) District Attorney General and Philip Morton Assistant District Attorney General Blount County Courthouse 363 Court Street Maryville, TN 37804

OPINION FILED:____________________

CONVICTIONS AFFIRMED; REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING

Joseph M. Tipton Judge OPINION

The defendant, Jimmy Davis, appeals as of right following his convictions

by a jury in the Blount County Circuit Court for two counts of delivering more than one-

half gram of cocaine, a Class B felony. He was sentenced for each conviction as a

Range I, standard offender to nine years confinement in the Department of Correction,

to be served concurrently. He received a fifty-thousand-dollar fine for each conviction.

The defendant presents the following issues for our review:

(1) whether the evidence is sufficient to support his convictions;

(2) whether the trial court erred by refusing to allow cross- examination regarding a confidential informant’s use of drugs while on probation;

(3) whether the trial court erred by allowing the jury, during deliberations, to listen to an audiotape of the drug transaction; and

(4) whether the trial court erred by imposing an excessive sentence and by failing to sentence the defendant to probation or community corrections.

We affirm the convictions but remand the case for resentencing.

At trial, Cheryl Denise Androws testified that she contacted the Blount

Metro Narcotics Unit (BMNU) in 1996 because she was using cocaine and needed help

with treatment. She said that she had convictions for burglary and for writing worthless

checks. She said she wanted to do undercover work for the BMNU because she

needed money. She said the BMNU employed her to purchase drugs, which she did

eight or nine times. She said that she was paid fifty dollars for each transaction. She

said she received drug treatment at Cornerstone and is drug-free.

Ms. Androws testified that she knew the defendant by the name Sam and

had seen him about sixty times. She said that on September 6, 1996, she called a

house on Howe Street and spoke to the defendant. She said she asked the defendant

2 if she could buy cocaine from him, and she arranged to meet him at the house. She

said she then called the BMNU and spoke with Agent Scott Johnson. She said she

went to the BMNU office where she was wired with an electronic audiotape recorder.

She testified that agents searched both her and her car before she was wired. She

said she received one hundred dollars with which to purchase the drugs. She

explained that the agents followed her to the house on Howe Street, and she went

inside the house.

Ms. Androws testified that once inside the house, she talked to the

defendant for a while because she wanted to get his full name, and she said the

defendant told her his last name was Davis. She said she gave him one hundred

dollars, and he gave her five packages of cocaine. She said another man whom she

did not know was present during the transaction. She said she then drove to a

predetermined location to meet with the agents, and she gave them the drugs. She

said that the agents searched both her and her car again. She testified that she was

absolutely certain that the defendant was the man who sold her the drugs. She said

she later learned that the audiotape had malfunctioned, and the transaction was not

recorded. She stated that after the first transaction, she went to the BMNU office and

identified a photograph of the defendant.

Ms. Androws testified that on September 17, 1996, she participated in

another drug transaction with the defendant. She testified that she went through the

same process that she had gone through for the first transaction. She testified that

while she was at the house on Howe Street purchasing the drugs from the defendant,

someone handed her a marijuana cigarette. She testified that after the transaction, she

met with the agents and turned over the marijuana cigarette and the cocaine. She

testified that the second transaction was successfully recorded, and a tape of the

transaction was played for the jury.

3 On cross-examination, Ms. Androws testified that she had been involved

with cocaine for six or seven years but that at the time of the trial, she had not used

cocaine for almost one year. She said she stopped using cocaine in August 1996 when

she started treatment. She admitted that she had more than five worthless check

convictions. She also admitted that she was convicted of burglary in March 1994 and

pled guilty to forgery in May 1995. She stated that she made about nine transactions

for the BMNU and that she earned about four hundred and fifty dollars. She testified

that she did not have a regular job during the period in which she worked for the BMNU.

She admitted that she was charged on July 31, 1996 with stealing money from Cost-

Cutters and that she was arrested and charged in November with burglary and theft

from Wal-Mart while she was on community corrections for a prior conviction. She said

the charges were dismissed upon her agreement to pay restitution, which she paid in

full. She denied that the Wal-Mart charges were dismissed as part of her agreement

with the BMNU. She stated that she did not use cocaine after she began working with

the BMNU.

Eric Gutridge testified that he is an officer with the BMNU. He stated that

he knew the defendant in September 1996 and that he helped set up the first

transaction between the defendant and Ms. Androws. He said that although the

audiotape recorder malfunctioned, he listened to the transaction as it was happening.

He said that during the transaction, Ms. Androws talked to a man she called Sam, and

the man told her that his last name was Davis. Officer Gutridge said Ms. Androws

bought cocaine from the man and then met him and other officers to turn over the

drugs. Officer Gutridge stated that he had previously seen the defendant’s car at the

house on Howe Street, and after the first transaction, he showed the defendant’s

picture to Ms. Androws who identified him immediately as the man she knew as Sam.

He testified that on November 4, 1996, after the second transaction, he obtained a

warrant and searched the house at Howe Street. He said he found a document from

the Tennessee Department of Safety bearing the name Jimmy Davis.

4 On cross-examination, Officer Gutridge testified that he was present when

Ms. Androws came to the BMNU office and volunteered her services. He said Ms.

Androws said that she needed money for drug treatment and that she wanted to

purchase drugs for them. He said Ms. Androws did not tell them that she had felony

convictions. He said that during the first transaction, Ms.

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