State v. Joseph Martin Thurman

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 31, 1999
Docket01C01-9706-CC-00231
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Joseph Martin Thurman (State v. Joseph Martin Thurman) 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. Joseph Martin Thurman, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE FILED AUGUST SESSION, 1998 March 31, 1999

Cecil W. Crowson STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) Appellate Court Clerk C.C.A. NO. 01C01-9706-CC-00231 ) Appellee, ) ) ) MARION COUNTY VS. ) ) HON. BUDDY PERRY JOS EPH MAR TIN TH URM AN,) JUDGE ) Appe llant. ) (Direct Appe al - Preme ditated First ) Degree M urder)

FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:

HOWARD B. BARNWELL, JR. JOHN KNOX WALKUP 829 McCallie Avenue Attorney General and Reporter Chattanooga, TN 37403 TIMOTHY F. BEHAN Assistant Attorney General 425 Fifth Avenu e North Nashville, TN 37243

J. MICHAEL TAYLOR District Attorney General

STE VE ST RAIN Assistant District Attorney Jasper, TN

ORDER FILED ________________________

AFFIRMED

JERRY L. SMITH, JUDGE OPINION

The appellan t, Joseph Martin Thurman, was convicted by a Marion Coun ty

jury of one (1) count of premeditated first degree murder and one (1) count of

arson. He was sentenced to concurrent sentences of life imprisonment for

murder and three (3) years for arson. On appeal, he claim s that the trial court

erred in (1) failing to s uppres s his statem ents to law enforcement authorities; and

(2) denying a continuance and/or sanctions after the state fa iled to com ply with

discovery requests. After a thorough review of the record before this Court, we

find no rev ersible erro r and affirm the judgm ent of the tria l court.

FACTS

On January 17, 1995, emergency fire personnel received a call regarding

a burning mobile home in Bledsoe County. The mobile home belonged to th e

appellant and his wife, Elizabeth Thurman. After approximately two hours,

emergency personnel were able to stop the fire, but the mobile home received

extensive damage as a result. Authorities later recovered the burned body of

Elizabeth Thurman in the area of the master bedroom.1

When questioned regarding the incident, appellant denied any knowledge

of how th e fire sta rted. Ap pellan t told investigators that he left the trailer at

appro ximate ly 2:00 p.m., and when he returned appro ximate ly one a nd on e-half

hours later, he found the trailer burning. However, upon further investigation,

1 According to W illiam Bark er, an arson investigator with the State Fire Marshall’s Office, the fire burned through the floor in the master bedroom, so that the victim’s body was actually on the ground in the area wh ere the b edroom had bee n previou sly.

-2- authorities were ab le to elimina te accide ntal caus es of the fire . Instead, the

investigato rs found evidenc e that acc elerants w ere use d in starting the fire.

Dr. Charles Harlan p erforme d an au topsy on the bod y of Elizabe th

Thurman. Dr. Harlan found a nega tive carb on m onoxid e level in the victim ’s

blood, which indicated that the victim died prior to the fire. Further, Dr. Harlan

found no soot or smoke in the victim’s trachea, which also indicated that the

victim’s death o ccurred prior to the fire . Dr. Harlan determ ined th at the vic tim did

not die as a result of natural causes, a gunshot wound or sharp force trauma, but

could not eliminate suffocation or strangulation as a cause of death. Due to the

extensive burn d ama ge to th e victim ’s body, the doctor could not determine the

precise c ause o f death.

In the course of his investigation, TBI Agent David Emiren interviewed the

appellant in May of 1995. Wh en confronte d with the informa tion that his wife did

not die as a result of the fire, app ellant told Emire n that Elizabeth committed

suicide by hang ing herse lf. He claimed that w hen he disc overed his wife’s bo dy,

there was a fire burning in the mid dle of the b edroom . Accord ing to app ellant,

he then decided to let the fire bu rn in orde r to conce al his wife’s s uicide.

After appellan t gave the statem ent, Emire n ask ed him if he would consent

to take a po lygraph e xamina tion, to which ap pellant ag reed. At the conclusion

of this examin ation, app ellant cha nged h is story onc e again . In this statem ent,

appellant admitted that he and his wife we re having marital problems. On the day

of the fire, he and Elizabeth had gotten into an argument in the master bedroom.

Elizabe th left the bedroom and return ed with a jug o f keros ene. T he victim then

poured the kerosene onto some clothes on the floor and ign ited a lighter.

Appellant told Agent Emiren that he gra bbed the ligh ter from her ha nds, th rew it

down, and the room caugh t on fire. The victim physically attacked him, and in an

-3- effort to subdue her, the appellant placed his hands around his wife’s neck and

choked her. App ellant state d, “I don’t kn ow wha t happe ned. I don ’t know if I

broke her neck or if I just choked her too hard. The next thing I knew was that we

were laying on the floor an d I was shak ing her trying to get he r up.” Appellant

told Emiren that he then left the trailer, not kn owing wheth er the fire was s till

burning .

Appellant was placed under arrest and subsequently charged with first

degree murder a nd arson. At trial, the state presented testimony that the

appellant had a long-term roma ntic relation ship with Michelle Hamby, a co-worker

of appellant and the victim. Althoug h Ham by testified tha t her relation ship with

appellant had term inated in Octo ber 19 94, sh e ack nowle dged that sh e aga in

became intimate with the ap pellant approxim ately one mo nth after Elizabeth’s

death. Other witnesses testified that appellant had announc ed his desire to kill

his wife and h ad even solicited an other to commit the crime in late November of

1994. The state also presented evidence of various insura nce p olicies w herein

the appellant was the beneficiary and would gain substantial amounts of money

in the eve nt of his wife’s dea th. Furthe r, an em ployee w ith the Tennessee Valley

Federal Credit U nion testified that eight days prior to his wife’s death, the

appellant opened a single checking account and named his son as the

beneficia ry.

The appellant tes tified in h is own beha lf at trial. Re gardin g his w ife’s

death, the ap pellant testified in conformity with his last statement to Agent

Emiren, stating tha t he accid entally cho ked his w ife to death. He stated that he

did not know whether the trailer was on fire when he left. When he returned, the

trailer had burned partially, and the appellant retrieved some gasoline and poured

it in the h allway, caus ing the fire to ign ite onc e aga in. W hen a sked why he did

-4- such a thing , appe llant rep lied, “I tho ught m aybe th at if it burned the rest of the

way up that people would think it was an accident and think that she died in a fire,

‘cause I know ed nobod y would believe a nything I told them .”

The jury returned guilty verdicts for one (1) count of premeditated first

degree murder and one (1) count of arson. From his convictions, appellant

brings this ap peal.

MOTION TO SUPPRESS

Appellant conten ds that the trial cou rt erred in de nying a m otion to

suppress his statements given to Agent Emiren. He claims that, at the time he

was questioned , he had bee n seized witho ut probable cause; therefore, the

statem ents should have been suppressed as a product of the illegal seizure (so-

called “fruit of the poiso nous tree”). A ddition ally, app ellant argues that his

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