State v. Kendricks

947 S.W.2d 875, 1996 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 582
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 25, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by126 cases

This text of 947 S.W.2d 875 (State v. Kendricks) 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. Kendricks, 947 S.W.2d 875, 1996 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 582 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

PEAY, Judge.

The defendant was indicted for and convicted by a jury of first-degree murder. He was sentenced to life imprisonment. He now appeals as of right raising the following issues:

1. The evidence was insufficient to support his conviction;
2. The trial court erred when it found a child witness to have been properly qualified to testify;
3. The trial court erred when it limited the defendant’s attempt to introduce prior statements of a witness;
4. The trial court erred when it allowed the prosecution to cross-examine the defendant about prior convictions;
5. The trial court erred when it allowed the State to produce a witness whose identity had not been disclosed to the defendant;
6. The trial court erred when it allowed hearsay testimony under the excited utterance exception;
7. The state violated Brady v. Maryland when it failed to disclose exculpatory information to the defendant;
8. The trial court erred when it did not give a limiting instruction on the use of an “excited utterance;” and
9. The trial court erred when it included an instruction on flight in its charge to the jury.

Because we find no merit in the defendant’s grounds for this appeal, we affirm the judgment below.

On March 6, 1994, at approximately 10:00 p.m., the defendant drove to the gas station at which Lisa Kendrick, his wife and the victim, worked. With him in the car were their four-year-old daughter and three-year-old son. These children were sitting in car seats in the back seat of the station wagon the defendant was driving. Also in the car, on the front passenger floorboard, was the defendant’s loaded 30.06 hunting rifle.

The defendant pulled into the station, parked, and went into the market portion of the station where his wife worked as a cashier. He asked her to come outside, which she did. She and the defendant went to the car where she spoke briefly to the children. The defendant retrieved the rifle from the front passenger floorboard and carried it to the back of the car. At that point, the weapon fired once, the bullet striking the victim in her chest and killing her almost instantly.

After the victim fell to the parking lot, the defendant briefly bent over her body, put the gun back in the ear, and drove toward the airport a short distance away. On the way, he threw the rifle out of the car. Once he arrived at the airport, he called 911 and reported that he had shot his wife. Before the defendant left the gas station, he took no action to assist the victim in any way.

Timothy Shurd Benton, a customer, was in the market when the defendant entered. He testified that the defendant had asked the cashier “to step outside, he had something to show her.” Benton left the market, got in his car and started to leave the parking lot. He testified that, as he had begun to leave, he heard an “explosion.” He looked over his shoulder out the window of his car and saw the defendant holding a rifle “pointed straight up in the air.” He also saw the victim lying on her back on the parking lot. After deciding that another person in the market was aware of the situation and would call for help, Benton followed the defendant to the airport, where he contacted an airport police officer.

*879 Lennell Shepheard was also in the market at the time the defendant entered. He testified that he had seen the defendant and his wife leave the store, that the defendant had not appeared angry or hostile, and that the victim had shown no signs of fear when she went outside at the defendant’s request. Shepheard remained in the store until he heard the rifle shot. At that point, he opened the market door and looked outside to see what had happened. He testified that he had seen the defendant shut the back passenger door and then lean over the victim’s body and state, “I told you so” approximately six times.

Endia Kendrick, the defendant’s four-year-old daughter, testified on direct examination that she had seen her father shoot her mother and that her mother had had her arms up at the time. However, on cross-examination, Endia admitted that she hadn’t actually seen the shooting.

Dr. Frank King, the Hamilton County Medical Examiner, testified that the victim had died of a single gunshot wound to the chest that entered her body in the left chest at forty-nine inches above the heel and exited her body at the left back at forty-nine and one-half inches above the heel.

The defendant testified that he had been moving the rifle from the front of the ear to the back at the request of the victim and that it had discharged accidentally. He testified that he had been shifting it from one hand to the other when it went off. He testified that he had not pulled the trigger. He steadfastly denied that he had intended to shoot the victim, and claimed that he had been carrying the rifle in the car because he sometimes cleaned apartments near an area where he felt a gun was necessary for personal protection. He also denied making any statements as he bent over the victim, and testified that he had taken no action to assist her because he knew she was dead. The defendant also testified that he and the victim had agreed on an irreconcilable differences divorce, that an attempted reconciliation had recently failed, and that he suspected that she had had or was having an affair. He denied that he was upset or angry at his wife about the status of their relationship.

In support of his contention that the rifle fired accidentally, the defendant relied on the testimony of Officer Steve W. Miller. Officer Miller testified that he had shot himself in the foot with the rifle when he was removing it from the trunk of his car after recovering it from where the defendant had thrown it. Officer Miller testified that he had shot himself accidentally. He further testified that he could not recall whether or not his finger had been on the trigger of the gun when it fired.

Kelly Fite, a firearms examiner, testified that he had examined and tested the rifle and that, in his opinion, “[t]he only way that you can fire this rifle without breaking it is by pulling the trigger.”

After the defense closed its proof, the State called Martha Kay Maston as a “rebuttal” witness. Maston testified that she had been working as a public safety officer for the Chattanooga Metropolitan Airport Police on the night of the shooting. On finding the defendant at the airport, she saw the two children in the back seat of the ear. She testified that she had gotten the children out and that they were both “very upset and hysterical.” She further testified that “when I got [the little girl] out of the ear, she just put her arms around me and she stated that she had told daddy not to shoot mommy but he did and she fell.” Maston testified that the defendant’s daughter had not made any other statements and that his son had not said anything.

The defendant first challenges the sufficiency of the proof, arguing that it is not sufficient to support a conviction of first-degree murder.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
947 S.W.2d 875, 1996 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kendricks-tenncrimapp-1996.