State v. Kilburn

782 S.W.2d 199
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 11, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 782 S.W.2d 199 (State v. Kilburn) 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. Kilburn, 782 S.W.2d 199 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinions

[201]*201OPINION

BYERS, Judge.

The defendant, Billy Kilburn, was convicted of first degree murder and employing a firearm in the commission of a felony. He was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder conviction, enhanced by five years for employing a firearm in the commission of a felony. This sentence was made consecutive to a sentence from a Lake County conviction.

Following the denial of his motion for new trial and his amended motion for new trial the defendant appealed. Nine issues are raised in this appeal. The first three issues challenge the jury selection phase of the trial. The remaining issues on appeal include challenges to the following:

1. Admission of a cartridge case without a proper showing of chain of custody;
2. Allowing two lay witnesses to testify about the “freshness” of a mark on the victim’s vehicle’s windshield;
' 3. Allowing a witness to testify about the alibi of another suspect;
4. Refusal to allow certain proof regarding the intimate relationship between the victim’s wife and a male suspect;
5. Refusal to allow testimony by a witness regarding the purported confession of that witness’s former boyfriend; and
6. The sufficiency of the convicting evidence to support the jury’s finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the case is remanded for new trial.

In the early morning hours of September 14, 1986, the Tiptonville Chief of Police was contacted by the defendant and asked to send an ambulance to the home of Walter Lee Hayes. The defendant said Mr. Hayes had been found dead in the front yard.

When officers arrived at the victim’s home he was found lying in the front yard, dead from a gunshot wound to the head. The defendant, along with Freida Hayes, Kelly Patton, Gerald Reed, and several others were standing in the yard. Freida Hayes is the defendant’s sister. She was married to the victim at the time of the murder. The defendant, Freida, and Kelly reported finding the victim when they returned to the house after visiting a bar in Hickman, Kentucky.

An investigation of the scene was conducted but the area was not secured. Several days after the murder further investigation of the scene was conducted and a .22 caliber shell casing was found near the side of the victim’s home. A subsequent autopsy of the victim revealed he had been killed by a .22 caliber hyper-velocity round fired from a Marlin or Marlin product rifle.

The son of the victim testified he found a crack in the windshield of the victim’s truck the morning after the murder. The truck was parked near where the body was found. The son and another witness testified the crack appeared to have been made by a projectile of some type striking the outside of the windshield.

Approximately ten months after the murder a .22 caliber Marlin Model 60 rifle was found by a fisherman in the mud along the Mississippi River. The serial number of this rifle matched the serial number of a gun purchased in 1985 by Kelly Patton. The defendant admitted he had been given a .22 caliber rifle by Kelly Patton. He offered various explanations for how he lost possession of the gun and how it ended up in the Mississippi river.

The shell casing and the rifle were examined by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation crime laboratory. The shell casing was manufactured by C.C.I. The bullet removed from the victim was also examined by the T.B.I. lab. It was a .22 hollow-point-round possibly of a Winchester-Western manufacturer. It had been fired from a Marlin rifle but because of its condition it was impossible to determine if it was fired from the defendant’s rifle.

Larry Boone, an inmate of the Lake County Jail, testified the defendant, who he met while incarcerated with him, admitted [202]*202killing the victim. Boone said the defendant described the marital problems between Freída and the victim and a fight that occurred on the evening of the murder. He also said the defendant told him the murder weapon was thrown into the river shortly after the killing.

William Larry Morgan testified the defendant told him before the murder that he intended to kill the victim because of Freida’s marital problems and because the victim had physically abused Freida’s children. After the murder the defendant told Morgan “they” had been planning the murder for four or five months.

The defendant offered the testimony of Mike Buckalew. Buckalew testified about a fight between the victim and the man Freída Hayes was purportedly having an intimate relationship with before and during her marriage to the victim. Other evidence was offered to show the relationship between Freida and this man.

Defendant’s first three issues challenge the jury selection process as it related to three prospective jurors. He claims he was denied a fair and impartial jury, because: 1) the trial court improperly forced him to use a peremptory challenge to remove a prospective juror who was the prosecutor in a case pending in the same court, 2) the trial court allowed the state to challenge a prospective juror who said she had formed the conviction the defendant was innocent and would require proof to alter that perception, and 3) the trial court allowed a juror to be empaneled, despite her admission of having knowledge of the instant case and defendant’s prior conviction for murder in a neighboring county.

As a preliminary matter it should be noted there is no proof in this record regarding the use of peremptory challenges by the defendant. The record shows which jurors were excluded, but does not reveal whether the challenge was made by the defendant or the state. Only when a defendant exhausts all his peremptory challenges and is forced to later accept an incompetent juror (propter defectum) can he complain about the jury composition. State v. Coury, 697 S.W.2d 373 (Tenn.Cr. App.1985). Absent proof on the use of peremptory challenges it is necessary for the defendant to show actual prejudice or bias (propter affectum) in order to prevail on his jury complaints. See Toombs v. State, 197 Tenn. 229, 270 S.W.2d 649 (1954).

Generally, a juror is subject to challenge if he has a suit pending for trial at the same term of court as the present litigation. See Durham v. State, 182 Tenn. 577, 188 S.W.2d 555 (1945). The fundamental question presented by this issue is not whether the defendant was forced to use a peremptory challenge; but rather, was he denied the constitutional right to trial before an impartial jury. Tenn.Const. Art. I, sec. 9.

The trial court, in denying defendant’s challenge of this juror for cause, said the juror did not have a case pending for trial in the same term of court. This finding is incorrect.

The juror in question was the prosecutor in a case scheduled for trial a few days after the defendant. Further, this defendant and the defendant in the case involving the juror were both represented by the Public Defender’s office.

A prosecutor in a criminal case is a party. Partin v. Henderson,

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Bluebook (online)
782 S.W.2d 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kilburn-tenncrimapp-1989.