State v. Litton

161 S.W.3d 447, 2004 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 849, 2004 WL 2237763
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 5, 2004
DocketE2003-00782-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 161 S.W.3d 447 (State v. Litton) 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. Litton, 161 S.W.3d 447, 2004 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 849, 2004 WL 2237763 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

JERRY L. SMITH, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which DAVID H. WELLES and JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JJ., joined.

The appellant, Larry F. Litton, was indicted on charges of rape in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-13-503. A jury found the appellant guilty of the lesser-included offense of sexual battery and recommended a $3,000 fine. The appellant was sentenced to a one-year sentence as a Range I Standard Offender, but the trial court ordered the appellant to serve two years on probation in lieu of incarceration. The trial court also imposed the $3,000 fine recommended by the jury. After the denial of a motion for new trial, this appeal ensued. The appellant challenges: (1) the trial court’s decision to allow the testimony of Dr. Scott Levine in which he recounted a conversation with the victim that occurred several weeks after the incident; (2) the trial court’s instruction to the jury that a tape-recorded conversation between the victim and the appellant was an “alleged admission;” and (3) the sufficiency of the evidence. For the following reasons, we affirm the decision of the trial court.

Factual Background

On Monday, October 23, 2000, the victim, Christy Trent, was admitted to Bristol Regional Medical Center for a surgical procedure. The victim was licensed as a nurse, but did not work at the time of the procedure due to various physical ailments. The victim was scheduled to have a feeding tube installed because of a condition, called “chronic aspiration.” As a result of chronic aspiration when the victim swallowed food, it passed into her lungs rather than her stomach. The insertion of the feeding tube was designed to alleviate this problem.

On the day the victim was scheduled for the procedure, the appellant, a licensed registered nurse anesthetist, was working in the operating room at Bristol Regional Medical Center. The appellant introduced himself to the victim and explained that he would be responsible for both administering and monitoring her medications both prior to and during her procedure. The victim specifically asked the appellant to check on her after the procedure to make sure she was alright. The victim also com *450 plained to the appellant that her husband did not accompany her to the hospital for the procedure.

Prior to the feeding tube procedure, the victim had undergone at least thirty-three surgeries for various physical ailments. One of these surgeries required a morphine pump to be inserted into her spine for pain relief from her back problems; the morphine pump was in place at the time of the feeding tube procedure.

The victim remained in the hospital until October 27, 2000. Several days later, after calling one of her psychologists and an attorney, and having a conversation with her husband, the victim called the Bristol Tennessee Police Department to report that the appellant raped her while she was a patient at Bristol Regional Medical Center.

The appellant contacted Investigator Debbie Richmond-MeCauley with the Bristol Police Department. Several days later, Investigator Richmond-MeCauley spoke with the victim. According to the victim, the appellant visited her in her hospital room on Tuesday, the day after her surgery, for no apparent reason. When he left, he told her that he may come back to visit her again the next night. On Wednesday afternoon, the appellant telephoned the victim in her hospital room to tell her that he would come see her later that evening. At approximately 2:30 a.m. on Thursday morning, the appellant telephoned the victim and invited her to meet him in the “on call” room. The victim told the appellant “no” and he informed her that he would “run up” and see her. The appellant arrived at the victim’s room about fifteen minutes later.

The victim claimed that once in her room, the appellant crossed the room to the windows and drew the shades tighter. The victim claimed that the appellant then sat on her bed and spoke with her briefly. After some light conversation, the victim claimed that the appellant leaned over the rail of her bed and started kissing her on the mouth and “stuck his tongue” in her mouth. The victim claimed that she pushed the appellant away, told him to stop, and told him that he should leave. Then, according to the victim, the appellant grabbed her right hand and said, “Look what you did,” placing her hand on his erect penis over his clothing. The victim pulled her hand away and again told the appellant to leave. The victim stated that the appellant then walked around the bed, pulled down his scrub pants and exposed himself to the victim. The appellant then allegedly “leaned over and took my head again and forced his penis in my mouth.” The victim claimed that she bit the appellant’s penis and, as a result, he removed it from her mouth. After removing his penis from her mouth, the victim claimed that the appellant tried to get her to “masturbate him.” When she refused, the victim claimed that the appellant “finished the job,” ejaculating quite a bit on a pillowcase that he grabbed from a bedside table. After ejaculating, the victim claimed that the appellant went into the bathroom and cleaned himself up. When he emerged from the bathroom, the victim claimed that he acted as if nothing had happened. The appellant told the victim that he also worked some hours at Norton Hospital in a nearby Virginia town and that she. could call him there. The appellant instructed her to say that she was his cousin when she called.

After hearing the victim’s claims, Investigator Richmond-MeCauley instructed the victim to place a call to the appellant at Norton Hospital. Investigator Richmond-MeCauley provided the victim with a tape recorder to record the conversation and instructed the victim to try to get the appellant to admit to the incident during *451 the phone call. A phone call was placed to Norton Hospital and a message was left for the appellant to return the call. Approximately two hours later, the appellant returned the call and the victim recorded the conversation. Investigator Richmond-McCauley was not present during the telephone conversation.

As a result of the victim’s allegations, the Sullivan County Grand Jury indicted the appellant on charges of rape in February of 2001. A lengthy trial was held in November of 2001. During the trial, the victim maintained her version of the events and stated that she did not report the incident while still a patient at the hospital because she was “just scared” and “just clammed up.”

At trial, the jury learned that the victim had a history of psychiatric problems. The victim admitted that in 1991 she faked an attempted murder in order to get sympathy from her husband. 1 During this incident, the victim shot herself and blamed it on an unidentified assailant. The victim also admitted that she was a patient at Woodridge Psychiatric Hospital in 1996 after she ingested 95 pills in an apparent suicide attempt. During this visit, the victim was diagnosed with adjustment disorder with disturbance of emotion and behavior, moderate to severe major recurrent depression and personality disorder. The victim also admitted that she again attempted suicide in 1998 and was again admitted to Woodridge after ingesting 40 pills.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 S.W.3d 447, 2004 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 849, 2004 WL 2237763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-litton-tenncrimapp-2004.