State v. Manning

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 27, 1998
Docket03C01-9501-CR-00012
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Manning (State v. Manning) 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. Manning, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT KNOXVILLE FILED NOVEMBER 1995 SESSION February 27, 1998

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) ) Appellee, ) No. 03C01-9501-CR-00012 ) ) Bradley County v. ) ) Honorable R. Steven Bebb, Judge ) ANGELA MANNING, ) (Especially aggravated kidnapping, especially ) aggravated robbery, aggravated rape (five Appellant. ) counts), especially aggravated burglary, ) conspiracy to commit aggravated burglary, ) theft of property valued over $1000)

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

Ashley L. Ownby Charles W. Burson 440 Worth Street, N.W. Attorney General of Tennessee P.O. Box 176 and Cleveland, TN 37364-0176 Amy L. Tarkington Assistant Attorney General of Tennessee 450 James Robertson Parkway Nashville, TN 37243-0493

Jerry N. Estes District Attorney General and Joseph Rehyansky Assistant District Attorney General 203 E. Madison Athens, TN 37303-0647

OPINION FILED:____________________

ESPECIALLY AGGRAVATED KIDNAPPING, ESPECIALLY AGGRAVATED ROBBERY, AGGRAVATED RAPE, CONSPIRACY TO COMMIT AGGRAVATED BURGLARY, AND THEFT OF PROPERTY VALUED OVER $1,000 CONVICTIONS AFFIRMED; ESPECIALLY AGGRAVATED BURGLARY CONVICTION MODIFIED TO AGGRAVATED BURGLARY

Joseph M. Tipton Judge OPINION

The defendant, Angela Manning, appeals as of right her convictions by a

jury in the Bradley County Criminal Court for especially aggravated kidnapping,

especially aggravated robbery, five counts of aggravated rape, all Class A felonies,

especially aggravated burglary, a Class B felony, conspiracy to commit aggravated

burglary, a Class D felony, and theft of property valued over one thousand dollars, a

Class D felony. As a Range I, standard offender, she received a twenty-five-year

sentence for each of the Class A felonies, a twelve-year sentence and twenty-five-

thousand-dollar fine for the especially aggravated burglary, a four-year sentence and

five-thousand-dollar fine for the conspiracy to commit aggravated burglary, and a four-

year sentence for the theft of property valued over one thousand dollars. All sentences

are to be served concurrently. The defendant contends that:

(1) the trial court committed reversible error by excluding impeachment evidence; and

(2) the trial court erred by allowing the victim to identify the defendant at trial.

We disagree with the defendant’s contentions. However, we recognize, as plain error,

that the defendant’s conviction for especially aggravated burglary is prohibited under

T.C.A. § 39-14-404(d). We reduce the especially aggravated burglary conviction to

aggravated burglary and impose a four-year sentence and ten-thousand-dollar fine for

the conviction.

This case involves events on the morning of October 31, 1993, at a house

where Faye Watson, her husband and parents resided. Mrs. Watson, a victim of the

offenses, testified that on October 30, 1993, she received a telephone call from

Shannon Blaylock, her former foster son, who asked whether she would be going to

church the next morning. She said that she told him that she was and that he replied

that he may see her there. The victim said that she did not attend church on October

2 31 because she felt sick. She stated that her daughter called her at 10:30 a.m. that

morning, after her parents and husband had left for church. Shortly after she got off the

telephone with her daughter, she was leaving the bathroom of the house on her way to

her bedroom when she heard a noise. She turned and saw a man, whom she later

identified as Scott Minton, in the living room. She also recognized Shannon Blaylock’s

voice coming from another room and noticed that the defendant was also standing in

the living room. She said that both Minton and the defendant had a knife but that

Minton assured her that he only wanted her money and that he would not hurt her. She

said that the defendant followed her and Minton to her bedroom where she gave Minton

approximately two hundred dollars out of her pocketbook and some money from her

piggy bank. She said that the defendant and Minton insisted that there was more

money, but she kept telling them that there was not.

The victim testified that Minton pushed her from the bedroom into the

living room and that the defendant pulled on her housecoat causing it to unbutton. The

victim testified that the defendant told Minton to burn her and that Minton used a cigar

to burn her several times. She said that Minton burned her three or four times on the

chest, twice on the breasts, once in the middle of her stomach, three times on her

buttocks, once in the center of her back, and once in the center of her right thigh. The

victim said that the defendant and Minton passed a gun back and forth to each other

during the attack and that the defendant burned her face with a cigarette.

The victim also detailed various sexual assaults on her that were

committed by the defendant and Minton. She said that the defendant ordered Minton to

perform anal sex on her, ordered Minton to make her perform fellatio on him and then

ordered Minton to urinate on her. The victim testified that Minton complied with the

defendant’s orders while the defendant assaulted her with a gun. The victim explained

that while Minton was up at her head the defendant placed the gun into her vagina.

3 The victim said that at one point the defendant dropped her shorts and sat on her face,

forcing her to perform cunnilingus. The victim said that the defendant performed

cunnilingus on her and that someone penetrated her vagina with a can of room

deodorizer. The victim said that the assaults ended when Minton got scared because

the gun discharged, shooting the victim in the leg.

During cross-examination, the victim was questioned about

inconsistencies between her testimony and prior statements that she had made. She

also admitted that in 1992 she wrote three or four thousand dollars worth of bad checks

to her employer, K-Mart. Although she admitted returning some of the goods she

purchased with the checks for a refund, she said that she could not remember what she

did with the money from the goods because she had a bad calcium problem at the time.

She explained that she had been suffering from a “calcium storm” and that she did not

know what she was doing. She said that as soon as she realized what had happened

she called the head of security for K-Mart.

Ellen Summers, Mrs. Watson’s daughter, testified that she lives next door

to the house where Mrs. Watson resided on the day of the offenses. She said that she

talked to the victim on the telephone at 10:30 that morning and that she did not see a

car drive up to the house that morning and did not hear a gunshot. Mrs. W atson’s

father testified that seven thousand, six hundred dollars was taken from his closet that

day. He said that only his wife knew where he kept the money.

Roxanne Blackwell, a deputy sheriff with the Bradley County Sheriff’s

Department testified that she was dispatched to go to the victim’s residence a little after

eleven on October 31. She said that when she arrived she found the victim lying on the

living room floor with burns on her face, chest, and buttocks and a gunshot wound in

her leg.

4 Phillip Matthews, a former detective with the Bradley County Sheriff’s

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