State v. Mitchell Ashley

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 20, 1998
Docket01C01-9706-CC-00219
StatusPublished

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

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

FILED AT NASHVILLE August 20, 1998

Cecil W. Crowson APRIL 1998 SESSION Appellate Court Clerk

STATE OF TENNESSEE, )

) No. 01-C-01-9706-CC-00219

Appellee, )

) Franklin County

v. )

) Honorable Buddy D. Perry, Judge

MITCHELL D. ASHLEY, )

) (Theft of Property; Possession of

Appellant. ) a Controlled Substance)

FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:

1 Philip A. Condra John Knox Walkup

District Public Defender Attorney General & Reporter

204 Betsy Pack Drive 425 Fifth Avenue, North

Jasper, TN 37347 Nashville, TN 37243

Ellen H. Pollack

Assistant Attorney General

425 Fifth Avenue, North

Nashville, TN 37243

James M. Taylor

District Attorney General

265 Third Avenue, Suite 300

Dayton, TN 37321

William B. Copeland

Assistant District Attorney General

Franklin County Courthouse

Winchester, TN 37398

2 OPINION FILED: _____________________________________

AFFIRMED

L. T. LAFFERTY, SPECIAL JUDGE

OPINION

The appellant, Mitchell D. Ashley (defendant), was convicted of theft of property, a

Class D felony, and possession of a controlled substance, a Class A misdemeanor by a jury

of his peers.1 The trial court found the defendant a standard offender and imposed a Range

I sentence of four (4) years in the Department of Correction for the theft conviction and eleven

months and twenty-nine days in the county jail for the drug charge. The defendant was also

1 The jury acquitted the defendant of burglary charges.

3 fined $2,500. The trial court ordered that the two sentences run concurrently for an effective

sentence of four years.

The defendant presents four issues for review. He contends the evidence is insufficient as

a matter of law to support the convictions. He also contends the trial court erred (a) by denying

his motion to suppress, (b) by instructing the jury on joint and constructive possession of drugs,

and (c) by imposing an excessive sentence. After a thorough review of the record, the briefs

submitted by the parties, and the law governing the issues presented for review, it is the

opinion of this court that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.

I. Facts

In the winter of 1994, Ricky Foster owned and operated Cumberland Valley Concrete in

Winchester. On December 12, 1994, he closed for the day as usual around 5 p.m.

When Mr. Foster returned the next morning, he discovered the back door to his business

had been pried open and most of his office equipment and supplies were missing.

Among the items stolen were telephones, a copy machine and stand, vacuum cleaners,

word processor, bank bags with $1,000 cash and gift certificates, power drills and chargers,

tools, microwave, first-aid kit, paper products (towels, napkins, plates), pencils and pens,

scratch pads, calculators, mobile radios, cleaning products, an ink stamp with the Cumberland

Valley Concrete emblem, and a Christmas poinsettia. He estimated the value of the items at

$6,000 not including the cash or gift certificates. His insurance company paid him $2,000 for

the theft.

4 Mr. Foster said he found some smaller items, such as pens and a sewing kit, scattered

outside the building. A die set was found about 200 yards from the office toward the

defendant’s house.

The defendant, Mitchell D. Ashley, lived in a house about 200 or 300 yards away from the

concrete company. He lived there with his girlfriend, Lora Hacker.2 Ashley’s house was on the

corner of Shephard and Third Streets. The house faced Shephard, and Third Street ran

parallel to the side of the house. A driveway off Third Street ran behind the defendant’s home.

A small porch was located toward the rear of the house on the side opposite Third Street.

Third Street provided access to the concrete company.

While leaving the concrete company office on December 14th via Third Street, Mr. Foster

passed the defendant’s house. Through two windows near the rear porch he saw two vacuum

cleaners.3 Through a window facing Third Street he saw a microwave oven resembling the

one taken from his business. His suspicions were raised because he had not seen a

microwave there before. Mr. Foster explained that it was dark outside, the windows were not

obstructed, and the lights were on inside the house making the items inside visible.

2 At the time of the theft, Lora Hacker was the defendant’s girlfriend. She was tried as a co- defendant. While married to the defendant’s cousin, Eric Ashley, Hacker moved in with Mitchell Ashley and at the time of sentencing was pregnant with his child.

3 The defendant challenged Mr. Foster’s claim that he could see the vacuum cleaners through windows next to the back porch. The porch was not visible from the area of Third Street directly abutting the defendant’s home. Mr. Foster explained that coming from the concrete company Third Street curved. Mr. Foster said the defendant’s back porch and windows were visible from the curve in the road. While photographs of the home included in the record show the view obstructed by trees, the victim pointed out that the theft occurred in the winter and the trees did not have leaves.

5 He drove by the house a second time to verify what he thought he saw. He then called the

police station and told Investigator Betsy Green.

On the same day, Investigator Green went to the defendant’s home, knocked on the door,

and asked Lora Hacker if she could speak with the defendant. At some point while waiting on

Ms. Hacker or the defendant to come to the door, Green said she saw through the door and

the nearby windows what looked like some of the stolen items sitting on a dresser.4 They were

partially covered with a blanket. She could also see two vacuum cleaners.

She told the defendant why she was there and asked to search his house. He gave verbal

consent and then signed a written consent form. Other officers came to assist Green in the

search. The defendant cooperated and pointed out various items in the house that were stolen.

During the search, Green discovered a tray containing marijuana in a kitchen cabinet.5

The defendant told Green he found the items on the side of the road. Green told jurors,

“Initially he said that that night they’d made several trips down to the Speedway or I think it’s

also being referred to as the Amoco station. At one point him and his children went and then

at one point him and Mrs. Hacker went.” He said the items were stacked up in two locations.

He said he did not know the concrete company office had been burglarized. He told Green

there were two or three people that seemed to be moving stuff out of the office and piling it up

outside.

4 Green testified during the motion to suppress that she noticed the items after the initial knock and while waiting for Lora Hacker to come to the door. At trial, she testified that she noticed the items after knocking, speaking with Lora Hacker and while waiting on the defendant to come to the door.

5 A forensic chemist from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations testified that the material recovered was marijuana weighing .13 grams. He said the marijuana was “just enough to test.”

6 Green said some of the gift certificates taken from the office were later found in a grocery

store parking lot and some at a laundromat. The money was never recovered.

Mr.

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