State v. Mixon

983 S.W.2d 661, 1999 Tenn. LEXIS 33, 1999 WL 16281
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1999
Docket02S01-9804-CC-00034
StatusPublished
Cited by637 cases

This text of 983 S.W.2d 661 (State v. Mixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mixon, 983 S.W.2d 661, 1999 Tenn. LEXIS 33, 1999 WL 16281 (Tenn. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DROWOTA, J.

We granted this appeal to determine: (1) when a judgment becomes “final” and triggers the one-year coram nobis statute of limitations; and (2) whether a petition for writ of error coram nobis may be filed in the trial court during the pendency of an appeal as of right from a conviction.

We conclude that a judgment becomes final, and the one-year coram nobis statute of limitations begins to run, thirty days after entry of the judgment in the trial court if no post-trial motion is filed, or upon entry of an order disposing of a timely filed post-trial motion. As a result, in most instances, to be timely, a petition for writ of error coram nobis generally will be filed during the pen-dency of an appeal as of right.

Therefore, to promote judicial economy, when a convicted defendant files a petition for writ of error eoram nobis in the trial court, he or she must simultaneously file a motion in the appellate court to stay the appeal as of right until conclusion of the coram nobis proceeding in the trial court. The motion to stay will generally be granted by the appellate court. If, as in this case, an appeal is taken from the trial court’s denial of the petition for writ of error coram nobis, it will be consolidated with the appeal as of right. Because coram nobis is an extraordinary remedy to which resort should be had only if no other remedy is available, upon review, the appellate court must first address the issues raised in the defendant’s appeal as of right. If none of those issues are meritorious, the appellate court must then address the issues raised in the defendant’s coram nobis appeal.

In this case, a majority of the Court of Criminal Appeals 1 failed to address the issues raised by the defendant in his appeal as of right. Having considered those issues to prevent needless litigation, we conclude that the trial court erred by allowing the State to impeach the defendant’s testimony with a prior sexual battery conviction, and the error is not harmless. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Criminal Appeals, which remanded this case to the trial court for further findings on the coram nobis claim, is reversed. The defendant’s convictions of attempted rape, attempted incest, and sexual battery are vacated and the case is remanded to the trial court for a new trial. 2 Because of the double jeopardy prohibition against multiple punishments for the same offense, the defendant, upon retrial, may not be convicted of both attempted rape and sexual battery.

I.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Following a jury trial the defendant, Vaughn Mixon, was convicted of attempted *664 rape, attempted incest, sexual battery, public intoxication, and evading arrest. The proof at trial consisted of the testimony of the victim, A.M., 3 the defendant’s thirteen-year-old daughter. The victim testified that on April 16, 1994, she drove her father to visit one of his friends. Her father was unable to drive because he had consumed approximately eighteen cans of beer and was intoxicated.

After Mixon visited awhile with his friend, he and A.M. began the drive back home. The incident at issue in this appeal allegedly occurred on the return trip when the defendant instructed the victim to drive down a dirt road and stop the truck. The victim drove approximately one-half mile down the road and stopped the truck. The victim said the defendant had previously asked her if she had ever seen him naked, and once the truck was stopped, the victim said the defendant reached over, turned the key back on so the radio would play, placed his hand on her inner thigh, and commented that he “wanted a piece of pussy.” . The victim said she thought her father intended to rape her so she opened the truck door and jumped from the truck. As she was leaving the truck, the defendant grabbed her clothing and said he was only joking. The victim did not believe the defendant was joking, so she left the truck and ran down the dirt road and onto the main highway.

The victim ran approximately one-half mile down the main highway before she encountered another car driven by Keith Middleton, a reserve deputy with the Chester County Sheriff’s Office. Middleton was driving an unmarked car and was not in uniform at the time of this incident. Middleton testified that he saw the victim running “as fast as she could go” down the side of the highway. By the time Middleton turned his vehicle around and returned to offer assistance, the defendant was driving along beside the victim. When Middleton parked his car, the victim ran toward him crying and hysterically pleading for help. A.M. asked Middleton not to leave her alone with the defendant. Although Middleton repeatedly inquired as to the problem, neither the victim nor the defendant responded to his inquiries. The defendant told Middleton to mind his own business, and eventually, Middleton returned to his ear. As he drove away, Middleton observed the defendant grab the victim by the arm and throw her into the truck. The victim testified that once the defendant had forced her back into the truck he warned her not to “narc on him.”

When Middleton called the Sheriffs Department to report the incident and to give a description of the vehicle, he was dispatched to the Mixon home on Carroll Road to investigate a possible rape. When Middleton arrived, two other deputies were already at the scene. The victim was also at the residence and told the deputies that the defendant had attempted to rape her. When the defendant heard these charges, he fled. Middleton and another deputy located him in a drainage ditch about 200 yards from his home. He ran again, but was apprehended at a nearby outbuilding. When apprehended, the defendant’s speech was slurred and he smelled of alcohol. The defendant violently kicked the doors and windows of the patrol car and was eventually sprayed with mace.

Mixon testified in his own behalf and denied both that he had touched his daughter and that he had made sexually explicit comments to her. Mixon admitted that he was intoxicated on the day of the incident. He also admitted that he had asked the victim to stop the truck on the dirt road on the trip home, but said he had done so only because he needed to again relieve himself. When questioned about the victim’s hysterical behavior, Mixon said they had been arguing about an incident which occurred in Mississippi and about the victim dating an eighteen-year-old man. Mixon said A.M. made the allegations against him because he had intended to remove her from public school and enroll her in a private Christian academy to stop the relationship.

Mixon admitted that he had fled from the deputies when the victim told them that he had attempted to rape her, but said he had *665 done so only because he had not wanted to be arrested for a crime he had not committed. The defendant explained that he previously had been arrested when the victim had falsely accused him of physically abusing her. Mixon said he had been injured when he fled, and attributed his violent behavior in the patrol car to the pain from his injuries and to being intoxicated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
983 S.W.2d 661, 1999 Tenn. LEXIS 33, 1999 WL 16281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mixon-tenn-1999.