State v. Perry

13 S.W.3d 724, 1999 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 396, 1999 WL 233522
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 22, 1999
Docket01C01-9710-CC-00467
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 13 S.W.3d 724 (State v. Perry) 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. Perry, 13 S.W.3d 724, 1999 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 396, 1999 WL 233522 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

*727 OPINION

WADE, Presiding Judge.

The defendant, Jeffery L. Perry, was convicted in the second degree murder of his father, Leon Perry. The trial court sentenced the defendant, who qualified as a violent offender, to fifteen years imprisonment in a special needs facility. In this appeal of right, the defendant presents the following issues for review:

(I) whether the evidence is sufficient to support the conviction for second degree murder;
(II) whether the trial court erred by denying the defendant’s motion to suppress his custodial statement; and
(III) whether Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-11-501, the statute governing the affirmative defense of insanity, is unconstitutional.

We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Late in the evening of November 5, 1995, Donald Shirley of the Dickson County Sheriffs Department was dispatched to the Perry residence to investigate a shooting. Upon his arrival at the residence, Deputy Shirley surveyed the front yard while Sergeant Steve Lovell went to the rear of the house. When he heard Sergeant Lovell order the defendant to put his hands in the air, Deputy Shirley ran to the side of the residence and informed the sergeant that the defendant was deaf. Upon entering the residence, Deputy Shirley located the body of the victim, Leon Perry, on the living room floor.

Sergeant Steve Lovell testified that he made hand gestures to direct the defendant, who was in his truck, to unlock the track and step outside the vehicle. Sergeant Lovell, who described the defendant as being under the influence of glue, noticed several empty glue containers, a case of glue, and the strong odor of glue in the track. He recalled that the defendant appeared to be surprised and “tensed up” several times while he was being handcuffed. After being placed in a patrol car, the defendant kicked out the side window and propelled himself through the broken glass onto the driveway.

Deputy Sheriff Robert Hayes, who assisted in the arrest, described the defendant as uncooperative, but otherwise calm and expressionless. He recalled that the smell of glue in the truck was very strong and he observed a box on the floorboard that contained tubes of glue. He testified that there were five or six opened packages of glue on the seat of the truck and a space heater was in the floorboard.

Martha Kay Perry, the defendant’s mother, testified that on the day of the shooting the defendant had spent the afternoon sniffing glue in his track. At about 9:85 P.M., she heard the defendant enter the house and go to his bedroom. The victim, the defendant’s father, was in the living room. She testified that she then heard a gunshot and heard the victim say something like, “[pjlease don’t shoot me, Jeff.” When a second shot was fired, Ms. Perry grabbed a can of mace and ran into the hallway where the defendant stood with a shotgun. Ms. Perry sprayed the defendant with mace, and, after a straggle, she was able to break free. When she saw the victim lying on the living room floor, she grabbed the cordless telephone, called 9-1-1, and fled in her vehicle.

Ms. Perry testified that the defendant had suffered nerve deafness at the age of two. She stated that from the age of five until he graduated from high school, the defendant attended the Tennessee School for the Deaf in Knoxville. She recalled that her son was popular and excelled as a student and athlete. He received his high school diploma in 1982. Ms. Perry testified that the defendant could read fairly well but not as well as a hearing person. After high school, the defendant returned to Dickson to live with his parents and worked at their service station as a mechanic for the next four years. Although he had performed well at his job, he had experienced difficulty making friends in *728 Dickson and had become very self-conscious about being deaf.

In 1985, after the defendant sustained a head injury in an auto accident and refused medical treatment, Ms. Perry noticed behavioral changes in the defendant. She described him as “paranoid” and recalled him say, “Everybody’s watching me, looking at me ... They’re laughing at me.” She testified that he was easily agitated and that his behavior deteriorated until eventually the Perrys had asked him to stop working at the service station. She recalled that over the next year, the defendant routinely paced the floor for hours at a time while yelling and making animal sounds.

In 1987, the Perrys took the defendant to Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute and then to the Parthenon Pavilion where he remained for several weeks. He was diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic. During the following year, the defendant stopped taking his prescribed medication, became “real violent,” and required sedation. Two days after an incident requiring sedation, the defendant attacked a bank teller and was readmitted to the Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute. He was then transferred to Horizon Hospital in Clearwater, Florida, where the hospital staff was trained in American Sign Language. The defendant, who remained at Horizon Hospital for approximately five months, was again diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic. During his stay there, the defendant ingested thumbtacks, rocks, and toothpicks, ultimately requiring emergency surgery.

After the defendant was returned to his home, he required quarterly, evaluations at Southridge, a psychological hospital in Dickson. He experienced few problems until 1995, when the defendant became more frequently agitated even though he consistently received his prescribed medications. At that point, Ms. Perry learned that the defendant was sniffing glue. He stayed away from home on most nights and returned in an intoxicated condition but not smelling of alcohol. She described the defendant as even more agitated and more violent during this period. He also stopped communicating with his parents. Ms. Perry testified that she had learned some American Sign Language but that the victim knew very little.

Ms. Perry recalled that the defendant would sit in his truck behind her residence and sniff glue throughout the night. When she tried to convince him to stop, the defendant replied, “It stops the electricity in my head.” Ms. Perry testified that the defendant claimed to hear voices that directed him to do things. She realized that the defendant’s glue consumption continued to increase over time.

By October of 1995, Ms. Perry had become increasingly fearful of the defendant. When he acted violently toward her and the victim, she returned him to Parthenon Pavilion for treatment of the glue addiction. During his last hospitalization before the shooting, a physician at Parthenon Pavilion changed the defendant’s medication and released him six days later despite the Perrys’ objections. Although the defendant was scheduled to attend a drug rehabilitation program in Memphis especially designed for the hearing impaired, the facility would not allow admission until a neurologist examined a cyst that had been discovered on his brain. Ms. Perry explained that she did not want the defendant at her home because “he wasn’t well enough....

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W.3d 724, 1999 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 396, 1999 WL 233522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-perry-tenncrimapp-1999.