State v. Sparks

891 S.W.2d 607, 1995 Tenn. LEXIS 1
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 891 S.W.2d 607 (State v. Sparks) 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. Sparks, 891 S.W.2d 607, 1995 Tenn. LEXIS 1 (Tenn. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

REID, Justice.

This case presents an appeal from the conviction of Donald Wade Sparks for first degree murder. The trial court rejected the plea of insanity, the only defense asserted by the defendant, and the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed. On this appeal, only two issues will be considered: whether the proof was sufficient to prove sanity beyond a reasonable doubt, and the related issue, whether the trial judge erred by allowing one of the arresting officers to testify that in his opinion the appellant was sane according to the legal definition of sanity. This Court finds that the evidence is not sufficient to support the finding that the defendant was sane beyond a reasonable doubt at the time the offense was committed, and, therefore, the defendant is not guilty by reason of insanity.

I

The defendant shot and killed his mother on June 12, 1990. He was 29 years old. He lived in a trailer which was parked adjoining the residence occupied by the victim, Jo Ann Taylor, and his stepfather, Don Taylor. The trailer had been purchased for the defendant by the victim after he had been sent home from Atlanta in 1988 by his brother Jeffrey, who, though supportive of the defendant, “just couldn’t handle him anymore.”

The defendant has a long history of mental illness, diagnosed as a schizoaffective disorder. The evidence includes medical records dating back to September of 1982, when he was first admitted as a patient to Overlook Mental Health Center. He later was discharged, but became a patient again in December of 1987, and has remained a patient at the center since then. Throughout his illness, various drugs have been prescribed to treat the defendant’s symptoms of mental confusion, auditory and visual hallucinations, anxiety, depression, paranoia, memory lapses, and aggressiveness. At the time the offense was committed, he was being medicated with Haldol by injection once a month. He had received the last injection on May 18, 1990, three weeks before he shot his mother.

According to Jeffrey Sparks, the defendant was “different” when he came home from service in the army in 1983,

... he couldn’t hold a conversation.... and he would just, out of the blue, start talking about something else. And, I knowed that, you know, there was something wrong with him.

From 1983 to 1988, the defendant, who had a ninth grade education, lived in Atlanta where he worked with Jeffrey as a roofer. Jeffrey testified that his brother was “off’ and related several incidents supporting that opinion. In 1983, the defendant “went off his rocker” and told his sister’s boyfriend to leave her house, causing a serious confrontation with his sister and her friend. According to Jeffrey, during the roofing jobs, he sometimes “had to get the law to get him down off of the roof.” Jeffrey testified that he was afraid of the defendant when he was “crazy”, and had committed him to mental institutions because of his mental problems on at least two occasions, “maybe three.” The defendant had also been committed by another brother in Dallas.

After Jeffrey returned to Tennessee, he and the defendant worked together hanging dry wall and doing roofing work, and, according to Jeffrey, “He was getting crazier.” His description of the defendant, was,

.. one day he was just like a normal person, you know, carry on a normal conversation, you know.... He would come *609 to work and a lot of days he wouldn’t say nothing, not nothing ... He was just weird, a weird person.

He also testified that when the defendant was “on his medicine,” he would work, go home, and sleep without taking a bath, but “he seemed to think better.”

The defendant’s only prior criminal conviction was for driving while intoxicated.

The facts of the crime are undisputed. Jeffrey, who was with the defendant' on the day of the shooting, testified as follows:

Q: When is the last time that you saw your brother, Jeff, before your Mom died?
A: It was — I bought a bed- — I bought a truck and I had bought a bed off of a first cousin of mine, and me and Donnie that day was going over to his house to take the old bed off of my truck, to get it in the process of putting the new one on, and I knowed that he was off of his medicine, you know, and I knowed that he would really get mad if I confronted him with it. So, I kindly told a story while we was on our way over there. I told him, I said, Donnie, Overlook called and told me or told Debbie that you was off your medicine.
Q: Debbie was your wife?
A: Yeah. And, he was cussing her and stuff. And, saying things you know, I didn’t like for him to say and me and him about got in a fight and we was up at the garage at that time away from the dump and there was mud like a foot and a half to two foot deep in places, and it had been raining and stuff and we was walking from the garage up there me and my brother, back to get the truck. Boy, he was talking crazy. He was saying, I bet you can’t crawl in that mud so far, you know, just crazy stuff.
Q: When did you all part on that day? When did Donnie go his way and you go your way?
A: It was about, I believe, no more than three to four hours before he killed her. I went home and got a phone call and went to the store and people come running out from the store....
I called my mother and told her to lock ... the doors and close the doors ‘cause he was crazy and he had a gun, and as soon as I got done with my business, ... I’ll be right there and we’ll get something done about it. I went home and they called me and it was too late.

Around noon on the day of the crime, Jeffrey’s wife had called Overlook Mental Health Center and asked whether the defendant had been receiving his medication. Later that day, the defendant walked into Overlook Mental Health Center and told a person there to stop calling his brother and telling him that he was not taking his medicine.

After leaving Overlook, he went to his cousin Gary Sparks’ motorcycle shop where he bought a pistol from Jimmy Swiggett. He was drinking and was “high” but not “drunk.” He and Swiggett left the shop for about an hour, during which time the defendant purchased a box of ammunition and test fired the pistol. The defendant provoked a quarrel with another man in the shop and a fight between them was avoided by the intervention of his cousin. Gary Sparks described the incident as follows:

[The defendant] just grabbed [Shan’s] cap [and smacked him in the face], and I think he done it more or less acting a fool, but it was more or less, violent like, you know. It wasn’t just goofing off like he usually does.... He was happy for a while and then he got kind of violent like, you know, when he started to smack Shan with that cap, and after I told him he couldn’t do that, then he just calmed down.

Around 5:30 that afternoon, the stepfather, Don Taylor, came home from work. After talking with his wife, he locked the door in order to keep the defendant out of the house, and went to his barn to feed his hogs. Around 6:00 p.m., the defendant came to the barn. Taylor testified that,

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Bluebook (online)
891 S.W.2d 607, 1995 Tenn. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sparks-tenn-1995.