State v. Stanley Lawson

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 24, 1997
Docket01C01-9607-CR-00320
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Stanley Lawson (State v. Stanley Lawson) 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. Stanley Lawson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE AUGUST 1997 SESSION FILED STATE OF TENNESSEE ) C.C.A. No. 01C01-9607-CR-00320 October 24, 1997 ) ) SUMNER COUNTY Cecil W. Crowson VS. ) Appellate Court Clerk ) HON. JANE WHEATCRAFT STANLEY LAWSON ) JUDGE ) ) (Incest)

FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:

JOHN E. HERBISON JOHN KNOX WALKUP Attorney at Law Attorney General & Reporter 2016 Eight Avenue South Nashville, Tennessee 37204 DARYL J. BRAND Assistant Attorney General 450 James Robertson Parkway Nashville, Tennessee 37243

SALLIE WADE BROWN Assistant District Attorney General 113 West Main Street Gallitin, Tennessee, 37066

OPINION FILED:___________________

AFFIRMED

JOE H. WALKER, III Sp. JUDGE OPINION

The defendant appeals a jury verdict finding him guilty of twenty-five counts of

incest. The defendant was sentenced to seven years on each count, with counts one

through ten to be served consecutively, and the others to be run concurrently. The jury

assessed fines of ten thousand dollars per count. The court reduced the fines to two

thousand dollars per count.

The defendant presents the following issues for consideration:

1. Whether the proof was insufficient as a matter of law to sustain a conviction,

in that the defendant was convicted on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice;

and whether the trial court erred through its instructions by submitting to the jury the

question of whether the victim was an accomplice so as to require corroboration of her

testimony.

2. Whether the admission of a redacted version of an audio tape recording of a

conversation between the defendant and the victim was error.

3. Whether the trial court erroneously permitted the victim to testify from notes.

4. Whether the trial court erred by allowing a statement of the defendant to be

submitted to the jury.

5. Whether the trial court erroneously excluded cross examination of the victim

concerning certain prior statements.

6. Whether the trial court erroneously permitted the jury to take transcripts of a

tape recorded conversation between the defendant and victim into the jury room during

deliberations.

7. Whether the trial court erroneously ordered consecutive sentencing as to ten

counts of the indictment; and whether this was a harsher effective sentence on retrial,

violating due process.

2 Procedural Background

The defendant was indicted on twenty-six counts of incest, alleging that he

sexually penetrated his adopted daughter, on twenty-six specified dates. The case was

tried, with the state dismissing one count of the indictment. The jury found the

defendant guilty on the remaining twenty-five counts. After a sentencing hearing, the

defendant was sentenced to six years in prison on each count, with ten of the

sentences to be served consecutively, and the others to run concurrently.

The defendant filed a petition for post-conviction relief, alleging ineffective

assistance of counsel. After a hearing, the petition was sustained, and the convictions

were set aside, and the defendant was granted a new trial.

The defendant moved to suppress certain statements he made in a tape

recorded conversation with the victim, and after an evidentiary hearing, the motion was

denied, with the court proposing certain redactions. As redacted, the tape and

transcription of the conversation were admitted into evidence at trial, and submitted to

the jury.

The jury at re-trial found the defendant guilty on all twenty five counts of incest.

Factual Background

The defendant was the step father of the victim, and adopted her when she was

four years old. The acts of incest alleged in the indictment occurred when the victim

was fifteen years of age, and in the ninth grade.

The victim lived with her mother, the defendant, and her younger brother, who

was the son of the victim’s mother and the defendant. The family lived in a double wide

trailer on fourteen acres in Sumner County.

At the time of most of the incidents of incest, the victim’s mother would not be at

home. The victim’s mother worked at a store in Nashville, and usually spent the entire

weekend in Nashville, staying at her own mother’s home. Most of the acts of incest

3 occurred during those weekends. One act (count 22) occurred while the mother was at

home but asleep.

The younger brother was usually at home, but slept in another room of the trailer.

The defendant would block the doorways to prevent the brother from observing the

sexual activities. On one of the occasions the brother was outside playing, and the

defendant locked him out of the trailer. On another occasion, the brother walked into

the defendant’s bedroom during anal incest of the victim, and the defendant tried to

cover up the victim so that the brother would not see her.

At the trial, the victim described in detail the sexual activities that occurred on

each of the twenty-five dates specified in the indictment. She testified that she had

independent recollection of the events, although she used notes formulated from a

calender to help keep straight which events occurred on which precise dates.

The victim related that on several occasions she would watch x-rated videos with

the defendant, and the defendant would have the victim act out fantasies for him. On

certain occasions the defendant would argue with the victim about playing the stereo

too loudly, or going out with boys, or meeting friends. After those arguments the

defendant would engage in incest with the victim.

The victim recounted the numerous instances, by specific date, on which the

defendant sexually penetrated her vaginally, orally, and anally. On at least one

occasion the sexual intercourse was extremely painful to the victim.

The victim requested that the defendant stop having sex with her and simply act

as her “daddy,” and he agreed. Shortly after that promise, they were wrestling on the

bed and the defendant began feeling her and then engaged her in sex. On several

other occasions the victim discussed with the defendant stopping the sexual

encounters, but the relationship continued sexually.

In March, 1993, because the victim was late for her period, the defendant

purchased an over-the-counter pregnancy test kit. When the results were negative, the

defendant celebrated with incest on the victim. Shortly after that, the victim told her

guidance counselor in high school about the sex with her adoptive father. The victim

was then interviewed by a sexual abuse counselor from the Tennessee Department of

4 Human Services. The complaints were reported to a detective with the Sumner County

Sheriff’s Department, who requested that the victim wear a concealed microphone while

speaking with her adoptive father. The victim called the defendant, and arranged a

time and place for a meeting. At the deputy’s suggestion, the victim told the defendant

that she had run away, but that they needed to meet and talk. They arranged to meet

at a local restaurant.

The deputies were present at the restaurant, and monitored and recorded the

conversation between the victim and the defendant. After hearing the conversation

through the concealed microphone, the deputies confronted the defendant, and read

him the Miranda warnings, and transported him to the sheriff’s department. The

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State v. Stanley Lawson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stanley-lawson-tenncrimapp-1997.