State v. Toliver

117 S.W.3d 216, 2003 Tenn. LEXIS 857, 2003 WL 22251400
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 2003
DocketE2001-00584-SC-R11-CD
StatusPublished
Cited by98 cases

This text of 117 S.W.3d 216 (State v. Toliver) 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. Toliver, 117 S.W.3d 216, 2003 Tenn. LEXIS 857, 2003 WL 22251400 (Tenn. 2003).

Opinions

FRANK F. DROWOTA, III, C.J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which JANICE M. HOLDER, and WILLIAM M. BARKER, JJ.,

joined.

ADOLPHO A. BIRCH, JR., J., filed a concurring opinion; and E. RILEY ANDERSON, J„

filed a dissenting opinion.

OPINION

The defendant was convicted of two counts of aggravated child abuse. The trial court imposed a nine-year sentence for each conviction and ordered concurrent service of these sentences. The defendant appealed, raising numerous issues, but the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the convictions and sentences. We granted the defendant’s application for permission to appeal and, after thoroughly reviewing the record, conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in consolidating the two indictments for trial. Furthermore, we have concluded that the erroneous consolidation of the indictments, in conjunction with the erroneous admission of evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts, affirmatively appears to have affected the verdict of the jury. Accordingly, the judgments of the trial court and Court of Criminal Appeals are reversed, and these cases are remanded for new trials at which evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts committed by the defendant against the victim or others shall not be admitted unless relevant to a material issue.

I. Factual Background

The defendant, Anderson Toliver, was convicted of two counts of aggravated child abuse for striking his stepson, G.S., on March 1, 1998 and April 9, 1998, with a [219]*219braided heavy-duty extension cord.1 G.S., who was eighteen years old and a senior in high school at the time of the trial and sixteen years old when the alleged incidents occurred, testified as the State’s first witness. Before being asked about either of the incidents alleged in the indictments, G.S. was questioned about earlier incidents of abuse and said that from the time he was in eighth grade the defendant would regularly whip him and his younger brother whenever they received a grade lower than a “B.” He testified that these “beatings” occurred at least every six weeks, when report cards were issued. G.S. said that the defendant initially used a weight belt, described as a wide belt worn by persons for back support while lifting weights, that the defendant then progressed to a braided telephone cord, and that the defendant then began using a braided extension cord which sometimes had a wire woven into the braid and duct tape wrapped around the wire. According to G.S., the defendant would administer this punishment in the boys’ bedroom. The defendant would require the boys to bend over and would then strike them “on the back or the butt” while they were fully clothed or in their underwear. G.S. said that the pain from these incidents would last “sometimes weeks, sometimes days” and when asked what he did for the pain, G.S. responded that he would “ignore it.”

The victim then was asked about the incident on March 1, 1998,2 which was the basis for the first indictment charging the defendant with aggravated child abuse. G.S. said that he had just received “some low grades” and described what happened when he returned home:

It always started as like I would have to bend over and then he hit me with the extension cord, and this time it had coat hangers braided around it and then the extension cord and duct tape at the end. And I would fall, and if I fell, he’d hit me on my back until I had to get up.
Q. What did it feel like when he was hitting you with the extension cord?
A. At first it was like — the first contact it would be like a real pain, numbness, and then increase. Like at first I couldn’t feel anything and then it was just like all coming in together and it hurt real bad.

G.S. then described in much greater detail the April 9, 1998, incident,3 saying that while he was in his room, the defendant came in, forced him to bend over, and hit him twice with the braided extension cord, this time without the added coat hangers and duct tape. When he then stood up and refused to bend over again, the defendant grabbed his neck and tried unsuccessfully to force him to bend over. The defendant then began punching and choking G.S. with his hands, then gave the braided extension cord to the victim’s mother, and then began choking G.S. again. The victim said that he was in “lots of pain,” that his “neck was hurting,” and that his throat was “hurting real bad.” After this, G.S. fell to the floor, and the defendant retrieved the braided cord from the victim’s [220]*220mother and began swinging it again. When the victim grabbed at the cord, the defendant wrapped it around his neck and began lifting him from the floor and slinging him around the room. G.S. fell against the handlebars of some bicycles and the wooden bunk bed in the room. G.S. then fell to the floor, but, before losing consciousness for a couple of seconds, the victim heard his mother call the defendant’s name. At this point the defendant released the extension cord and left the bedroom. The victim caught his breath, ran to a neighbor’s apartment, and called the police. G.S. described his condition when he arrived at his neighbor’s house:

I wasn’t really feeling any pain, I guess it was trembling. I was just crying. I remember crying a lot. And then when the police got there, that’s when it started hurting, like I noticed I had a real bad scar on my eye, real bad. I don’t know how it got there, I just know my eye was like a cherry. And my throat was hurting real bad. I had like scratch marks on my neck, things like that. My ribs were hurting, because I hurt my ribs before playing football. I hit the same rib that I had hurt when I hit the bicycles.

The victim’s twelve-year-old half brother, J.N., testified that he had been removed from his home with his mother and the defendant and was living at the Tennessee Baptist Children’s Home at the time of trial. He acknowledged that the defendant had whipped him and the victim with a belt and with an extension cord which was wrapped around itself. He said that the defendant made them empty their pockets before the whippings to make sure they did not have any padding, and made them bend over and stretch out their hands. He said that the defendant had whipped him “hard” with the extension cord “like maybe three times,” but that he “got smart” and “learned [his] lesson.” When asked about the victim, J.N. said he did not think that G.S. had learned his lesson “because he repeatedly got it.”

J.N. further testified that the whippings hurt “pretty bad” for a few days. However, in a prior statement given to a detective at the Red Bank Police Department, J.N. had said that “after being punished in this manner, the bruises and whelps [sic] lasted about three weeks” and that he “could not sit without a cushion of some sort for about four days.” J.N. said that he did not consider these whippings to be beatings and that he believed he deserved the whippings the defendant had given him. J.N. also testified that the victim had “a problem telling the truth sometimes.” When asked to explain, J.N. said the victim had tried to change his grades on his report card once “because he knew he was going to be in trouble for the grades” and that the victim “was always lying about something....”

J.N.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.W.3d 216, 2003 Tenn. LEXIS 857, 2003 WL 22251400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-toliver-tenn-2003.