State v. Vaughn

279 S.W.3d 584, 2008 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 442, 2008 WL 2420958
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 16, 2008
DocketM2007-01159-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 279 S.W.3d 584 (State v. Vaughn) 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. Vaughn, 279 S.W.3d 584, 2008 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 442, 2008 WL 2420958 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID H. WELLES, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which THOMAS T. WOODALL and ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER, JJ„ joined.

A jury convicted the Defendant, Cordell Remont Vaughn, of premeditated first degree murder, and he was sentenced to a life term in the Department of Correction. In this direct appeal, he presents four *587 issues for our review: (l)whether the evidence is sufficient to support his conviction; (2) whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying the Defendant’s request for a continuance after his family hired a private attorney to represent him approximately one week before the scheduled trial date; (3) whether the trial court abused its discretion by revoking its approval of funds for the Defendant to hire an expert because the Defendant retained private counsel; and (4) whether the trial court erred by not requiring the assistant public defender to assist defense counsel during the Defendant’s trial. Following our review of the record and the parties’ briefs, we reverse the judgment of conviction and remand for a new trial.

Factual Background

On February 17, 2005, at approximately 6:00 p.m., the victim, Catricia Candance McPheters, was shot seven times and killed at the Defendant’s home in Linden. A grand jury subsequently indicted the thirty-five-year-old Defendant for first degree premeditated murder, and a jury trial followed.

At trial, the Defendant’s wife, 1 Chandra Ewing Vaughn, testified that she was living with the Defendant at the time the homicide occurred. That morning, the victim and the Defendant had an argument. Asked how “heated” the argument was, Mrs. Vaughn said, “it wasn’t that bad.” Afterwards, the victim and Mrs. Vaughn went to a grocery store together and then returned to the house. Later that day, Mrs. Vaughn and the Defendant went “somewhere” and returned in the afternoon.

An unspecified period of time later, as Mrs. Vaughn was folding clothes in a front bedroom, she heard the Defendant and the victim arguing again in the kitchen. Mrs. Vaughn heard gunshots, and she saw the Defendant firing a handgun at the victim. She ran through the kitchen to pick up a young girl 2 who was staying at their house, and as she ran, the Defendant continued to fire the gun at the victim.

Mrs. Vaughn testified that the victim had a knife in her hand at the time of the shooting and had been using the knife to peel potatoes. However, in a statement she gave the day after the incident (eighteen months before trial), she related that while the shooting was taking place, she “didn’t see anything in [the victim’s] hands. [The victim] had been peeling potatoes.”

Mrs. Vaughn did not see the Defendant with a gun at anytime prior to the shooting that day. He had not been carrying the gun with him when they went out together after her shopping trip with the victim. She did not know from where he obtained the gun.

After she got the young girl, Mrs. Vaughn ran out the back door to her next door neighbor’s, Anthony Head’s, house. Mrs. Vaughn calmed the girl for a “few minutes,” then left her at the Heads’ residence. She left to find her cellular telephone, which took “maybe a minute or two,” and then called her sister in order to tell her to come pick up the girl. She then returned to the Heads’ house and described the Defendant’s subsequent arrival there as follows: “[The Defendant] came into the — he came in, like crawling, like on *588 the floor, and he grabbed my leg. I couldn’t understand the words that he was saying, but he said something about call— call the police, get help or something, I don’t know exactly what the words were.” At that time, the Defendant had blood on his shirt from wounds to his chest.

On redirect examination, Mrs. Vaughn confirmed that in the statement she gave the day after the shooting, she indicated that the Defendant and the victim had been arguing about the victim’s relationship with a man named DeAngelo. DeAn-gelo was the ex-boyfriend of Mrs. Vaughn’s sister. The Defendant was angry because the victim apparently had sexual relations with DeAngelo inside the Defendant’s house, which he considered disrespectful.

The Defendant’s brother-in-law, Ronnie Tucker, testified that the victim was his daughter-in-law and that he was present at the Defendant’s house during the shooting. Tucker had traveled to the Defendant’s house from Nashville in order to remodel his bathroom, and he had been there approximately three days before the incident occurred. The victim had traveled to the Defendant’s house from Nashville with Tucker. 3

On the day of the incident, the victim was cooking dinner, and as Tucker went about his work on the bathroom, he heard the Defendant and the victim arguing in the kitchen. He did not know the subject of their argument. Approximately ten minutes later, as he was at work in the crawlspace underneath the house, he heard several gunshots. He emerged from the crawlspace and saw the victim lying on the sidewalk outside the kitchen door of the Defendant’s house. At that time, Tucker turned the victim over to “see what [he] could see.” She did not react when he touched her, and he assumed she was dead. Asked whether he noticed “anything” lying on top of the victim’s body, Tucker said that he “[r]eally didn’t pay attention to none of that” because he was “ready to go.”

After looking at the victim, Tucker ran inside the house, and he encountered the Defendant in the kitchen; the Defendant asked him, “What have I done, Bro’?” Tucker responded, “You done screwed up,” and then he ran out of the house and went to a nearby store to call his wife. He did not see any kind of powder on the floor or counters before leaving.

Johnny Hester testified that he lived in a one-room shed located behind the Defendant’s house and did carpentry work for him. On the day of the incident, Hester was helping Tucker remodel the bathroom. He had lunch that day with the victim and Tucker. By Hester’s account, the victim announced during lunch that she was angry with the Defendant; she was holding a “paring knife and she said she’s gonna stab him.” Asked whether he knew why the victim was angry with the Defendant, Hester said that he did not know “what the problem was. Earlier that day, you know, I know that they was — her and him had been smoking, you know, some— some — that stuff, or whatever.”

Around dusk that same day, Hester was resting in his shed when he heard “a little bit of arguing going on” between a man and a woman. Several minutes later, he heard gunshots. He waited “a little bit” then looked outside and saw Tucker, Mrs. Vaughn, and the young girl leave. Approximately ten minutes later, Hester left his shed, went inside the house and saw green powder on the floors. Then, he *589 described finding the Defendant and the victim as follows:

I seen the [victim] laying there, and she was right outside on — you know, the bottom of the steps. [The Defendant] was right beside her and he was — kept trying to get her to wake up.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 S.W.3d 584, 2008 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 442, 2008 WL 2420958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vaughn-tenncrimapp-2008.