Tanshanny T. Wright v. State of Florida

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 16, 2019
Docket18-1956
StatusPublished

This text of Tanshanny T. Wright v. State of Florida (Tanshanny T. Wright v. State of Florida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tanshanny T. Wright v. State of Florida, (Fla. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D18-1956 _____________________________

TANSHANNY T. WRIGHT,

Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County. James C. Hankinson, Judge.

August 16, 2019

LEWIS, J.

Appellant, Tanshanny T. Wright, appeals his convictions for burglary of a structure with person assaulted (Count 1), criminal mischief (Count 2), and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon (Count 3). He argues that the trial court abused its discretion by instructing the jury to disregard his testimony. We disagree and affirm.

BACKGROUND

At Appellant’s jury trial, the victim testified that he was working at Zaxby’s as part of his manager training when he noticed Appellant leaning over the registers and yelling at Ms. Godwin, one of the employees. Appellant then walked through the employee door that blocked the public’s entry and walked down the cashier aisle. The victim asked Appellant to leave because he was not supposed to be behind the counter. Appellant initially ignored the victim, but then started threatening him, saying, “I’ve killed people before like you.” Appellant pulled out a pocketknife and threw it at the victim while still yelling and looking directly at him. The victim was scared and ducked to avoid being hit with the knife, which landed a couple of feet from him. Appellant then went to the drive-through window, where he continued to try to attack the victim and smashed the window. The incident was captured by the restaurant’s surveillance cameras, without sound, and the video recording of it was admitted into evidence.

Appellant testified on direct examination that he went to Zaxby’s to get some keys from Godwin, his child’s mother. When he asked Godwin for the keys at the register, she told him to go behind the counter to get them from her. Appellant entered the back area in order to get the keys, but once there, he had an altercation with the victim. Appellant pulled a pocketknife because he was in a rush to see his child and was very frustrated, and the victim “kind of like put his hands on” him and “there was another employee coming behind [him].” Appellant had no intention of hurting anyone with the knife and threw it “to the wall,” not at anybody, “just out of frustration” because he was “really agitated trying to get the keys.” Upon leaving the restaurant, Appellant went to the drive-through where Godwin worked to get the keys, but the victim slammed the window in his face, and he, in turn, hit the glass “out of frustration.” Appellant had two prior felony convictions.

On cross-examination, Appellant testified that Godwin told him to go behind the counter to get the keys and tried to give them to him, but the victim did not know that and intervened. Appellant denied threatening the victim and insisted that he threw the knife at the wall. The trial court instructed Appellant four times to stop interrupting and posing questions to the prosecutor, but he continued to do so, at which point the court told him to be quiet. In turn, Appellant repeatedly stated that it was his life on the line, ignoring the court’s continued instruction that he be quiet. Appellant stated that “[t]his isn’t a burglary,” and when the court warned him that he would be removed from the stand, he again commented that it was his life on the line. At that point, the court

2 told Appellant to be quiet, instructed the jury to disregard his comments, and explained that every witness has to be subject to cross-examination and the State was entitled to answers to its questions. The court also warned Appellant that if he could not properly answer questions, it would instruct the jury to disregard his testimony. Appellant indicated that he would answer the questions, but before long, he started to make comments when there were not any questions pending, including that “y’all are playing with my life. My life is no joke,” “[t]hat’s not burglary,” and “I didn’t throw that knife at nobody,” over the court’s repeated instruction that he stop it. Appellant even stated that he was “done talking” and wished to “sit back down.”

After asking the jury to step out of the courtroom, the trial court explained to Appellant that he was subject to reasonable questions from the State and had to answer those questions. The court twice more warned Appellant that it was going to tell the jury to disregard his testimony in its entirety if he was not going to answer the State’s questions, and he responded that he understood and would answer the questions. Defense counsel did not want to be heard and declined an opportunity to talk with Appellant. When the jury returned, cross-examination resumed as follows:

[STATE]: Now -- [APPELLANT]: I told him I’m coming back there to get -- [COURT]: Mr. Wright, there is not a question. She’ll ask you a question. Ms. Surace [prosecutor], play what it is you want to play and then go back to the podium and ask your question. [STATE]: Okay. (Video played in open court.) [APPELLANT]: See, I threw it at the wall. [COURT]: Mr. Wright, be quiet. There is not a question being asked. [APPELLANT]: Y’all, this is my life. [COURT]: Be quiet. [APPELLANT]: Judge Hankinson - - [COURT]: I don’t care what - - [APPELLANT]: -- this is my life.

3 [COURT]: -- there is not a question. [APPELLANT]: Everybody in the jury know[s] this is not no [sic] burglary. [COURT]: All right. You step down. [APPELLANT]: This is not no burglary.

The trial court explained that because Appellant was refusing to properly answer questions on cross-examination, it was directing the jurors to disregard his testimony and “consider [they] did not hear anything he said.”

At sidebar, the trial court explained that it had warned Appellant three times, “we can’t even get him to wait for a question to be asked before he starts making additional comment,” and it did not “know of any other remedy when someone won’t subject themselves to cross-examination.” When the court invited defense counsel to suggest “some other remedy,” counsel stated, “I think when the witness is nonresponsive - - and I’m the first to admit, Mr. Wright is difficult, . . . you instruct the jury to disregard the nonresponsive answer, but I don’t think you can erase the normal answers he gave previous to that.” The court replied that if a witness for the State refuses to be cross-examined, the remedy is to strike the testimony and further explained:

That’s essentially what we have is he’s refusing to answer cross-examination questions in an appropriate fashion. He wants to say whatever it is he said - - he’s repeated it at least three times over the court trying to get him to be quiet - - that this is his life and it was not a burglary. I mean, those are statements that are totally inappropriate. And I’ve done my best to try to control the situation without - - I don’t know what other remedy I have.

Defense counsel disagreed with the court’s characterization, asserting that Appellant was not refusing to be cross-examined; instead, he was merely “showing inappropriate courtroom etiquette.” Defense counsel suggested that the jury be asked to leave the courtroom and he be given a few minutes to try to calm Appellant down, but the court noted, “that’s what I did last time. That’s why I offered to let you talk to him last time.” The court

4 overruled the defense’s objection, explaining that “[Appellant is] going to comment what he chooses to comment, whether there’s a question before the jury or not. The State’s not having an opportunity to cross-examine him because he’s refusing to respond to their questions. I don’t know of any other remedy.”

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Tanshanny T. Wright v. State of Florida, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanshanny-t-wright-v-state-of-florida-fladistctapp-2019.