Wayford Demonbreun, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 19, 1999
Docket01C01-9711-CR-00539
StatusPublished

This text of Wayford Demonbreun, Jr. v. State (Wayford Demonbreun, Jr. v. State) 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
Wayford Demonbreun, Jr. v. State, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE FILED JUNE 1999 SESSION August 19, 1999

Cecil W. Crowson WAYFORD DEMONBREUN, JR., ) Appellate Court Clerk ) Appellant, ) No. 01C01-9711-CR-00539 ) ) Davidson County v. ) ) Honorable Thomas H. Shriver, Judge ) STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) (Post -Conviction) ) Appellee. )

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

F. Michie Gibson, Jr. Paul G. Summers 1416 Parkway Towers Attorney General of Tennessee Nashville, TN 37219 and (AT POST-CONVICTION HEARING) Daryl J. Brand Associate Solicitor General Clifford K. McGown, Jr. 425 Fifth Avenue North 113 North Court Square Nashville, TN 37243 Post Office Box 26 Waverly, TN 37185 Victor S. Johnson, III (ON APPEAL) District Attorney General and Tom Thurman Assistant District Attorney General Washington Square, Suite 500 222 2nd Avenue North Nashville, TN 37201-1649

OPINION FILED:____________________

AFFIRMED

Joseph M. Tipton Judge OPINION

The petitioner, Wayford Demonbreun, appeals as of right from the

Shelby County Criminal Court’s denial of post-conviction relief. The petitioner pled

guilty to conspiracy to sell over three hundred grams of cocaine, a Class A felony. He

was sentenced to fifteen years in the Department of Correction as a Range I, standard

offender. The petitioner contends that (1) his guilty plea was not knowing and voluntary

because of his attorney’s failure to interview a co-defendant, and (2) his case should be

remanded for further proof because his initial post-conviction attorney failed to file the

certification required by Rule 28, Tenn. S. Ct. R. We affirm the trial court’s denial of

post-conviction relief.

The petitioner was indicted along with Ortago Thomas and Carlos Woods

for one count of selling three hundred grams of cocaine, one count of delivering three

hundred grams of cocaine, and one count of conspiracy to sell three hundred grams of

cocaine. The indictment also charged the petitioner with possession with intent to sell

another twenty-six grams of cocaine and with possession of a deadly weapon with the

intent to use it during an escape. The petitioner pled guilty to the conspiracy charge,

and the trial court dismissed the remaining charges in the indictment as well as two

other pending indictments and four outstanding warrants.

At the post-conviction evidentiary hearing, the state entered the transcript

of the guilty plea hearing into evidence. At the time of his guilty plea, the petitioner

testified that he understood that he was waiving his right to a trial and that he was

pleading guilty of his own free will. He said that he had discussed his possible

defenses and the guilty plea with his attorney and that he was satisfied with how his

attorney handled his case. After the state presented a factual summary, which included

the fact that Ortago Thomas told Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) agents that

2 the cocaine in the controlled buy came from the petitioner, the petitioner said that the

facts were true and that he was guilty.

At the evidentiary hearing, the petitioner testified that his trial attorney

represented him in a separate murder case as well as in the present drug case. He

said that he had two ten-minute meetings with his attorney about his drug charges. The

petitioner said that he told his attorney that the drugs found in his house were his but

that he knew nothing of the controlled buy involving Ortago Thomas, and he was willing

to go to trial to contest those charges. He said that he told his attorney that Thomas

accepted guilt for the crime and that the attorney should talk to Thomas. He said that

his attorney never asked him about any witnesses, never investigated the case, and

never discussed any possible defenses to the drug charges.

The petitioner testified that the case was set for trial on March 7, 1995.

He said that he had spent less than thirty minutes with his attorney preparing for trial

that day and that they only discussed his pleading guilty. He stated that he told his

attorney that he did not want to plead guilty but that his attorney told him that he had no

choice. He stated that at the plea hearing, his attorney told him that he had not spoken

with either Thomas or Thomas’s attorney. He said that he pled guilty to the conspiracy

charge because his attorney told him that if he did not plead guilty, he would get a long

sentence, possibly a life sentence. He said his attorney did not go over the guilty plea

form with him, but he acknowledged reading it before he signed it. He said that his

attorney instructed him that the trial court was going to talk to him and that he was to

say “yes” and that he was guilty. He said that he only understood that he was getting a

fifteen-year sentence for the crime.

On cross-examination, the petitioner testified that he was arrested on the

drug charges while he was on bond in the murder case. He admitted that he had eight

3 ounces of cocaine, a wrapper for a kilogram of cocaine, a .357 magnum handgun and

various drug paraphernalia at the time of his arrest, but he denied possessing thirteen

thousand dollars. He said that Thomas wrote him a letter admitting that the drugs were

Thomas’s. He said that before his guilty plea hearing, Thomas told him that he would

not testify against him. He said that he remembered the trial court reading to him at his

plea hearing, but he did not remember what the court said.

Ortago Thomas testified that he and Carlos Woods engaged in a drug

transaction with TBI agents and that he and Woods were arrested. He said that the

agents told him that if he implicated the petitioner, he would get less time. He said he

gave the agents false information about the petitioner. Thomas said that he told his

attorney that the petitioner was not guilty and that he wanted to tell the truth, but his

attorney said not to worry about it because he was getting a reduced sentence. He said

he was not able to contact the petitioner’s attorney. He said that the drugs sold to the

TBI agents were his, that the petitioner had nothing to do with the offense, and that he

would not have testified against the petitioner. He said that although he and the

petitioner lived in the same compound at Turney Center, they had not discussed this

case since before the petitioner’s trial when he told the petitioner that he would not

testify against him.

The petitioner’s trial attorney testified that after the preliminary hearing,

the petitioner and his family told him that the drugs belonged to Ortago Thomas. He

said that as a part of discovery, he received three tapes that were devastating to the

petitioner’s case. He said that he and the petitioner listened to the tapes together and

discussed the case, and he advised the petitioner that he did not think that they should

go to trial. He said that one reason he thought the plea offer was beneficial to the

petitioner was that the state offered to dismiss several other pending drug and weapon

charges against the petitioner.

4 On cross-examination, the attorney testified that he spent a considerable

amount of time on this case. He said that both the district attorney and Thomas’s

attorney told him that Thomas was prepared to testify against the petitioner at trial. He

said that he did not attempt to talk with Thomas without his attorney’s approval. He

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Wayford Demonbreun, Jr. v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayford-demonbreun-jr-v-state-tenncrimapp-1999.