State v. Charles Edward Overby ( 2010 )


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  •             IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE                       FILED
    JANUARY 2000 SESSION                  March 6, 2000
    Cecil Crowson, Jr.
    Appellate Court Clerk
    STATE OF TENNESSEE,          *    C.C.A. # E1999-00253-CCA-R3-CD
    Appellee,       *    BRADLEY COUNTY
    VS.                          *    Hon. Carroll L. Ross, Judge
    CHARLES EDWARD OVERBY, *          (Possession of Marijuana, Theft under
    $500, Theft over $1,000, Aggravated
    Appellant.      *     Assault, and Second Degree Murder)
    For Appellant:                    For Appellee:
    Charles G. Wright, Jr.            Paul G. Summers
    Attorney                          Attorney General and Reporter
    253 East Eleventh Street
    Chattanooga, TN 37402-4225        Elizabeth B. Marney
    Assistant Attorney General
    Criminal Justice Division
    425 Fifth Avenue North
    Nashville, TN 37243
    Sandra C. Donaghy
    Assistant District Attorney General
    P.O. Box 1351
    Cleveland, TN 37364
    OPINION FILED:__________________________
    AFFIRMED
    GARY R. WADE, PRESIDING JUDGE
    OPINION
    The defendant, Charles Edward Overby, was convicted of possession
    of marijuana, theft under $500.00, theft over $1,000.00, aggravated assault, and
    second degree murder. The jury acquitted the defendant of aggravated burglary.
    The trial court imposed sentences as follows:
    Offense                             Sentence
    Possession of Marijuana             Eleven months, twenty-nine days
    (75%)
    Theft under $500.00                 Eleven months, twenty-nine days
    (75%)
    Theft over $1,000.00                Eight years (Range II)
    Aggravated Assault                  Ten years (Range II)
    Second Degree Murder                Twenty-five years (violent offender)
    The trial court ordered that the 10-year sentence for aggravated assault and the 25-
    year sentence for second degree murder be served consecutively. All other
    sentences were ordered to be served concurrently for an effective sentence of 35
    years.
    In this appeal of right, the defendant argues that the trial court
    committed error by allowing an expert witness in psychiatry and psychology to testify
    directly on the ultimate issue of insanity.
    We find no error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Shortly after 3:00 P.M. on June 3, 1997, Thomas Kevin Swinford, the
    22-year-old son of Sergeant Thomas Keith Swinford of the Georgia Department of
    Natural Resources, looked out of his bedroom window and saw "my dad's car shoot
    through the yard, through the ditch, and up the street toward the dead end."
    Sergeant Swinford, a conservation ranger, was not at home at the time so the
    younger Swinford ran to the edge of the driveway, where he saw a shirtless, black-
    haired man, whom he later identified as the defendant, driving a 1993 Crown
    Victoria automobile that had been assigned by the state to his father. The value of
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    the vehicle was estimated at $7,500.00.
    An .870 shotgun, an AR-15, and several hundred rounds of
    ammunition were in the trunk of Sergeant Swinford's vehicle. There was a .38
    caliber pistol, loaded with five rounds, in a holster under the seat. Hours after the
    theft, Sergeant Swinford received a radio report that the vehicle had been found at a
    residence in Bradley County, which borders Georgia. When Sergeant Swinford
    arrived at the scene, other officers had already placed evidence tape around his
    vehicle. Sergeant Swinford discovered that the two long guns were still in the trunk,
    but that the handgun was missing.
    Roy Grant Breedlove, age 17 on the date of the theft, was cleaning his
    car when an official Georgia vehicle stopped at his Bradley County residence. The
    driver, whom Breedlove identified at trial as the defendant, inquired whether his
    father was at home and asked to use the phone. Breedlove went inside his
    residence and returned to the car with a portable telephone. Breedlove described
    the defendant as shirtless and "tired or strung out" from the look in his eyes. He
    recalled that the defendant then offered him some marijuana. When Breedlove
    refused, the defendant "went on his way." At trial, Breedlove described the
    defendant's driving as "fine."
    Breedlove's mother, Irene Breedlove, was at their Bradley County
    residence at the time the defendant stopped at the home. About 15 minutes after
    the defendant left, Ms. Breedlove's husband returned to the residence. At 4:15, the
    couple left the residence in their vehicle and saw the defendant driving the Georgia
    state vehicle. Mr. Breedlove stopped and motioned the defendant to stop along the
    side of his car. Mr. Breedlove then asked the defendant if he had just been at his
    house. When the defendant answered in the affirmative, Mr. Breedlove said, "W ell,
    don't be back on my property again." The Breedloves then took the license tag
    number of the defendant's vehicle and gave the information to the sheriff's
    department.
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    Tana King testified that she knew the defendant and his son, Charles
    Overby, Jr., who was a friend of her son Christopher, age 15 at the time of the
    crimes. When asked if she had ever known the defendant to "suffer from any form
    of mental illness" or to "abuse drugs," Ms. King replied in the negative.
    Jamie Fowler was at the residence of the victim, Roy Allen Hampton,
    on the date of the car theft. Fowler and the victim had gone to school together and
    had worked together at a carpet mill for about four years. They were working on
    Fowler's vehicle at the victim's home when Fowler saw a Georgia state vehicle pass
    by the residence and then return a few minutes later. The defendant, who was
    wearing no shirt, drove the vehicle partly into the Hampton driveway, pointed a
    handgun at the two men, and asked, "Where's my kids at?" The victim answered
    that the residence was his and that there were no kids there. The defendant
    insisted that he "knew they were there" and persisted in his inquiry. Then, while only
    a few feet away, the defendant fired a shot into the head of the victim, causing his
    eventual death. Fowler identified the defendant as the person who shot the victim.
    Fowler testified that after the shooting, the defendant stepped out of his car, pointed
    the gun at him, and directed him to the back of the victim's residence. Fowler then
    escaped around the corner of the house, went inside, and called 911. Fowler
    informed the victim's grandfather, who was inside the Hampton residence, of what
    had occurred and loaded a shotgun in case the defendant tried to force his way into
    the residence. Fowler explained that he had never seen the defendant on any prior
    occasion. At trial, he testified that there were no words of provocation exchanged
    between the defendant and the victim at any time before the shooting.
    Robbie Steward, who lived in the same neighborhood as the
    defendant, testified that the defendant, whom she described as shirtless, sweaty,
    and out of breath, also came to her residence on the day of the murder looking for
    his sons, Charles and Sam Overby. Ms. Steward testified that the defendant's sons
    often played with her son, Brock Steward. Ms. Steward told the defendant his sons
    "might be across the street" where her mother lived. Later, Ms. Steward saw the
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    defendant on TV. He was wearing a shirt owned by a friend of her son's who had
    been in the Steward garage on the day before the offense.
    George Howard, who lived across the street from Ms. Steward, was
    working in his garden when he saw the defendant walking through high weeds.
    Howard asked, "Hey, where are you going?" The defendant answered, "My van tore
    up . . . [and] I'm going down to get it if it's okay." Howard recalled nothing peculiar
    about the defendant. He specifically recalled that the defendant was not unruly and
    did not slur his speech.
    Later, Billy McBryar had been for a drive with his wife, his
    granddaughter, and his two great grandsons when he returned to his residence,
    where his granddaughter's van was parked. His granddaughter opened the door of
    the van, jumped back, and exclaimed, "Papaw, there's a man in my van." McBryar
    then saw the defendant "hunkered down in the van" and asked him for an
    explanation. The defendant answered, "I'm waiting on the man in the house to take
    me across town." McBryar described the defendant's demeanor and attitude as
    "real quiet." He recalled that the defendant was perspiring heavily from the heat,
    was wearing a damp shirt, and was wet from the knees down. McBryar said, "Since
    nobody knows you and I don't know you, it would be best for you to get out of the
    van and hit the road." The defendant followed McBryar's directive and walked west
    on Spring Place Road.
    Lieutenant Mike Boggess of the Bradley County's Sheriff's Office was
    dispatched to investigate a suspicious person in the Spring Place Road area. When
    he searched the area, he saw the defendant walking along Bromley Drive, followed
    by three or four dogs. Lieutenant Boggess patted the defendant down but found no
    weapon. He described the defendant as hot and sweaty and wearing a gray shirt
    and muddy blue jeans wet from the knees down. Lieutenant Boggess checked the
    defendant's identification, made radio contact with the dispatcher, and received
    instructions to arrest the defendant. The defendant, who had some cuts and
    5
    scratches, did not resist. A gunshot residue test on the defendant established that
    he had recently fired a gun. Several months later, the murder weapon was found in
    a hollow spot of a tree in a rural area not far from the crime scene. There were
    several bullets in the gun.
    Detective Clint Denny of the Bradley County Sheriff's Department
    identified a small bag of marijuana taken from the stolen vehicle. He and Officer
    Jimmy Woody took several photographs of the stolen vehicle at the crime scene.
    Detective Denny also identified a note found in the stolen vehicle which was
    apparently written by Charles Overby, Jr., and left with the defendant:
    Daddy, went with Chris to James' house. Call Tom's
    Cycles and talk to Tom. Also call Annette. Be back
    soon, Charles.
    Detective Denny also placed a shirt into evidence that was worn by the defendant at
    the time of his arrest.
    Dr. Charles Harlan performed the autopsy on the victim. It was his
    opinion that the victim was unconscious immediately upon being shot. He died
    several hours later. Upon direct examination, Dr. Harlan was asked whether
    methamphetamine would affect one's ability to distinguish right from wrong. Dr.
    Harlan answered, "No," as defense counsel objected to the testimony on the basis
    that the answer qualified as an opinion on the ultimate issue of the case. The
    defense argued that 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-501
    (c) prohibited testimony about the
    criteria establishing the test for insanity. That is, (1) whether the defendant suffered
    from a severe mental disease or defect and (2) whether he was able to appreciate
    the nature or wrongfulness of his conduct.
    Dr. William C. Greer, a psychiatrist at Valley Psychiatric Hospital,
    testified for the defendant. After examining the defendant, Dr. Greer initially
    determined that he was suffering from major depression, probably recurrent. He
    later modified his diagnosis to major depression with psychosis and mixed
    substance dependence or substance abuse. His testimony was that psychosis was
    6
    a severe mental condition. Dr. Greer was unable to state whether the defendant
    was suffering from a psychosis other than one induced by amphetamines at the time
    of the crimes. Dr. Greer was also unable to state whether the defendant was aware
    of the wrongfulness of his act.
    The defendant's sister, Violet Little, testified that the defendant was
    introverted and nervous as a child. She recalled that he would often claim to have
    heard his deceased father talking to him. She testified that the defendant attempted
    suicide in jail and, after his release on bail, had continued to make statements about
    the location of his children, often accusing her of having his children. Ms. Little
    described the defendant as being violent at times and cool and collected within
    minutes thereafter. She recalled that the defendant suffered a head injury as a child
    when he fell out of a car.
    Barbara Sullivan, the defendant's mother, described the defendant as
    having been a quiet child. Ms. Sullivan, who stated that she had been treated for
    schizophrenia, anxiety, and depression, recalled that her son had suffered a head
    injury in an automobile accident when he was young. Although she had not seen
    him for about a month before the shooting, she described the defendant's behavior
    after his release on bail as bizarre.
    Dr. Patrick Craven, a physician at Mocassin Bend Mental Health
    Institute, testified that the defendant stated that he heard voices that told him to
    commit suicide. While initially diagnosing the defendant as a paranoid-type
    schizophrenic, Dr. Craven ultimately concluded that the defendant had a schizo-
    effective disorder, depressed type.
    Dr. David A. Rose administered the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality
    Inventory (MMPI) and the Rorschach Ink Blot Test. Dr. Rose indicated that the
    MMPI demonstrated evidence of chronic depression and apathy. It was his opinion
    that the defendant had serious cognitive difficulties and serious psychotic thinking.
    7
    Dr. Rose stated that the Rorschach test did not demonstrate psychotic thinking at
    the time of testing but did place the defendant in the marginal range, subject to a
    psychotic reactive pattern under stress. It was his opinion that the defendant was
    relatively paranoid, frightened, and very unrealistic in his thinking.
    Dr. Samuel Craddock, a psychologist at the Middle Tennessee Mental
    Health Institute, described the defendant as a danger to himself due to threats to
    commit suicide. It was his opinion that the defendant had major depression with
    psychotic features. Dr. Craddock stated that the depression and the defendant's
    preoccupation with suicide interfered with his ability to appreciate the seriousness of
    the murder charge and to actively assist in the preparation of his defense. He
    recalled that the defendant was treated at his facility from March 24 to April 22,
    1998, almost ten months after the crime. It was his opinion that the defendant was
    severely mentally ill at the time of the crime because of his voluntary ingestion of
    "appreciable amounts of amphetamines." He did, however, believe that the
    defendant had an appreciation of the wrongfulness of his criminal acts. "I and Dr.
    Faruch were of the opinion that Mr. Overby was severely mentally ill at the time of
    the incident. However, we felt as though this mental illness was induced as a result
    of him taking . . . appreciable amounts of amphetamines, which was also supported
    by him acknowledging it, as well as the data that was provided by the hospital's
    screening test."
    Dr. Craddock testified that a text, The Diagnostic and Statistical
    Manual of Mental Disorders, mentions amphetamine dependence or amphetamine
    intoxication as a mental illness:
    So for me to say that it's not a mental illness is not
    completely accurate. But I want to remind the jury that
    this is something that was brought on by Mr. Overby, his
    voluntary taking the medication and not something like a
    depression or a schizophrenia or a psychosis that a
    person really can't control themselves.
    He concluded that being "drunk on drugs" can be classified as a mental illness.
    Dr. Craddock also testified as follows regarding the defendant's
    8
    involvement in the crimes:
    I think he had an appreciation of the wrongfulness of his
    alleged shooting of another individual and the
    accompanying other crimes with that. That is not
    something that one can measure directly by a
    psychological test, either at the time or sometimes later,
    but it can certainly be inferred by their behavior, meaning
    the defendant's behavior; such things as if they made an
    effort to evade being apprehended; if they tried to hide
    evidence, a gun or something of this nature, that would
    indicate that likely the person had an appreciation for the
    wrongfulness of his behavior . . . . Mr. Overby's delusion
    was that he was looking for his child, and his actions may
    have been totally irrational, but nonetheless I don't see
    that it deprived him of appreciating the wrongfulness of
    assaulting another . . . I believe that he was aware [that]
    the shooting was wrong.
    Dr. Jerry DeVane, the medical director at the emergency room at
    Bradley Memorial Hospital, was unable to state whether the defendant suffered from
    a mental disease or defect on the date of the shooting. Dr. Angelina A. Supan, a
    psychiatrist at Mocassin Bend Mental Health Institute, diagnosed the defendant as
    having paranoid schizophrenia at the time of her examination. Dr. Supan had no
    opinion as to whether the defendant suffered from a severe mental disease or
    defect at the time of the murder.
    The defendant testified that he had a car accident as a child and
    suffered a head injury. He stated that he had had problems with his memory and
    had heard voices for 14 to 15 years. The defendant testified that he utilized a radio
    with earphones in order to cover up the voices that he heard and also took
    medication. The defendant claimed that he did not want to live any longer. He
    acknowledged that he had been introduced to "crank" by a friend and had used it for
    eighteen days before the shooting of the victim.
    Until 1995, the statutory definition of insanity was as follows:
    Insanity.--(a) Insanity is a defense to prosecution if, at
    the time of such conduct, as a result of mental disease or
    defect, the person lacked substantial capacity either to
    appreciate the wrongfulness of the person's conduct or to
    conform that conduct to the requirements of law.
    (b) As used in this section, "mental disease or defect"
    9
    does not include any abnormality manifested only by
    repeated criminal or otherwise antisocial conduct.
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-501
     (repealed 1995); see Graham v. State, 
    547 S.W.2d 531
     (Tenn. 1977). Moreover, until 1995, expert witnesses could testify to an
    ultimate issue, including that of the defendant's mental responsibility. Tenn. R. Evid.
    704. In 1995, our legislature amended the insanity statute in its entirety, as follows:
    (a) It is an affirmative defense to prosecution that, at
    the time of the commission of the acts constituting the
    offense, the defendant, as a result of a severe mental
    disease or defect, was unable to appreciate the nature or
    wrongfulness of such defendant's acts. Mental disease
    or defect does not otherwise constitute a defense. The
    defendant has the burden of proving the defense of
    insanity by clear and convincing evidence.
    (b) As used in this section, "mental disease or defect"
    does not include any abnormality manifested only by
    repeated criminal or otherwise antisocial conduct.
    (c) No expert witness may testify as to whether the
    defendant was or was not insane as set forth in
    subsection (a). Such ultimate issue is a matter for the
    trier of fact alone.
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-501
     (emphasis added). Although Rule 704, Tenn. R.
    Evid., was not amended to preclude expert testimony on the ultimate issue of
    insanity, the 1996 Advisory Commission Comments to the rules recognize that such
    testimony has been restricted under 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-501
    . It is well
    established that a specific provision relating to a particular subject controls and
    takes precedence over a general provision applicable to a multitude of subjects.
    State v. Black, 
    897 S.W.2d 680
    , 683 (Tenn. 1995).
    The United States Supreme Court has ruled that a state may require a
    defendant to prove the defense of insanity beyond a reasonable doubt without
    resulting in a denial of due process under the federal constitution. Leland v.
    Oregon, 
    343 U.S. 790
     (1952). "It is axiomatic, therefore, that a lesser standard of
    proof, such as the clear and convincing standard, may be imposed." United States
    v. Amos, 
    803 F.2d 419
    , 421 (8th Cir. 1986); see also United States v. Freeman, 
    804 F.2d 1574
     (11th Cir. 1986). In Freeman, the defendant challenged the burden of
    proving insanity by clear and convincing evidence under the Insanity Defense
    10
    Reform Act of 1984,1 which is similar to our statute. The Eleventh Circuit held that
    the rule announced in Leland compelled a determination that the clear and
    convincing evidence standard was constitutional. 
    804 F.2d at 1576
    .
    Obviously, the jury rejected the defendant's claim at trial that he had
    established his insanity at the time of the crimes by clear and convincing evidence.
    In this appeal, the defendant argues that the trial court "completely destroyed the
    defense of insanity . . . by first requiring experts to testify to their opinion of [his]
    sanity at the time of the offenses and then later . . . allowing experts to so testify." In
    fact, the trial court did rule that the experts could not testify on the sanity or insanity
    of the defendant but did allow questions regarding whether he had an illness and
    whether that illness prevented him from knowing the wrongfulness of his act. In our
    view, the trial court ruled correctly.
    In State v. Jeffery L. Perry, No. 01C01-9710-CC-00467 (Tenn. Crim.
    App., at Nashville, Apr. 22, 1999), perm. to app. denied, Oct. 11, 1999, this court
    upheld the constitutionality of 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-501
    . This court ruled that
    construction of subpart (c) should be narrow because of the interests at stake:
    Although subpart (c) precludes an expert from testifying
    that the defendant was, in fact, legally "insane" at the
    time of the commission of the offense, the expert may
    testify that the defendant suffered from a severe mental
    disease or defect. The expert may also state whether
    the defendant could have appreciated the nature or
    wrongfulness of his conduct at the time of the offense.
    Subpart (c), however, does prevent the expert from
    1
    (a) Affirmative defense.---It is an affirmative defense to the prosecution under any
    Federal statute that, at the time of the commission of the acts constituting the
    offe nse , the d efen dan t, as a resu lt of a s ever e m enta l disea se or defe ct, wa s una ble
    to appreciate the nature and quality or the wrongfulness of his acts. Mental disease
    or defect does not otherwise constitute a defense.
    (b) Burden of proof.---The defendant has the burden of proving the
    defense of insanity by clear and convincing proof.
    11
    stating that the severe mental disease or defect operated
    to prevent the defendant from appreciating the nature or
    wrongfulness of his conduct. In that regard, the jury must
    render the ultimate determination as to the effect of
    mental disease on the defendant's understanding of his
    conduct at the time of the offense.
    Perry, slip op. at 34.
    None of the witnesses testified that the defendant met the two-
    pronged statutory test for insanity. That is, none testified that because of "a severe
    mental disease or defect" the defendant was "unable to appreciate the nature or
    wrongfulness" of his acts. Our review suggests that the trial court used care in
    fashioning a process by which the various expert witnesses could express a view
    either on the nature of the defendant's mental disease or defect, even if due to
    excessive use of methamphetamines, or his ability to appreciate the wrongfulness of
    his acts. To do so was entirely proper under the new statute. Comments upon the
    criteria necessary to establish insanity are not comments on the ultimate issue.
    That the defendant was unable to establish by clear and convincing evidence that
    he was insane at the time of the offense does not mean that the trial court did not
    provide him with the opportunity to do so. In our assessment, the terms of 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-501
    (c) were not violated. The defendant had an opportunity to
    establish his insanity defense. The supporting proof was simply inadequate to meet
    his burden. The experts did not render an opinion on the ultimate issue, that is, the
    sanity or insanity of the defendant.
    Accordingly, the judgment is affirmed.
    __________________________________
    Gary R. Wade, Presiding Judge
    CONCUR:
    _____________________________
    Joseph M. Tipton, Judge
    _____________________________
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    James Curwood Witt, Jr., Judge
    13