State of Tennessee v. Tommy Michael Owen ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                              11/10/2021
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    Assigned on Briefs September 14, 2021
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. TOMMY MICHAEL OWEN
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Lewis County
    No. 2019-CR-4      Michael E. Spitzer, Judge
    ___________________________________
    No. M2020-01375-CCA-R3-CD
    ___________________________________
    Defendant was convicted by a Lewis County Circuit Court jury of reckless aggravated
    assault, a Class D felony, and sentenced by the trial court to two years in the Department
    of Correction, suspended to unsupervised probation. Defendant argues on appeal that the
    trial court abused its discretion in denying his request for judicial diversion. Based on our
    review of the entire record and the parties’ briefs, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed
    JILL BARTEE AYERS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT
    WILLIAMS, P.J., and NORMA MCGEE OGLE, J., joined.
    David Christensen, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tommy Michael Owen.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Caitlin Smith, Senior Assistant
    Attorney General; Kim R. Helper, District Attorney General; and Hunter Knight, Assistant
    District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    Factual and Procedural Background
    On January 28, 2019, Defendant, Defendant’s mother, and the victim, Defendant’s
    stepfather, were involved in a verbal altercation regarding the eviction of Defendant from
    the property previously owned by Defendant’s mother and Defendant’s father. During the
    altercation, Defendant pulled out his pistol and fired a shot that grazed the back of the
    victim’s neck. The Lewis County Grand Jury subsequently returned a three-count
    indictment charging Defendant with aggravated assault, reckless aggravated assault, and
    reckless endangerment with a deadly weapon. At the conclusion of the trial, the jury
    convicted Defendant of reckless aggravated assault and acquitted him of aggravated assault
    and reckless endangerment with a deadly weapon.
    While it is the duty of the appellant to prepare the record, the trial transcript is not
    included in the record before this court. The trial court, however, provided an extensive
    summary of the trial testimony in its sentencing memorandum. According to the trial
    court’s memorandum, the trial testimony revealed that the victim and Defendant had a
    hostile relationship that originally stemmed from Defendant’s mother’s extramarital affair
    with the victim, which apparently began after Defendant’s father had been diagnosed with
    terminal cancer. The victim began coming to the couple’s home to help with chores on the
    rural property. Defendant lived with his wife and son in a separate mobile home located
    on the same property. Prior to the death of Defendant’s father, the victim and Defendant’s
    mother moved in together and became caretakers of Defendant’s father until his death.
    After the death of Defendant’s father, Defendant’s mother married the victim.
    In his brief, Defendant’s counsel states that Defendant’s father died by suicide while
    incarcerated at a special needs facility in the Tennessee Department of Correction, having
    discharged a weapon at his wife’s workplace, the Lewis County Courthouse, upon learning
    of his wife’s affair with the victim. Although it may be an accurate rendition of what
    transpired, it is not included in the trial court’s summary of the trial testimony or anywhere
    else in the record on appeal. According to the trial court’s sentencing memorandum,
    Defendant testified at trial that after his mother abandoned his father, Defendant and
    Defendant’s wife cared for the father until his death.
    Regardless of how Defendant’s father died, Defendant’s mother decided at some
    point after his death to sell the property. Because Defendant and his wife refused to move,
    Defendant’s mother and the victim filed an eviction action that resulted in a court order for
    Defendant to vacate the property by February 15, 2019.
    On January 28, 2019, Defendant’s mother and the victim went to the property to
    install posts for a gate across the drive. Defendant saw the activity, armed himself with his
    pistol, and went down the drive to confront his mother and the victim. Testimony at trial
    differed about what Defendant said, but the parties agreed that Defendant became upset
    when the victim interjected himself into Defendant’s conversation with his mother. There
    was also conflict in the testimony about whether it was Defendant or the victim who first
    pulled out a gun. It was undisputed, however, that Defendant fired at the victim and that
    the bullet grazed the victim across the back of the victim’s neck.
    -2-
    At the June 2, 2020, sentencing hearing, the victim testified that he and Defendant’s
    mother were reinstalling gate posts that had been destroyed by a recent tornado when
    Defendant came down the drive and began “hounding” his mother about needing more
    time to vacate the property. According to the victim, Defendant kept talking about his new
    house not being ready by the February 15 deadline. When the victim interrupted Defendant
    to tell him that he needed a back-up plan, Defendant became enraged and began reaching
    into his pocket. The victim said he was aware that Defendant routinely carried a pistol.
    Therefore, when he saw Defendant’s movement toward his pocket, he told him that he did
    not “need to go there.” According to the victim, the next thing he knew, Defendant had
    pulled his pistol out and was holding it in both hands aimed at the victim’s face.
    The victim testified that he thought he could diffuse the situation by walking away,
    but when he turned he “got a bullet right across the back of [his] neck.” The victim said
    that he responded by running to the back of his trailer, pulling his own gun out of his
    pocket, and “fumbling with it.” When Defendant followed him, he put the gun back into
    his pocket without pointing it at Defendant and began wrestling with Defendant for control
    of Defendant’s weapon. The victim stated that his own gun fell out of his pocket during
    his struggle with Defendant on the hillside.
    The victim testified that his relationship with Defendant deteriorated after
    Defendant’s mother asked Defendant to move from the property. Although he had not
    mentioned it at trial, the victim testified that Defendant had threatened to kill him on two
    earlier occasions. The victim claimed that his lawyer had advised him to always take his
    own weapon with him to the property because of those death threats and Defendant’s habit
    of carrying a weapon. The victim expressed his opinion that a sentence of probation or
    judicial diversion would not be a fair outcome, testifying that his own father, who had no
    criminal record, “poured gas in [his] mother’s house, but he didn’t light the match,” and
    was sentenced to serve eight years in prison.
    On cross-examination, the victim expressed his belief that the sheriff’s department
    had been aware of Defendant’s previous threats to kill him, which occurred at the
    Hohenwald home of Debbie Devore, a cousin of Defendant’s mother. He denied that he
    had pointed his gun at Defendant, stating that he could not shoot Defendant in front of his
    mother. According to the victim, the outcome would have been different had Defendant’s
    mother not been present.
    Lisa Owen, Defendant’s wife, testified that she and Defendant had been married for
    almost twenty-seven years and had one child, a nineteen-year-old son, who lived with them
    and attended school. She said she had a number of health problems, including breast
    cancer, which had first been diagnosed in July 2014. Defendant drove her to her medical
    -3-
    appointments and their son to school, performed all the housework, took care of all
    yardwork, and assisted her with showering. She and Defendant each drew disability, with
    the Defendant’s disability dating from before the birth of their son. She was unsure of the
    exact nature of his disability other than that he suffered “social phobia and OCD[.]”
    Defendant for the most part remained at home because he did not like to be out in public.
    Mrs. Owen testified that Defendant had not had any contact with his mother or the
    victim since the incident. Prior to the incident, Defendant had never been arrested and Mrs.
    Owen had never before seen him engage in any act of violence. Defendant had been going
    to “Centerstone” for mental health treatment since they were first married and was
    currently on medication for his mental health. Mrs. Owen testified that she and her son
    depended on Defendant’s help at home because Defendant performed a number of tasks,
    including assistance with her personal hygiene, that no one else could do.
    On cross-examination, Mrs. Owen testified that the victim pulled his gun out first,
    forcing Defendant to shoot in self-defense. She insisted that the victim had been facing
    Defendant when Defendant fired his gun and speculated that he must have turned his head
    the instant before the bullet struck him. She stated that the only reason Defendant left their
    mobile home was to ask his mother if she knew anyone who could help him move his
    storage buildings. She said Defendant was in the habit of carrying his gun whenever he
    left their home. She acknowledged that neither the victim nor Defendant’s mother
    approached their mobile home. She further acknowledged that it would have been possible
    for Defendant to relay a message to his mother through their respective lawyers. She
    added, however, that Defendant and his mother were able to hold civil conversations when
    the victim was not around to instigate conflict.
    Defendant testified that he was forty-six-years-old and had obtained his handgun
    carry permit when he was in his early twenties. The permit had since been revoked as a
    result of the instant offense. He no longer owned any guns, having sold his three guns
    before trial because he needed the money. He had dropped out of school in the ninth grade
    and worked a series of jobs, including his last job with the Tennessee Department of
    Transportation, before quitting work approximately twenty years earlier due to his mental
    health problems. Defendant explained that he suffered from major depression and stress
    and had started cutting himself, which had motivated him to seek mental health treatment
    at Centerstone. He said he currently took medication for OCD, depression, anxiety, and
    social phobias and was fine as long as he stayed busy with home chores and no one
    bothered him. He stated that he had not had any problems with anger issues since he had
    been placed on his medication.
    -4-
    Defendant described his caretaking of his wife and said that their son would be
    unable to assume his duties because many of the required tasks were too personal. He said
    he had not had any contact with the victim or his mother since the incident, did not desire
    to have a relationship with them, and sought only to live his life quietly and free from
    drama. Since the incident, his depression had worsened but remained manageable as long
    as he stayed busy with tasks during the day. He said he would continue with his mental
    health treatment and would comply with any conditions of probation.
    Defendant denied that he threatened the victim’s life or that he had gone to Ms.
    Devore’s house after his mother began her affair with the victim. He volunteered, however,
    that he had heard that the victim and his mother had met at Ms. Devore’s house during his
    father’s lifetime to carry on their affair. He testified that he strapped on his gun holster on
    the day of the incident because it was his habit to carry his gun with him whenever he left
    his home. In an apparent contradiction to that statement, he agreed that his decision to
    carry the gun had also been influenced by his knowledge that the victim was frequently
    armed. He said he wished the incident had never happened and that it could have been
    avoided had his mother and the victim waited on the gate installation until after he and his
    family had vacated the property. He insisted he had to go down to see what they were
    doing because his movers would have been unable to bring his storage sheds out the narrow
    driveway if the posts were left where the victim and his mother were installing them. He
    said when the victim kept interrupting his conversation with his mother and he told the
    victim to “just shut the F up,” the victim pulled a gun on him.
    On cross-examination, Defendant testified that he was taking medication for his
    anger issues at the time of the incident. He reiterated that the incident could have been
    avoided had his mother and the victim waited until he had moved from the property, but
    he conceded that the incident would not have occurred had he not gone down to see what
    they were doing. He refused to concede that the incident could have been prevented if he
    had left his gun at home, testifying that if he had not had his gun with him, he would have
    been dead. Defendant stated that he reacted to the victim’s pulling his gun on him by
    pulling his own gun and firing a shot at the victim without aiming. When asked why he
    failed to mention his concern with the placement of the posts during his trial testimony, he
    responded that he thought he had mentioned it. Defendant refused to acknowledge that he
    was in any way at fault for the incident. When asked if he would seek to regain his handgun
    permit or purchase more weapons if he were granted diversion and his record cleared, he
    replied that he did not know about the carry permit but that he might want to again own
    guns.
    On June 15, 2020, the trial court entered an extensive sentencing memorandum in
    which it analyzed in detail the seven factors required to be considered and weighed for
    -5-
    judicial diversion as set forth in State v. Electroplating, Inc., 
    990 S.W.2d 211
    , 229 (Tenn.
    Crim. App. 1998). The trial court concluded that Defendant was not a favorable candidate
    for judicial diversion. The court also concluded, however, that a sentence of probation was
    suitable under the unusual facts and circumstances of the case, which included the fact that
    the victim, who was aware of Defendant’s mental health issues, engaged in provocative
    behavior toward Defendant. Accordingly, the court sentenced Defendant as a Range I,
    standard offender to two years in the Department of Correction, suspended to unsupervised
    probation.
    ANALYSIS
    Defendant contends on appeal that the trial court abused its discretion in denying
    his request for judicial diversion. Specifically, he argues that the court erred in finding that
    the circumstances of the offense weighed against diversion, in conflating its analysis of the
    factor concerning Defendant’s physical and mental health with the factor concerning the
    circumstances of the offense, and in finding that diversion would have no deterrence value
    to Defendant or others. The State responds that the trial court properly denied the request
    for judicial diversion because the record supports the court’s findings that five of the seven
    Electroplating factors weigh against the granting of diversion. We agree with the State.
    Following a determination of guilt by plea or by trial, a trial court may, in its
    discretion, defer further proceedings and place a qualified defendant on probation without
    entering a judgment of guilt. T.C.A. § 40–35–313(a)(1)(A); State v. Dycus, 
    456 S.W. 3d 918
    , 925 (Tenn. 2015). If the defendant successfully completes the period of probation,
    the trial court is required to dismiss the proceedings against him, and the defendant may
    have the records of the proceedings expunged. 
    Id.
     § 40–35–313(a)(2), (b); Dycus, 456
    S.W.3d at 925.
    As an offender convicted of a Class D felony and with no prior criminal record,
    Defendant met the statutory requirements to be considered for judicial diversion. See id. §
    40-35-313(a)(1)(B). Mere eligibility, however, does not entitle a defendant to judicial
    diversion. State v. Parker, 
    932 S.W.2d 945
    , 958 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996). Instead, the
    decision to grant or deny a qualified defendant judicial diversion “is entrusted to the trial
    court.” State v. King, 
    432 S.W.3d 316
    , 326 (Tenn. 2014) (citation omitted). In determining
    whether to grant diversion, the trial court is to consider the following factors: (a) the
    accused’s amenability to correction, (b) the circumstances of the offense, (c) the accused’s
    criminal record, (d) the accused’s social history, (e) the accused’s physical and mental
    health, (f) the deterrence value to the accused as well as others, and (g) whether judicial
    diversion will serve the interests of the public as well as the accused. Electroplating, 
    990 S.W.2d at 229
    .
    -6-
    “A trial court’s decision to grant or deny judicial diversion is reviewed for an abuse
    of discretion with a presumption of reasonableness.” King, 432 S.W.3d at 327. In King,
    our supreme court held that “nothing in Bise or its progeny requires the abrogation of the
    Parker and Electroplating factors:
    Under the Bise standard of review, when the trial court considers the
    Parker and Electroplating factors, specifically identifies the relevant factors,
    and places on the record its reasons for granting or denying judicial diversion,
    the appellate court must apply a presumption of reasonableness and uphold
    the grant or denial so long as there is any substantial evidence to support the
    trial court’s decision. Although the trial court is not required to recite all of
    the Parker and Electroplating factors when justifying its decision on the
    record in order to obtain the presumption of reasonableness, the record
    should reflect that the trial court considered the Parker and Electroplating
    factors in rendering its decision and that it identified the specific factors
    applicable to the case before it. Thereafter, the trial court may proceed to
    solely address the relevant factors.
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 327 (footnote omitted).
    The record reveals that the trial court considered and weighed each of the
    Electroplating factors in its decision to deny Defendant’s request for judicial diversion.
    The court found that Defendant’s amenability to correction and Defendant’s criminal
    history both weighed in favor of diversion, noting that Defendant had no prior criminal
    record, had had no contact with his mother or the victim since the incident, and expressed
    his desire to have no contact with them in the future.
    The trial court found that the circumstances of the offense weighed heavily against
    diversion. The court recognized the unusual and provocative set of facts that preceded the
    incident, with Defendant having been evicted from his childhood home by his mother and
    the victim, who had been involved together in an extramarital affair while Defendant’s
    father was dying. The court found, however, that the most significant circumstance was
    that Defendant, who was aware that he suffered from anger management issues, made the
    decision to arm himself to walk down the drive to confront the victim, a man he despised.
    The trial court found that Defendant’s social history also weighed heavily against
    diversion. The court noted the Defendant’s history of mental health problems, including
    anger management issues, and Defendant’s testimony that he generally avoids contact with
    other people. For that reason, the court found that Defendant “was treading on thin ice by
    -7-
    initiating contact with [the victim] and his mother under a volatile situation and doing so
    with a loaded weapon at the ready.”
    The trial court found that Defendant’s physical and mental health weighed against
    diversion, noting the evidence about Defendant’s mental health issues and observing that
    Defendant “should be cautious about his encounters and continue to seek therapy for his
    diagnosis.”
    The trial court found that the sixth factor, the deterrence value to Defendant and
    others, weighed against diversion. The court’s major concern was Defendant’s refusal to
    accept responsibility for his own actions and his continued attempt to place complete blame
    on the victim for the incident. Noting that the jury, by its verdict, obviously rejected
    Defendant’s claim of self-defense, the court found that there would be no deterrence value
    to Defendant if diversion were granted.
    Finally, the trial court found that diversion would serve neither the interest of the
    public nor Defendant. The court, therefore, concluded that Defendant’s was not a proper
    case for judicial diversion.
    Defendant cites the trial court’s application of the mitigating factors that Defendant
    acted under strong provocation and committed the offense under such unusual
    circumstances that it was unlikely a sustained intent to violate the law motivated his
    conduct, see T.C.A. § 40-35-113 (2), (11), in support of his contention that the trial court
    abused its discretion in finding that the circumstances of the offense weighed heavily
    against the granting of judicial diversion. The trial court’s finding of applicable mitigating
    factors, however, was separate from its analysis of the Electroplating factors. In its
    analysis of whether the circumstances of the offense weighed in favor of or against the
    granting of judicial diversion, the trial court recognized the unusual and provocative
    circumstances that preceded the offense. The court nevertheless found that the most
    significant circumstance, which weighed heavily against diversion, was Defendant’s
    decision against that acrimonious background to arm himself with his weapon to go down
    to confront the victim, a man he despised. The trial court’s finding that the circumstances
    of the offense weighed heavily against the granting of diversion is fully supported by the
    record.
    Defendant also contends that the trial court abused its discretion by conflating the
    factor of Defendant’s mental health with the circumstances of the offense and by finding
    that Defendant’s “decision to receive mental health treatment and spend the majority of his
    time with his intact nuclear family to weigh against diversion.”
    -8-
    We respectfully disagree with Defendant’s characterization of the trial court’s
    findings. When read in context, it is clear that the trial court’s finding that Defendant’s
    social history and mental health weighed against the granting of diversion was not based
    on the fact that Defendant sought mental health treatment and chose to spend most of his
    time at home with his nuclear family, but instead on the fact that Defendant, knowing of
    his mental health issues and difficulty with social encounters, made the conscious decision
    to arm himself before initiating a confrontation with the victim.
    Finally, Defendant contends that the trial court abused its discretion by finding that
    there would be no deterrence value to a sentence of judicial diversion and by relying too
    heavily in its decision on its concern about Defendant’s future ownership of firearms.
    Defendant argues that the trial court erred by counting the Defendant’s consistent account
    that he acted in self-defense against him and asserts that the “idiosyncratic circumstances
    of the offense” suggest that “the deterrent value in denying diversion is extremely low.”
    We, again, respectfully disagree. In finding that the deterrence factor weighed
    against the granting of diversion, the trial court properly noted the Defendant’s adamant
    refusal to accept any responsibility for his role in the incident, along with his testimony at
    the hearing that he would probably get another gun if he were granted diversion and his
    record expunged. The trial court’s findings are supported by the record.
    We, therefore, conclude that the trial court acted within its discretion in denying
    Defendant’s request for judicial diversion. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the
    trial court.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    ____________________________________
    JILL BARTEE AYERS, JUDGE
    -9-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: M2020-01375-CCA-R3-CD

Judges: Judge Jill Bartee Ayers

Filed Date: 11/10/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/10/2021