Tommy Joe Walker v. State of Tennessee ( 2003 )


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  •            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    Assigned on Briefs May 21, 2003
    TOMMY JOE WALKER v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
    Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County
    No. 69441 Richard R. Baumgartner, Judge
    No. E2002-02431-CCA-R3-PC
    July 29, 2003
    Convicted in 1990 of first-degree felony murder, aggravated robbery, and conspiracy to commit
    aggravated robbery, the petitioner, Tommy Joe Walker, appeals the Knox County Criminal Court’s
    dismissal of his petition for post-conviction relief, through which he claimed that ineffective
    assistance of trial counsel fouled his convictions. Because the record supports the denial of post-
    conviction relief, we affirm.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Criminal Court is Affirmed.
    JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOE G. RILEY, and
    THOMAS T. WOODA LL, JJ., joined.
    Joseph Liddell Kirk, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Tommy Joe Walker.
    Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; Elizabeth B. Marney, Assistant Attorney General;
    Randall E. Nichols, District Attorney General; and Roger D. Moore, Assistant District Attorney
    General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    Although our supreme court on direct appeal reversed the petitioner’s sentence of
    death on the felony murder conviction, the high court affirmed his convictions. See State v. Walker,
    
    910 S.W.2d 381
    (Tenn. 1995).1 The petitioner was originally indicted along with his brother, E.J.
    Walker, and his nephew, Danny Branam, for the crimes against the victim, Gladys Houston. 
    Id. at 383. The
    charges against the individual defendants were severed for trial. 
    Id. The supreme court’s
    opinion contains a helpful recitation of the facts of the petitioner’s conviction offenses:
    1
    Apparently, on remand, the trial court imposed a life se ntence in lieu of the vacated death sentence .
    The evidence heard by the jury, including [petitioner’s] own
    admissions to various of the witnesses who testified, was sufficient
    to establish that he entered into a conspiracy, in combination with his
    brother and his nephew, to rob Gladys Houston, within the definition
    of the term conspiracy contained in T.C.A. § 39-1-601, et seq.,
    repealed by Chapter 591 of the Public Acts of 1989. This statute
    provided in pertinent part that "the crime of conspiracy may be
    committed by any two (2) or more persons conspiring: (1) To
    commit any indictable offense.
    ...
    [D]uring the early morning hours of 23 July 1987, Gladys Houston
    was shot to death when she arrived at her home on Potomac Drive in
    Knox County after working until about midnight at her family's
    livestock business in Sweetwater, Tennessee. Around 1:15 a.m.
    neighbors were awakened by the sound of gunshots and a honking
    horn. One neighbor looked out her window and saw a car driving
    away from the direction of the Houston house toward the Alcoa
    Highway. Summoned by a neighbor, sheriff's officers arrived at the
    scene to find Mrs. Houston inside her automobile, barely alive and
    slumped over the steering wheel. The driver's door, the glove box
    and car trunk were open. The evidence is conflicting as to whether
    the front passenger door was also open when the first officer arrived.
    The driver's side of the rear window of the vehicle had been shot
    through three (3) times, one bullet passing completely through the
    driver's headrest. Expended rounds were found inside the car in the
    front windshield on the driver's side, between the front seats, and in
    the passenger door. Spent 9MM cartridge casings were on the ground
    behind the vehicle. Officers discovered Mrs. Houston's purse outside
    the car on the passenger side. An unfired .25 caliber automatic
    weapon belonging to Mrs. Houston was lying on the floorboard on
    the driver's side. The keys to the automobile were missing. Mrs.
    Houston died later at a local hospital. She had bled to death from her
    wounds. She had been shot several times, once in the left hand, once
    through the right side of the chest, and once in the back of the neck,
    the bullet exiting through her nose. There was an additional, minor
    wound to her scalp. Around 8:30 a.m., later in the morning of the
    shooting, a neighbor taking a walk found a six-pack of beer, a paper
    bag containing tomatoes and an empty money bag scattered along the
    side of Potomac Drive leading from the Houston residence to the
    Alcoa Highway. Paper wrappers designed to hold stacks of quarters
    were strewn on the pavement near the money bag. Mrs. Houston's
    -2-
    husband identified the money bag as the one used by her to carry
    change from the vending machine at the stockyard. It had contained
    approximately $6.50 in quarters when she left work. A customer had
    also given her a sack of tomatoes the day before she was killed. A
    brown carrying case containing Mrs. Houston's jewelry, some cash
    and bank bags holding several hundred dollars in receipts from the
    restaurant and flea market at the stockyard were found in the car trunk
    when police conducted an inventory of the vehicle.
    Other evidence established that about 6:45 p.m. on Wednesday, 22
    July, three (3) unidentified men entered a bar called "Sam's Place"
    located near the Houston Stockyard in Sweetwater. The men left
    about 7:00 p.m. in a Cadillac and drove away in the direction of the
    stockyard. Around midnight that same evening a customer delivering
    cattle to the stockyard saw the same car sitting "in an unusual place"
    on the road at the stockyard. One person was in the car; another was
    standing outside on the passenger side. Neither of these men were
    identified. The same night between eleven and twelve o'clock two (2)
    stockyard employees were standing next to the Cadillac, which was
    parked at the stockyard. A man resembling Danny Branam, who both
    women knew, got out of the back of the car and, turning his face away
    from the two women, went inside the stockyard building. When he
    opened the car door the interior light came on and the two women
    saw two other people sitting on the front seat. The driver, a man
    resembling the [petitioner], had dark, curly hair and wore glasses.
    The person in the passenger seat had straight brown hair. After five
    or ten minutes the person resembling Branam returned to the car.
    Again he turned his face away from the witnesses. The car and its
    occupants drove away 20 to 30 minutes before Gladys Houston left
    the stockyard. The car seen by the several witnesses belonged to Ray
    "Speck" Elliott, the [petitioner’s] brother-in-law. Police later found
    spent 9MM shells at Elliott's farm in Union County. These shells had
    been fired from the same gun as the bullets and shell casings found
    at the site of the Houston killing.
    Elliott and his wife, Naomi, the [petitioner’s] sister, testified that
    Ernest Walker, had asked to borrow Elliott's cadillac. At the time he
    was accompanied by [petitioner] and Danny Branam. The men said
    they wanted to borrow the car to "go try to make some money" in
    Sweetwater. They indicated that they were going to talk about "some
    business" with a man named Otis Bivens.
    -3-
    When the three men returned the car (a couple of days later according
    to Ray Elliott, early the following morning according to his wife),
    they had Elliott's 9MM gun. The [petitioner] informed Elliott that he
    had "borrowed" the gun and that Elliott would have to get rid of it
    because [the petitioner] had used it to kill a woman. [The petitioner]
    claimed he had been forced to kill the woman because she had a gun.
    Before leaving, he warned the Elliotts, "if this goes outside this room
    about what I have said about what happened, you will get the same
    thing the bitch got."
    Three other persons testified [the petitioner] had confessed his
    participation in the homicide. The first of these was Terry Boling, a
    convicted felon and an acquaintance of both the [petitioner] and Ray
    Elliott. Boling testified that in the early morning hours of 23 July
    1987 [the petitioner] came to his house and asked for cocaine and
    $20. [The petitioner] was high at the time and was driving Elliott's
    cadillac. When Boling stated that he had no cocaine and no money,
    [the petitioner] told Boling that he had just seen "this whore get her
    head blew off" and that "they had just got ... $6.50 in change and a
    bag of tomatoes." [The petitioner], who appeared unfazed by what
    had happened, explained he had gone "there" to make some money.
    Jackie Lynn Dawson, Danny Branam's brother, testified that about 18
    months after the Houston murder [the petitioner] had gotten drunk
    and told Dawson that he was involved in a murder in South
    Knoxville. [The petitioner] said he had gone to a house in the Martha
    Washington subdivision to rob a woman and that the robbery had
    been set up by Otis or Greg Bivens, who had told him that the woman
    would be carrying "a lot of money." According to Dawson's testimony
    [the petitioner] recounted how he had hidden behind a tree on the left
    side of the driveway, rushed out and yanked open the car door as the
    victim started to open it. When the victim pulled a gun from her
    pocketbook, he shot her. While he was checking around the car, the
    victim began to thrash about and [the petitioner] shot her several
    more times.
    Peter Talarico, an inmate at the State Penitentiary in Pikeville
    testified that while he was helping [the petitioner] with legal research
    [the petitioner] told him that he, his brother and his nephew "went to
    rob this lady" and "he had to shoot her because she got on the horn."
    [The petitioner] said he got $6.00 in the robbery and that he [had]
    taken the keys from the car and opened the trunk to see if there was
    any money there.
    -4-
    
    Id. at 384, 386-88.
    We now review issues raised in the petitioner’s direct appeal to our supreme court
    that have some bearing upon the issues raised in the post-conviction proceeding now before this
    court. On direct appeal, the petitioner challenged the admissibility of the following out-of-court
    statements: Danny Branam’s statement made to the petitioner's sister, Naomi Elliott; the petitioner’s
    statements made to his sister and brother-in-law three or four days after the homicide; and the
    statements made by E.J. Walker to his sister, Naomi Elliott. 
    Id. at 384. All
    of the statements
    challenged in the appeal were offered by the state through the testimony of Naomi Elliott. 
    Id. at 385. The
    supreme court determined that all of the statements given by Branam and E.J. Walker to Naomi
    Elliott were inadmissible as hearsay because they were neither made during the course of the
    conspiracy to rob Ms. Houston nor to conceal the crimes of robbery and murder. 
    Id. at 386. However,
    the high court held that the challenges to the admissibility of Branam’s and E.J. Walker’s
    statements had been waived due to the petitioner’s failure to object to their introduction and to raise
    the issues in the motion for new trial, and moreover, the court held that the use of the statements was
    harmless error in light of the strong case against the petitioner, which included his own, multiple
    admissions to the crimes. 
    Id. at 386-88. The
    supreme court also considered, inter alia, an issue of prosecutorial misconduct
    in which the petitioner alleged
    that a transcript [of Branam’s statement] was materially altered
    mid-trial to include []the damning phrase,[] [“]they were there,[”]
    when the phrase had not appeared in three (3) previous transcripts,
    two of which had been prepared by the State [and] that the altered
    transcript was supplied mid-trial to defense counsel knowing defense
    counsel would only have a few minutes to review it.
    
    Id. at 389-90. The
    high court described the tape recording and the transcript authenticated by Naomi
    Elliott as follows:2
    The recording was deplorably poor in audibility. It was also peppered
    with profanity and vulgarities on the part of both Ms. Elliott and her
    nephew. The questioned statement was made by Mr. Branam. In the
    transcript produced by defense counsel it appears that he said, "I don't
    think--to tell you the truth, I don't think Jay and Joe would say
    nothing. (Inaudible)--They both know, (inaudible)--burn their
    2
    The supreme court held that the transcript offered by the state was adm issible because Naom i Elliott, a party
    to the record ed co nversa tion, authenticated it as accurately reflecting the con versation. Walker, 910 S.W .2d at 395 .
    -5-
    goddamn ass. I believe that somebody on down the (inaudible)--" In
    the final version submitted by the State this statement became, "I
    don't think--to tell you the truth, I don't think Jay and Joe would say
    nothing cause they were there and they both know, that's gonna--burn
    their goddamn ass. I believe its somebody on the outside or
    something."
    
    Id. at 390. The
    court then ruled:
    We are in accord with the conclusion of the trial judge [in ruling on
    the motion for new trial] that there was significant evidence, not only
    in the tape recording of the conversation between Naomi Elliott and
    Danny Branam, but in the testimony of other witnesses, that would
    have allowed any rational trier of fact to find guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    
    Id. at 391. The
    court’s majority opinion, authored by Special Justice O’Brien, was hardly
    unanimous on the issues surrounding the out-of-court statements. Then Chief Justice Anderson
    concurred in affirming the petitioner’s convictions, although he concluded that the petitioner’s
    “tactical” decision not to object to the introduction of the statements waived any appellate review
    of the statements’ admissibility. 
    Id. at 399 (Anderson,
    C.J., concurring). He wrote,
    In this case, the defendant failed to interpose an objection to the
    admission of the statements even though the trial judge specifically
    inquired if the defense objected before admitting the evidence now
    challenged as error. Thus, the trial judge had no opportunity to rule
    on the evidence that the defendant now claims was admitted in error.
    ...
    Defense counsel was objecting to the State's use of one certain
    version of the transcript of the tape. Counsel never objected to
    admission of the tape itself, which was the evidence, as the trial court
    repeatedly instructed the jury.
    
    Id. Chief Justice Anderson
    concluded that the plain error rule would not apply because, based upon
    trial counsel’s statements during the hearing on the motion for new trial, counsel’s failure to object
    to the introduction of the tape was the result of tactical choice. 
    Id. at 400. Chief
    Justice Anderson
    noted that the trial judge had agreed that the decision to let the tape in was “well thought out.” 
    Id. -6- Justices Drowota
    and Birch joined in Chief Justice Anderson’s concurring opinion.
    Justice Reid dissented from the majority’s conclusion and opined that admission of the co-
    conspirators’ statements was reversible error. 
    Id. at 400-01 (Reid,
    J., concurring and dissenting).
    On appeal in the present case, the petitioner claims that his trial counsel was
    ineffective in two respects: (1) his failure to object on hearsay grounds to the admission of Naomi
    Elliott’s accounts of Danny Branam’s and E.J. Walker’s statements, and (2) his failure to discern and
    object to the inculpatory nature of the introduced transcript of Naomi Elliott’s tape-recorded
    conversation with Danny Branam.
    At the post-conviction evidentiary hearing, the petitioner’s lead trial attorney testified
    that about two weeks before trial, he heard an audiotape of a conversation between Naomi Elliott
    and Danny Branam. The tape itself was mostly unintelligible, but the Tennessee Bureau of
    Investigation (TBI) made a transcript, as did a court reporter engaged by defense counsel. Counsel
    testified that no statements made by Branam on the tape placed the petitioner at the crime scene.
    Counsel testified that his copy of the taped conversation and his privately-prepared transcript differed
    from the state’s tape and transcript. Defense counsel and the prosecutor discussed the variances but
    reached no agreement about an admissible version prior to the commencement of the trial.
    In an in-chambers conference before trial, counsel objected to the use of Naomi
    Elliott’s tape, and at the post-conviction hearing, he testified that the trial court had ruled it
    admissible on the basis of being a recording of a conversation that was in furtherance of a
    conspiracy. However, no objection to the tape was ever put on the record. Counsel testified that he
    had no one who could authenticate his own version of the tape because Naomi Elliott authenticated
    the state’s version and the only other participant to the taped conversation, Danny Branam, had
    invoked the Fifth Amendment as a bar to answering questions about the tape.
    On the morning of the fourth day of trial, the prosecutor presented defense counsel
    with a new version of a transcript that the prosecutor wanted to introduce into evidence. Counsel
    testified that neither he nor his co-counsel had an opportunity to review the transcript before the state
    called Naomi Elliott to testify, but defense counsel did not ask the court for more time to review the
    transcript. The state’s new transcript contained statements that placed the petitioner at the scene of
    the crime. Counsel testified that he was not aware of these changes to the transcript until after it was
    presented to the jury through witness Naomi Elliott. Counsel testified that in the subsequent
    separate trial of E.J. Walker, the trial court deleted from the transcript a reference to the petitioner
    and others being present at the crime scene because the court ruled that that statement was not
    uttered on the audiotape.
    Counsel testified that he was unaware that the statement “they were there” was
    included in the state’s transcript until the prosecutor mentioned it five times during closing rebuttal
    argument. Counsel testified that no tactical reason could have supported allowing this statement into
    evidence and denied that he declined to pursue exclusion for tactical reasons.
    -7-
    The post-conviction court found that trial counsel did object to the introduction of the
    Branam tape “in chambers which was not on the record” and that “[i]t is unfortunate that the
    proceedings held in chambers [were] not later memorialized on the record.” The post-conviction
    court found that defense counsel was unaware of the “they were there” statement in the new
    transcript until it was relied upon by the prosecutor during his final argument. The court further
    noted that the prosecutor “apparently had an epiphany and was miraculously able to hear an
    incriminating statement made by Mr. Branam that no one else before or since has been able to hear.”
    Nevertheless, the court held that, although “it would have been preferable to have a
    contemporaneous objection to the introduction of the statement,” the petitioner had not established
    that trial counsel had rendered ineffective assistance “during a contentious trial when the objection
    had already been overruled.” The court stressed that counsel’s performance must be viewed “in the
    atmosphere of a contentious and fluid trial setting,” not “in the quiet and calmness of hindsight.”
    Although the post-conviction court opined that the trial prosecutor should have provided adequate
    notice of the changes in the transcript and that he should not have saved his arguments about the new
    transcript revisions until his closing argument, see Tenn. R. Crim. P. 29.1(b), possible misconduct
    on the part of the prosecutor does not “equate to ineffective assistance of [defense] counsel.”
    We begin our assessment of the case by recalling familiar and settled rules of law.
    The post-conviction petitioner bears the burden of proving his or her allegations by clear and
    convincing evidence. Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-210(f) (1997). On appeal, the appellate court
    accords to the trial court's findings of fact the weight of a jury verdict, and these findings are
    conclusive on appeal unless the evidence preponderates against them. Henley v. State, 
    960 S.W.2d 572
    , 578-79 (Tenn. 1997); Bates v. State, 
    973 S.W.2d 615
    , 631 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997).
    When a post-conviction court denies a petitioner’s claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel, this court, on appeal, must determine whether the evidence preponderates against a
    post-conviction court's findings (1) that counsel's performance was within the range of competence
    demanded of attorneys in criminal cases, Baxter v. Rose, 
    523 S.W.2d 930
    , 936 (Tenn. 1975), and/or
    (2) that any deficient performance did not prejudice the petitioner, Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687-79, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 2064-2069 (1984). See also Powers v. State, 
    942 S.W.2d 551
    ,
    557 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996). Courts need not address these components in any particular order or
    even address both if the petitioner fails to meet his burden with respect to one. 
    Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 580
    .
    In evaluating counsel's performance, this court should not examine every allegedly
    deficient act or omission in isolation, but rather we view the performance in the context of the case
    as a whole. State v. Mitchell, 
    753 S.W.2d 148
    , 149 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988). The primary concern
    of the court should be the fundamental fairness of the proceeding of which the result is being
    challenged. 
    Id. Therefore, this court
    should not second-guess tactical and strategic decisions by
    defense counsel. 
    Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 579
    . Instead, this court must reconstruct the circumstances
    of counsel's challenged conduct and evaluate the conduct from counsel's perspective at the time. Id.;
    see also Irick v. State, 
    973 S.W.2d 643
    , 652 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1998).
    -8-
    Even if the petitioner establishes that counsel's performance was not within the
    requisite range of competence, he must also demonstrate a reasonable probability that the result of
    the proceeding would have been different but for the defective performance of counsel. 
    Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 580
    . A court must
    "consider the totality of the evidence before the judge or jury. Some
    of the factual findings will have been unaffected by the errors, and
    factual findings that were affected will have been affected in different
    ways. Some errors will have had a pervasive effect on the inferences
    to be drawn from the evidence, altering the entire evidentiary picture,
    and some will have had an isolated, trivial effect. . .."
    
    Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 580
    (quoting 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696-97
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2069).
    Although the petitioner in his brief presents a forceful argument that he was
    prejudiced by trial counsel’s deficient performance, we conclude that the record supports the lower
    court’s denial of post-conviction relief.
    We arrive at this conclusion, however, on different grounds than those primarily used
    by the lower court. In our view, trial counsel performed deficiently in both the activities cited by the
    petitioner in his brief. Relative to the failure to object to the extra-judicial statements as hearsay, the
    post-conviction court found, based upon trial counsel’s testimony, that counsel did, in fact, object,
    albeit he did so in chambers and failed to memorialize the objection and ruling on the record. Thus,
    the lower court held that trial counsel made the objection and, accordingly, performed sufficiently.
    This view, however, fails to account for trial counsel’s duty to take actions before and during trials
    that will afford his client the opportunity to adjudicate adverse trial court rulings on appeal. See, e.g.,
    Tenn. R. Crim. P. 12(b); Tenn. R. App. P. 3(e), 36(a). The failure to secure a record of his motion
    and of the court’s denial of same precluded the appellate courts from reviewing the hearsay issue on
    the merits on direct appeal. We believe this lapse on counsel’s part constituted deficient
    performance.
    Similarly, the failure to request a recess before the state’s continuation of the direct
    examination of Naomi Elliott so that defense counsel could have an opportunity to review the
    proffered transcript equates to deficient performance of counsel.
    That said, we remain unpersuaded that the petitioner has demonstrated by clear and
    convincing evidence that he was prejudiced by counsel’s rather narrow lapses. Although various
    state witnesses were arguably handicapped by credibility demerits, the state nevertheless presented
    evidence from at least four of these witnesses other than Naomi Elliott that the petitioner admitted
    that he killed Ms. Houston. Moreover, the thrust of the petitioner’s defense was that Speck Elliott,
    whose physical appearance resembled that of the petitioner and who is Naomi Elliott’s husband and
    the petitioner’s brother-in-law, committed the crimes. In the context of the totality of the evidence,
    the triers of fact were necessarily aware that Noami Elliott’s accounts of her conversations with
    -9-
    Danny Branam and E.J. Walker were assailable on the grounds that she was trying to exonerate her
    husband by assigning blame to the petitioner. In other words, the efficacy of Branam’s and E.J.
    Walker’s pretrial statements was hinged to the challenged credibility of Naomi Elliott. Furthermore,
    concerning the failure to object to the use of the transcript, we note that at trial the transcript was
    authenticated by the witness, Naomi Elliott. Ms. Elliott was apparently willing to authenticate the
    transcript, including the reference to the petitioner being at the scene of the crime, as being an
    accurate reflection of her conversation with Danny Branam. Accordingly, we conclude that, had
    defense counsel timely objected to the use of the transcript, the trial court in the petitioner’s case
    might well have overruled the objection.
    Thus, in the context of the entire evidence, we are unconvinced that the result of the
    trial would have been different had the hearsay statements been excluded. Accordingly, the denial
    of post-conviction relief is affirmed.
    ___________________________________
    JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE
    -10-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E2002-02431-CCA-R3-PC

Judges: Judge J. Curwood Witt, Jr.

Filed Date: 7/29/2003

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014