State v. Stacy Williford ( 1998 )


Menu:
  •            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT JACKSON
    OCTOBER 1998 SESSION
    FILED
    December 21, 1998
    Cecil Crowson, Jr.
    Appellate C ourt Clerk
    STATE OF TENNESSEE,             )
    )    C.C.A. NO. 02C01-9710-CC-00416
    Appellee,            )
    )    FAYETTE COUNTY
    VS.                             )
    )    HON. JON KERRY BLACKWOOD,
    STACY D. WILLIFORD,             )    JUDGE
    )
    Appellant.           )    (Aggravated Vehicular Homicide,
    Vehicular Assault, Driving Under the
    Influence, Driving on Revoked
    License, and Leaving the Scene of an
    Accident)
    FOR THE APPELLANT:                   FOR THE APPELLEE:
    ANDREW S. JOHNSTON                   JOHN KNOX WALKUP
    108 East Court Square                Attorney General & Reporter
    Somerville, TN 38068
    PETER M. COUGHLAN
    Asst. Attorney General
    John Sevier Bldg.
    425 Fifth Ave., North
    Nashville, TN 37243-0493
    ELIZABETH T. RICE
    District Attorney General
    302 Market St.
    Somerville, TN 38068
    OPINION FILED:____________________
    AFFIRMED
    JOHN H. PEAY,
    Judge
    OPINION
    The defendant was convicted by a jury of aggravated vehicular homicide,
    vehicular assault, driving under the influence, driving on a revoked license, and leaving
    the scene of an accident. Following a sentencing hearing, the defendant received an
    effective sentence of twenty years. The defendant now appeals, raising the following
    issues for review:
    I. Whether the trial court erred in denying the defendant’s motion to
    suppress statements on the theory the defendant was in custody but was
    not read his Miranda warnings?
    II. Whether the defendant’s due process rights were violated by T.C.A. §
    55-10-401, which allows an inference that previous DUI offenders are
    intoxicated if their blood alcohol content is .08% or higher, whereas it may
    be inferred that first-time offenders are intoxicated only when their blood
    alcohol content is .10% or higher?
    III. Whether the trial court erred in charging the jury that they could infer
    intoxication by a .08% or higher blood alcohol content, since this instruction
    reveals to the jury that the defendant has been previously convicted of
    DUI?
    IV. Whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the defendant’s
    convictions for aggravated vehicular homicide, vehicular assault, and
    leaving the scene of an accident?
    Finding no reversible error, we affirm the trial court’s judgments.
    Around 6:50 p.m. on October 10, 1996, Annette Pittman and her young
    daughter were traveling between forty-five and fifty miles per hour on Bateman Road in
    Fayette County, headed north toward Highway 57. As Ms. Pittman crested a hill, her
    young daughter’s yell alerted her to a motorbike, without any lighting, driving
    approximately fifteen miles per hour weaving in the middle of the lane. Two boys in their
    early teens were riding the motorbike, but neither looked back when Ms. Pittman’s
    headlights illuminated them, even though her car came within five to six feet of hitting
    them. She followed them at a distance, and when she came to a safe place to pass
    2
    them, she did.
    Approximately fifteen minutes later, at around 7:05 p.m., the defendant was
    driving his Camaro westbound on Highway 57. The speed the defendant was traveling
    is unknown. The night was dark and clear, there were no street lights but nothing to
    obstruct a driver’s view, and the pavement was dry. The defendant struck two boys,
    Ronald Phillip Webb and Brandon Robbins, who were riding a motorbike traveling
    between fifteen to thirty miles per hour1 westbound approximately one to three feet inside
    the pavement’s white line. The motorbike became wedged underneath the defendant’s
    car and the boys were thrown fifteen to twenty feet from the road. The collision left no
    skid marks on the road.
    The defendant continued driving. A man driving eastbound on Highway 57
    passed the defendant’s Camaro after the collision, noticed the motorbike lodged under
    the Camaro’s body, and smelled antifreeze and burning rubber. According to the man,
    the defendant was traveling at a “normal highway speed, maybe faster” and without any
    headlights. The record is silent as to whether the defendant’s headlights were on at the
    time of the collision. It is also unknown how fast the defendant was traveling at the time
    of the collision.
    The defendant drove to his mother’s house, which was one mile from the
    scene of the collision. Because the motorbike remained lodged under the Camaro, the
    motorbike’s tire left a mark as it dragged on the road from the point of impact to the
    defendant’s mother’s house. At his mother’s house, at 7:14 p.m., the defendant called
    911. He returned to the scene by 7:55 p.m. driven by a friend in another car; he left his
    1
    Robbins first testified they were traveling approximately 20 to 30 m.p.h. at the time of the
    collision, but then he agreed that they were traveling approximately the same speed on Highway 57 as
    they had been on Bateman Road, which another witness testified was approximately 15 m.p.h.
    3
    Camaro, with the dirt bike lodged still underneath of it, at his mother’s house.
    Trooper Perkins of the Tennessee Highway Patrol arrived on the scene at
    7:35 p.m., approximately half an hour after the collision occurred. Trooper Perkins did
    not see the defendant at the scene until approximately 7:50 or 7:55 p.m. The defendant
    was very emotional, appeared to be upset, and began to cry. He told Trooper Perkins
    that he was the driver of the car that hit the motorbike. He said he did not see anything,
    but he felt and heard a “thug” and decided to continue driving to his mother’s house. He
    admitted he had had a couple of beers earlier that day. A records search revealed that
    the defendant’s driver license had been suspended.
    Upon request, the defendant submitted to a blood test. The paramedic who
    administered the blood test observed the defendant’s demeanor as very scared, afraid,
    and nervous. The defendant did not appear to the paramedic to be intoxicated, but the
    paramedic admitted that there have been previous times when he mistakenly thought a
    patient was not drunk. At least one police officer at the scene smelled alcohol on the
    defendant’s person and believed the defendant “was obviously under the influence.” The
    defendant’s blood test later revealed a blood alcohol content of .16%.
    Webb, who was fifteen years old at the time of the collision, died from
    multiple injuries sustained in the collision. His toxicology screen was negative for alcohol
    or drug use. Robbins, thirteen years old at the time of the collision, was severely injured
    in the collision. Robbins, who did not have a license to operate the motorbike on public
    roads, was operating the motorbike at the time of the collision; Webb was sitting behind
    him. At trial, Robbins admitted they had driven north on Bateman Road toward Highway
    57, and then were headed westbound on Highway 57 when the collision occurred.
    4
    A local police officer had warned the boys one to two months prior to the
    collision about the dangerous manner in which they were riding the motorbike because
    they were causing cars to weave in order to avoid them. The local police had also
    previously warned the boys not to ride their bike on the city streets because the bike was
    not equipped with proper turn signals, a windshield, or a license plate and the brake lights
    were not working.2 Robbins admitted that the reason they were traveling so slowly that
    evening was because they were having mechanical problems with the motorbike, but he
    insisted that the motorbike’s headlight and taillight were working.
    At trial, there was evidence suggesting the boys might have used marijuana
    prior to the collision. A seventeen-year-old friend of Robbins testified that Robbins had
    told her he and Webb had been smoking marijuana prior to the collision and was “high”
    at the time of the collision. She admitted she had known this information for nine months
    and could not explain why she decided three days prior to trial to disclose the information
    to the defense attorney but not the state attorney or any law enforcement officer. She
    also admitted she knew the defendant, but she insisted she did not know him well.
    Robbins denied using any drugs or alcohol that afternoon, and he denied telling anyone
    he had used marijuana and was afraid his parents would find out. Robbins also denied
    that he had rolling papers on his person at the time of the collision, but a local police
    officer found rolling papers near him after the collision. Robbins was not subjected to a
    drug or alcohol test because Trooper Perkins was not aware rolling papers were found
    at the collision scene.
    First, the defendant argues that the trial court erred in failing to suppress
    the statements he made to Trooper Perkins at the collision scene because he was in
    2
    The chief of the local police testified that he had previously checked the motorbike’s brake
    lights and discovered they were not working, although he admitted he did not know whether that problem
    had been repaired prior to the collision.
    5
    custody but was not advised of his Miranda rights. The defendant also contends that the
    results of his blood alcohol test should have been suppressed since the only grounds for
    administering the test under T.C.A. § 55-10-406(a)(1) was the defendant’s statement to
    Trooper Perkins.
    Miranda v. Arizona bars the admission of any statements elicited from a
    defendant through police-initiated custodial interrogation unless the defendant, prior to
    making the statement, was warned of certain rights and knowingly waived those rights.
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    (1966); see, e.g., Edwards v. Arizona, 
    451 U.S. 477
    (1981); State v. Huddleston, 
    924 S.W.2d 666
    , 669 (Tenn. 1996); State v. Bates, 
    804 S.W.2d 868
    (Tenn. 1991). “Custodial interrogation” is defined as “questioning initiated
    by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise
    deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.” 
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 444
    . In
    other words, Miranda warnings are required when a suspect has been formally arrested
    or when his or her freedom of movement has been restrained to the degree associated
    with a formal arrest. California v. Beheler, 
    463 U.S. 1121
    (1983); State v. Cooper, 
    912 S.W.2d 756
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995).
    In assessing whether an individual is “in custody,” the totality of the
    circumstances must be examined to determine whether a reasonable person would
    consider his or her freedom of movement restrained to the degree associated with formal
    arrest. State v. Anderson, 
    937 S.W.2d 851
    (Tenn. 1996). Factors relevant to this
    determination include the following:
    the time and location of the interrogation; the duration and character of the
    questioning; the officer’s tone of voice and general demeanor; the suspect’s
    method of transportation to the place of questioning; the number of police
    officers present; any limitation on movement or other form of restraint
    imposed on the suspect during the interrogation; any interactions between
    the officer and the suspect, including the words spoken by the officer to the
    suspect, and the suspect’s verbal or nonverbal responses; the extent to
    which the suspect is confronted with the law enforcement officer’s
    6
    suspicions of guilt or evidence of guilt; and finally, the extent to which the
    suspect is made aware that he or she is free to refrain from answering
    questions or to end the interview at will.
    
    Id. at 855.
    Contrary to the defendant’s suggestion, it is immaterial that “the trooper knew
    that he was dealing with an individual that he would likely charge with a crime” since a
    defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights are no longer triggered by the defendant being the
    investigation’s focus. See, e.g., Stansbury v. California, 
    511 U.S. 318
    (1994); see also
    
    Anderson, 937 S.W.2d at 854
    ; 
    Cooper, 912 S.W.2d at 766
    .
    Here, Trooper Perkins arrived at the scene approximately one-half hour
    after the collision occurred. Approximately twenty minutes later, the defendant voluntarily
    returned to the scene, approached Trooper Perkins, and disclosed to him he was the
    driver of the car involved in the collision. Trooper Perkins asked the defendant to wait a
    few minutes by his patrol car while he finished identifying the victims and notifying their
    parents. The defendant was not handcuffed, placed in the back of the patrol car,
    escorted or guarded by another police officer, or otherwise restrained. Approximately
    fifteen minutes later, Trooper Perkins approached the defendant and began questioning
    him about what happened. The record does not indicate that any officer other than
    Trooper Perkins was involved in the questioning of the defendant, nor does it indicate that
    either party became belligerent or confrontational during the questioning. The defendant
    stated he did not see anything, but heard a “thug” noise. When asked, he also stated he
    had been drinking alcohol. Trooper Perkins asked him one time to submit to a blood test,
    telling him he was not required to consent, but the defendant agreed to the test. The
    defendant was not advised of his Miranda rights. At no time, however, was the defendant
    told he must remain at the scene, answer questions, or submit to a blood test. In fact,
    according to the defendant’s testimony at the suppression hearing, the defendant had
    returned to the scene voluntarily to give his account of the incident; he testified he had
    no problem waiting until Trooper Perkins could question him. After the questioning
    7
    concluded, the defendant went home.
    Considering the totality of these circumstances, the defendant was not in
    custody at the time he answered Trooper Perkins’ questions. Because Miranda warnings
    are constitutionally required only where a defendant is subjected to police-initiated
    custodial interrogation, there was no basis to suppress the defendant’s statements to
    Trooper Perkins. See 
    Stansbury, 511 U.S. at 318
    ; 
    Anderson, 937 S.W.2d at 854
    .
    The defendant also contends that his blood test results should have been
    suppressed. The defendant relies upon T.C.A. § 55-10-406 for the proposition that a
    police officer must have “reasonable grounds to believe” that a defendant was driving
    under the influence of an intoxicant before requesting a blood test. According to the
    defendant, the only “reasonable grounds” Trooper Perkins had was his statement he had
    been drinking beer earlier that day, which he contends was obtained in violation of the
    Fifth Amendment and thus cannot serve as a proper basis for requesting a blood test
    under § 55-10-406.     Even assuming the defendant’s interpretation is correct, his
    argument is moot since we have concluded that the defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights
    were not violated and the evidence shows the defendant consented to the blood rest.
    Next, the defendant challenges T.C.A. § 55-10-408(b), claiming that a jury
    instruction pursuant to § 55-10-408(b) violated his constitutional right to due process of
    law. DUI is proven by a showing that a person was in physical control of a motor vehicle
    on a public road or any premises frequented by the public while “(1) Under the influence
    of any intoxicant, marijuana, narcotic drug, or drug producing stimulating effects on the
    central nervous system; or (2) The alcohol concentration in such person’s blood or breath
    is ten-hundredths of one percent (.10%) or more.” T.C.A. § 55-10-401(a)(1)-(2) (Supp.
    1996). Generally, for the purpose of proving intoxication under § 55-10-401(a)(1), it may
    8
    be inferred that a defendant’s ability to drive was sufficiently impaired if his or her blood
    alcohol content was .10% or higher. T.C.A. § 55-10-408(a) (Supp. 1996). If the
    defendant has at least one previous DUI conviction, however, a .08% blood alcohol
    content is sufficient to infer intoxication and impaired ability to drive, in violation of § 55-
    10-401(a)(1). T.C.A. § 55-10-408(b) (Supp. 1996).
    In this case, the trial court instructed the jury, pursuant to § 55-10-408(b),
    as follows: “Evidence from the test that there was at the time alleged eight-hundredths
    of one percent or .08 or more by weight of alcohol in the defendant’s blood creates an
    inference that defendant was under the influence of such intoxicant, and that his ability
    to drive was impaired.”       The defendant argues that this instruction violated his
    constitutional right to due process and that § 55-10-408 creates disparate treatment of
    previously convicted DUI offenders, whose intoxication may be inferred at .08%, as
    compared to first-time DUI offenders, whose intoxication may be inferred only after
    reaching .10%. The defendant’s challenge to the constitutionality of § 55-10-408(b) must
    fail, however, as the defendant lacks standing. Because the defendant’s blood test result
    was a .16%, the jury would have been entitled to infer the defendant was intoxicated
    under the higher .10% standard of § 55-10-408(a), regardless of the existence of a lower
    .08% standard for previous DUI offenders under § 55-10-408(b). In other words, even
    if the trial court had not instructed the jury on the .08% inference pursuant to § 55-10-
    408(b) and even if there were no disparity between the inferences for first-time DUI
    offenders and previous DUI offenders, the jury would still have been entitled to infer that
    the defendant was intoxicated because his blood alcohol content exceeded the higher
    .10% level. Because it cannot be said that the .08% inference under § 55-10-408(b)
    operated to deprive the defendant of his rights, the defendant lacks standing to challenge
    its constitutionality. See State v. Purkey, 
    689 S.W.2d 196
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1984).
    9
    The defendant also argues that the trial court’s instruction on the .08%
    inference constituted reversible error because it “revealed to a knowledgeable juror(s)
    that the [defendant] had been convicted of prior DUI’s [sic] and . . . put said juror(s) on
    notice of evidence that would otherwise be inadmissible at trial.” The jury instruction
    pursuant to § 55-10-408(b) advised the jury it could infer intoxication and that the
    defendant’s ability to drive was impaired from evidence of a blood alcohol content of .08%
    or higher. As far as the jury was instructed, the only purpose of the .08% standard was
    to infer intoxication and impaired ability to drive and nothing else. The jury was not
    instructed that the .08% standard applies only to defendants previously convicted of DUI
    or that the defendant in this case had been previously convicted of DUI. The defendant
    does not identify any “knowledgeable jurors” or even contend that any of the jurors in this
    case were “knowledgeable.”
    In the absence of evidence to the contrary, a jury is presumed to follow the
    instructions given to it. State v. Blackmon, 
    701 S.W.2d 228
    , 233 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    1985). Just as a jury may be presented with evidence of a defendant’s prior bad acts and
    be instructed that they are to consider that information only as it relates to motive or intent
    or some other admissible purpose, we must assume that the jury in this case used the
    .08% standard for nothing more than to infer the defendant’s intoxication and impaired
    ability to drive, rather than to speculate whether the defendant might have been
    previously convicted of DUI and allow that speculation to affect their verdict in this case.
    Thus, we must conclude that the trial court did not err in instructing the jury pursuant to
    § 55-10-408(b), a valid statute, as it is required to do. Even if error occurred, it would be
    harmless because the jury could have inferred that the defendant, who had a .16% blood
    alcohol content, was intoxicated even under the .10% standard for first-time offenders in
    § 55-10-408(a). Tenn. R. Crim. P. 52(a)(only errors affecting the result of trial on the
    merits may constitute reversible error).
    10
    Finally, the defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, arguing
    it is insufficient to sustain his convictions for aggravated vehicular homicide, vehicular
    assault, and leaving the scene of an accident.
    As it pertains to the charges in this case, aggravated vehicular homicide is
    the reckless killing of another as the proximate result of the driver’s intoxication while
    operating a vehicle. T.C.A. § 39-13-213(a)(2). Similarly, vehicular assault occurs when
    a person causes serious bodily injury to another as the proximate result of his or her
    intoxication while operating a vehicle. T.C.A. § 39-13-106(a). The defendant contends
    that due to the boys’ actions in operating the motorbike on the road under dangerous
    conditions when they had previously been warned not to do so, the death and the injury
    that occurred in the collision were not a proximate result of his intoxication. Rather, the
    defendant argues that most of the factors that caused the collision were “brought to bear
    by the victims themselves.”      As the State points out, however, Ms. Pittman had
    encountered the boys on the street only minutes before the defendant struck the boys.
    The circumstances under which Ms. Pittman encountered the boys were similar to the
    circumstances under which the defendant encountered the boys, with one notable
    exception: Ms. Pittman was not drunk, while the defendant had a blood alcohol content
    of .16%. Because Ms. Pittman, who was not drinking, was able to avoid a collision while
    the defendant, who was drinking, was not, the evidence was sufficient for the jury to
    conclude that the defendant’s intoxication was the proximate cause of the collision that
    killed Webb and injured Robbins.
    The defendant also contends that regardless of the .16% result from the
    blood test taken approximately one hour after the collision, there was no proof he “had
    consumed any alcohol or had any alcohol in his blood at the time of the subject accident.”
    To the contrary, the defendant admitted to Trooper Perkins that he had consumed two
    11
    beers prior to the collision. Moreover, given that there was no evidence that the
    defendant consumed alcohol after the collision but before the blood test, the .16% blood
    alcohol content, coupled with the defendant’s admission of drinking prior to the collision,
    was sufficient proof from which the jury could infer that the defendant was under the
    influence of alcohol at the time the collision occurred.
    With regard to the defendant’s challenge to his conviction for leaving the
    scene of the accident under T.C.A. § 55-10-101, the defendant contends that because
    he left the scene only to call 911 and then returned “forthwith,” his actions did not violate
    § 55-10-101. The record shows otherwise.
    Section 55-10-101(a) provides that drivers of vehicles involved in accidents
    resulting in injury or death “shall immediately stop such vehicle at the scene of such
    accident or as close thereto as possible, but shall then forthwith return to and in every
    event shall remain at the scene of the accident until the driver has fulfilled the
    requirements of § 55-10-103.”        Section 55-10-103(a) requires drivers to provide
    identifying information to other drivers involved in the collision and “render to any person
    injured in such accident reasonable assistance.” T.C.A. § 55-10-103(a).
    Here, a driver who passed the defendant on Highway 57 shortly after the
    accident saw the motorbike lodged underneath the defendant’s car and smelled
    antifreeze and burning rubber, which was apparently caused by the motorbike as it
    dragged along the road. When the defendant reached his mother’s house, which was
    one mile away from the scene of the collision, he called 911. When he returned to the
    scene forty-five minutes later, he told Trooper Perkins he “felt and heard a thug,” but
    decided to continue traveling without stopping to investigate. Under the circumstances,
    however, he should have stopped immediately at the crime scene to evaluate whether
    12
    the boys required medical treatment. See §§ 55-10-101(a), 55-10-103(a). Moreover, by
    taking a forty-five minute hiatus from the scene of the collision, the defendant did not
    return “forthwith,” as § 55-10-101(a) requires. Thus, because the evidence revealed the
    defendant did not comply with the statutory requirements, the evidence was sufficient to
    prove the defendant left the scene of an accident, in violation of § 55-10-101.
    Finding no merit to the defendant’s arguments, we affirm the trial court’s
    judgments.
    _______________________________
    JOHN H. PEAY, Judge
    CONCUR:
    ______________________________
    DAVID G. HAYES, Judge
    ______________________________
    L. T. LAFFERTY, Senior Judge
    13