State v. La Southaphanh ( 2010 )


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  •              IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE             FILED
    NOVEMBER 1998 SESSION
    February 9, 1999
    Cecil W. Crowson
    Appellate Court Clerk
    STATE OF TENNESSEE,                  )
    )    C.C.A. NO. 01C01-9804-CC-00173
    Appellee,               )
    )    RUTHERFORD COUNTY
    VS.                                  )
    )    HON. JAMES K. CLAYTON, JR.,
    LA SOUTHAPHANH,                      )    JUDGE
    )
    Appellant.              )    (Aggravated Assault)
    FOR THE APPELLANT:                        FOR THE APPELLEE:
    GERALD L. MELTON                          JOHN KNOX WALKUP
    District Public Defender                  Attorney General & Reporter
    RUSSELL N. PERKINS                        KIM R. HELPER
    Asst. District Public Defender            Asst. Attorney General
    201 W. Main St., Suite 101                       -and-
    Murfreesboro, TN 37130                    ERIK W. DAAB
    Legal Assistant
    John Sevier Bldg.
    425 Fifth Ave., North
    Nashville, TN 37243-0493
    WILLIAM WHITESELL
    District Attorney General
    JOHN W. PRICE
    Asst. District Attorney General
    Judicial Bldg., Suite 303
    Murfreesboro, TN 37130
    OPINION FILED:____________________
    AFFIRMED
    JOHN H. PEAY,
    Judge
    OPINION
    The defendant was charged by indictment with three counts of aggravated
    assault.   At the close of the State’s evidence at trial, the trial court granted the
    defendant’s motion for verdict of acquittal as to two of the counts. On the third count,
    however, the defendant was convicted. Following a hearing, he was sentenced as a
    Range II multiple offender to nine years incarceration. He now appeals, arguing that the
    evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction and that the imposed sentence is
    excessive. Finding no merit to these arguments, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    The evidence at trial showed that in the early morning hours of February 27,
    1996, Jeff Walker was wakened as several shots were fired at his house in LaVergne.
    At the time, Mr. Walker’s wife was feeding their infant child on the bed in which Mr.
    Walker was sleeping. Three of the shots struck the exterior of the house, but two
    shattered the bedroom window and entered the bedroom, one hitting the bed upon which
    the family was lying and the other hitting the far bedroom wall. Mr. Walker testified that
    the two bullets that entered the bedroom window caused them concern because they
    came within feet of hitting him, his wife, and their infant. Mr. Walker immediately called
    the police. One of Mr. Walker’s neighbors testified that immediately after the gunshots
    were fired, he saw a small, white import vehicle without headlights driving away from the
    area and called the police, giving them a description of the vehicle he saw. According to
    testimony from a police detective who investigated the case, the Walker home faced the
    driver’s side of the vehicle as it drove past the home.
    Officer John Bell of the LaVergne Police Department testified that as he
    received a report of the shooting and a description of the vehicle by radio broadcast, he
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    passed a vehicle matching the description and initiated a stop. According to Officer Bell,
    the defendant was driving the vehicle, a small, white import car, and three other
    individuals were passengers in the car. Officer Bell stated that as the defendant opened
    the car door and stepped out of the car, approximately one-half dozen unfired .22 caliber
    bullets fell to the ground. Officer Bell testified he observed several other unfired .22
    caliber bullets on the floorboard and the defendant’s seat. The .22 caliber gun involved
    in the shooting was found on Somphong Sayvone, the frontseat passenger.
    Sayvone testified that he owned the .22 caliber gun involved in the shooting
    and that he gave the gun to the defendant, who may have fired it. He also testified that
    because he was intoxicated at the time of the shooting, he did not remember whether he
    or the defendant shot at the Walker house. Phetphoutho Vongdaraxay, a backseat
    passenger in the car that evening, testified that the defendant fired shots at the Walker
    house and then Sayvone fired shots at another house down the street.
    After the shooting, several .22 caliber shell casings were found in front of
    the Walker house. A firearms examiner for the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation
    testified that all of the casings recovered from the Walker house were fired from the .22
    caliber gun found in the defendant’s vehicle. Moreover, the results of a gunshot residue
    test administered to the defendant were positive, meaning that the defendant could have
    fired, handled, or been near a gun when fired. Vongdaraxay’s gunshot residue test
    results were also positive, and Sayvone’s test results were inconclusive.
    Based on this evidence, the jury found the defendant guilty of aggravated
    assault. A sentencing hearing was held, after which the trial court sentenced the
    defendant as a Range II multiple offender to nine years incarceration.
    3
    The defendant first challenges his conviction, arguing that the evidence is
    insufficient to support his conviction because there was no independent corroboration of
    the accomplice testimony in this case that would actually place the gun in the defendant’s
    hands at the time of the shooting. When a defendant challenges the sufficiency of the
    convicting evidence, we must review the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    prosecution in determining whether “any rational trier of fact could have found the
    essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979); see State v. Tuggle, 
    639 S.W.2d 913
    , 914 (Tenn. 1982). We do
    not reweigh or re-evaluate the evidence and are required to afford the State the strongest
    legitimate view of the proof contained in the record as well as all reasonable and
    legitimate inferences which may be drawn from the proof. State v. Cabbage, 
    571 S.W.2d 832
    , 835 (Tenn. 1978). Questions concerning witnesses’ credibility, the weight and value
    given to evidence, and all factual issues raised by the evidence are resolved by the trier
    of fact, not this Court. 
    Id. Here, Sayvone
    and Vongdaraxay both testified that they and the defendant
    were involved in the shooting at the Walker home. Sayvone testified he gave the
    defendant a .22 caliber gun to use in the shooting. Although Sayvone claimed to be too
    intoxicated at the time of the shooting to later remember whether he or the defendant
    fired the shots at the Walker home, Vongdaraxay testified that the defendant fired the
    shots. Sufficient evidence in the record corroborates this testimony. The defendant was
    stopped shortly after the shooting while driving a car that matched the description of the
    car at the scene of the shooting. As the defendant exited the car, .22 caliber bullets fell
    from him and several bullets were in the driver’s area of the car. The defendant’s hands
    were covered with gunshot residue, and the .22 caliber gun recovered from the
    defendant’s car was identified as the gun involved in the shooting.
    4
    The defendant complains that there is no “independent corroborative
    evidence” that actually places the .22 caliber gun in the defendant’s hands at the time of
    the shooting, but such evidence is not necessary.             Evidence corroborating an
    accomplice’s testimony need not be sufficient to support a conviction by itself. Henley
    v. State, 
    489 S.W.2d 53
    , 56 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1972). Rather, it is enough that the
    accomplice testimony is corroborated as to any fact that “tend[s] to connect the defendant
    with the commission of a crime.” Clapp v. State, 
    94 Tenn. 186
    , 
    30 S.W. 214
    , 217 (1895).
    Here, the corroborative evidence sufficiently connects the defendant to the shooting at
    the Walker home.      As such, the evidence is sufficient to support the defendant’s
    conviction, and the defendant’s challenge must fail.
    The defendant also challenges his sentence. He argues that the imposed
    sentence of nine years incarceration, just one year short of the maximum Range II
    sentence for this offense, is excessive because the trial court erroneously refused to
    apply certain mitigation factors and thus did not appropriately weigh all pertinent
    considerations when sentencing the defendant. The evidence shows otherwise.
    The defendant, a Range II multiple offender convicted of a Class C felony,
    faced a possible sentence of six to ten years. T.C.A. §§ 40-35-112(b)(3), 39-13-
    102(a)(1)(B). In sentencing the defendant, the trial court specifically applied several
    enhancing factors, including that the defendant has a history of criminal convictions or
    criminal behavior in addition to those necessary to establish the appropriate range, T.C.A.
    § 40-35-114(1); that the offense involved more than one victim, T.C.A. § 40-35-114(3);
    and that the defendant was a leader in the commission of the offense, T.C.A. § 40-35-
    114(2). The defendant offered several mitigation factors for the trial court to consider,
    including the following: that the defendant played a minor role in the offense, T.C.A. § 40-
    5
    35-113(4); that the offense was committed under such unusual circumstances that it is
    unlikely a sustained intent to violate the law motivated his conduct, T.C.A. § 40-35-
    113(11); that the defendant was highly intoxicated and did not know what was happening
    at the time of the offense; and that the defendant expressed remorse to the Walker
    family. Based upon the record evidence, however, the trial court rejected these mitigation
    factors and sentenced the defendant to nine years incarceration.1
    When a defendant challenges his sentence, we must review the sentence
    de novo, with a presumption of correctness if the record affirmatively shows “that the trial
    court considered the sentencing principles and all relevant facts and circumstances.”
    State v. Ashby, 
    823 S.W.2d 166
    , 169 (Tenn. 1991). The burden of showing the sentence
    is improper is upon the defendant, as the appealing party. T.C.A. § 40-35-401(d)
    Sentencing Commission Comments. The weight afforded to existing enhancing or
    mitigating factors is a matter of the trial court’s discretion. State v. Shelton, 
    854 S.W.2d 116
    , 123 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992).
    Here, the record supports the imposed sentence. The defendant does not
    challenge and we will not reweigh the enhancing factors applied in this case. Moreover,
    we agree with the trial court that the mitigating factors presented to it were not applicable
    in this case. The testimony showing that the defendant was a leader in this offense and
    drove the car through a neighborhood while wielding a gun is inconsistent with defense
    counsel’s notion that he played a minor role in the offense or did not have a sustained
    intent to violate the law. As a matter of credibility, the trial court rejected the defendant’s
    assertion that he was so intoxicated he could not appreciate his actions because there
    1
    The trial court ordered the nine-year sentence imposed in this case to run consecutively to a
    three-year sentence incarceration for a forgery conviction, an offense for which the defendant was
    arrested after he was arrested in the present cas e. The defendant doe s not challenge the consecutive
    nature of the sentence received.
    6
    was no suggestion of intoxication by the arresting police officers and because the
    defendant was not as oblivious to what was happening “if he was able to drive a vehicle.”
    Further, because a sentencing court is not required to consider the defendant’s remorse
    as a mitigation factor, it cannot be said that the trial court erred in failing to reduce the
    defendant’s sentence because he expressed remorse. Considering all of this, a nine-
    year sentence is appropriate.
    In sum, we find no merit to the defendant’s challenges to his conviction and
    sentence. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    _______________________________
    JOHN H. PEAY, Judge
    CONCUR:
    ______________________________
    GARY R. WADE, Presiding Judge
    ______________________________
    JERRY L. SMITH, Judge
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