IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE
May 19, 2010 Session
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. TONY LEE CROWE
Appeal from the Criminal Court for Putnam County
No. 06-0304 Leon Burns, Judge
No. M2009-02194-CCA-R3-CD - Filed July 16, 2010
The Defendant, Tony Lee Crowe, was convicted by a Putnam County Jury of two counts of
rape of a child and two counts of aggravated sexual battery. As a result, he was sentenced
to sixteen years incarceration, to be served at 100%. On appeal, he alleges that the trial court
improperly denied his motion for new trial based on newly discovered impeachment evidence
and recanted testimony. After a review of the record, we affirm the judgment of the trial
court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
D AVID H. W ELLES, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J ERRY L. S MITH and
R OBERT W. W EDEMEYER, JJ., joined.
H. Marshall Judd, Assistant Public Defender, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tony
Lee Crowe.
Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; David H. Findley, Assistant Attorney
General; William E. Gibson, District Attorney General; and Beth Willis, Assistant District
Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
Factual Background
The Defendant was convicted by a jury of two counts of rape of a child and two
counts of aggravated sexual battery.1 He received an effective sentence of sixteen years, to
be served at 100%.
The facts upon which the Defendant was convicted are set out in the opinion of this
Court on the original direct appeal of the convictions:
At trial, the State presented several witnesses including Dorothy Sevier,
Sue Ross, M.M.,2 and M.S., the victim. Dorothy Sevier, the victim’s mother,
testified that the victim was under 13 years of age during the time listed in the
indictment. She explained that their home was close to Crowe’s, that her
family “spent a whole lot of time” with Crowe’s family, and that she
considered them to be friends. Sevier allowed the victim to visit Crowe’s
family without her supervision when the victim was older. She stated the
victim would visit Crowe’s home “almost everyday” to “[play] on the
computer, and [do] some homework.” Sevier also testified that the victim told
her she went to Crowe's house because “[she had] to have something to do.”
Sevier stated that before Crowe and his family moved away, “the victim
wanted [her] to tell [Crowe] that she had went [sic] to [Sevier’s] niece’s
house” when in reality the victim “stayed hid [sic] in [Sevier’s] house, and [
] didn’t want to take no [sic] phone calls or anything.” When Crowe
eventually moved away, Sevier was concerned because he would repeatedly
call the victim. Sevier testified that Crowe sent the victim a birthday card with
a handwritten note which stated, “I love you and miss you.” Sevier read the
card, which was addressed to the victim, and later provided it to the police.
After reading the card, Sevier was “upset” because “it didn’t really sound
right.” Consequently, Sevier telephoned the parents of M.M., the victim’s
friend, who she later understood was “involved too.”
1
The trial court merged the two counts of aggravated sexual battery.
2
This witness is a minor who is noted in the record as a victim in a related case. Thus, we will refer
to this witness by initials only.
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Sevier also testified that Crowe sent the victim a Christmas card. After
receiving the Christmas card, Sevier contacted the police. Crowe continued
to call the victim’s home so much they were forced to get a new phone
number. On cross-examination, Sevier admitted that after the Crowe family
moved away, she and the victim traveled to Sevierville to visit them. Crowe
and his family rented cabins in the Smokey Mountains for the victim and her
family. Sevier and the victim stayed in a cabin with Crowe’s mother while the
victim’s father stayed in a cabin with Crowe. Sevier also admitted that the
families loaned each other money. She stated that Crowe “would always buy
[the victim] stuff.” He would specifically buy her wolf figurines and burn
songs onto CD’s for her to play at home. Sevier explained “it kind of bothered
[them] . . . but [Crowe] kind of insisted on doing it.” She knew that Crowe
had some health problems and that he was on a breathing machine at home.
She further testified that during the time period listed in the indictment she was
not working and was at home “almost every day.”
Between 2002 and 2005, Sevier stated that the victim’s pediatrician was
Dr. Christopher Climaco. In 2005, she switched doctors and took the victim
to Cookeville Medical Center. Although the victim at one point expressed an
interest in moving to an apartment in Sevierville, Sevier testified that the
victim later begged her not to move.
Sue Ross, an employee at Our Kids Center in Nashville, testified that
Our Kids Center is an out-patient facility of Metro Nashville General Hospital.
Ross began working in the nursing field in 1968. She received her nursing
diploma from St. Thomas School of Nursing in Nashville; her bachelor’s
degree in nursing from the University of Tennessee Center for Health Sciences
in Memphis, where she also went through the pediatric nurse practitioner
program; and her master’s degree in nursing from Vanderbilt University in
Child and Adolescent Health.
Ross stated that she had previously testified numerous times in criminal
and civil cases. She had personally examined “around 3800” children that had
been the victims of sexual assault. Ross explained the normal protocol under
which a child is examined by Our Kids Center and confirmed that the victim
was seen at the Our Kids Center on March 21, 2006. Ross testified that she
medically examined the victim and prepared a report. Ross’s examination of
the victim revealed the following:
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From the non-genital standpoint, a normal exam. A child
that had, clearly was going through, or at least in puberty, based
on tanner (spelled phonetically) staging of her breasts. For the
genital area, what I found was, again, a child who was pubertal.
I found an estrogenized hymen.
Ross was unable to confirm or deny any type of sexual abuse to the victim.
However, Ross explained that her findings were not inconsistent with the
victim’s complaint because the hymen does not always tear when digital,
genital, or penile genital penetration occurs. On cross-examination, defense
counsel asked, “But if you were talking about rape, you might find signs of
injury, a doctor or a nurse might find signs of injury, or bruising, or something
like that, wouldn’t they?” Ross replied:
You might. The greater odds are, you will not. The vast
majority of children that we see non-acutely, like we saw with
[the victim], and even acutely, when we see them in the
emergency room hours to a couple of days after their assaults,
ordinarily have virtually no physical findings. That’s the rule.
It’s the exception that there are tears in the hymen.
The victim, M.S., testified and confirmed that she was less than thirteen
years old during the period listed in the indictment. She identified Crowe at
trial. She said that she met Crowe when she was three years old and that he
was a “family friend.” She stated that she would go to Crowe’s house to play
video games on the computer in Crowe’s room. Her house was within walking
distance of Crowe’s, and sometimes her parents would allow her to go to
Crowe’s house without them.
When the victim was nine years old, she was in Crowe’s room playing
a video game. Crowe’s mother was in the kitchen doing dishes. The victim
testified that Crowe’s mother briefly came into Crowe’s bedroom, but she left.
At some point, Crowe closed the door to the room and “something bad
happened.” Crowe told the victim to take her pants off and go by his bed. The
victim took her pants and panties off. Crowe did not have on any pants or
underwear. Crowe told the victim to “bend [her] legs up,” and he held her legs
at her shoulders and touched her “private part and [her] breasts.” The victim
was asked what she meant when she said “private part,” and she explained,
“My vagina? I don’t know.” The victim testified that Crowe put his penis all
the way inside her vagina and that it hurt.
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During the above incident, the victim stated that Crowe had a weapon
in the room. She was shown a photograph of a weapon and confirmed that it
was the same weapon that she saw in Crowe’s room. The picture was entered
into evidence as Exhibit 3. The victim stated Crowe held the weapon to her
throat and told her if she told anyone about what he had done to her, he would
kill her family in front of her and then kill her. The victim testified that she
believed him.
Sometime between September 2004 and October 2004, another incident
occurred. The victim recalled she was working on a school science project and
asked Crowe if she could use his computer. She stated that M.M., “a really
close friend” from her neighborhood, went with her to Crowe’s house. Crowe
and his mother were at his home. The victim testified that she finished her
school project, but at some point, she found herself in Crowe’s room with
M.M. Crowe closed the door and told her to take her pants and panties off.
The victim further testified that Crowe touched her breasts and her vagina with
his fingers. However, Crowe did not threaten her. The victim stated Crowe
“practically done [sic] the same thing he done [sic] the first time.”
Another incident occurred around the end of June 2005, prior to
Crowe’s moving away. The victim stated that she was in Crowe’s room, and
that “[Crowe] forced her again to do the same thing that he’d done for the
other two times.” Crowe touched the victim’s breasts and penetrated her
vagina with his penis. It was only after the third incident that the victim told
someone what was happening. The victim was afraid to tell anyone because
she believed that Crowe would kill her parents and her family. The victim also
confirmed that Crowe (1) sent her two cards, (2) would buy her gifts, (3) told
her he loved her, (4) talked about marrying her, and (5) telephoned her
incessantly.
On cross-examination, the victim admitted that before the incidents she
had visited Crowe’s home almost every day to do her homework. The victim
described Crowe’s home as a small, two bedroom apartment with a living
room, bathroom, and kitchen. When asked why she took her pants off, the
victim replied, “Because he had threatened me with the gun first.” The victim
explained that she continued to go back to Crowe’s house after the first
incident “[b]ecause he told [her] to.” She stated that she did not yell or scream
while Crowe penetrated her even though it hurt. She further confirmed that
Crowe’s mother was in the apartment when each incident occurred. She stated
that she would make telephone calls to Crowe “[s]ometimes.” She agreed that
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Crowe would give her money and that her family would go to his apartment
for dinner and to watch television.
M.M., the victim’s friend, testified that she went to Crowe’s house,
along with the victim, to work on a school project. At some point, she and the
victim were in Crowe’s room with the door closed. Crowe’s mother was either
in the kitchen or her room. M.M. testified that Crowe told the victim to take
her clothes off and then touched the victim with his finger. When pressed by
the prosecutor about specifics, M.M. only replied affirmatively to Crowe
touching the victim “where she goes to the bathroom” and on her “boobies.”
On cross-examination, M.M. explained that it was both the victim’s and her
idea to go to Crowe’s house the day this incident occurred. She saw a gun the
day of the incident but did not tell anyone about it “[b]ecause [she] got
scared.”
Yvette Deming, a sergeant with the Cookeville City Police
Department's Criminal Investigation Division, testified that she spoke with
Crowe regarding the allegations in this case. Sergeant Deming stated that
Crowe was cooperative and confirmed that the victim visited his home “just
about every day” and had been in his bedroom “a number of times.” He
admitted to previously calling the victim’s home “15 or 18 times” a day
because her family was not answering his calls. He called the police
department to perform a “welfare check” on the family to ensure they were
safe. Sergeant Deming asked Crowe if he had any weapons in the home, and
Crowe told her that he kept a number of weapons locked in a gun cabinet.
Sergeant Deming also asked Crowe’s mother if there were any other weapons
in the home, and Crowe’s mother showed her a rifle wrapped in camouflage
tape that she had placed under a blanket on her bed. Sergeant Deming was
shown Exhibit 3 and confirmed that it was the same rifle she recovered from
Crowe’s home. Crowe also admitted to Sergeant Deming that in October of
2005, he sent the victim a birthday card and wrote, “I love and miss you very
much, [M.S.]” on the envelope. The handwritten letter inside the card stated
the following:
[M.S.], I’m still waiting on your answer[,] and you know
that I love you more than anything in this whole world, and it’s
killing me being away from you and not being able to spend any
time with you, because you’re the light of my life and the only
happiness I’ve ever know [sic]. And since you’re not here with
me, it feels like my whole world has been taken away from me.
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I don’t know why you don’t bother to take the time to call me
even for a few minutes when you know how much I love and
miss you. I hurt every day that I can’t be with you, or hear your
voice to know that you’re all right and no one is hurting you or
worse. I worry about you all the time, and I think about you all
the time. I’ve never let anyone as close to my heart as I have
you, and I’ve never let myself love anyone as much as I love
you. I’m sorry that I’m not there on your twelfth birthday, but
you never bothered to care enough to even ask me to come, so
I sent you my love in this card.
The letter was signed, “Love always and forever, [Crowe]. Call me. [Crowe’s
phone number] My number. Don’t lose it. Write it down .”
In the Christmas card sent to the victim that was postmarked December
24, 2005, Crowe wrote:
[The victim’s name], I love and miss you very much, and
I don’t know why you’re treating me the way you are and doing
the things that you’re doing when you know how much I love
and care about you. I do not like your silence that you are
giving me, but I will respect your decision to shut me out of
your life if that’s what you really want, because that’s how much
I love and care about you. I’ve shown you nothing but love and
kindness. If you no longer want my love and friendship, I have
no choice but to do what I have to do, because everyone’s fate
is sealed by the choices that they make. I want to wish you a
very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, and if I don’t
hear from you soon, I will know what your answer is. Your
silence to me means you want nothing to do with me anymore,
or you calling me means that you do, but either way, I’ll know
for sure. Love, [Crowe] P.S. Remember, I have always loved
you and always will.
Crowe told Sergeant Deming that the two aforementioned letters were written
in the same context as a father writing a letter or sending a card to his
daughter.
The defense proof consisted of Dr. Christopher Climaco, Shirley Harris,
Debra Davidson, and the defendant-appellant. Dr. Christopher Climaco, the
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victim’s pediatrician, testified that he went to medical school in the Philippines
and was a board-certified medical doctor. He completed a three-year pediatric
residency in New York City. He further testified that he had been a doctor for
the past eleven years. The defense offered Dr. Climaco as an expert without
identifying a specific area of expertise. He was admitted as an expert without
objection from the State. Dr. Climaco testified that the victim was one of his
patients from August 2000 to November 28, 2005. On July 11, 2002, Dr.
Climaco “checked the victim for sexual abuse.” His examination revealed “no
evidence of sexual physical abuse, and the vagina was normal, without any
signs of trauma.” Dr. Climaco stated the victim told him “nothing happened,”
and he had written “‘nothing happened’ according to patient” in quotation
marks in his notes. Additionally, according to Dr. Climaco’s records, he did
not perform another examination for sexual abuse in 2002. Dr. Climaco
further testified that he saw the victim on October 8, 2004, October 26, 2004,
November 9, 2004, February 7, 2005, September 22, 2005, and November 28,
2005. Dr. Climaco treated the victim on these dates for a variety of things,
none of which were related to sexual abuse. However, on May 26, 2005, the
victim had a physical exam of her genitalia which was normal. Dr. Climaco
explained that a finding of “normal female genitalia” meant that he did not
“see any discharges, . . . signs of trauma, or any signs of inflammation.” His
records did not indicate whether the victim’s hymen was intact during this
examination. Dr. Climaco testified that he had examined thousands of children
and “[w]ith full penetration, the hymen should not be intact.”
On cross-examination, Dr. Climaco agreed it would be difficult for a
child to tell him about sexual abuse. Although he received training regarding
sexual abuse during his residency, Dr. Climaco had not attended any “updated
classes, or continuing education each year about sexual abuse[.]” Dr. Climaco
explained that whether the hymen is torn by digital penetration of a child’s
vagina depends on how far the finger is inserted. When questioned about his
testimony during direct examination that the hymen could not be intact with
full penetration, he stated he did not know if a child’s age, particular genetic
make-up, or the elasticity of the hymen would make a difference.
Shirley J. Harris, Crowe’s mother, testified that both she and her son
were disabled and received Social Security. She stated that Crowe was
thirty-eight years old, had lived with her since he was born, and had “a lot of
medical problems.” She first met the victim and her family when the victim
was three years old. Harris emphasized that her apartment was “really small.”
When the victim would come to her home, Harris explained that she and
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Crowe would help her with her homework. According to Harris, the victim
never went into Crowe’s room without her because the victim followed Harris
around “like a little chick.” If the victim did go into Crowe’s room, Harris
testified that the door would remain open. Harris stated that Crowe had a
shotgun that he kept locked in a gun cabinet, and she had a rifle. Both
weapons were obtained “strictly for [] home protection.” Harris stated the
victim knew about both weapons.
Harris recalled the day that M.M. and the victim came to visit her home
to work on a school project. Harris testified Crowe went into his bedroom and
retrieved some information from the computer. He came into the living room
and gave it to the victim and M.M. Harris watched the victim and M.M. work
on the project until they were finished. She stated neither the victim nor M.M.
ever went into Crowe’s room alone. On cross-examination, Harris maintained
that the victim was never in Crowe’s room without her.
Debra Davidson, Crowe’s sister, also testified that Harris and Crowe
moved to Sevierville to be near her in May of 2005. Prior to moving to
Sevierville, Davidson lived in Cookeville and frequently visited Harris’
apartment because they were very close. She also confirmed that the victim
often visited Harris’ apartment. She stated the only time the victim would be
in Crowe’s room was when a group of them were playing a video game
together. In response to being asked whether she had seen anything
inappropriate happen to the victim, Davidson stated the victim had just come
from home and told her, “My butt hurts.” Davidson testified that the victim
would cry and “throw a fit” whenever her father wanted her to come home.
Finally, Davidson stated that whenever she was at Harris’ apartment, she never
observed her brother do anything inappropriate to the victim.
Crowe testified that he completed the ninth grade and then obtained his
GED. He stated he was an oxygen patient and had several medical conditions;
including, sleep apnea, epilepsy, diabetes, and back trouble. On May 1, 2005,
Crowe moved to Sevierville to be with his sister. Before he moved, he lived
close to the victim in a small apartment with his mother. He denied the
allegations as testified to by the victim. Crowe provided a lengthy explanation
as to why he wrote the two aforementioned letters to the victim but confirmed
that he did so because “[he] love[d] her . . . like a child, just like any adult or
any parent would love a child that they had practically raised from a little small
child up.”
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Crowe took the victim and her family to church with him and attended
Sunday School class during the time period he was alleged to have committed
these offenses. He admitted to having weapons but stated they were only for
protection. He denied threatening the victim and testified that he had never
been convicted of a misdemeanor or a felony. He stated that M.M. came to his
home once with the victim and that he helped both of them with a school
project. According to Crowe, neither M.M. nor the victim ever entered his
bedroom that evening.
State v. Tony Lee Crowe, No. M2008-00092-CCA-R3-CD, 2009 WL 507683, at *1-7 (Tenn.
Crim. App., Nashville, Mar. 2, 2009) (footnote in original).
On direct appeal, a panel of this Court affirmed the Defendant’s convictions but
remanded the case to the trial court for consideration of the Defendant’s third amended
motion for new trial, wherein he argued that newly discovered evidence required a new trial.3
See id. at *7-11.
A hearing on the merits of the third amended motion for new trial was held on May
21, 2009. M.M., who had testified at the Defendant’s trial that she was present in the
Defendant’s bedroom when the Defendant sexually assaulted the victim and that she saw a
gun on the day of the incident, was first to testify at the hearing. M.M. testified that she
continued to talk with the victim after the Defendant’s trial. During one visit by the victim
to M.M.’s home, the victim told M.M. that the Defendant did not have a gun and relayed that
she fabricated the rape story. According to M.M., the victim lied because she got mad at the
Defendant for touching her in the “wrong places.” M.M. testified that she informed her step-
father of their conversation.
M.M. confirmed that, after trial, she met with the Defendant’s lawyer and signed an
affidavit. She stated that the contents of that affidavit were true. In the affidavit, M.M.
recanted her testimony that she saw a gun during the sexual assault of the victim. M.M. also
relayed that the victim told her she made up the story about the gun and about having sexual
relations with the Defendant because the victim was mad at the Defendant for touching her
in the “wrong places.”
3
On December 3, 2008, the Defendant filed a petition for coram nobis relief alleging the same issue.
In its order denying the Defendant’s third amended motion for new trial, the trial court also denied the coram
nobis petition. The Defendant filed a motion in this Court to remand this case to the trial court for a hearing
on his petition for a writ or error coram nobis. The motion was denied, noting that the Defendant has been
afforded the opportunity to litigate the question of newly discovered evidence. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-
26-105(b) (relief limited to matters that were not litigated on a motion for new trial).
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On cross-examination, M.M. confirmed that both she and the victim were sexually
assaulted while together in the Defendant’s bedroom. When asked if she saw a gun that day,
she stated, “I don’t remember.”
M.M.’s stepfather then testified at the hearing. He stated that, while the victim was
visiting with M.M. after the trial, M.M. came out from her room and told him that the victim
admitted to lying about the Defendant. Specifically, the victim told M.M. that she had made
up the story about the Defendant having a gun and about having a sexual relationship with
the Defendant because the victim was mad at the Defendant. M.M.’s stepfather stated that
he immediately called the Defendant’s lawyer’s office and spoke with counsel. According
to M.M.’s stepfather, the victim had a “tendency to exaggerate.”
On cross-examination, he testified that M.M. and the victim were no longer friends.
He stated that, if M.M. testified at trial that she saw a gun, he would have believed her. He
confirmed that M.M. was shy and not very outgoing.
Then, M.M.’s stepfather testified, apparently for the first time and contrary to his
earlier testimony, that he overheard the conversation between the victim and M.M. that M.M.
had relayed to him. He stated that he heard the victim say she lied because she was mad at
the Defendant because he “wouldn’t buy her something . . . .” Specifically, he heard the
victim say that the Defendant did not have a weapon and that sexual relations did not occur.
He acknowledged that the victim and his stepson had been dating, but had an “ugly” breakup.
Following the hearing, the trial court entered an order detailing its findings and
denying the Defendant’s third amended motion for new trial. Subsequently, the Defendant
filed a timely notice of appeal.
Analysis
The Defendant argues on appeal that the trial court improperly denied the motion for
new trial based on newly discovered evidence. Specifically, he contends that the trial court
erred when it found neither witness (M.M. or her stepfather) to be credible.
The usual test for whether a defendant should be granted a new trial based on newly
discovered evidence is: (l) did the defendant act with reasonable diligence to discover the
evidence; (2) is the newly discovered evidence material; and (3) will introducing the
evidence likely change the result if accepted by the jury. State v. Meade, 942 S.W.2d 561,
565 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996) (citing State v. Nichols, 877 S.W.2d 722, 737 (Tenn. 1994)).
The test for granting a new trial in cases involving recanted testimony as newly discovered
evidence is based on the following criteria: (1) whether the trial judge is reasonably
well-satisfied that the testimony given by a material witness was false and that the new
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testimony is true; (2) whether the defendant was reasonably diligent in discovering the new
evidence or surprised by false testimony, or was unable to know of the falsity until after the
trial; and (3) whether the jury might have reached a different conclusion had the truth been
told. State v. Housler, 193 S.W.3d 476, 494 (Tenn. 2006) (citing State v. Mixon, 983 S.W.2d
661, 666 (Tenn. 1999)). When the basis for the newly discovered evidence is recanted
testimony, the test should include a determination by the trial judge whether the recanting
witness’ current testimony seems credible. State v. Phillip Lloyd Herndon, No.
03C01-9303-CR-00098, 1994 WL 176969, at *2 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, May 11,
1994); see also Housler,193 S.W.3d at 494. The decision as to whether to grant a motion for
new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence lies within the sound discretion of the
trial court. State v. Caldwell, 977 S.W.2d 110, 117 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997) (citing Hawkins
v. State, 220 Tenn. 383, 417 S.W.2d 774, 778 (Tenn. 1967)).
In this case, the trial judge resolved the issue of whether the post-trial testimony of
M.M. and her stepfather was credible. In the order denying relief, the judge stated:
The testimony of both these witnesses has been carefully reviewed. The
transcripts of the hearing and the trial have been compared. The witnesses
were obviously observed by the [c]ourt and after considering all that has been
said and the circumstances surrounding the testimony given at this hearing, the
[c]ourt has come to the conclusion that it cannot be believed.
....
In the instant case, the [c]ourt is not satisfied that the new testimony is
true or that the testimony by the material witness, [the victim M.S.], was false.
The trial court had the opportunity to observe the witnesses, noting that M.M. was a
“very shy witness” and referring to M.M.’s stepfather’s testimony as “sketchy.” At the
motion for new trial hearing, M.M. did not affirmatively recant her trial testimony that she
saw a gun, stating only that she did not remember if there was a gun. Further, we note that
the primary purpose of the testimony would have been to impeach the victim’s testimony that
she was raped by the Defendant while a weapon was present. A court should not grant a new
trial where it appears that the new evidence can have no other effect than to discredit the
testimony of a witness, contradict a witness’ statements, or impeach a witness, unless the
testimony of the witness who is sought to be impeached was so important to the issue and the
evidence impeaching the witness is so strong and convincing that a different result at trial
would necessarily follow. Rosenthal v. State, 292 SW.2d 1, 4-5 (Tenn. 1956). The trial
court found the testimony not to be credible; in fact, M.M.’s stepfather changed his story
again at the motion for new trial hearing. Moreover, there was other independent proof of
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a weapon inside the Defendant’s home, and the State’s theory was not based upon the use of
a weapon, but the age of the child. Upon review, we conclude that the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in denying the motion for a new trial.
Conclusion
Based upon the foregoing reasoning and authorities, we affirm the judgment of the
trial court denying the Defendant’s motion for new trial.
_________________________________
DAVID H. WELLES, JUDGE
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