IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
January 24, 2006 Session
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. RICKY LYNN NORWOOD, ALIAS
Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County
No. 76302 Richard R. Baumgartner, Judge
No. E2005-00704-CCA-R3-CD - Filed March 16, 2006
This state appeal, initially filed as a Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 3 appeal, is deemed by
this court an interlocutory appeal pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 10. The state
seeks review of the Knox County Criminal Court’s determination that, in the on-going driving under
the influence (DUI) prosecution of the defendant, Ricky Lynn Norwood, a 1997 DUI conviction may
not be used to enhance punishment. Because the record and the applicable law support the trial
court’s ruling, we affirm the order.
Tenn. R. App. P. 10; Judgment of the Criminal Court is Affirmed.
JAMES CURWOOD WITT , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which GARY R. WADE, P.J.,
and WILLIAM H. INMAN , S.J., joined.
Mark Stephens, District Public Defender; John Halstead and Mary Ellen Coleman, Assistant District
Public Defenders; and Candi Henry, Special Defense Attorney, for the Appellee, Ricky Lynn
Norwood.
Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; John H. Bledsoe, Assistant Attorney General;
Randall E. Nichols, District Attorney General; Marsha Mitchell and Steven C. Garrett, Assistant
District Attorneys General; and Marla Holloway, Special Prosecuting Attorney, for the Appellant,
State of Tennessee.
OPINION
In the hearing on the defendant’s motion to strike the reference in the defendant’s
current indictment to the 1997 Knox County General Sessions Court conviction of DUI, case number
35471, the defense attorney emphasized that she was not seeking to set aside the 1997 judgment; she
was merely trying to exclude it as a basis for enhancing the current charge of DUI to a third offense.
The prosecutor responded that she found a “waiver of rights form” with the warrant and judgment
in case number 35471 in the general sessions court records. The prosecutor stated that the practice
in general sessions court is to have the defendant execute a waiver of his trial rights on a form
separate from the warrant-and-judgment form. The defense countered that the waiver form produced
by the state contained no docket number or other reference to the defendant’s 1997 DUI case.
A deputy general sessions court clerk was called as a witness and exhibited the file
in general sessions case number 35471, State v. Ricky Lynn Norwood. She identified the original
warrant1 and affirmed that the judgment on the reverse side of the form adjudicated the defendant
guilty of DUI. She testified that a “rights waiver form” was a part of the record, found folded
“inside this citation.” She acknowledged that the form bore a signature that read “Ricky Norwood.”
The blank provided for the defendant’s attorney’s signature contained the signature of Bill Petty, a
Knoxville attorney. The deputy clerk testified, “The judge always explains their rights to them
before they plead and has them – reads them to them and then has them sign them, the attorney sign
them.” She testified that the Knox County General Sessions Court had been using the separate rights
waiver form for many years.
On cross-examination, however, the deputy clerk acknowledged that it was customary
to have the defendant sign the warrant form for waiving rights, in addition to signing the separate
form. She agreed that the warrant’s waiver blanks were not signed in case number 35471. She also
agreed that the separate waiver form contained no caption, docket number, or date.
The warrant form in general sessions case number 35471, State v. Ricky Lynn
Norwood, reflects that an officer cited the defendant for DUI on March 13, 1997. The back side of
the one-sheet warrant form contains caption information and a section for recording, separately, a
defendant’s waiver of his rights to jury trial, to a preliminary hearing, and to counsel. This section
remained blank and did not bear the defendant’s name, his signatures, or his counsel’s signature.
The judgment section of the back of the form showed that, upon a guilty plea, the defendant was
convicted of DUI on June 17, 1997. He was sentenced to 11 months, 29 days, suspended upon
serving 48 hours and attending a DUI program. He was fined $350. The judgment was signed by
the general sessions court judge.
The “rights waiver form” exhibited to the deputy clerk’s testimony is a one-page
declaration and waiver of various rights of a criminal defendant. It contains five blanks; the blanks
for the charged offense (DUI), the maximum sentence (11 months, 29 days), the defendant’s
signature (/s/ Ricky Norwood), and the defendant’s attorney’s signature (/s/ Bill Petty) were filled
in. Only the space for designating the minimum sentence was left blank. The form contained no
blanks for indicating a caption, docket number, or date, and no such information was included on
the form. The form contained no approving or authenticating signature of a judge. The form
contained no signature of a prosecutor.
In ruling that the judgment in general sessions case number 35471 was “defective,”
the criminal court relied upon the lack of any information on the separate rights waiver form that tied
1
The form reflects that the defendant in case number 35471 was issued a citation.
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it to case number 35471 and to the absence of the defendant’s signature on the waiver blank on the
warrant form.
Aggrieved of the trial court’s ruling, the state filed a notice of appeal pursuant to
Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 3(c). See Tenn. R. App. P. 3(c) (providing the state in a
criminal case a rightful appeal when substantive effect of trial court’s order is to dismiss a charging
instrument, set aside a guilty verdict, arrest judgment, grant or refuse to revoke probation, or remand
a child to juvenile court). The trial court’s ruling in this case, however, was not a determination that
gave rise to a Rule 3 appeal, see State v. Gallaher, 730 S.W.2d 622, 623 (Tenn. 1987), and an appeal
pursuant to Rule 3 is inappropriate. That said, this court grants the state’s request to be allowed to
proceed in the form of an interlocutory appeal pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure
10. See State v. Norris, 47 S.W.3d 457, 463 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000).
Tennessee Code Annotated section 55-10-403 authorizes, in seriatim, enhanced fines
and minimum confinement periods for second, third, and “subsequent” DUI convictions. See Tenn.
Code Ann. § 55-10-403(a)(1) (2003). Code section 55-10-403(g)(2) and (3) provides:
In the prosecution of second or subsequent offenders, the indictment
or charging instrument must allege the prior conviction or convictions
for violating any of the provisions of § 55-10-401, § 39-13-213(a)(2),
§ 39-13-106, § 39-13-218 or § 55-10-418, setting forth the time and
place of each prior conviction or convictions. . . .
(3)(i) Notwithstanding any other rule of evidence or law to the
contrary, in the prosecution of second or subsequent offenders under
this chapter the official driver record maintained by the department
and produced upon a certified computer printout shall constitute
prima facie evidence of the prior conviction.
(ii) Following indictment by a grand jury, the defendant shall
be given a copy of the department of safety printout at the time of
arraignment. If the charge is by warrant, the defendant is entitled to
a copy of the department printout at the defendant’s first appearance
in court or at least fourteen (14) days prior to a trial on the merits.
(iii) Upon motion properly made in writing alleging that one
(1) or more prior convictions are in error and setting forth the error,
the court may require that a certified copy of the judgment of
conviction of such offense be provided for inspection by the court as
to its validity prior to the department printout being introduced into
evidence.
Id. § 55-10-403(g)(2), (3) (2003).
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In State v. McClintock, 732 S.W.2d 268 (Tenn. 1987), the defendant “averred that
he had not validly waived his right to counsel at his hearing on the first [DUI] offense and that the
record of his plea was silent as to the validity of the waiver in General Sessions Court of Davidson
County.” Id. at 269. Notwithstanding this claim, our supreme court found that the warrant
underlying the prior DUI conviction contained “several written waivers . . . , all signed by Defendant,
including a waiver of his right to counsel,” that “[n]o irregularities appear on the face of the
warrant,” and that the “General Sessions Court had jurisdiction over the subject matter and over the
person of Defendant” in the first DUI conviction proceeding. Id. (citing Tennessee Code Annotated
section 40-1-109(a), which provides that a general sessions court has jurisdiction to render final
judgments in misdemeanors). The McClintock court stated, “Although the record of Defendant’s
first conviction consists only of the warrant upon which the judgment was entered, like any
judgment, a presumption of regularity in the proceedings attaches upon becoming final.”
McClintock, 732 S.W.2d at 270.
The McClintock court distinguished the adjudicative facts from those in Baldasar v.
Illinois, 446 U.S. 222, 100 S. Ct. 1585 (1980), overruled on other grounds by Nichols v. United
States, 511 U.S. 738, 114 S. Ct. 1921 (1994), in which “the record affirmatively revealed that the
defendant had neither been represented by counsel nor waived his right to counsel.” McClintock,
732 S.W.2d at 273. In Baldasar, the High Court allowed the attack on the prior conviction:
An uncounseled conviction does not become more reliable merely
because the accused has been validly convicted of a subsequent
offense. For this reason, a conviction which is invalid for purposes
of imposing a sentence of imprisonment for the offense itself remains
invalid for purposes of increasing a term of imprisonment for a
subsequent conviction under a repeat-offender statute.
Baldasar, 446 U.S. at 228, 100 S. Ct. at 1588 (Marshall, J., concurring). The McClintock court
agreed that “[s]uch a conviction [as in Baldasar] is void on its face for the purposes of recidivist
provisions upon subsequent convictions.” McClintock, 732 S.W.2d at 273.
Essentially, the present defendant posits that the conviction in his case number 35471
is invalid on its face due to the Baldasar-type deficiencies. To explore the claim, we note that
McClintock was not the last word on the nature of facial invalidity of a prior conviction; the issue
was explored by the Tennessee Supreme Court in Hickman v. State, 153 S.W.3d 16 (Tenn. 2004),
a habeas corpus proceeding. Hickman had “alleged that his 1986 misdemeanor conviction, for which
he received a ten-day suspended sentence, [was] void because the judgment [did] not affirmatively
indicate that Hickman was represented by counsel or that he waived his right to counsel.” Id. at 18.
The Hickman court agreed that “[t]he certified copy of the judgment does not indicate whether
Hickman was represented by counsel or waived his right to counsel” in the 1986 proceeding. Id. at
19. Although the court rejected Hickman’s claim to habeas corpus relief because it held that he was
not “‘restrained of liberty’ for purposes of the habeas corpus statute,” the court further determined
that the waiver-poor 1986 judgment was “not void on its face.” Id. at 24. The court said:
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The judgment in this case is not facially invalid because the judgment
does not show that the convicting court was without jurisdiction or
authority to accept the plea and to sentence Hickman. The copy of
the judgment attached to Hickman’s petition demonstrates that the
General Sessions Court had both subject matter and personal
jurisdiction. The warrant charged Hickman with possession of
marijuana on May 5, 1986, a misdemeanor offense over which the
General Sessions Court had subject matter jurisdiction. Because the
General Sessions Court is a court of limited jurisdiction, jurisdictional
facts must affirmatively appear upon the record. See . . . McClintock,
732 S.W.2d at 270-71. Here, those facts appear: the warrant reflects
that Hickman entered a written guilty plea, requested a trial on the
merits in General Sessions Court, and expressly waived his right to
indictment, presentment, grand jury investigation, and jury trial.
Because the judgment plainly states the essential facts establishing the
court’s jurisdiction, the judgment is entitled to a presumption of
regularity.
The judgment’s silence as to whether the petitioner was
represented by counsel or waived the right to counsel does not defeat
the presumption of regularity and render the judgment void.
Id. (footnotes omitted). The Hickman court stated that its prior decisions, including McClintock,
“do not support Hickman’s argument that a judgment is facially void unless it affirmatively recites
that the defendant was represented by counsel or waived the right to counsel.” Id. at 25. The court
specifically distinguished Baldasar, stating that the record in Baldasar “affirmatively revealed that
the defendant had neither been represented by counsel nor waived the right to counsel.” Id.
(emphasis added). The Hickman court concluded that “the [1986] judgment is not void on its face
and is instead entitled to the presumption of regularity.” Id. at 26. The court explained,
The judgment contains a blank line where defense counsel is
ordinarily listed, and the pre-printed “Waiver of Attorney” was not
signed by the defendant. This judgment does not clearly reflect that
the defendant was denied the right to counsel. The judgment is
merely silent. Additional information outside the judgment would be
needed to establish that Hickman in fact was not represented by
counsel. As we previously stated, where additional proof is needed,
the judgment is at most voidable, rather than void.
Id. at 26.
Applying these principles to the present case, we agree with the state that the warrant
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form in case number 35471 does not affirmatively reflect that the defendant was denied the right to
counsel. However, even though the warrant’s mere silence on the issue of counsel does not by itself
equate to facial invalidity of the judgment, per Hickman, we conclude that the judgment was facially
invalid because it does not contain facts that establish the issuing court’s jurisdiction: the entry of
“a written guilty plea, [a] request[ for] a trial on the merits in General Sessions Court, and [an]
express[] waive[r of the defendant’s] right to indictment, presentment, grand jury investigation, and
jury trial.” See id. at 25. In Hickman, the record of the underlying judgment contained those facts;
in the present case, the warrant form does not. Thus, the defendant’s conviction in case number
35471 lacks a presumption of regularity and is invalid on its face unless the separate “rights waiver
form” is considered a part of the record in that case.
The record before the court shows that the general sessions court in Knox County
typically used the free-standing “rights waiver forms,” but testimony established that the waiver
practice also included affixing the defendant’s signatures to the waiver blanks on the back of the
warrant form. Relying upon the departure from this practice in case number 35471, the criminal
court effectively held that the undated, un-captioned “rights waiver form” should not be considered
a part of the record in that case.
In our view, the trial court’s determination involved a mixed question of law and fact.
As such, our review of that court’s action is de novo. See, e.g., Serrano v. State, 133 S.W.3d 599,
603 (Tenn. 2004); State v. Burns, 6 S.W.3d 453, 461 (Tenn. 1999).
The state has argued in its brief that this court, in a case in which the underlying DUI
conviction record had been destroyed, has approved of the state’s establishing the underlying,
counseled conviction through evidence such as the issuing judge’s testimony. See State v. Clever,
70 S.W.3d 771, 776 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2001). The analogy, however, is unavailing. First, the issue
presented in the case before us is not whether the conviction in case number 35471 exists; no one
questions the existence of the conviction. Second, the state presented no evidence that addressed
the judgment’s “defects” as the trial court discerned them. The issuing judge did not testify, and no
docket notes were presented.2
The only “evidence” presented was the testimony of the deputy general sessions court
clerk and, through her, the warrant and rights waiver form found in the clerk’s “dead file” for case
number 35471. As a means of integrating the rights waiver form into the record, the state relies in
part upon the deputy clerk’s testimony that the use of the free-standing rights waiver form was a
long-standing custom in general sessions court in Knox County; however, the same testimony also
established that the general sessions court was accustomed to requiring the defendant to sign the
waivers contained on the back of the warrant form, a custom that was not followed in case number
35471. The criminal court essentially recognized that the custom was to require signatures on both
2
The fact of a filing of a free-standing waiver form would not be memorialized in a rule docket in case number
35471 because the general sessions court is not a court of record. See State v. Black, 897 S.W .2d 680, 682 (Tenn. 1995)
(“[I]t is undisputed that a General Sessions court is not a court of record.”).
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forms, and it declined to recognize the general sessions court’s custom in one particular when its
concomitant custom in another particular had not been followed. The criminal court concluded that
this out-of-custom absence of signatures on the warrant form, along with the separate form’s lack
of identifying information, belied the regularity of the general sessions court judgment in case
number 35471.
Thus, excluding the separate waiver form from consideration, the record supports the
criminal court’s conclusion that the judgment in case number 35471 is irregular and evinces a lack
of jurisdiction of the issuing court,3 despite that the judgment does not affirmatively indicate the
denial of the right to counsel.
In view of the record and the trial court’s findings based thereon, we affirm that
court’s order.
___________________________________
JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE
3
As we have mentioned in this opinion, the basis for collaterally attacking a conviction’s efficacy as a
recidivism marker is the same basis used for a plenary collateral attack via the writ of habeas corpus. That basis is the
lack of the issuing court’s jurisdiction, which voids the judgment. Even so, the successful results of the two types of
collateral attacks are not identical. The attack mounted in the present case was limited in scope to disabling the 1997
conviction in case number 35471 as a subsequent sentencing enhancing tool, and that attack method is implicitly
authorized by cases such as McClintock and Hickman. The defendant made no attempt, however, to follow the
mandatory statutory procedural requirements for a habeas corpus proceeding, see Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 29-21-101, -105,
-107 (2000), and accordingly the effect or result of the defendant’s attack method in this case does not terminate the
existence of the actual judgment in case number 35471.
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