IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
Assigned on Briefs October 4, 2005
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. COREY MOTEN
Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County
No. 01-07148 Chris Craft, Judge
No. W2004-02896-CCA-R3-CD - Filed January 26, 2006
The defendant, Corey Moten, was convicted of second degree murder, a Class A felony, and
sentenced as a violent offender to twenty years in the Department of Correction. On appeal, he
argues that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction and that the trial court erred in
giving a sequential jury instruction. Following our review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
ALAN E. GLENN , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID H. WELLES and JERRY L.
SMITH , JJ., joined.
Marvin Ballin (at trial) and Blake D. Ballin (on appeal), Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant,
Corey Moten.
Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Rachel E. Willis, Assistant Attorney General;
William L. Gibbons, District Attorney General; and Stephen P. Jones, Assistant District Attorney
General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
FACTS
At the defendant’s August 2-4, 2004, trial, Maria Gauntlett, the victim’s sister, testified that
the victim was thirty-one years old at the time of her death and had been married to the defendant
between five and seven years.
Officer Tim Monistere testified that he responded to a “wounded party” call sometime after
midnight on February 2, 2001, at the residence of the defendant and the victim in Shelby County.
Emergency medical personnel advised Monistere that the victim, Orchid Moten, was dead. The
defendant, who appeared “pretty calm and quiet acting,” told Monistere that he had arrived home
from work around 12:44 a.m., found the victim with a wound to her neck in the laundry room, and
called the police. Officer Monistere described the victim’s appearance: “[S]he was laying [sic] on
her back on the floor. There was blood around her head. And there was a towel like over her head
and neck area. Her pants were completely off except for one portion of the pants and her shirt was
like torn off of her. It was kind of partially hanging on her.”
Sergeant Mark Rewalt testified that he made photographs and collected evidence at the crime
scene. He identified a diagram he had made of the scene, as well as photographs of various items,
including a “turned-over”curio cabinet, a bloody nylon rope, a short telephone cord with connectors
on both ends, a set of keys, the kitchen window mini blinds found lying in the sink, and a green
Army jacket. Sergeant Rewalt found two cords coming out of the telephone: one that was cut or
torn that ran down to the dining room and another one that ran “along to the living room and it’s
connected to another extension and going into a wall.” He said that “utensils used to smoke crack
along with a cigarette lighter” were found in the dryer and that bloodstains were found only in the
laundry room.
Lieutenant Vennes Owens testified that when he arrived at the crime scene between 2:00 and
3:00 a.m., the defendant told him he “had come home from work and found his wife in the back of
the house dead.” Lieutenant Owens observed “a lot of disarray” inside the house. The defendant
subsequently was taken to the police station where he signed a waiver of rights and a consent form
to search his residence. The case was assigned to Sergeant Ashton, and Lieutenant Owens and
Sergeant Shemwell returned to the crime scene where they “identified all the knives in the house and
left them there” and collected a sponge.
Captain James L. Fitzpatrick testified that Sergeant William Ashton was the case coordinator
but was unavailable to testify because he was currently on active duty in the United States Coast
Guard Reserves. Captain Fitzpatrick said he participated in the interview of the defendant which
began around 11:45 a.m. on February 2, 2001. Fitzpatrick knew that the defendant already had been
advised of his rights and said that the defendant signed a waiver of rights. The defendant initially
told the officers that, when he arrived home at about 12:30 a.m., the door was unlocked. He said he
found his wife in the laundry room, locked his dog in a room, and called 9-1-1. The defendant also
said that one of the telephones had been “jerked” from the wall. During the interview, Sergeant
Ashton received a call from Sergeant Shemwell who advised that “a little rectangular pot scrubber
that had been used” to clean up blood had been found at the crime scene. Captain Fitzpatrick then
confronted the defendant about the inconsistences in what he had told the officers and the evidence
that had been collected. When the officers questioned the defendant about the sponge, he admitted
that he had used the sponge “to clean up the blood and then had rinsed it out and had placed it in a
dish which is exactly where it had been found.”
Asked if the defendant later “change[d] his story,” Captain Fitzpatrick replied:
And we confronted him with them one after another breaking down the initial
story that he had told. He had been calm up until a certain point and then it’s almost
as you see on Perry Mason. Once this information began to build up and build up
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and build up and then he broke down and admitted that he had been the person who
had inflicted the injuries on Mrs. Moten.
The defendant’s statement was reduced to writing, and the defendant signed it. In his statement, the
defendant said he had “cut [the victim] with a kitchen knife,” which he described as a “steak knife
size” with “a brown wooden handle.” Asked what had caused the altercation between him and the
victim, the defendant replied:
Well, when I got home, my neighbor next door, Buddy, told me that some
people had been going in and out of the house earlier that day. When I went in, I let
the dog in the house and put the dog in the room that she sleeps in. I asked her why
had people been going in and out of this house and you know I don’t like people in
this house when I’m not here. She told me that there hadn’t been nobody in this
house and I told her that she was lying because Buddy had told me that he had seen
people going in and out of the house. She told me that he was lying and I told her,
“[Y]ea, right. I don’t believe you” and I went to the bathroom to use it and she
confronted me at the bathroom door when I tried to walk past and she grabbed me
and I pushed her off of me and she fell into the shelf that was sitting by the bathroom
door.
After I pushed her I went to the kitchen. I went to get something to drink.
She kept pulling on my arm and she hit me in the back of my head so I turned around
and hit her in the shoulder. She swung at me and she missed and then I grabbed her
and grabbed the cord on the kitchen counter and wrapped it around her neck. Then
I pulled open the kitchen drawer and grabbed the kitchen knife. She started pulling
away from me after I wrapped the cord around her neck. She reached for the back
door and opened it and I snatched her back and I cut her. Then she fell down and
started bleeding and I walked away and came back and tried to clean up the blood
and I cleaned the knife and put it back and I put the sponge back into the dish and I
called 9-1-1.
The defendant admitted that he had pulled the victim’s pants off “[t]o make it look like somebody
else did it.” He acknowledged that he had “knocked” the blinds off the wall in the kitchen when he
put the sponge back. The defendant said that he had not wanted to kill the victim because he loved
her and that he “just snapped.” Captain Fitzpatrick said the defendant never indicated that he had
killed the victim in self-defense or that he had been injured during the altercation. Fitzpatrick
acknowledged that the defendant had been awake for at least eighteen hours at the time he gave his
statement.
Lieutenant Robert Shemwell testified that he and Sergeant Vennes Owens were instructed
to search for bloody clothing at the crime scene. Although they did not find any bloody clothing,
they found a wet sponge with the “same width of the pattern of blood smear pattern that was beside
the [victim’s] body on the floor.” Shemwell placed the sponge beside the blood smear on the floor
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and took a photograph for comparison purposes. He then took the sponge to the homicide office
where he showed it to Sergeant Ashton. After he learned that the defendant had confessed to killing
the victim, Lieutenant Shemwell returned to the crime scene to “locate a knife that was possibly used
in the murder.” The officers had received information that the murder weapon was “a serrated edge
knife, like a steak knife with a wooden handle.” Photographs were made of several knives found in
a drawer and one was collected as evidence. Sergeant Ashton later showed the collected knife to the
defendant who verified that it was the knife he had used to kill the victim.
Dr. Jennifer Love, a forensic anthropologist at the Regional Forensic Center of Memphis who
was accepted by the court as an expert in the field of forensic anthropology, testified that she had
reviewed the victim’s autopsy report and had examined a forensic cast made of the cartilage from
the victim’s neck region. She made sample cut marks with the suspect knife, compared them to the
castings made of the cartilage of the victim’s neck, and opined that the knife was “consistent with
the knife that was used in terms of the serrations.” However, she could not determine if the knife
was the actual murder weapon.
Dr. O’Brian Cleary Smith testified that he performed the autopsy on the victim’s body on
February 2, 2001, which revealed the presence of alcohol and cocaine in her system. He said the
victim died “as a result of both ligature strangulation and cutting of the neck. Specifically with the
ligature strangulation there’s a mark left on the skin at the front surface of the neck that is consistent
with a narrow cord that measures about one tenth of an inch.” He described the cuts to the victim’s
neck:
In the front portion of the neck there was a series of wounds about five and
three quarter inches in length across the front. And it was not a single wound but it
was a confluence of at least three wounds in which there were – you could tell where
a wound would start and then another wound would begin within that wound and it
would leave a jagged edge or margin to the wound indicating that about three or a
minium of three passes of the knife were required to produce a wound of this type.
There were two small superficial abrasions where the cutting surface of the knife
barely touched the skin. It was just enough to cut through the very top layers. Those
were in line with two of the other two cuts. So I think with a fair degree of medical
competence and certainty at a minium of three passes of the knife would have been
required to produce the injuries to the neck. Those injuries went down deep enough
to cut through the two heavy muscles on either side of the neck . . . . In so doing the
knife went through both of the jugular veins, the external jugular veins. . . . [T]he
knife proceeded through the windpipe and the voice box cutting it almost to the rear
wall of the windpipe leaving tool marks present in the cartilage of those tissues.
Asked which injury caused the victim’s death, Dr. Smith opined that either the knife wounds
or the strangulation could have been lethal and said that each injury occurred while the victim was
still alive. He agreed that a cut to the victim could have begun while she was standing but said she
“did not have the extensive damage to her neck done while she was standing up.”
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The defendant did not present any proof at trial.
ANALYSIS
I. Sufficiency of the Evidence
The defendant argues that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction for second
degree murder, saying the proof at trial established that he “was in a state of passion produced by
adequate provocation sufficient to lead a reasonable person to act in an irrational manner.”
In considering this issue, we apply the familiar rule that where sufficiency of the convicting
evidence is challenged, the relevant question of the reviewing court is “whether, after viewing the
evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, 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, 99 S. Ct. 2781, 2789, 61 L. Ed. 2d 560, 573 (1979); see also Tenn. R. App. P. 13(e) (“Findings
of guilt in criminal actions whether by the trial court or jury shall be set aside if the evidence is
insufficient to support the findings by the trier of fact of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”); State
v. Evans, 838 S.W.2d 185, 190-92 (Tenn. 1992); State v. Anderson, 835 S.W.2d 600, 604 (Tenn.
Crim. App. 1992). All questions involving the credibility of witnesses, the weight and value to be
given the evidence, and all factual issues are resolved by the trier of fact. See State v. Pappas, 754
S.W.2d 620, 623 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1987). “A guilty verdict by the jury, approved by the trial judge,
accredits the testimony of the witnesses for the State and resolves all conflicts in favor of the theory
of the State.” State v. Grace, 493 S.W.2d 474, 476 (Tenn. 1973). Our supreme court stated the
rationale for this rule:
This well-settled rule rests on a sound foundation. The trial judge and the
jury see the witnesses face to face, hear their testimony and observe their demeanor
on the stand. Thus the trial judge and jury are the primary instrumentality of justice
to determine the weight and credibility to be given to the testimony of witnesses. In
the trial forum alone is there human atmosphere and the totality of the evidence
cannot be reproduced with a written record in this Court.
Bolin v. State, 219 Tenn. 4, 11, 405 S.W.2d 768, 771 (1966) (citing Carroll v. State, 212 Tenn. 464,
370 S.W.2d 523 (1963)). A jury conviction removes the presumption of innocence with which a
defendant is initially cloaked and replaces it with one of guilt, so that on appeal, a convicted
defendant has the burden of demonstrating that the evidence is insufficient. See State v. Tuggle, 639
S.W.2d 913, 914 (Tenn. 1982).
Second degree murder is defined as “[a] knowing killing of another.” Tenn. Code Ann. §
39-13-210(a)(1) (2003). “Knowing” is defined as:
“Knowing” refers to a person who acts knowingly with respect to the conduct
or to circumstances surrounding the conduct when the person is aware of the nature
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of the conduct or that the circumstances exist. A person acts knowingly with respect
to a result of the person's conduct when the person is aware that the conduct is
reasonably certain to cause the result[.]
Id. § 39-11-106(a)(20). Voluntary manslaughter is defined as “the intentional or knowing killing
of another in a state of passion produced by adequate provocation sufficient to lead a reasonable
person to act in an irrational manner.” Id. § 39-13-211(a). “Whether the acts constitute a ‘knowing
killing’ (second degree murder) or a killing due to ‘adequate provocation’ (voluntary manslaughter)
is a question for the jury.” State v. Johnson, 909 S.W.2d 461, 464 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995). To
support a second degree murder conviction, the State had only to establish that the killing of the
victim was knowing beyond a reasonable doubt. See State v. Summerall, 926 S.W.2d 272, 275
(Tenn. Crim. App. 1995).
The defendant argues that his statement to police officers established that he acted as a result
of adequate provocation. He asserts on appeal that he had received information that the victim was
having an affair while he was at work and that when he confronted the victim with this information,
the victim assaulted him. According to the defendant, as a result of the victim’s assault upon him
and his belief that she was having an affair, he “went into a rage.” In his statement, the defendant
said his neighbor had told him “that some people had been going in and out of the house earlier that
day”; he and the victim argued about the neighbor’s comment; the argument became physical; he
wrapped a cord around the victim’s neck; the victim reached for the back door and opened it; and
he “snatched” the victim back and cut her with a kitchen knife. These actions were sufficient to
support the jury's finding that the defendant committed a knowing killing of the victim.
II. Sequential Jury Instruction
The defendant argues that his rights to due process and to a trial by jury were violated by the
trial court's instructing sequentially as to second degree murder and voluntary manslaughter, with
the jury not to consider the lesser offense unless it first determined that the defendant was not guilty
of second degree murder. According to the defendant's argument, “the instructions given by the trial
court are of the type that fail to fairly submit the legal issues and mislead the jury thus violating the
defendant’s right to due process and to a trial by jury under the Tennessee and United States
Constitutions.”
Defendants have a “constitutional right to a correct and complete charge of the law.” State
v. Teel, 793 S.W.2d 236, 249 (Tenn. 1990). Accordingly, trial courts have the duty to give “a
complete charge of the law applicable to the facts of the case.” State v. Davenport, 973 S.W.2d 283,
287 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1998) (citing State v. Harbison, 704 S.W.2d 314, 319 (Tenn. 1986)). As long
as the instructions given are correct statements of the law and “fully and fairly set forth the
applicable law,” the trial court does not commit error in “refus[ing] to give a special instruction
requested by a party.” State v. Bohanan, 745 S.W.2d 892, 897 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1987).
Furthermore, there is no requirement that a trial court be limited to using pattern jury instructions.
State v. West, 844 S.W.2d 144, 151 (Tenn. 1992). When reviewing challenged jury instructions, we
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must look at “the charge as a whole in determining whether prejudicial error has been committed.”
In re Estate of Elam, 738 S.W.2d 169, 174 (Tenn. 1987); see also State v. Phipps, 883 S.W.2d 138,
142 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994).
In the present appeal, the trial court instructed the jury on the indicted offense of second
degree murder and the lesser-included offenses of voluntary manslaughter, reckless homicide, and
criminally negligent homicide. The trial court also instructed the jury not to consider the lesser-
included offenses unless it first acquitted the defendant of the greater offense.
It is settled law that a jury is instructed to consider, in sequential fashion, first the indicted
offense and then the lesser-included offenses:
The appellant next contends that the trial court erred in giving sequential
instructions on first degree murder, second degree murder, and voluntary
manslaughter. We disagree. This court has repeatedly upheld "acquittal-first"
instructions. See State v. Raines, 882 S.W.2d 376, 381-82 (Tenn. Crim. App.), perm.
to appeal denied, (Tenn. 1994); State v. McPherson, 882 S.W.2d 365, 375 (Tenn.
Crim. App.), perm. to appeal denied, (Tenn. 1994); State v. Rutherford, 876 S.W.2d
118, 119-20 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1993), perm. to appeal denied, (Tenn. 1994); State
v. Beckham, No. 02C01-9406-CR-00107, 1996 WL 389321 (Tenn. Crim. App., at
Jackson, Sept. 27, 1995). Accordingly, this issue is without merit.
State v. Mann, 959 S.W.2d 503, 521 (Tenn. 1997).
Applying the holding of Mann, we conclude, likewise, that this issue is without merit.
CONCLUSION
Based upon the foregoing authorities and reasoning, the judgment of the trial court is
affirmed.
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ALAN E. GLENN, JUDGE
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