IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
July 2000 Session
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. RALPH DEWAYNE MOORE
Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Roane County
No. 11679 E. Eugene Eblen, Trial Judge
No. E1999-02743-CCA-R3-CD
October 30, 2000
The defendant was convicted of reckless endangerment with a deadly weapon, a shotgun. The
defendant asserts that insufficient evidence supported the verdict against him. We affirm, holding
that the defendant’s loading the weapon and recklessly pointing it at the victim while angry, in such
a manner that death or serious bodily injury was imminent, were actions sufficient to constitute the
offense of reckless endangerment whether said weapon was fired or not.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOSEPH M. TIPTON and
ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER , JJ., joined.
Joe Walker, District Public Defender, and Walter B. Johnson, II, Harriman, Tennessee (on appeal);
Rowland Cowden, Assistant Public Defender (at trial), for the appellant, Ralph Dewayne Moore.
Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; Mark A. Fulks, Assistant Attorney General; J. Scott
McCluen, District Attorney General; and Roger Delp, Assistant District Attorney, for the appellee,
State of Tennessee.
OPINION
Introduction
The defendant, Ralph Dewayne Moore, was convicted by a Roane County Criminal Court
jury of reckless endangerment with a weapon, a Class E felony. See Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-13-
103(b). He was sentenced as a Range I standard offender to one year, with seven days in jail and
the remainder on Community Corrections.1 He asserts that insufficient evidence supported the
1
For other charges incurred during the defendant’s confrontation with the Taylo r family, he also re ceived thirty
days for disorderly conduct and eleven months and twenty-nine days for assau lt. All were impo sed conc urrently, with
seven days confinement and the remainder on Co mmunity Corrections.
verdict because the evidence established neither the direction of the weapon’s discharge nor the
identity of the actual shooter. After careful review, we affirm the conviction.
Background
According to the trial testimony, Lakisha Taylor is the daughter of the victim, Irvin Taylor.
Lakisha testified that, in September 1996, when she, Nikita Taylor, and a friend were standing under
a tree in the rain at the Taylors’ residence, the defendant, next door at his uncle’s house, began
cursing at the girls. The girls entered the Taylor residence, and Lakisha called her mother to inquire
about the defendant.
Quickly, Lakisha Taylor’s mother, Sandra Taylor, and her father, the victim, arrived, in that
order, at the house. After the victim arrived, he stood on his porch, as the defendant entered the
victim’s driveway and threatened him. Lakisha testified that the defendant pretended to pull a gun,
and the victim responded by picking up a baseball bat from the ground. Further, she stated that, at
the defendant’s request, John Russell, a friend of the defendant, brought the defendant a shotgun.
The defendant loaded the weapon and pointed it at Lakisha.
Lakisha testified that when the defendant pointed a shotgun at her, the victim stepped
between her and the weapon. She entered her home and then heard a gunshot. She did not see the
weapon discharge.
The victim then testified. He stated that the defendant began to curse and threaten him when
he arrived home. The defendant simulated drawing a weapon and shooting the victim. The victim
then picked up a ball bat from the yard and began approaching the defendant. He testified that the
defendant yelled for John, who brought the defendant a shotgun from a car trunk. The defendant
loaded it and pointed it at Lakisha. The victim stepped between Lakisha and the weapon and told
his daughter to leave. The victim then retreated into his house because he feared being shot. Like
Lakisha, the victim did not see the subsequent discharge. On cross-examination, the victim stated
that the investigating officers found neither a spent shell casing nor any shotgun pellets.
Sandra Taylor, the victim’s wife, testified that she arrived home before the victim. As she
exited her car in the driveway, the defendant called her several obscenities and threatened her. She
took her children into the house and left to find her husband. When passing the defendant, she
concluded that he had been drinking intoxicants. After the defendant brandished the shotgun, she
fled to a neighbor’s house to call the police and heard, but did not see, the shotgun discharge.
The defendant was originally charged with disorderly conduct, a Class A misdemeanor, and
two counts of aggravated assault, a Class C felony. He was found guilty of disorderly conduct, of
misdemeanor assault as a lesser- included offense of one aggravated assault charge, and of the instant
reckless endangerment as a lesser-included offense of the remaining aggravated assault charge.
Analysis
Sufficiency of the evidence
-2-
The defendant was convicted of reckless endangerment:
(a) A person commits an offense who recklessly engages in conduct which places or
may place another person in imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury.
(b) Reckless endangerment is a Class A misdemeanor; however, reckless
endangerment committed with a deadly weapon is a Class E felony.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-103(a)-(b). The defendant asserts that insufficient evidence supported the
verdict against him because none of the witnesses testified that they saw the shotgun being fired and
because the state did not prove that he fired the weapon. Further, the defendant asserts that, even
if he fired the weapon, no evidence establishes that the shotgun was fired at the victim.
When a defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the verdict against
him, our standard of review is whether, after reviewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the
prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond
a reasonable doubt. See Jackson v. Virginia, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 2789 (1979). Questions concerning the
credibility of the witnesses, the weight and value to be given the evidence as well as all factual issues
raised by the evidence, are resolved by the trier of fact, not this Court. See State v. Tuttle, 914
S.W.2d 926, 932 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995). Nor may this Court reweigh or re-evaluate the evidence.
See State v. Cabbage, 571 S.W.2d 832, 835 (Tenn. 1978). On appeal, the state is entitled to the
strongest legitimate view of the evidence and all inferences therefrom. Id. Because a verdict of guilt
removes the presumption of innocence and replaces it with a presumption of guilt, the accused has
the burden of illustrating to this Court why the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict returned
by the trier of fact. See State v. Tuggle, 639 S.W.2d 913, 914 (Tenn. 1982).
In part, the defendant alleges that his conviction can not stand because neither eyewitness
testimony nor physical evidence established the direction of the discharge. We disagree. If such
evidence established that the weapon was fired at the victim and not in the air or some other
direction, then that evidence clearly would support a reckless endangerment conviction. We
conclude, however, that the defendant’s firing the weapon was not necessarily requisite to
conviction.
The statute requires that a defendant’s actions constitute a reasonable probability of injury,
beyond firing a weapon into the air or into a tree top. See State v. Fox, 947 S.W.2d 865, 866 (Tenn.
Crim. App. 1996)(“Merely discharging a weapon, standing alone, is not sufficient to constitute
commission of reckless endangerment.”); see also State v. Culbertson, No. 03C01-9412-CR-00449
(Tenn. Crim. App. filed Aug. 30, 1995, at Knoxville) (similar holding when defendant fired weapon
into ceiling). Thus, to constitute the offense of reckless endangerment, those actions must endanger
a person or persons in a particular defined area, a “zone of danger.” See State v. Payne, 7 S.W.3d
25, 28 (Tenn. 1999). For example, this Court has determined that a defendant’s shooting a dog
across a street at night, when that dog was fifteen to twenty feet from the victim, was within the
vicinity of the victim and constituted the requisite danger. See State. v. Steven Willard Self, No.
03C01-9807-CR-002 (Tenn. Crim. App. filed July 30, 1999, at Knoxville).
The issue of our statute’s imminence requirement, crucial to this analysis, is demonstrated
by contrast with the analogous Model Penal Code section:
-3-
A person commits a misdemeanor if he recklessly engages in conduct which places
or may place another in danger of death or serious bodily injury. Recklessness and
danger shall be presumed where a person knowingly points a firearm at or in the
direction of another, whether or not the actor believed the firearm to be loaded.
Model Penal Code § 211.2. As noted by the Supreme Court in the Payne opinion, the relevant Code
requires something above the mere possibility of danger, and the state must establish imminent
threat. See Payne, 7 S.W.3d at 28. For purposes of the statute, “imminent” is that which is:
Near at hand; mediate rather than immediate; . . . impending; on the point of
happening; threatening; menacing; perilous. Something which is threatening to
happen at once, something close at hand, something to happen upon on the instant,
close although not yet touching, and on the point of happening.
Black’s Law Dictionary 750 (6th ed. 1990), quoted in Payne, 7 S.W.3d at 28).
When we contrast the relevant subsections of the aggravated assault statute, the original
charge, and the reckless endangerment statute, see Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 39-13-102(a)(1)(B), -103(a)-
(b), we discern three significant differences. First, the mens rea is “intentional” or “knowing” for
the former and “reckless” under the latter. Second, the state legislature has classified the relevant
aggravated assault as a Class C felony, whereas the instant reckless endangerment constitutes a Class
E felony. Finally, one may commit reckless endangerment without the victim realizing the threat,
whereas, under the relevant subsections of the aggravated assault statute the victim must apprehend
and fear the imminent harm. The reckless endangerment statute therefore forbids and punishes
activities that society views as dangerous, independent from a victim's characterization or even
perception of the threat. We conclude that the defendant’s wielding the shotgun in this case
constituted such an activity.
Comparable with reckless endangerment, certain simple assaults and aggravated assaults
require imminence, in the context of the victim’s reasonable fear of bodily injury, see Tenn. Code
Ann. §§ 39-13-101(a)(2), –102. Display of a firearm in a threatening context, even without the
weapon actually being pointed at a victim, has been found sufficiently indicative of imminence to
support a conviction for aggravated assault. See State v. Christopher Max Hall, No. M1998-00180-
CCA-R3-CD (Tenn. Crim. App. filed March 23, 2000, at Nashville); State v. Gregory Whitfield, No.
02C01-9706-CR-00226 (Tenn. Crim. App. filed May 8, 1998, at Jackson). In the instant case, the
testimony established that the defendant, in a heated argument and apparently after consuming
intoxicants, loaded a firearm and pointed it at a minor. He kept the weapon pointed at her father, the
victim, when that victim put himself between the muzzle of the weapon and his daughter. Then, as
the victim fled, the weapon was discharged. Further, the weapon was a shotgun, a firearm that
generally fires multiple projectiles in a roughly circular pattern at short distances, like the short
distance involved in the instant case. At short range, this weapon requires a less precise targeting
than other conventional firearms and is especially lethal. One short stroke of a trigger, in anger or
in accident, would have sent the projectiles at the victim. Such a situation and its dire consequences
were imminent and on the very edge of occurrence. Under these circumstances, such threat can not
-4-
be condoned in our society and, we conclude, falls under the breadth of this statute. Therefore, the
evidence was sufficient to prove the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.2
The defendant’s arguments also imply that John Russell, his friend who brought him the
shotgun, actually fired that weapon. Since firing of the weapon was not requisite to conviction, our
analysis disposes of this particular concern, but we note the evidence in the record: After making
gestures of firing an imaginary weapon at the Taylors, the defendant requested the weapon, loaded
it himself, pointed it at Lakisha and Irving Taylor, and, as the family members fled, the weapon
discharged. A rational trier of fact could conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant
fired the weapon.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the conviction from the trial court.
___________________________________
JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, JUDGE
2
Our prior discussion regarding imminence notes the significance o f our statute’s com prising that req uirement,
contrasted with the Model Penal Code’s omission of such requirement. In a similar vein, the Model Penal Code
expressly states that the elements of the offense may be constituted by pointing a firearm, loaded or unloaded, at a victim.
This definitio n of the offense is somewha t broader than our statute, a nd our ho lding does not extend to unloaded
weapon ery. We also note that in State v. Thom as R. Bald win , No. 01C 01-961 2-CR-00 530 (T enn. Crim. A pp. filed July
29, 1998, at Nashville), this Court did not find reckless endangerment established by the defendant’s firing a weapon
a moment before at an other victim in a nother dire ction. That opinion did not address the defendant's subsequent pointing
of the firearm, w ithout firing, at the first victim . See id.
-5-