IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
JUNE 1998 SESSION
FILED
October 23, 1998
Cecil Crowson, Jr.
Appellate C ourt Clerk
TAVARUS U. WILLIAMS, )
) C.C.A. No. 02C01-9711-CR-00423
Appellant, )
) Shelby County
V. )
) Honorable Chris Craft, Judge
)
STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) (Post-Conviction/First Degree Murder)
)
Appellee. )
FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:
C. Anne Tipton John Knox Walkup
Attorney at Law Attorney General & Reporter
140 North Third Street
Memphis, TN 38103 Peter M. Coughlan
Assistant Attorney General
Cordell Hull Bldg., 2nd Floor
425 Fifth Avenue North
Nashville, TN 37243-0493
William L. Gibbons
District Attorney General
Daniel S. Byer
Assistant District Attorney General
201 Poplar Avenue, Third Floor
Memphis, TN 38103
OPINION FILED: ___________________
REVERSED; CONVICTION VACATED;
REMANDED FOR NEW TRIAL
PAUL G. SUMMERS,
Judge
OPINION
In September 1991, fifteen-year-old Tavarus Williams, the appellant, shot
and killed Raymond Brooks outside of J.T.’s Lounge in Memphis, Tennessee.
He was tried as an adult and convicted by a jury of first degree premeditated
murder in the Shelby County Criminal Court. The court sentenced the appellant
to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole. The Court of Criminal Appeals
affirmed the judgment of the trial court. State v. Tavarus U. Williams, C.C.A. No.
02C01-9307-CR-00137 (Tenn. Crim. App., filed at Jackson June 29, 1994). The
appellant’s application for permission to appeal was denied.
In November of 1995, the appellant filed a motion for post-conviction
relief. An amended petition was filed in August of 1996. After an evidentiary
hearing, the court denied the petition and this appeal followed. The following
issues are presented for our review:
I. Whether the appellant’s counsel failed to adequately
investigate and assess his case and effectively present the
proof at trial.
II. Whether the appellant was denied a fair and impartial
jury of his peers because the trial court refused to excuse a
juror who revealed information prejudicial to the appellant
during the trial.
III. Whether the appellant’s aunt, De Lois Jacocks,1 exerted
undue influence over the appellant such that he could not
properly confer with his attorney and make his own
decisions regarding his case.
Because we find that the evidence preponderates against the trial court’s
finding that the appellant failed to establish that his attorney was ineffective, we
reverse the lower court's judgment, vacate the appellant's conviction and remand
this matter for a new trial.
1
In the post-conv iction hearing trans cript, the appellant’s aun t’s name is spelle d “Jacocks.” In
the Court of Cr iminal Appea ls decision, her nam e is spelled “Jaco x.”
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In February of 1992, the court appointed assistant public defender
Samuel Perkins to represent the appellant. The case was set for trial on June
22, 1992. In 1992, the appellant’s father was in prison and his mother was in a
mental institute. The appellant’s aunt, De Lois Jacocks, accompanied the
appellant to his appointments with attorney Perkins. Ms. Jacocks told Perkins
that God had forgiven the appellant and would take care of him. She also told
Perkins that she was going to hire a “real lawyer” or ask for a different public
defender.
Perkins reviewed the state's file and obtained a plea offer from the state.
The appellant rejected an offer to plead guilty to second degree murder in
exchange for a forty-year sentence. The appellant stated that he did not believe
the sentence fit the facts of the crime. With the assistance of different counsel,
the appellant had previously given a statement to the police in which he
described the shooting as one of self-defense. Since the state would not make
the appellant any other offers, he decided to proceed to trial.
At the post-conviction hearing, Perkins testified that he did not request an
investigation from the public defender’s office because he wanted to do the
investigation himself. He testified that he had been to J.T.’s Lounge and knew
the people there. Perkins testified that, on March 20, 1992, he went to the
lounge and talked to three men and a lady who were in the bar. He also talked
to the disc jockeys. He testified that the people he had interviewed did not want
to get involved so he did not record their names. This effort is primarily the
extent of Perkins’ investigation into the appellant’s case.
Attorney Perkins testified that he did not remember talking to the state’s
witnesses. He testified that his file did not contain any notations that he had tried
to contact the state’s witnesses prior to trial or that he had talked to those
witnesses. Attorney Perkins told the appellant to have his witnesses get in touch
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with the public defender’s office and set up an appointment so that Perkins could
take a statement from them. Perkins testified that this was his policy because
too many witnesses had surprised him at trial. He also stated that if the
witnesses would not come to his office then they would be unlikely to show up for
trial. Perkins never talked to the appellant’s witnesses. He did not subpoena
any witnesses to testify on the appellant’s behalf at trial.
At the post-conviction hearing, attorney Perkins testified that he was ready
to go to trial on June 22. He testified that the trial court granted a one week
continuance because the appellant told the court that he had several witnesses
that he wanted Perkins to interview. At this point in the post-conviction hearing,
the court ordered a transcript of the June 22 hearing. The transcript was later
introduced as evidence at the post-conviction hearing. The transcript revealed
that, on June 22, Perkins was accompanied to court by the Assistant Director of
the Shelby County Public Defender’s office, attorney Robert Jones. Perkins
asked the court for a continuance because he had not completed his
investigation of the case. He told the court that he had talked to two of the
state’s seven or eight witnesses. The court responded that it was sure that
Perkins’ investigator had provided him with a complete report. Perkins told the
court that an investigation was not ordered because the appellant’s aunt had
said that she was going to hire a “real lawyer.” The court responded that it was
aware of Ms. Jacocks’ intentions to hire another attorney. The court stated,
however, that he had told Perkins four or five times that the case was going
forward to trial, regardless of whether the appellant wanted to substitute counsel.
Assistant Director Jones apologetically acknowledged that Perkins should have
been prepared to go to trial. Jones told the court that the appellant’s case had
not been fully investigated. The court granted a one week continuance, with the
trial set for Monday, June 29th. The court revoked the appellant’s bond so that
Perkins would have no trouble meeting with him. Perkins met with the appellant
one time, that being on the eve of trial.
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On June 22, Shelby County Public Defender, A C Wharton, immediately
assigned his Supervising Investigator, Leah Abbott, to the appellant’s case. Ms.
Abbott was a nine-year veteran of the public defender’s office. At the post-
conviction hearing, Ms. Abbott testified that an investigator is usually allotted one
to one and one-half months to investigate a “serious” case. To begin her
investigation, Ms. Abbott was given the indictment and some of the discovery.
Ms. Abbott testified that she and Perkins did not have a chance to talk about the
theory of the defense. She testified that she was not provided with as much
information about the appellant’s case as she usually is at the beginning of the
investigation. Ms. Abbott contacted Perkins to find out how she could reach Ms.
Jacocks. Ms. Abbott interviewed the state’s witnesses. She interviewed every
potential defense witness that she could reach. She followed up on as many
leads as time permitted. Ms. Abbott prepared written summaries of her
interviews for Perkins. In her summaries, she gave her impressions about the
witnesses and made notations such as “we do not want this witness,” “talk to me
about this witness,” and “Important, read.”
Ms. Abbott testified that she located a witness who was unrelated to the
appellant or the Jacockses. The witness, an older man, “felt very strongly” that
the victim had been pulling a gun on the appellant when the appellant shot him.
Ms. Abbott did not remember the name of the witness and did not have a copy of
the summary of his statement. Ms. Abbott placed the name of the witness and a
summary of his testimony, along with the results of her investigation, in Perkins’
“box” on the morning of the trial. The witness came to the appellant’s trial and
was available to testify on the appellant’s behalf. Perkins did not call the witness
to testify. Perkins testified that he was unaware of the witness.
No explanation was presented as to why Ms. Abbott and Perkins did not
speak about this witness immediately prior to or during the trial. There appears
to have been no communication between Ms. Abbott and Perkins after Ms.
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Abbott submitted the results of her investigation. Indeed, Ms. Abbott testified
that she did not have a reasonable opportunity to discuss the results of her
investigation with Perkins. From her testimony, it appears that she and Perkins
did not discuss the case during the weekend prior to trial. They did not discuss
the case on the morning of trial. Ms. Abbott testified that Perkins never asked
her about any of the investigation and never tried to contact her during the trial.
Perkins testified that he spoke with Ms. Abbott three or four times during the
week before trial. He testified that they talked about what she had discovered
during her investigation and about the witnesses’ testimony. The import of Ms.
Abbott’s testimony is she never had any meaningful conversations about the
results of her investigation, if she had any discussion at all. Finally, Ms. Abbott
testified that she did not have enough time to interview the appellant, although
she did have his statement.
The trial court dismissed the appellant’s petition. The court held that the
petitioner failed to establish that he was denied effective assistance of counsel.
The court found that the necessary investigation was complete prior to trial and
that at no time was Perkins taken by surprise by anything that was introduced at
trial. The court also held that, even assuming that Perkins’ representation was
ineffective, the petitioner failed to establish that he was prejudiced by the errors.
The findings of fact of the trial judge on a petition for post-conviction relief
are conclusive on appeal, unless the evidence preponderates against those
findings. We do not reweigh or reevaluate the evidence, nor do we substitute
our inferences for those drawn by the trial judge. Questions concerning the
credibility of witnesses, the weight and value to be given their testimony, and the
factual issues raised by the evidence are to be resolved by the trial judge. See
Henley v. State, 960 S.W.2d 572, 578-79 (Tenn. 1997). The appellant has the
burden of establishing that the evidence preponderates against the findings of
the trial court. See id.
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To establish ineffectiveness, a petitioner must show that counsel's
performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing
professional norms; this requires the petitioner to demonstrate that counsel
made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as "counsel" guaranteed
by the Constitution. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984);
Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 579. A petitioner must also establish that the deficient
representation prejudiced the defense to the point of depriving the appellant of a
fair trial with a reliable result, calling into question the reliability of the outcome of
the trial. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687; Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 579. To
establish prejudice the petitioner “ ‘must show that there is a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability
sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.’ ” Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 579
(quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694).
Perkins’ failure to properly investigate the appellant’s case and prepare for
trial constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel. Perkins did not receive the
written results of Ms. Abbott’s investigation until the morning of his trial. We fail
to see how he had any meaningful opportunity to review these results. The
record reflects that he did not review all of the investigative findings with Ms.
Abbott. Ms. Abbott testified that she did not have time to conduct the
investigation in the usual manner, including locating defense witnesses who were
out of town. That Ms. Abbott was able to locate at least one unbiased defense
witness in the few days that she had to investigate the case indicates that
Perkins’ efforts at investigation were insufficient. Although Ms. Abbott completed
a large portion of the investigation prior to trial, it does not appear that she was
able to effectively communicate the results of her investigation to Perkins so as
to benefit the appellant.
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The court below made no specific findings of credibility regarding either
Perkins or Abbott, although it relied heavily on Perkin's testimony when
contrasted with the appellant's. Although we defer to the trial court, we have
serious problems with Perkins’ credibility. Before the post-conviction court
ordered the transcript of the June 22 continuance request, Perkins blamed the
appellant for the need to have the trial continued. He stated that “I was ready.”
From reading the transcript of June 22, we fail to see how Perkins could have
forgotten that the Assistant Director of the Shelby County Public Defender’s
office, Robert Jones, accompanied him to court on the day of trial because
Perkins was not prepared for trial, despite the trial court’s repeated instruction to
be ready. In any event, we turn to Perkins’ investigation.
Although Perkins had reviewed the state’s file and talked to the assistant
district attorney, this is not a substitute for an independent investigation into the
facts of this case. While there was no dispute that the appellant shot the victim,
there was a dispute as to whether the shooting was premeditated. Perkins’
investigation consisted of going to J.T.’s Lounge once and talking to the people
that just happened to be there when he arrived. He testified that he may have
interviewed two of the state’s witnesses. Perkins should have ordered an
investigation or interviewed all witnesses, including those furnished by the
appellant. As Perkins seemed to understand, the case involved a fifteen-year-
old charged with first degree murder. At one point in the hearing, Perkins
testified that he did not investigate the case because, up until the week before
trial, Ms. Jacocks continued to tell him that she was going to hire another
attorney. This is not a reasonable basis for Perkins’ failure to investigate the
appellant’s case. All attorneys must deal with difficult clients. This does not
excuse them from being prepared when in court on behalf of that client.
Furthermore, the trial court repeatedly told Perkins to be ready for trial.
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In addition to finding ineffective assistance at the investigative stage of the
case, we hold that the appellant has also established prejudice resulting from
Perkins' representation. In determining whether a petitioner has established
prejudice, a court
must consider the totality of the evidence before the judge or
jury. Some of the factual findings will have been unaffected
by the errors, and factual findings that were affected will
have been affected in different ways. Some errors will have
had a pervasive effect on the inferences to be drawn from
the evidence, altering the entire evidentiary picture, and
some will have had an isolated trivial effect....
Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 580 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696-97).
A review of the facts as found by this Court on direct appeal is necessary
to determine if the evidence presented at the post-conviction hearing establishes
a reasonable probability that the results of the appellant’s trial would have been
different if that evidence had been introduced at the appellant’s trial. The
transcript of the appellant’s trial is not in the record.2 The facts as found by this
Court on direct appeal are as follows:
On September 14, 1991, appellant was at J. T.'s Lounge in
Memphis, Tennessee. He began to argue with Raymond
Brooks, the victim, concerning a woman to whom both were
speaking. The men were separated by friends, and
appellant left the lounge.
Tony Jefferson was working at the lounge that evening and
knew the victim well. After the argument with appellant, Mr.
Jefferson took the victim to the back of the lounge and told
him to go home. He thought the victim had calmed down
until he heard him tell Darryl Dawkins that he was "going to
go out there and slap [the appellant] like a whore." The
victim and Mr. Dawkins then left the lounge. Outside, they
approached the appellant. Testimony differs as what
happened next. Tony Jefferson testified that the victim got
in the appellant's face and asked, "What's up?" At that
point, appellant drew a gun and shot him.
A number of other individuals also witnessed the shooting.
Patrick Mason was approximately one block away at the
time. He heard the victim ask, "What's on your mind?"
2
Apparently the trial cou rt reviewed the tran script of the appellan t’s trial prior to making his
decision.
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before he got shot. After shooting the victim, appellant said,
"Look at you now."
David Monger was leaving a nearby lounge when he heard
two gunshots. Looking around he saw the victim falling
backwards and another man shooting at him. He stated that
there was a hesitation between the shots and that the man
appeared to be picking his places to shoot. After the
shooting, he heard the man say, "I told you I was going to
get you, boy."
Willie Hayden, a security guard in the parking lot of the
lounge, was about five yards away when the shooting
began. After he heard the first shot he looked back to see
what was happening. He stated that the victim was
unarmed and had his hands to his side. Mr. Hayden
identified appellant as the shooter.
Eric Harris and Marcus Jacox, friends of the appellant, also
testified as to the shooting that evening. Mr. Harris left the
lounge with appellant and Marcus Jacox after the initial
altercation with the victim. Later, the victim came outside
and approached appellant. He asked, "You got something
to say to me?" The victim then turned to a friend and said,
"Give me that thing." At that point, appellant began
shooting and Harris ran across the street to his car. He
refused to give appellant a ride home.
Marcus Jacox gave similar testimony. He heard the victim
say to a friend, "Man, give me that thing so I can kill this
bitch." The victim then leaned his hand towards his friend
who pulled up his shirt to reveal a pistol. At that point,
appellant shot the victim.
Dr. Jerry Francisco, professor of pathology at the University
of Tennessee, performed the autopsy. He stated that the
victim died of multiple gunshot wounds to the head and
chest. There were a total of four wounds to the head and
two to the chest.
In a statement to the police, the appellant stated that he overheard the
victim say that he, the appellant, was going to die tonight. The appellant stated
that he was approached by the victim and the victim’s friend outside the club.
The victim directed several epithets at the appellant and then asked his friend for
the “tone.” The victim’s friend raised his shirt and the appellant saw a pistol.
Seeing the gun, the appellant pulled out his pistol and shot the victim. He stated
that he kept on shooting because he was afraid for his life. The statement was
not introduced at trial but was introduced at the post-conviction hearing.
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The evidence to support the appellant’s conviction of first degree murder
was not overwhelming. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696 (“a verdict . . . only
weakly supported by the record is more likely to have been affected by [counsel's
unprofessional] errors than one with overwhelming record support.”) The
appellant could have established prejudice by producing evidence at the post-
conviction hearing which created a reasonable probability that he would have
been convicted of a lesser degree of homicide or acquitted. We turn to the
evidence in the record of prejudice.
Ms. Abbott testified that she had
found . . . one witness . . . who was not related in any way
to [the appellant] or the Jacocks. He was an older man.
He felt very strongly that the victim was pulling a gun. He
believed that the victim was pulling a gun.
Had this witness been called at trial, his testimony would have significantly
bolstered the appellant's theory of self-defense. And even if the testimony was
not successful in convincing the jury to acquit the appellant, it may well have
convinced them to convict him of something less than premeditated murder.
This missing testimony was so significant in the context of this particular case
that its exclusion undermines our confidence in the outcome of the trial. See
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. Accordingly, trial counsel's failure to produce this
witness constituted ineffective assistance of counsel which prejudiced the
appellant.
The lower court's sole comments relating to this testimony go to the
appellant's failure to call this witness at the post-conviction hearing.3 But we are
perplexed as to how the appellant could have produced this witness. Ms. Abbott
found this gentleman on June 28, 1992. The appellant did not file for post-
conviction relief until more than three years later. Post-conviction counsel was
3
“Since petitioner at his hearing on this petition has failed to produce a single additional
witness to substantiate his claim of self-defense other than those actually called at trial, even after
having been g iven an additiona l setting to call additional witne sses, this Cour t will not assume tha t his
trial attorney could hav e done any better at trial.”
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not appointed until July 11, 1996.4 Ms. Abbott testified in November 1996 that
she had no written record of the witness' name and could not recall it. She
further testified that she had given the witness' name and a summary of her
interview with him to Perkins. Perkins claimed to have never known about this
man, although he was waiting outside the courtroom to testify. We recognize
that this witness' proposed testimony should have been produced at the post-
conviction hearing under the general rule announced in Black v. State, 794
S.W.2d 752, 757-58 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1990). However, we think it is
fundamentally unfair to hold this failure of proof against the appellant and,
therefore, find the Black rule inapplicable under the facts of this case. To hold
otherwise puts the appellant in a double bind from which he cannot escape: his
lawyer's ineffectiveness condemns him not only at trial but prevents him from
later proving that ineffectiveness at his post-conviction hearing.
The best evidence that the appellant had of the crucial testimony was Ms.
Abbott, and he did produce that proof at the hearing. Accordingly, because he
produced independent proof of vital testimony that would have been available at
the hearing but for his trial lawyer's ineffectiveness (in never discovering the
witness, not calling him and losing all record of him), we hold that the appellant
has established both prongs of the Strickland test.
With respect to the appellant’s second issue, it was previously determined
by this Court on direct appeal. Therefore, the issue is not cognizable in a post-
conviction petition. T. C. A. § 40-30-206(h). The appellant’s third issue is
without merit. The lower court, sua sponte, raised the issue of whether the
appellant’s aunt exerted undue influence over the appellant. The court found
that she had not exerted such an influence over the appellant and that the
appellant’s decision to reject the state’s plea agreement was made with
4
Prior post-conv iction counsel had been remov ed in June 1996, fo r repeated failures to
appear.
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independence and sufficient maturity. The evidence does not preponderate
against the lower court’s findings.
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the court below is
reversed, the appellant's conviction is vacated and this cause is remanded for a
new trial.
_____________________________
PAUL G. SUMMERS, Judge
CONCUR:
___________________________
DAVID H. WELLES, Judge
___________________________
JOE G. RILEY, Judge
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