IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
FILED
June 12, 1998
MARCH 1998 SESSION
Cecil Crowson, Jr.
Appellate C ourt Clerk
STEPHEN MICHAEL WEST, )
) C.C.A. No. 03C01-9708-CR-00321
Appellant, )
) Union County
V. )
) Honorable John K. Byers, Senior Judge,
) Sitting by Designation
STATE OF TENNESSEE, )
) (Post-Conviction - Death Penalty)
Appellee. )
FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:
Roger W. Dickson John Knox Walkup
Leah M. Gerbitz Attorney General & Reporter
Miller & Martin
1000 Volunteer Building Michael E. Moore
832 Georgia Avenue Solicitor General
Chattanooga, TN 37402
Glenn R. Pruden
John T. Milburn Rogers John P. Cauley
Rogers, Laughlin, Nunnally, Assistant Attorneys General
Hood & Crum 425 Fifth Avenue North
100 South Main Street Nashville, TN 37243-0493
Greeneville, TN 37743
William Paul Phillips
District Attorney General
Clifton H. Sexton
Assistant District Attorney General
P.O. Box 10
Huntsville, TN 37756-0010
OPINION FILED: ___________________
AFFIRMED
PAUL G. SUMMERS,
Judge
OPINION
The petitioner was convicted of two counts of first degree premeditated
murder, one count of aggravated rape, and two counts of aggravated kidnapping.
He was sentenced to death. His convictions and sentences were affirmed by the
Tennessee Supreme Court. State v. West, 767 S.W.2d 387 (Tenn. 1989).
These brutal murders were committed by the petitioner and another individual,
Ronnie Martin, whose case was severed. At the petitioner’s trial, his defense
was that he was forced by Martin to engage in the crimes and could not get away
from Martin although the appellant was bigger and taller than Martin and was
Martin’s supervisor at a fast-food restaurant. The motive of the crimes was sex
and money. The petitioner gave varying accounts of what had happened and
blamed Martin for the crimes. The petitioner was represented at trial by two
lawyers, Mr. McConnell and Mr. McAlexander.
In 1990, the petitioner filed a post-conviction relief petition alleging
ineffective assistance of counsel, prosecutorial misconduct and trial court errors,
and challenging the constitutionality of the Tennessee death penalty statute.
Judge John K. Byers, Senior Judge, held hearings in September and October
1996 on the petition. In April 1997, the hearing court entered comprehensive
findings of fact and conclusions of law in denying relief requested in the petition.
Following the appropriate appellate procedures, petitioner appealed to this Court.
We heard oral arguments on March 24, 1998.
The issues for review can best be summarized as follows:
I. Should the petitioner’s death sentence
be vacated because he was denied effective
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assistance of counsel at the sentencing
hearing?
II. Should the petitioner’s case be remanded
for a new sentencing hearing because the
evidence does not support the aggravating
circumstance that the petitioner’s actions were
committed to avoid arrest or prosecution?
III. Should the petitioner’s convictions be set
aside because the trial judge did not charge
applicable lesser offenses?
IV. Did the post-conviction relief trial court err
regarding petitioner’s motion for defense services?
We affirm the judgment of the post-conviction court which denied relief.
THE EVIDENTIARY HEARING
Dr. Eric Engum, a clinical psychologist, conducted a two-hour evaluation
of the petitioner in December 1995. Dr. Engum testified that his tests did not
indicate any sign of brain damage or any type of “cognitive compromise.”
Petitioner’s intelligence was within normal limits. The petitioner suffers from
depression and mixed personality disorder, both of which are of a long-standing
nature. Dr. Engum stated that the petitioner was “somewhat unstable, moody,
and changeable.” He had a poor home life and home environment.
The psychologist testified that the results of the Minnesota Multi-Phase
Personality Inventory indicated that the petitioner had a lot of anger resulting
from earlier childhood experiences. Dr. Engum’s opinion was that the petitioner
could be submissive and was functioning at an emotional level less than his
chronological age. Dr. Engum opined that the test results would have supported
the thrust of the defense of the petitioner at the guilt phase of the trial, that the
codefendant dominated and controlled the petitioner “who was acting under a
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form of duress.” Dr. Engum concluded that the petitioner suffers from a
condition characterized as extreme emotional disturbance.
Dr. Engum compared his findings to that of Dr. Bursten, a psychiatrist who
had been used during the initial trial of the petitioner. Dr. Engum described how
the petitioner had told Dr. Bursten that during the incident he could not do
anything about the crimes perpetrated upon the victims. Dr. Engum then stated
that Dr. Bursten had been employed during the initial trial to conduct a sanity and
competency evaluation, which was different from the neurological assessment
that he had conducted.
On cross-examination, Dr. Engum admitted that in the twenty cases in
which he had testified as an expert, he had testified for the defense. Dr. Engum
stated that the petitioner had told him that he had no recollection of any events in
his life before the age of ten. The doctor admitted that the petitioner had been
asked by Dr. Bursten if he had ever encountered any abuse, and the response
had been “No.”
Debbie West, sister of the petitioner, testified that she was the oldest of
four siblings. She stated that the petitioner’s mother had had an affair in 1961
and that the petitioner had been born in a mental institution in 1962. Ms. West
testified that in 1964 the petitioner had “been knocked cross-eyed” by being
thrown against the wall of the family home. She testified that the petitioner also
had been slapped in the head and hit with shoes. She said that the petitioner
had been abused throughout his childhood.
Ms. West testified that her father has been an alcoholic since he was ten
years old and that he is a violent man. She stated that the petitioner would flinch
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when either his mother or his father came toward him. She then stated that she
had not spoken with the petitioner in ten years.
When questioned about her participation in the sentencing phase of her
brother’s trial, Ms. West stated that she had told Mr. McConnell, trial counsel,
about the abuse suffered by the petitioner. Mr. McConnell told her that this
information was not relevant because the petitioner’s parents were paying his
fee. Therefore, they would not admit to anything. She stated that she would
have testified concerning the abuse if she had been asked about it when she
took the witness stand.
On cross-examination, Ms. West admitted that when she was questioned
during the sentencing phase of the trial as to whether there was ever any
problem between the petitioner and the rest of the family as far as discipline, she
had replied, “No.” She admitted that at the sentencing hearing she had testified
that the petitioner had lived with her and that he had never been involved in any
trouble but that in actuality, the petitioner had experienced a problem with drugs
and alcohol. She stated that she had not informed the court of his problems or
information concerning abuse at the sentencing phase because she was not
asked specific questions. Also, her mother was on the verge of a heart attack at
the initial trial, and she did not think it would benefit the petitioner to tell things
that would harm her mother.
The next witness, Mr. McAlexander, co-counsel in the petitioner’s trial,
was called, out of order, to testify for the state. Mr. McAlexander testified that he
had been licensed to practice law in 1986 and that he had been contacted by Mr.
McConnell, chief counsel in the petitioner’s trial, to assist him in the case. He
initially reviewed files and conducted investigations. He had done a tremendous
amount of research in preparing motions filed by the petitioner. He had met with
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the petitioner’s family on numerous occasions during the pendency of the trial
and he had participated in everything that occurred in the case after he was
appointed co-counsel. He stated that he had handled the motion for new trial,
the appeal, and the suppression motion in the case by himself. His total time
spent was 547.4 hours.
Mr. McAlexander testified that he did not remember Ms. West, the
petitioner’s sister, ever alleging that the petitioner had been abused during
childhood. He also could not recall that the petitioner ever alleged any type of
abuse. He stated that he had not received as much cooperation from the
petitioner’s family as he would have liked.
On cross-examination, Mr. McAlexander testified that he had no
experience as a trial lawyer in defending capital cases. He admitted that he
knew Mr. McConnell, like himself, had never had any experience trying a capital
case. He recalled that Mr. McConnell had experienced difficulty with his fee
because he had been retained and that he had made the statement that Mr.
McAlexander, a court-appointed attorney, was getting paid more than he was
getting paid as a retained lawyer.
Mr. McAlexander admitted that Mr. McConnell had consulted Dr. Ben
Bursten regarding a sanity and competency evaluation. As a result of the
evaluation, the petitioner had attempted to introduce a duress defense through
expert witness testimony. The trial court rejected the request for expert services
because Mr. McConnell had earlier objected to a court-ordered evaluation of the
petitioner at Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute. Mr. McAlexander also
testified that a suppression hearing concerning inconsistent statements by the
petitioner had been conducted and that he had requested that the hearings be
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transcribed. However, at the time of the trial, the hearings had not been
transcribed.
On redirect examination, Mr. McAlexander recalled that the issue
concerning hiring a defense expert on the duress defense was raised on appeal,
and the Supreme Court ruled that this testimony would not be admissible
anyway. The Supreme Court also compared the transcript of the suppression
hearing with that of the trial transcript and concluded that there were no
overlooked opportunities for impeachment.
Mr. McConnell, chief counsel for the petitioner, was called by the
petitioner to testify. He had been paid $10,000 by the petitioner’s family for his
representation. In addition, several thousand dollars were paid by the family to
investigators and Dr. Bursten. He admitted that when he learned that his
co-counsel was paid $20,000, he had not been happy. He also admitted that at
the time of the trial, he had never handled a capital case involving the death
penalty. He admitted that he had requested additional funds from the petitioner
on numerous occasions but that he had not been paid these funds.
Mr. McConnell claimed that he had made a complete investigation into the
petitioner’s life. Records were introduced into evidence to show that Mr.
McConnell had waited to subpoena the school records of the petitioner until the
second day of the trial. Counsel admitted having no recollection of obtaining any
employment records, birth records, medical records, or military records of the
petitioner. He further admitted that he “wouldn’t have wasted any time” on
conducting interviews of siblings for the purpose of exploring mitigation themes
because the petitioner had never raised those issues.
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Mr. McConnell recalled that Dr. Bursten had been employed to conduct a
sanity and competency evaluation. Mr. McConnell admitted that he had filed a
motion in opposition to a court-ordered competency evaluation. After the state’s
motion was denied, Mr. McAlexander filed a motion to obtain expert services for
a “duress defense.” This motion was denied.
Mr. McConnell admitted that he had been allowed to withdraw from this
case while the motion for a new trial was pending. His co-counsel was going to
handle the appeal, and Mr. McConnell’s practice had suffered economically as a
result of this case. He further testified that his theory at the guilt phase of the
trial had been that although the petitioner was at the scene of the murders, his
codefendant had actually committed the murders. At the penalty phase, counsel
had attempted to show that the petitioner was a veteran, that it would be an
extreme hardship on his wife and new baby without him, and that the petitioner
was a young man with no prior record. Mr. McConnell stated that he had
attempted to appeal to the common sense, decency, and sympathy of the jury.
On cross-examination, personal diaries Mr. McConnell kept during his
representation of the petitioner were entered into evidence. Mr. McConnell
recalled interviewing family members of the petitioner, especially the petitioner’s
mother and one of his sisters, Deborah Adams. He testified that at no time
during his interviews with Ms. Adams did she make him aware of any abuse
suffered by the petitioner in his early years. He testified that the family had told
him that the petitioner had come from a happy family.
Mr. McConnell testified that he had employed two private investigators to
check out whether the petitioner’s codefendant had been involved in a cult. One
of the investigators had also attempted to measure the prejudice in the
community against the two alleged perpetrators of the crime.
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On redirect examination, Mr. McConnell was questioned concerning a
press interview he had given about the case in his initial representation during
which he had mentioned that a satanic cult might be involved. He responded
that he had intended to show that it was the petitioner’s codefendant who might
have had an involvement with a cult.
Mr. Jerry Summers, a seasoned Tennessee attorney who has participated
in many criminal trials, capital and noncapital, testified that he had been asked
by post-conviction counsel to review the record in this case. Upon his review,
Mr. Summers’ opinion was that counsel’s performance in this case fell below the
range of competence required of attorneys in death penalty cases. Specifically,
he stated that Ms. West’s testimony that the petitioner was born in a mental
institution would have been a red flag. He stated that he would certainly have
talked to others besides family members in determining a defendant’s
background. Family members might not always be truthful because of
embarrassment or shame.
Mr. Summers’ opinion was that the standards for defending a death
penalty case would require counsel to obtain a psychological evaluation other
than a sanity and competency evaluation, especially considering the facts of this
case. He opined that Dr. Engum’s report would have been extremely valuable at
the sentencing phase of the trial because it indicated that the petitioner suffered
from specific emotional problems. The report would have supported certain
mitigating factors such as: that the murders were committed while the defendant
was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance, that his
participation in the murders was relatively minor, and that the defendant acted
under extreme duress and under the substantial domination of another.
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Mr. Summers testified that the petitioner’s failure to remember anything
concerning events in his life before the age of twelve or thirteen should have
been an indicator that he was attempting to block out certain events from that
time period. Mr. Summers would not have waived jury instructions on lesser
included offenses, as counsel did, because jurors might want to help someone if
they think that person was less culpable than someone else. In conclusion, Mr.
Summers testified that it was his opinion that the attorneys’ performance fell
below the range of competence required of capital case attorneys in that they did
not conduct a proper investigation, did not conduct thorough interviews, and did
not get a psychological evaluation.
On cross-examination, Mr. Summers admitted that a lawyer could make a
strategic decision not to have a psychologist examine the defendant if he had
previously been examined by a psychiatrist. However, he further opined that the
red flags in this case would have led counsel to further investigation rather than
accepting the petitioner’s and the family’s word.
Patricia Depew, another sister of the petitioner, testified that she had
grown up in the same house with the petitioner as a child. She recalled physical
and verbal abuse of herself and the petitioner. She testified that the petitioner
had reacted to the abuse by becoming passive. When questioned about
whether she had ever spoken with petitioner’s trial counsel, she stated that she
had just spoken with her mother about the case. She recalled that she had
attended some of the meetings between her mother and counsel but that
counsel had never asked her any questions. When asked why she had not told
the attorneys about the abuse, she stated that nobody had asked and she had
not thought that it was important. On cross-examination, Ms. Depew stated that
she had been in New Mexico the five years before the petitioner’s arrest.
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Ruby West, the petitioner’s aunt, testified that she had lived upstairs from
the petitioner’s apartment when he was a child. She said that petitioner’s
parents were abusive. The petitioner’s mother would swear at him, beat him,
and would put him in a cold room with a mattress wet with urine. She recalled
one occasion when the petitioner’s mother got angry at him and threw him
against the wall by his feet. She recalled several incidents of abuse. She also
stated that the petitioner’s father had participated in some of the abuse. She
then stated that she had never been contacted by petitioner’s counsel at the time
of his trial.
On cross-examination, Ms. West testified that she had been contacted by
her husband, brother of the petitioner’s father, and asked if she would testify as
to the abuse the petitioner had experienced as a child. She stated that at that
time she was living in Ohio but had since moved back to Tennessee. The
petitioner’s brother had approached her and asked if she would be willing to
testify as to the abuse. She told him that she would rather not get involved; but
when Patty, the petitioner’s sister, came to see her, she told her what she
remembered.
Ms. West testified that the petitioner had reacted to the abuse by
becoming very timid and frightened when he saw his parents coming. She
stated that he always appeared undernourished.
When she was confronted with the statement that the petitioner had made
at trial that he had a close relationship with his family and that they “all still
love[d] each other a lot,” she stated that maybe things had changed. She stated
that she had been away and that she had only been around the family closely
when the petitioner was small.
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The petitioner’s next witness was Paul Morrow, an attorney who has been
actively involved in capital case litigation since 1989 when he was employed with
the Capital Case Resource Center of Tennessee. Mr. Morrow testified that there
are standards by which capital cases are governed and that they are contained
in the United States Supreme Court opinions. He elaborated concerning the
differences in capital case representation and explained that specialized training
is definitely required before accepting the representation of defendants charged
with capital offenses. One of the primary differences in death penalty litigation is
that an individualized sentencing hearing must be held which requires a second
trial. An attorney must present to a jury the background of the defendant, the
defendant’s character, and anything that might permit the jury to render a
sentence less than death. Mr. Morrow stated that the investigation should entail
searching and pulling birth records, school records, medical records, military
records, and institutional records and that from these records the attorney should
be able to “ferret out” someone who could talk about the development of the
defendant. Additionally, he stated that extensive interviews needed to be
conducted, starting with the defendant. He added that if abuse is a factor,
however, usually the defendant is the worst person to talk to because he or she
is usually embarrassed or does not understand its significance.
When questioned as to the experience of counsel in this particular case,
Mr. Morrow testified that Mr. McAlexander was a new lawyer and that Mr.
McConnell had come from a state that did not have the death penalty, so
counsel should have at least contacted other attorneys who had represented
persons charged with capital offenses. They should have consulted materials
that were readily available, such as the Capital Death Penalty Manual created by
the Tennessee Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Mr. Morrow then
stated that counsel’s investigation in this case did not fall within the range of
competence demanded of attorneys in death penalty cases.
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Mr. Morrow also stated that counsel was deficient in not requesting a
psychological evaluation, at least for mitigation purposes. He emphasized the
importance of Dr. Engum’s psychological report which would have led him to
investigate the development of childhood abuse. He differed in Mr. Summers’
conclusion that counsel was most deficient in the sentencing phase because it
was his opinion that the psychological evaluation would have been extremely
important in the guilt phase of the trial as to intent and diminished capacity. In
conclusion, he testified that the prejudice that was shown in this case was that
the jury did not hear the “psychological or lay witnesses that would have made
somewhat comprehensible his actions on that day [day of the murders].” On
cross-examination, when questioned as to the heinous nature of the crimes and
as to whether any mitigation would have made a difference, Mr. Morrow stated
that mitigation absolutely demands an explanation because a competent
attorney must give the jury at least something.
The petitioner concluded his proof, and then Dr. Ben Bursten testified for
the state. He was allowed to testify as an expert witness. He had examined the
petitioner and conducted a forensic evaluation requested by counsel. Dr.
Bursten stated that he had determined that the petitioner was competent to
stand trial and that he could not support an insanity defense. He testified that
during the evaluation the petitioner had definitely stated that there had been no
childhood abuse in his family life. He admitted that he had not questioned the
immediate family about abuse because they had told him that he was the most
lovable of all the children. He stated that he had evaluated Dr. Engum’s report
and that he disagreed that the evaluations conducted indicated any type of
abuse. He also testified that he disagreed with Dr. Engum that the effect of the
abuse caused extreme emotional disturbance. In conclusion, Dr. Bursten stated
that within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, he would not agree with Dr.
Engum’s assessment.
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On cross-examination, Dr. Bursten testified that he was being paid by the
state for his testimony as an expert witness. He admitted that he had had no
contact with the petitioner since 1986. He admitted that he had contacted Mr.
McConnell to obtain his permission to speak with the district attorney general.
I.
The petitioner cites numerous cases for the contention that one of
counsel’s primary duties is to investigate and pursue the angles of defense,
whether representing the client at trial, at sentencing, or on appeal. State v.
Melson, 772 S.W.2d 417, 421 (Tenn. 1989); Baxter v. Rose, 523 S.W.2d 930
(Tenn. 1975); Cooper v. State, 847 S.W.2d 521, 527 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992).
The petitioner asserts that this investigation is especially essential at the
sentencing phase of a capital trial. Cooper, 847 S.W.2d at 531. However, the
petitioner also acknowledges that “[a] fair assessment of attorney performance
requires that every effort be made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight,
to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct, and to
evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time.” Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 689 (1984).
The petitioner contends that defense counsel’s failure to investigate the
petitioner’s background fell far outside the range of competent assistance
because the only mitigation proof was the testimony of six character witnesses
that the petitioner was a well-behaved and generally liked person. The petitioner
contends that his attorneys were deficient in failing to conduct any investigation
into his background, educational and emotional condition, and family
relationships in order to present mitigation. The petitioner emphasizes that
counsel did not conduct a records search.
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The petitioner faults counsel for conducting interviews of only his parents
and one sister. None were questioned concerning possible abuse. The
petitioner cites specific instances of abuse as reflected in the post-conviction
hearing transcript. The petitioner also faults counsel for failing to have a
comprehensive psychological examination. He argues that the choice not to put
on evidence at the sentencing phase of the hearing cannot be defended as trial
strategy because the record indicates that counsel completely failed to conduct a
thorough investigation.
The petitioner cites Goad v. State, 938 S.W.2d 363 (Tenn. 1996) and
Adkins v. State, 911 S.W.2d 334 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994) as two Tennessee
cases which demanded resentencing due to counsel’s failure to conduct an
adequate investigation into the petitioner’s life. The petitioner then recounted the
testimony of Mr. Summers and Mr. Morrow.
The state cites Lockhart v. Fretwell, 506 U.S. 364, 369-70 (1993) for the
following proposition:
[A]n analysis focusing solely on mere outcome
determination, without attention to whether the
result of the proceeding was fundamentally
unfair or unreliable, is defective. To set aside
a conviction or sentence solely because the
outcome would have been different but for
counsel’s error may grant the defendant a
windfall to which the law does not entitle him.
The state argues that the petitioner has failed to meet his burden of proof
as to counsel’s ineffectiveness at the sentencing hearing. The state contends
that counsel obtained the petitioner’s military records and made a deliberate
decision not to introduce such evidence because it contained information
showing that the petitioner had a background of drug and alcohol abuse. The
state argues that counsel’s failure to obtain school records was not per se
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ineffective because prejudice was not shown by the petitioner. The state argues
that counsel’s failure to obtain medical records was not per se ineffective
because the petitioner did not produce such records at the post-conviction
hearing which could have been introduced at trial.
Regarding the lack of a comprehensive psychological evaluation, the state
argues that the testimony of Dr. Bursten was of crucial importance in this case.
Dr. Bursten disagreed with expert witness Dr. Engum in that Dr. Bursten would
not agree that the petitioner was an abused child. When asked to assume that
the petitioner had been abused, Dr. Bursten disagreed with Dr. Engum’s
conclusion that the abuse would cause extreme emotional disturbance. The
state argues that counsel was not ineffective for failing to uncover
nonpsychological evidence of abuse because counsel had never been made
aware of such abuse during interviews with the family.
We agree with the post-conviction court’s assessment that “there existed
conflicting testimony regarding mitigation evidence that trial counsel failed to
present.” We also agree with the court that Dr. Engum’s testimony reflected that
the petitioner’s evaluation showed no signs of trauma or organic brain damage.
We agree with the post-conviction court that in light of this conflicting evidence,
the petitioner did not meet his burden with respect to the allegation of ineffective
counsel at the sentencing phase. Regarding all of the ancillary and subissues,
after a thorough review, we conclude that the petitioner has failed to meet his
burden of proof as to these allegations. We agree with the post-conviction
hearing court that the petitioner has failed to show how he was prejudiced by any
acts or omissions of counsel.
II.
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The petitioner asserts that during the sentencing phase of his trial, the
state failed to “submit even a single piece of evidence from which any rational
trier of fact could infer that the petitioner acted in order to avoid prosecution.”
The petitioner asserts that the post-conviction trial court failed to address this
issue in its Memorandum of Law. Petitioner argues that this issue is not waived
because “[a]n error which has affected the substantial rights of an accused may
be noticed at any time, even though not raised in the motion for a new trial or
assigned as error on appeal, in the discretion of the appellate court where
necessary to do substantial justice.” Tenn. R. Crim. P. 52(b).
The state asserts that this claim has been waived by the petitioner’s
failure to present it at trial and during the direct appeal. See Tenn. Code Ann. §
40-30-112(b) (repealed 1995). The state argues that the petitioner’s attempt to
introduce the plain error doctrine into a post-conviction proceeding such as this
has been specifically rejected by this Court. See State v. Sandy Eugene
Womack, No. 01C01-9003-CC-00077 (Tenn. Crim. App. at Nashville, July 26,
1990).
The state also argues that the evidence adduced at the trial clearly
supported this aggravating factor because it was established that the petitioner’s
codefendant was known to one of the victims. The petitioner and his
codefendant were in the victim’s home for a substantial period of time, the
codefendant was wearing a restaurant uniform that would identify him, and a
concerted effort had been made by the petitioner and the codefendant to wipe
fingerprints from the weapons that had been handled.
We agree with the state’s position on waiver. The claims advanced by the
petitioner could have been raised on direct appeal but were not. The petitioner
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has fostered no basis for overcoming the waiver provision found in the applicable
post-conviction statute. Therefore, this issue is without merit.
III.
The petitioner argues that because the issues in this case revolved
around his level of involvement in the murders, a second degree murder charge
was indispensable. He asserts that the trial court was required by law to instruct
the jury on the lesser included offenses of first degree murder, regardless of
whether he was requested to do so or not. See State v. Ruane, 912 S.W.2d
766, 782 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995). The petitioner also asserts that trial counsel
was ineffective for verbally waiving an instruction for second degree murder,
especially since the record did not reflect that the petitioner himself voluntarily
and knowingly waived the right to such an instruction. The petitioner argues that
this issue should have been raised at the motion for new trial or on appeal.
Again, the petitioner cites Rule 52(b) of the Tennessee Rules of Criminal
Procedure in support of his nonwaiver claim.
The state argues that the decision to forgo instruction on lesser included
offenses was a strategic decision of counsel and did not constitute
ineffectiveness. The state cites the trial record whereby counsel informed the
court that it was the defendant’s position that he did not wish the court to
consider any lesser included offenses in his charge. At the post-conviction
hearing, the petitioner failed to examine his attorneys concerning their decision
to forgo instruction on lesser included offenses. The state asserts that the
petitioner’s decision to relinquish further instruction on lesser included offenses
was made in light of the evidence at trial and the defense theory that the
petitioner did not commit the murders.
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The allegation regarding lesser included offenses is presented for the first
time at the post-conviction stage. A complaint about failure to charge a lesser
included offense is not a cognizable claim on post-conviction review. Only
constitutional errors can be grounds for relief, and normally the failure to charge
a certain offense does not violate the constitution. Moreover, the petitioner has
failed to rebut the presumption of waiver, and this issue is waived. See Tenn.
Code Ann. § 40-30-112 (repealed 1995). Based upon this overall record and the
petitioner’s theory of defense at trial, we also are of the opinion that,
substantively, the issue is without merit.
IV.
The petitioner contends that the post-conviction trial court erred in denying
funds for investigative services. He faults the post-conviction court for granting a
hearing on the motion for expert services and ordering the petitioner to provide
the state a copy of his ex parte motion. In addition, the petitioner faults the court
for allowing the state to participate in the hearing. The petitioner cites Owens v.
State, 908 S.W.2d 923, 924 (Tenn. 1995) for the proposition that post-conviction
petitioners are entitled to an ex parte hearing on a motion for defense services
as long as procedural requirements are met.
The state contends that the trial court did not err in denying the
investigative services of Mr. Ronald Lax and Ms. Gloria Shettles at a cost not to
exceed $27,500 and neuropsychological services of Dr. Eric Engum in an
amount not to exceed $5,000. The state asserts that the trial court did, in fact,
grant an ex parte motion in part by ordering payment to Dr. Engum in the amount
of $1,200. When the petitioner’s post-conviction counsel filed a motion to
rehear, the trial court held a hearing at which time it concluded that the amount
of $1,200 payment to Dr. Engum (although the amount was later increased) was
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sufficient and otherwise denied the petition to rehear. The petitioner then filed
an application for permission to appeal pursuant to Rule 10 of the Tennessee
Rules of Appellate Procedure challenging the trial court’s refusal to grant funds
for investigative services. The state contends that the petitioner has waived any
other claims concerning an ex parte hearing. The Rule 10 application was
denied by this Court.
The state cites Owens for the proposition that its holding should not be
interpreted as a “blank check” requiring courts to hold ex parte hearings and to
authorize funds in every case. The state contends that the affidavits of Ms.
Shettles and Mr. Lax failed to demonstrate that professional investigative
services were required in this case.
In Owens, the Supreme Court examined its cases in the direct appeal
context and found the principles regarding investigative funds to be the same.
The Court found that in State v. Evans, 838 S.W.2d 185, 192 (Tenn. 1992), a
defendant has to show that a substantial need exists requiring the assistance of
state-paid support services and that a defendant’s defense cannot be fully
developed without such assistance. The petitioner’s motion and affidavits failed
to explain why the investigative work could not have been done by the attorneys
and must have been done by the investigators. The petitioner has not shown
why these professional investigative services are required. It should be pointed
out that once an individual has gone beyond the trial and direct appeal level in a
case, the state does not have to write a blank check for investigative services.
Just because a particular service might be of some benefit does not mean that it
is constitutionally required. We agree that Judge Byers was correct in his refusal
to grant the additional expert services in this post-conviction case. Furthermore,
we find no prejudice regarding the allegations of the state’s participation in the ex
parte hearing. The petitioner simply has not carried his burden to show how the
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post-conviction hearing judge committed reversible error. This issue is without
merit.
CONCLUSION
After reviewing the record, briefs, and arguments, this Court concludes
that the decision by the post-conviction judge denying post-conviction relief
should be, and is, affirmed. The petitioner’s death sentence will be carried out
unless stayed by competent authority. The petitioner’s execution date is set for
October 1, 1998.
__________________________
PAUL G. SUMMERS, Judge
CONCUR:
______________________________
JOHN H. PEAY, Judge
______________________________
CORNELIA A. CLARK, Special Judge
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