IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
FILED
AT KNOXVILLE June 3, 1999
Cecil Crowson, Jr.
FEBRUARY 1999 SESSION Appellate C ourt
Clerk
KENNETH LEE WESTON, )
) C.C.A. No. 03C01-9805-CR-00190
Appellant, )
) Knox County
v. )
) Honorable Richard R. Baumgartner, Judge
STATE OF TENNESSEE, )
) (Post-Conviction)
Appellee. )
FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:
Mark E. Stephens Paul G. Summers
District Public Defender Attorney General & Reporter
Paula R. Voss Erik W. Daab
Assistant Public Defender Assistant Attorney General
1209 Euclid Avenue 425 Fifth Avenue North
Knoxville, TN 37921 Nashville, TN 37243
Randall E. Nichols
District Attorney General
Marsha Selecman
Assistant District Attorney General
400 Main Street
Knoxville, TN 37901
OPINION FILED: _______________________________
AFFIRMED
L. T. LAFFERTY, SENIOR JUDGE
OPINION
The appellant, Kenneth Lee Weston, referred herein as “the petitioner,” appeals as
of right from the denial of his petition for post-conviction relief by the Knox County Criminal
Court. In 1988, the petitioner was convicted of robbery with a deadly weapon in the
robbery of the Valley Fidelity Bank and Trust Company. The petitioner is presently
confined in the Department of Correction serving a life sentence for his conviction as an
habitual criminal. The petitioner presents two appellate issues:
1. Whether the state had constitutional authority to charge
the petitioner under the general robbery statute when
the legislature had enacted a specific crime of bank
robbery.
2. Whether the petitioner received inadequate assistance
of counsel at trial and on appeal: (a) trial counsel’s
inadequate investigation resulted in the use of
unreliable evidence that petitioner’s prior felonies took
place at two separate times; and (b) trial counsel’s
failure to object to the state’s use of the general robbery
statute constituted inadequate assistance of counsel.
After a review of the entire record, briefs of all parties, and applicable law, we
AFFIRM the trial court’s judgment finding that the petitioner was denied a first tier appeal
of the denial of his first post-conviction petition in Cause No. 40398. The petitioner shall
have sixty days to file an application for permission to appeal with the Supreme Court in
Cause No. 40398. We also affirm, on other grounds, the trial court’s judgment of dismissal
of the petitioner’s amendment in Cause No. 45862 in that the trial court was without
jurisdiction to consider such amendment.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Since 1988, the petitioner has sought his freedom through various appellate
proceedings. Thus, we will set forth the chronological proceedings as to how we arrived
at our decision.
After his conviction for robbery with a deadly weapon in 1988, the petitioner filed a
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direct appeal. This Court affirmed the petitioner’s conviction. See State v. Kenneth Lee
Weston, No. 1235, 1989 WL 139693 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, November 20, 1989),
per. app. denied (Tenn. 1990). On April 28, 1990, the petitioner filed his first pro se petition
for post-conviction relief, No. 40398, with the Knox County Criminal Court. The trial court
appointed Ellery Hill, attorney, to represent the petitioner. In his petition, the petitioner
complained that: (a) he was denied effective assistance of counsel in that counsel failed
to uncover alleged proof that his two prior convictions in Georgia, utilized to render him an
habitual criminal, were actually one offense; and (b) the jury instruction in the sentencing
phase of the trial as to the presumption of identity was unconstitutional. After an
evidentiary hearing, the trial court, on July 11, 1991, denied the petitioner any relief. Post-
conviction counsel failed to perfect a direct appeal of this denial.
On November 25, 1991, the petitioner filed his second pro se petition for post-
conviction relief, No. 45862, alleging his post-conviction attorney failed to appeal the denial
of his first petition for post-conviction, No. 40398, thus constituting ineffective assistance
of counsel. The record reflects the trial court appointed the Knox County Public Defender
to represent the petitioner. On April 6, 1992, the trial court summarily dismissed the
petition, and the petitioner filed a motion to vacate the trial court’s order of dismissal. On
May 5, 1992, the trial court denied the petitioner’s motion to vacate. On direct appeal, this
Court affirmed the trial court’s dismissal, stating, “[t]he scope of relief under the post-
conviction statute is thus limited to abridgment of constitutional rights in the conviction
process and there can be no due process in violation ‘in the conviction process’ by what
may have happened at a prior post-conviction proceeding.” Kenneth Lee Weston v. State,
No. 03C01-9209-CR-00308, 1993 WL 179915, at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, May 27,
1993). The Supreme Court granted the petitioner’s application for permission to appeal.
In its order reversing this Court and remanding the case to the trial court for an
evidentiary hearing on the second petition, the Supreme Court stated:
Upon consideration of the application for permission to appeal
and the entire record in this cause, the Court is of the opinion
that the record is inadequate to determine the merit of the
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petitioner’s claim.
The case is remanded to the trial court for an evidentiary
hearing on the issue of whether petitioner was denied a first
tier appeal of his original post-conviction petition as a result of
inaction on the part of appointed counsel.
If the trial court finds in the affirmative on this issue, an appeal
shall be granted on the original post-conviction petition or, in
the alternative, a new hearing on the petition shall be granted,
from which petitioner shall be entitled to a first tier appeal.
Kenneth Lee Weston v. State, No. 03C01-9209-CR-00308, 1993 WL 460500, at *1 (Tenn.,
November 10, 1993), pet. to rehear denied (Tenn. 1994).
The record reflects that the evidentiary hearing on the second petition for post-
conviction relief, No. 45862, was reset several times from 1995 to April, 1998.
On April 15, 1998, the petitioner filed an amended petition for post-conviction relief
in Cause No. 45862. In the amended petition, the petitioner alleged: (a) trial counsel failed
to move for an acquittal on the robbery with a deadly weapon charge at the end of trial,
when the proof did not support a finding of anything but bank robbery; and (b) the petitioner
received inadequate assistance of counsel at trial and on appeal when counsel failed to
raise the variance between the proof and the conviction either in the motion for a new trial
or on appeal. The state did not file an answer to the amended petition.
On April 23, 1998, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the second petition
pursuant to the Supreme Court’s order for remand. The trial court did not hear any
witnesses, but considered the statements of counsel for both parties as to the history of
these two petitions for post-conviction relief. The trial court recognized that it was to
determine whether the petitioner was entitled to a first tier appeal of the first petition for
post-conviction relief, but the petitioner urged the trial court to consider the amendment to
the second petition. The state conceded the petitioner was entitled to a first tier appeal of
his first petition in Cause No. 40398. The state did not object to the trial court’s
determination of the merits of the amendment to the second petition.
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In its order of findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court found that the
petitioner was denied a first tier appeal, due to the inactions of appointed counsel, and
granted the petitioner an appeal in Cause No. 40398. As to the amendment of the second
petition for post-conviction relief in Cause No. 45862, the trial court found:
[W]hile there is a specific bank robbery charge, that does not
prevent the State from charging and seeking a conviction, and
a jury convicting an individual of armed robbery, whether it is
a banking institution or any other individual or institution. I think
they could proceed under 39-2-501 and submit that issue to
the jury, if the jury found the elements of that offense, that it
was appropriate for them to convict of that offense.
We agree with the trial court’s determination that the petitioner was deprived of an
appeal on the merits of his first petition for post-conviction relief in Cause No. 40398. As
to the amendment to the second petition for post-conviction relief in Cause No. 45862, we
agree with the state that the trial court was not authorized to entertain this amendment.
Therefore, this issue is not properly before this Court, and we decline to review it. The trial
court’s judgment is affirmed.
________________________________________
L. T. LAFFERTY, SENIOR JUDGE
CONCUR:
___________________________________
JERRY L. SMITH, JUDGE
___________________________________
NORMA McGEE OGLE, JUDGE
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