State of Tennessee v. Matthew Anthony Perry ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                            06/11/2021
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    May 26, 2021 Session
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. MATHEW ANTHONY PERRY
    Appeal from the Criminal Court for Johnson County
    No. 2018-CR-28 Lisa Rice, Judge
    ___________________________________
    No. E2020-00911-CCA-R3-CD
    ___________________________________
    A Johnson County jury convicted the defendant, Mathew Anthony Perry, of unlawful
    possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, and the trial court imposed a sentence of
    fifteen years’ confinement. On appeal, the defendant argues the trial court erred in
    sentencing him as a Range II offender, asserting the State’s notice of enhanced punishment
    was deficient. The defendant also argues the trial court erred in failing to grant a mistrial
    based upon alleged improper testimony. After reviewing the record and considering the
    applicable law, we affirm the judgment of the trial court. However, we remand the matter
    for the sole purpose of ensuring that judgment forms were entered for each count of the
    indictment.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
    J. ROSS DYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER
    and CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, JJ., joined.
    Perry L. Stout, Mountain City, Tennessee, for the appellant, Mathew Anthony Perry.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Edwin Alan Groves, Jr., Assistant
    Attorney General; Ken C. Baldwin, District Attorney General; and Leon Marshall,
    Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    Facts and Procedural History
    On December 28, 2017, the defendant, Mathew Anthony Perry, and Brittany Arnold
    approached the home of Charlena and Christopher Johnson and exchanged gunfire with
    Mr. Johnson. As a result, a Johnson County grand jury indicted the defendant with
    unlawful possession of a weapon by a convicted felon (count 1), five counts of felony
    reckless endangerment (counts 2 through 6), and attempted theft of property between
    $1000 and $10,000 (count 7).1 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 39-13-103
    ; -14-103; -17-1307. Prior
    to trial, the State filed a “Notice of Intent to Enhance/Impeach” which listed fourteen prior
    felony convictions. The State presented the following evidence during trial.
    Around 2:30 a.m. on December 28, 2017, Ms. Johnson woke to help her daughter
    who was sick. While awake, Ms. Johnson stepped outside on the front porch and saw a
    truck pull into a parking area “across the road” from her home. She described the truck as
    “a full-size truck with the lights across the top” and noted the truck was loud. The truck
    parked behind a tractor and a trailer, and Ms. Johnson “heard them cut the engine off, and
    [she] heard two doors shut.” Ms. Johnson then saw a man and a woman walking up her
    driveway. She alerted Mr. Johnson and gathered her three daughters in the living room.
    Mr. Johnson went outside, and Ms. Johnson soon heard “hollering” followed by
    three to four gunshots. Ms. Johnson did not see who fired the initial shot but stated she
    believed the shots were fired from different guns “[b]ecause one shot was louder than the
    other shots.” Mr. Johnson ran back inside and stated, “They’re shooting at me.” He was
    scared, frantic, and “trying to figure out what to do.” Ms. Johnson called the police, and
    Mr. Johnson went back outside. After the shooting ended, Ms. Johnson went outside and
    saw the truck “pulling out from behind the trailer on the other side of the road where [she]
    had seen it pull in at.” Ms. Johnson provided police with a description of the truck and
    indicated it drove towards Mountain City.
    Mr. Johnson provided similar testimony, stating when Ms. Johnson alerted him to
    two people walking up his driveway, he “grabbed [his] pistol” and went out on the front
    porch “to see what was going on.” He saw a man and a woman “scrambling around in
    [his] driveway. They were cussing and trying to go back down the road.” Mr. Johnson
    “stuck [his] pistol up in the air and shot,” and then “saw the flash of somebody shooting
    back at [him] from down the road.” Mr. Johnson stated he “immediately turned to the
    gunfire and commenced firing back.” In total, he fired five additional shots after the initial
    warning shot, and the man and woman fired at least three or four shots. During the gunfire,
    Mr. Johnson was worried that his children might be killed and felt a duty to protect them.
    Mr. Johnson ran back inside the house to get another rifle and saw the truck “getting ready
    to pull out.” The truck drove towards Mountain City, and Mr. Johnson described the truck
    as being a “dark color,” loud, and with “lights on the top of it.”
    The following day, Mr. Johnson examined his front porch and noticed that “one of
    the bullets had nicked the post.” Mr. Johnson took a picture of the area of the post “where
    the bullet had struck beside of me.” The picture was entered into evidence. Mr. Johnson
    1
    The attempted theft charge of count 7 was dismissed prior to trial.
    -2-
    did not find any additional bullets or notice any other damage to his home. Additional
    pictures of the Johnsons’ home were entered into evidence which showed: the area the man
    and woman “parked their truck and hid it,” several angles of the Johnsons’ home and
    driveway, the surrounding roads, and “the RZR or side-by-side that [the defendant and Ms.
    Arnold] was (sic) supposedly coming to take.” Mr. Johnson provided a statement to police
    on the night of the incident and reviewed the statement during trial. He did not recall the
    police suggesting that his warning shot was a bad idea and stated the man and woman were
    trespassing on his property.
    While on duty on December 28, 2017, Deputy Jeffrey Norman of the Johnson
    County Sheriff’s Office2 received a “shots fired” call and a description of the truck involved
    in the shooting. He described the vehicle as a large truck that “had a loud exhaust and there
    was a light bar on the top of the vehicle.” While en route to the Johnsons’ home, Deputy
    Norman and Deputy Lipford encountered the suspect vehicle and conducted a felony traffic
    stop. The deputies “pulled both individuals out at gun point,” identified and secured the
    individuals, and then spoke with them separately. Deputy Norman identified the defendant
    as the driver of the truck and Brittany Arnold as the passenger and noted he knew Ms.
    Arnold from prior experiences in law enforcement and “also through a relative.”
    The deputies placed Ms. Arnold in Deputy Norman’s patrol vehicle while Deputy
    Lipford questioned the defendant. Deputy Norman overheard the defendant state that there
    was a firearm in the truck and Ms. Arnold described the firearm as a purple handgun.
    Deputy Lipford then removed the firearm from the glove compartment and rendered the
    gun safe. Deputy Norman stated the gun was not loaded, but the deputies also found a
    magazine in the glove compartment. They did not find any bullets in the vehicle. Deputy
    Norman identified the firearm for the jury and described it as a 9-millimeter SCCY
    handgun. After conducting an inventory search of the truck, the deputies had the truck
    towed and completed a Vehicle Tow-In Report which was entered into evidence. The
    report listed the defendant as the truck’s registered owner.
    Chief Deputy Joe Woodard of the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office3 responded to
    the scene around 3:55 a.m. Because it was dark, officers did not complete a search until
    later that day, and Mr. Johnson participated in the search by using a metal detector to locate
    shell casings. Ultimately, two shell casings were found near Poplar Ridge Road
    approximately 211 to 230 feet from the damaged post on the Johnsons’ front porch. Deputy
    Woodard photographed the shell casings and the surrounding area, and the photographs
    2
    At the time of trial, Deputy Norman served as a Mountain City Police Department Officer.
    3
    At the time of trial, Deputy Woodard served as a sergeant with the Mountain City Police
    Department.
    -3-
    were entered into evidence. Deputy Woodard’s crime scene diagram was also entered into
    evidence.
    Deputy Woodard quickly developed the defendant and Ms. Arnold as suspects and
    conducted a recorded interview with the defendant around 5:00 a.m. at the Johnson County
    Sheriff’s Office.4 Lieutenant Shawn Brown also participated in the defendant’s interview.
    Deputy Woodard stated the defendant signed the waiver of rights form but was not
    cooperative, noting the defendant “would talk to us about things, but not things pertaining
    to the incident. Just more or less he just didn’t know what was going on.” Though not said
    during the interview, Deputy Woodard recalled “that [the defendant] accused Brittany
    Arnold as being the one shooting the gun and not him.”
    Additionally, during the interview, the defendant refused to participate in a gunshot
    residue test and did not allow Deputy Woodard to photograph injuries to the palms of his
    hands. Deputy Woodard stated the injuries looked like the defendant “may have fallen at
    some point in time, and that’s why I wanted to take the picture because I knew there was
    some red, reddish brown stain on the gun which we believe to be was blood, and I just
    wanted to take a photograph of his hands.” Regarding the gunshot residue test, when
    Deputy Woodard asked the defendant to submit to the test, the defendant requested an
    attorney. Deputy Woodard further testified that “whenever I asked [the defendant] to do a
    gunshot residue, [the defendant] said that he’d been firing guns all day at his house. And
    that’s basically what he said, he fired guns all the time at his house. Well, at his girlfriend’s
    house.” Deputy Woodard explained to the defendant that the gunshot residue test concerns
    “any firearms within the past four hours,” and the defendant seemed concerned about the
    timeline because the defendant stated “he’d shot guns all day, so that day.” The defendant
    did not object during this testimony.
    The investigation continued as Deputy Woodard obtained a search warrant for the
    defendant’s DNA, cell phone records, and Facebook records. He also requested DNA
    analysis on the “reddish brown stain” found on the firearm removed from the defendant’s
    truck. Deputy Woodard testified that the DNA profile obtained from the stained area on
    the slide of the pistol matched the defendant, but the DNA profile obtained from the
    textured area of the pistol and the trigger was inconclusive. The Tennessee Bureau of
    Investigation (“TBI”) forensic biology report was entered into evidence. Deputy Woodard
    also reviewed the TBI firearms report which addressed the SCCY, Model CP-2, 9-
    millimeter Luger caliber pistol, the magazine found in the defendant’s truck, a Blazer 9-
    millimeter Luger caliber cartridge from the magazine, and two Blazer 9-millimeter Luger
    4
    The State attempted to play the recorded interview for the jury but was unsuccessful due to the
    poor sound quality.
    -4-
    caliber cartridge cases. The firearms report was entered into evidence and indicated the
    shell casings collected were fired from the pistol. Finally, Deputy Woodard noted that Ms.
    Arnold submitted to a gunshot residue test. Ms. Arnold’s gunshot residue test report was
    entered into evidence and indicated Ms. Arnold “could have fired, handled, or was near a
    gun when it was fired.”5 The State then rested its case-in-chief, the defendant moved for a
    judgment of acquittal, and the trial court denied the motion.
    The defendant then testified and provided his version of the events of December 28,
    2017. Prior to the incident, he celebrated Christmas with his fiancée, Kristie Cooke, and
    her children. Afterwards, the defendant went home, Ms. Arnold called him, and the
    defendant picked Ms. Arnold up in his truck around 1:00 or 1:30 a.m. The defendant
    explained he met Ms. Arnold through “mutual acquaintances” and “through Facebook.”
    As the two rode around, Ms. Arnold “said she wanted to go to her uncle’s, and get
    money.” The two then drove to the Johnsons’ home, though the defendant did not know
    the home belonged to the Johnsons at the time. The home had “a pretty steep driveway”
    that he could not maneuver in his truck so the defendant parked at the end of the road. He
    and Ms. Arnold then walked up the driveway. The defendant stated it was dark, and he did
    not see anyone as they approached the top of the driveway. The defendant told Ms. Arnold,
    “I don’t think we really need to be here. I don’t think he’s up.”
    As they started to leave, Ms. Arnold began arguing with the defendant, and Mr.
    Johnson then fired a gun. The defendant stated that the first bullet came within ten feet of
    him and Ms. Arnold and that he felt “[e]xtremely terrified.” The defendant “took off
    running” as Ms. Arnold returned gunfire. The defendant thought he was going to die,
    stating “[i]t was a lot of gunfire.” As he ran, the defendant fell and “slid down the gravel
    driveway while they were exchanging gunfire.” The defendant testified he was not paying
    attention to Ms. Arnold during the exchange, noting “[a]ll I could care about was myself.”
    The defendant and Ms. Arnold returned to his truck. Ms. Arnold had a gun in her
    hand, and the defendant took it from her as he “did not feel safe with her having a loaded
    weapon in her hand.” The defendant removed the magazine from the gun and “took the
    bullet out of it, and put it in the glove compartment because I didn’t want [Ms. Arnold] to
    have a loaded gun after this just happened.” The defendant stated he “unloaded it to render,
    you know, it safe for me or anybody else that may come in contact.”
    After leaving the scene, the police pulled him over, and the defendant disclosed that
    there was a gun in the truck. The defendant again explained he did not feel safe being in
    5
    All of the reports entered into evidence were stipulated to by the parties.
    -5-
    the truck with Ms. Arnold and a loaded gun “[b]ecause she just shot at these people. What
    do you think she would do to me because I’m a witness now. She’s with me and I mean if
    she’s got the capability to shoot at these people, you never know what she’s got the
    capability of doing.”
    The defendant admitted to having a “rough past” and not being permitted to handle
    firearms. However, the defendant stated:
    [W]hen your life is in danger, it doesn’t matter if you’re a convicted
    felon or not. I mean you don’t think about that. That comes later. My life
    is more important right now than what could happen because I touched this
    gun. What could happen if I don’t touch this gun and unload it, what could
    happen to my life.
    More specifically, the defendant admitted he had approximately 14 felony convictions in
    the ten years preceding this incident, including one violent felony conviction and one
    felony perjury conviction. Regarding his prior felonies, the defendant stated, “I pled guilty
    to them because I was guilty of the crime.” Regarding the crimes for which he was on trial,
    the defendant stated, “I didn’t do it this time, so that’s why we’re here.”
    During cross-examination, the defendant claimed he did not know Ms. Arnold had
    a gun with her prior to the shooting but admitted he saw her shooting at Mr. Johnson. When
    Ms. Arnold entered the truck after the shooting, the defendant took the gun and a holster
    from her. As such, the defendant admitted to having a holster on him when he was stopped
    by the police, noting he put the holster in his pocket because he was scared. The defendant
    stated, “I know that I got a gun in my truck and I’m not supposed to have it. . . . And even
    if it’s not my gun, it’s still in my vehicle.” Regarding the ownership of the gun, the
    defendant stated Ms. Arnold purchased the gun from Ms. Cooke about six months prior to
    this incident. At the time of the shooting, Ms. Cooke might have been the registered owner
    of the gun “but she was not the physical owner.”
    The defendant’s fiancée, Kristie Cooke, also testified. Ms. Cooke reviewed the
    firearm that was previously entered into evidence and testified that the gun was hers.
    However, Ms. Cooke stated she sold the gun to Ms. Arnold for about $200 in early
    December 2017, approximately two to three weeks before this incident. In addition, Ms.
    Cooke recalled that around 5:00 a.m. on December 28, 2017, Officer Shawn Brown
    questioned her at her home about the gun, and she stated the gun did not belong to her at
    the time. Ms. Cooke stated she has no prior felony convictions, and though she is engaged
    to the defendant, she would not lie for him. The defense then rested.
    -6-
    Officer Shawn Brown of the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office testified in rebuttal
    for the State regarding his interview with Ms. Cooke on December 28, 2017. During the
    interview, Ms. Cooke stated that she owned the purple 9-millimeter handgun recovered
    from the defendant’s truck. Officer Brown did not recall the exact line of questioning
    related to the ownership of the gun but did recall Ms. Cooke “essentially admitted that it
    was her weapon.” Further, Officer Brown concluded that “[b]ased on what [Ms. Cooke]
    told me, I believed her to be the lawful owner of the weapon.” The State again rested its
    case.
    The jury acquitted the defendant of five counts of reckless endangerment but
    convicted him of unlawful possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and imposed a
    $2500 fine.6 For the conviction, the trial court sentenced the defendant to fifteen years’
    incarceration. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial wherein he challenged the
    sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction, the State’s notice of enhancement,
    and, for the first time, Deputy Woodard’s testimony regarding “statements that the
    [d]efendant made after he had invoked his right to counsel. Particularly[,] that the
    [d]efendant stated, ‘He had fired guns at his house the day before.’” The trial court denied
    the defendant’s motion for a new trial, and this timely appeal followed.
    Analysis
    Initially, we pause to address our concerns with the appellant’s brief. While the
    appellant’s brief technically complies with the requirements of Tennessee Rules of
    Appellate Procedure 27, his brief at best meets the bare minimum standards for appellate
    advocacy. Tenn. R. App. P. 27. For example, the appellant’s statement of the facts recites
    no testimony from the trial or describes any facts presented at trial which would provide
    this Court with an understanding of the crime or what took place at trial or during the
    sentencing hearing. Additionally, as discussed further infra, each of the appellant’s issues
    could be deemed waived for numerous reasons. Finally, despite the fact the State argued
    each of the issues should be considered waived, the appellant failed to file a reply brief or
    move to have the record supplemented with the sentencing hearing, especially considering
    one of his two challenges concerns the sentence imposed by the trial court.
    6
    The only judgment form included in the record on appeal is the judgment for the defendant’s
    conviction for unlawful possession of a weapon by a convicted felon. While the transcript notes the
    defendant was acquitted of the remaining charges, the record is void of judgments reflecting the jury’s
    verdicts on those charges. See State v. Berry, 
    503 S.W.3d 360
    , 363 (Tenn. 2015) (“When a jury returns a
    not guilty verdict (or when the defendant is otherwise entitled to be discharged), the trial court is nonetheless
    required to ‘enter judgment accordingly.’” Tenn. R. Crim. P. 32(e)(3) (including no details about the
    document to be used in such instances)).
    -7-
    Notwithstanding our concerns with the appellant’s brief, we will, in the interest of justice,
    address the issues presented.
    I.   Notice of Enhancement
    The defendant argues the trial court erred in sentencing him as a Range II offender,
    asserting the State’s notice of intent to seek enhanced punishment “was so deficient that it
    constitutes no notice.” Specifically, the defendant argues the notice was inadequate
    because it was combined with the State’s notice of impeachment and did not include
    “precise information on prior convictions, any mention of [Tennessee Code Annotated
    section] 40-35-202, [an] explanation of how the Florida offenses relate[d] to Tennessee
    offenses, or the State’s intent on what range they [sought].” The State asserts its “pre-trial
    notice of enhanced punishment substantially complied with the Sentencing Act, and [the]
    defendant failed to show prejudice from any perceived errors. Thus, the trial court properly
    sentenced [the] defendant as a Range II offender.” Based upon the record provided, we
    agree with the State.
    Under Tennessee’s criminal sentencing statutes, “multiple, persistent, career, and
    repeat violent offenders are subject to enhanced sentences.” State v. Patterson, 
    538 S.W.3d 431
    , 437 (Tenn. 2017) (citation omitted). Thus, “[i]f the State intends to seek
    an enhanced sentence for a defendant in any of these offender classifications, it
    must provide the defendant with notice of its intent to do so.” 
    Id.
     (citing 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-202
    (a) (2014)). The applicable statute provides:
    If the district attorney general believes that a defendant should be sentenced
    as a multiple, persistent or career offender, the district attorney general shall
    file a statement thereof with the court and defense counsel not less than ten
    (10) days before trial or acceptance of a guilty plea; provided, that notice may
    be waived by the defendant in writing with the consent of the district attorney
    general and the court accepting the plea. The statement, which shall not be
    made known to the jury determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant
    on the primary offense, must set forth the nature of the prior felony
    convictions, the dates of the convictions and the identity of the courts of the
    convictions. The original or certified copy of the court record of any prior
    felony conviction, bearing the same name as that by which the defendant is
    charged in the primary offense, is prima facie evidence that the defendant
    named in the record is the same as the defendant before the court, and is
    prima facie evidence of the facts set out in the record.
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-202
    (a). Our supreme court has stated, “[w]ith regard to the form
    of the notice, this Court has commented that ‘the practice of ‘embedding’ information
    inside an unrelated document is problematic’ and has instructed that ‘the filing of separate
    -8-
    documents properly captioned is to be preferred.’” Patterson, 538 S.W.3d at 438 (quoting
    State v. Benham, 
    113 S.W.3d 702
    , 705 (Tenn. 2003)). Regarding the content of the notice,
    the supreme court “has often emphasized that the responsibility for asserting ‘the
    appropriate sentencing status in the first instance’ lies with the State and that the State ‘may
    not shift these burdens to an accused by filing what is essentially an empty notice.’” 
    Id.
    (quoting State v. Adams, 
    788 S.W.2d 557
    , 559 (Tenn. 1990)). However, “where the State
    substantially complies ‘an accused has a duty to inquire about an ambiguous or
    incomplete notice and must show prejudice to obtain relief.’” 
    Id.
     (citations omitted).
    First, we note that our review of this issue is limited as the appellate record does not
    contain a transcript of the sentencing hearing. As the appellant, it was the defendant’s duty
    to “have prepared a transcript of such part of the evidence or proceedings as is necessary
    to convey a fair, accurate, and complete account of what transpired with respect to those
    issues that are the bases of appeal.” Tenn. R. App. P. 24(b). If this Court is unable to fully
    review an issue based on the defendant’s failure to include a full transcript, the issue has
    been waived. See State v. Troutman, 
    979 S.W.2d 271
    , 274 (Tenn. 1998)
    (failure to include trial transcript on appeal resulted in waiver of sentence challenge).
    Because the defendant failed to include the transcript of the sentencing hearing in the record
    on appeal, he has waived his challenge to the trial court’s decision to sentence him as a
    Range II offender.
    Despite the defendant’s waiver, our review of the record indicates the trial court
    sentenced the defendant as a Range II, multiple offender for his conviction for unlawful
    possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, a Class B felony. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 39
    -
    17-1307; 40-35-106. A Range II offender convicted of a Class B felony faces a sentencing
    range between twelve and twenty years. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-112
    . Thus, the trial
    court imposed a within-range sentence when it ordered a sentence of fifteen years’
    confinement. The defendant, however, asserts the trial court should have sentenced him as
    a Range I offender because the State filed a deficient notice of its intent to seek enhanced
    punishment. We disagree.
    The State filed its notice of enhancement in advance of trial on October 17, 2019.
    The notice was entitled, “Notice of Intent to Enhance/Impeach” and listed fourteen prior
    felonies upon which the State intended to rely in seeking to enhance the defendant’s
    punishment. The listed felonies included: grand larceny (7 counts), credit card fraud (3
    counts), aggravated assault, tampering with evidence, forgery, and perjury. The notice
    listed that the prior felonies occurred in Florida, noted the dates of convictions, and
    included the length of punishment imposed for the convictions. Additionally, the notice
    stated: “The State also intends to use these prior convictions to enhance the [d]efendant’s
    punishment, in sentencing.” Thus, the record indicates the notice provided the prior felony
    convictions, the date the convictions were rendered, and the sentencing imposed for the
    -9-
    convictions as required by statute. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-202
    (a). Though the defendant
    challenges the notice as deficient, his argument is misplaced as our review of the record
    indicates the trial court properly classified the defendant as a Range II offender for his
    Class B felony conviction based upon the prior convictions presented by the State in
    its notice of enhancement. The defendant is not entitled to relief.
    II.   The Testimony of Deputy Woodard
    The defendant argues the trial court erred in not declaring a mistrial after Deputy
    Woodard testified that the defendant told him that he had fired a gun at his girlfriend’s
    house. The defendant argues “[t]he State’s line of questioning of [Deputy] Woodard
    starting on page 87 of the trial transcript was inappropriate” but concedes he “chose not to
    object because he did not want to bring more attention to this line of questioning.” The
    defendant asserts Deputy Woodard’s testimony created “the thought of [the defendant]
    regularly firing guns as a dangerous felon” and “poisoned [the jury’s] mind.”7 The State
    asserts the defendant has waived this issue for failing to make a contemporaneous objection
    during trial and for failing to request a mistrial. The State further asserts the defendant is
    not entitled to plain error review “because defense counsel concedes that he strategically
    waived the issue in the trial court.” We agree with the State.
    Here, the record makes clear this issue is waived as the defendant failed to
    contemporaneously object or request a mistrial after Deputy Woodard made the allegedly
    “inappropriate” statements. See Tenn. R. App. P. 36(a) (providing that appellate courts
    need not grant relief when the objecting party “failed to take whatever action was
    reasonably available to prevent or nullify the harmful effect of an error”); State v. Johnson,
    
    970 S.W.2d 500
    , 508 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996) (“Issues raised for the first time on appeal
    are considered waived.”). For this reason alone, the defendant is not entitled to relief.
    However, the State provided additional argument on appeal as to why the defendant is not
    entitled to plain error relief as to this issue, and though not requested by the defendant, we
    will briefly address this issue under plain error.
    Under the plain error doctrine, a defendant may obtain relief only if all of the
    following criteria are satisfied: (1) the record clearly establishes what occurred in the trial
    court, (2) a clear and unequivocal rule of law was breached, (3) a substantial right of the
    accused was adversely affected, (4) the issue was not waived for tactical reasons, and (5)
    consideration of the error is necessary to do substantial justice. State v. Adkisson, 899
    7
    This is our best interpretation of the defendant’s argument based upon the poorly structured
    argument presented in his appellate brief. As previously addressed, the defendant’s brief is lacking in both
    explanation of argument and legal authority to support the same. For this issue, the defendant failed to cite
    to any specific statements in the record with which he takes issue, other than by generally citing two page
    numbers, and failed to properly cite to any legal authority in support of this claim.
    - 10 -
    S.W.2d 626, 641-42 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994) (footnotes omitted); State v. Martin, 
    505 S.W.3d 492
    , 504 (Tenn. 2016); State v. Hester, 
    324 S.W.3d 1
    , 56 (Tenn. 2010). As
    -
    previously noted, as it relates to the alleged improper testimony of Deputy Woodard, the
    defendant concedes he “chose not to object because he did not want to bring more attention
    to this line of questioning.” Thus, the defendant admits this issue was waived for tactical
    reasons, and he cannot satisfy the criteria necessary to warrant plain error review. 
    Id.
    Furthermore, during his trial testimony, the defendant admitted to handling the gun after
    the incident and that he was “not supposed to have” a gun in his truck. This issue is without
    merit.
    Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing, we affirm the judgment of the trial court. Additionally, we
    remand the matter for the sole purpose of ensuring that judgment forms were entered for
    each count of the indictment.
    ____________________________________
    J. ROSS DYER, JUDGE
    - 11 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E2020-00911-CCA-R3-CD

Judges: Judge. J. Ross Dyer

Filed Date: 6/11/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/11/2021